This includes a new summary mode (-s) for camcontrol defects that
quickly tells the user the most important thing: how many defects
are in the requested list. The actual location of the defects is
less important.
Modern drives frequently have more than the 8191 defects that can
be reported by the READ DEFECT DATA (10) command. If they don't
have that many grown defects, they certainly have more than 8191
defects in the primary (i.e. factory) defect list.
The READ DEFECT DATA (12) command allows for longer parameter
lists, as well as indexing into the list of defects, and so allows
reporting many more defects.
This has been tested with HGST drives and Seagate drives, but
does not fully work with Seagate drives. Once I have a Seagate
spec I may be able to determine whether it is possible to make it
work with Seagate drives.
scsi_da.h: Add a definition for the new long block defect
format.
Add bit and mask definitions for the new extended
physical sector and bytes from index defect
formats.
Add a prototype for the new scsi_read_defects() CDB
building function.
scsi_da.c: Add a new scsi_read_defects() CDB building function.
camcontrol(8) was previously composing CDBs manually.
This is long overdue.
camcontrol.c: Revamp the camcontrol defects subcommand. We now
go through multiple stages in trying to get defect
data off the drive while avoiding various drive
firmware quirks.
We start off by requesting the defect header with
the 10 byte command. If we're in summary mode (-s)
and the drive reports fewer defects than can be
represented in the 10 byte header, we're done.
Otherwise, we know that we need to issue the
12 byte command if the drive reports the maximum
number of defects.
If we're in summary mode, we're done if we get a
good response back when asking for the 12 byte header.
If the user has asked for the full list, then we
use the address descriptor index field in the 12
byte CDB to step through the list in 64K chunks.
64K is small enough to work with most any ancient
or modern SCSI controller.
Add support for printing the new long block defect
format, as well as the extended physical sector and
bytes from index formats. I don't have any drives
that support the new formats.
Add a hexadecimal output format that can be turned
on with -X.
Add a quiet mode (-q) that can be turned on with
the summary mode (-s) to just print out a number.
Revamp the error detection and recovery code for
the defects command to work with HGST drives.
Call the new scsi_read_defects() CDB building
function instead of rolling the CDB ourselves.
Pay attention to the residual from the defect list
request when printing it out, so we don't run off
the end of the list.
Use the new scsi_nv library routines to convert
from strings to numbers and back.
camcontrol.8: Document the new defect formats (longblock, extbfi,
extphys) and command line options (-q, -s, -S and
-X) for the defects subcommand.
Explain a little more about what drives generally
do and don't support.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
MFC after: 1 week
filesystems. It differs from file(1) in that it gives machine-parseable
output, it outputs filesystem labels, doesn't get confused by other
formats metadata, and runs in Capsicum sandbox.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1255
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
As a side effect...
1. The tests now checks for the root user before continuing with kyua, which is
more visible than the test being skipped with the TAP protocol
2. The tests work with devices that aren't /dev/md0 by caching the device
attached during the test to a file, and later use the cached information to
detach the device in the cleanup routine
3. The tests no longer require perl to run
MFC after: 1 week
PR: 191191
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
OpenBSD; unsure why we chose to do so. As groups are a requirement for
pf, exposing them by default will make our pf implementation less
confusing.
While here add a missing free() that OpenBSD fixed 7 years ago.
PR: 194925
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1185
Approved by: des
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Update route MTU in case of ifnet MTU change.
Add new RTF_FIXEDMTU to track explicitly specified MTU.
Old behavior:
ifconfig em0 mtu 1500->9000 -> all routes traversing em0 do not change MTU.
User has to manually update all routes.
ifconfig em0 mtu 9000->1500 -> all routes traversing em0 do not change MTU.
However, if ip[6]_output finds route with rt_mtu > interface mtu, rt_mtu
gets updated.
New behavior:
ifconfig em0 mtu 1500->9000 -> all interface routes in all fibs gets updated
with new MTU unless RTF_FIXEDMTU flag set on them.
ifconfig em0 mtu 9000->1500 -> all routes in all fibs gets updated with new
MTU unless RTF_FIXEDMTU flag set on them AND rt_mtu is less than ifp mtu.
route add ... -mtu XXX automatically sets RTF_FIXEDMTU flag.
route change .. -mtu 0 automatically removes RTF_FIXEDMTU flag.
PR: 194238
MFC after: 1 month
CR: D1125
Initially in_matrote() in_clsroute() in their current state was introduced by
r4105 20 years ago. Instead of deleting inactive routes immediately, we kept them
in route table, setting RTPRF_OURS flag and some expire time. After that, either
GC came or RTPRF_OURS got removed on first-packet. It was a good solution
in that days (and probably another decade after that) to keep TCP metrics.
However, after moving metrics to TCP hostcache in r122922, most of in_rmx
functionality became unused. It might had been used for flushing icmp-originated
routes before rte mutexes/refcounting, but I'm not sure about that.
So it looks like this is nearly impossible to make GC do its work nowadays:
in_rtkill() ignores non-RTPRF_OURS routes.
route can only become RTPRF_OURS after dropping last reference via rtfree()
which calls in_clsroute(), which, it turn, ignores UP and non-RTF_DYNAMIC routes.
Dynamic routes can still be installed via received redirect, but they
have default lifetime (no specific rt_expire) and no one has another trie walker
to call RTFREE() on them.
So, the changelist:
* remove custom rnh_match / rnh_close matching function.
* remove all GC functions
* partially revert r256695 (proto3 is no more used inside kernel,
it is not possible to use rt_expire from user point of view, proto3 support
is not complete)
* Finish r241884 (similar to this commit) and remove remaining IPv6 parts
MFC after: 1 month
Split it into two modules: if_gre(4) for GRE encapsulation and
if_me(4) for minimal encapsulation within IP.
gre(4) changes:
* convert to if_transmit;
* rework locking: protect access to softc with rmlock,
protect from concurrent ioctls with sx lock;
* correct interface accounting for outgoing datagramms (count only payload size);
* implement generic support for using IPv6 as delivery header;
* make implementation conform to the RFC 2784 and partially to RFC 2890;
* add support for GRE checksums - calculate for outgoing datagramms and check
for inconming datagramms;
* add support for sending sequence number in GRE header;
* remove support of cached routes. This fixes problem, when gre(4) doesn't
work at system startup. But this also removes support for having tunnels with
the same addresses for inner and outer header.
* deprecate support for various GREXXX ioctls, that doesn't used in FreeBSD.
Use our standard ioctls for tunnels.
me(4):
* implementation conform to RFC 2004;
* use if_transmit;
* use the same locking model as gre(4);
PR: 164475
Differential Revision: D1023
No objections from: net@
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
- convert boot1.efi to corrrectly calculate the lba for what the
media reports and convert the size based on what FreeBSD uses.
The existing code would use the 512 byte lba and convert the
size using 4K byte size.
- make fsck_msdosfs read the boot block as 4K so the read doesn't
fail on a 4Kn drive since FreeBSD will error out parition reads
of a block. Make the bpbBytesPerSec check a multiple of 512 since
it can be 512 or 4K depending on the disk. This allows fsck to
pass checking the EFI partition on a 4Kn disk.
To create the EFI file system I used:
newfs_msdos -F 32 -S 4096 -c 1 -m 0xf8 <partition>
This works for booting 512 and 4Kn disks.
Caveat is that loader.efi cannot read the 4Kn EFI partition. This isn't
critical right now since boot1.efi will read loader.efi from the ufs
partition. It looks like loader.efi can be fixed via making some of the
512 bytes reads more flexible. loader.efi doesn't have trouble reading
the ufs partition. This is probably a simple fix.
I now have FreeBSD installed on a system with 4Kn drives and tested the
same code works on 512.
MFC after: 1 week
to mount_nfs(8). They are implemented on Linux, OS X, and Solaris,
and thus can be expected to appear in automounter maps.
Reviewed by: rmacklem@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
vxlan creates a virtual LAN by encapsulating the inner Ethernet frame in
a UDP packet. This implementation is based on RFC7348.
Currently, the IPv6 support is not fully compliant with the specification:
we should be able to receive UPDv6 packets with a zero checksum, but we
need to support RFC6935 first. Patches for this should come soon.
Encapsulation protocols such as vxlan emphasize the need for the FreeBSD
network stack to support batching, GRO, and GSO. Each frame has to make
two trips through the network stack, and each frame will be at most MTU
sized. Performance suffers accordingly.
Some latest generation NICs have begun to support vxlan HW offloads that
we should also take advantage of. VIMAGE support should also be added soon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D384
Reviewed by: gnn
Relnotes: yes
we can't easily predict (in current parsing model)
if the keyword is ipfw(8) reserved keyword or port name.
Checking proto database via getprotobyname() consumes a lot of
CPU and leads to tens of seconds for parsing large ruleset.
Use list of reserved keywords and check them as pre-requisite
before doing getprotobyname().
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
if_lagg(4) interfaces which were cloned in a vnet jail.
Sysctl nodes which are dynamically generated for each cloned interface
(net.link.lagg.N.*) have been removed, and use_flowid and flowid_shift
ifconfig(8) parameters have been added instead. Flags and per-interface
statistics counters are displayed in "ifconfig -v".
CR: D842
query from a remote machine, and disable accepting it by default. This
requests a routed(8) daemon to dump routing information base for debugging
purpose. An -i flag to enable it has been added.
and (T < RTT).
- Use select(2) for timeout instead of interval timer. Remove poll(2) support.
- Use sigaction(2) instead of signal(3).
- Exit in SIGINT handler when two signals are received and doing reverse DNS
lookup as ping(8) does.
- Remove redundant variables used for getaddrinfo(3).
PR: 151023
The FreeBSD is the only system that has the FEC protocol, that is a simple alias
to loadbalance protocol and does not implement the ancient Cisco FEC standard.
From now on, we remove the fec protocol from the documentation and keep the FEC
code only for compatibility.
Phabric: D539
Reviewed by: glebius, thompsa
Approved by: glebius
Sponsored by: QNAP Systems Inc.
and receives frames on any port of the lagg(4).
Phabric: D549
Reviewed by: glebius, thompsa
Approved by: glebius
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Sponsored by: QNAP Systems Inc.
devq_openings counter lost its meaning after allocation queues has gone.
held counter is still meaningful, but problematic to update due to separate
locking of CCB allocation and queuing.
To fix that replace devq_openings counter with allocated counter. held is
now calculated on request as difference between number of allocated, queued
and active CCBs.
MFC after: 1 month
It affects the IPv6 source address selection algorithm (RFC 6724)
and allows override the last rule ("longest matching prefix") for
choosing among equivalent addresses. The address with `prefer_source'
will be preferred source address.
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Kernel changes:
* Split kernel/userland nat structures eliminating IPFW_INTERNAL hack.
* Add IP_FW_NAT44_* codes resemblin old ones.
* Assume that instances can be named (no kernel support currently).
* Use both UH+WLOCK locks for all configuration changes.
* Provide full ABI support for old sockopts.
Userland changes:
* Use IP_FW_NAT44_* codes for nat operations.
* Remove undocumented ability to show ranges of nat "log" entries.
on "ifconfig -v". I've seen no measurable timing difference
for doing additional SIOCGI2C call for system with 4k vlans.
* Determine appropriate handler (SFP/QSFP) by reading identification
byte (which is the same for both SFF-8472 and SFF-8436) instead
of checking driver name.
MFC with: r270064
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
This is the last major change in given branch.
Kernel changes:
* Use 64-bytes structures to hold multi-value variables.
* Use shared array to hold values from all tables (assume
each table algo is capable of holding 32-byte variables).
* Add some placeholders to support per-table value arrays in future.
* Use simple eventhandler-style API to ease the process of adding new
table items. Currently table addition may required multiple UH drops/
acquires which is quite tricky due to atomic table modificatio/swap
support, shared array resize, etc. Deal with it by calling special
notifier capable of rolling back state before actually performing
swap/resize operations. Original operation then restarts itself after
acquiring UH lock.
* Bump all objhash users default values to at least 64
* Fix custom hashing inside objhash.
Userland changes:
* Add support for dumping shared value array via "vlist" internal cmd.
* Some small print/fill_flags dixes to support u32 values.
* valtype is now bitmask of
<skipto|pipe|fib|nat|dscp|tag|divert|netgraph|limit|ipv4|ipv6>.
New values can hold distinct values for each of this types.
* Provide special "legacy" type which assumes all values are the same.
* More helpers/docs following..
Some examples:
3:41 [1] zfscurr0# ipfw table mimimi create valtype skipto,limit,ipv4,ipv6
3:41 [1] zfscurr0# ipfw table mimimi info
+++ table(mimimi), set(0) +++
kindex: 2, type: addr
references: 0, valtype: skipto,limit,ipv4,ipv6
algorithm: addr:radix
items: 0, size: 296
3:42 [1] zfscurr0# ipfw table mimimi add 10.0.0.5 3000,10,10.0.0.1,2a02:978:2::1
added: 10.0.0.5/32 3000,10,10.0.0.1,2a02:978:2::1
3:42 [1] zfscurr0# ipfw table mimimi list
+++ table(mimimi), set(0) +++
10.0.0.5/32 3000,0,10.0.0.1,2a02:978:2::1
optional attributes field.
- Add a 'machdep.smap' sysctl that exports the SMAP table of the running
system as an array of the ACPI 3.0 structure. (On older systems, the
attributes are given a value of zero.) Note that the sysctl only
exports the SMAP table if it is available via the metadata passed from
the loader to the kernel. If an SMAP is not available, an empty array
is returned.
- Add a format handler for the ACPI 3.0 SMAP structure to the sysctl(8)
binary to format the SMAP structures in a readable format similar to
the format found in boot messages.
MFC after: 2 weeks
* Convert ixgbe to use this ioctl
* Convert ifconfig to use generic i2c handler for "ix" interfaces.
Approved by: Eric Joyner (ixgbe part)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
The executable itself doesn't contain any privileged information.
An example of where this is useful is when makefs(8) is creating an image
that includes /sbin/shutdown. This can now be done without root privileges.
Reviewed by: delphij
Discussed with: delphij, des
CR: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D662
QSFP+ data via i2c inteface. These constants has been taken
from SFF-8436 "QSFP+ 10 Gbs 4X PLUGGABLE TRANSCEIVER" standard
rev 4.8.
* Add support for printing QSFP+ information from 40G NICs
such as Chelsio T5.
This commit does not contain ioctl changes necessary for this
functionality work, there will be another commit soon.
Example:
cxl1: flags=8843<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> metric 0 mtu 1500
options=ec07bb<RXCSUM,TXCSUM,VLAN_MTU,VLAN_HWTAGGING,JUMBO_MTU,.....>
ether 00:07:43:28:ad:08
nd6 options=29<PERFORMNUD,IFDISABLED,AUTO_LINKLOCAL>
media: Ethernet 40Gbase-LR4 <full-duplex>
status: active
plugged: QSFP+ 40GBASE-LR4 (MPO Parallel Optic)
vendor: OEM PN: OP-QSFP-40G-LR4 SN: 20140318001 DATE: 2014-03-18
module temperature: 64.06 C voltage: 3.26 Volts
lane 1: RX: 0.47 mW (-3.21 dBm) TX: 2.78 mW (4.46 dBm)
lane 2: RX: 0.20 mW (-6.94 dBm) TX: 2.80 mW (4.47 dBm)
lane 3: RX: 0.18 mW (-7.38 dBm) TX: 2.79 mW (4.47 dBm)
lane 4: RX: 0.90 mW (-0.45 dBm) TX: 2.80 mW (4.48 dBm)
Tested on: Chelsio T5
Tested on: Mellanox/Huawei passive/active cables/transceivers.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
sbin/devd/tests/client_test.c
* In the event that popen fails, don't dereference its return value.
* Fix array overwrite in the stream and seqpacket tests.
* Close sockets at the end of successful ATF tests.
Reported by: Coverity scan
CID: 1232019, 1232020, 1232029, 1232030
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
1. 50+% of NO_PIE use is fixed by adding -fPIC to INTERNALLIB and other
build-only utility libraries.
2. Another 40% is fixed by generating _pic.a variants of various libraries.
3. Some of the NO_PIE use is a bit absurd as it is disabling PIE (and ASLR)
where it never would work anyhow, such as csu or loader. This suggests
there may be better ways of adding support to the tree. Many of these
cases can be fixed such that -fPIE will work but there is really no
reason to have it in those cases.
4. Some of the uses are working around hacks done to some Makefiles that are
really building libraries but have been using bsd.prog.mk because the code
is cleaner. Had they been using bsd.lib.mk then NO_PIE would not have
been needed.
We likely do want to enable PIE by default (opt-out) for non-tree consumers
(such as ports). For in-tree though we probably want to only enable PIE
(opt-in) for common attack targets such as remote service daemons and setuid
utilities. This is also a great performance compromise since ASLR is expected
to reduce performance. As such it does not make sense to enable it in all
utilities such as ls(1) that have little benefit to having it enabled.
Reported by: kib
UNIX systems, eg. MacOS X and Solaris. It uses Sun-compatible map format,
has proper kernel support, and LDAP integration.
There are still a few outstanding problems; they will be fixed shortly.
Reviewed by: allanjude@, emaste@, kib@, wblock@ (earlier versions)
Phabric: D523
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
presenting most interesting fields via ifconfig -v.
This version supports Intel ixgbe driver only.
Tested on: Cisco,Intel,Mellanox,ModuleTech,Molex transceivers
MFC after: 2 weeks
mount_nfs effectively uses mount protocol v3 by default already.
v1 mount protocol is being removed along with nfsv2 by a high profile NFS
appliance vendor and our legacy v1 mount protocol usage causes rpc errors.
Makefile.inc1:
Always compile gensnmptree with bootstrap-tools when MK_BSNMP != no
instead of depending on a potentially stale tool installed on the build host
sbin/atm/atmconfig/Makefile:
- Always remove oid.h to avoid cluttering up the build/src tree.
- Consolidate all of the RESCUE/MK_BSNMP != no logic under one
conditional to improve readability
- Remove unnecessary ${.OBJDIR} prefixing for oid.h and use ${.TARGET} instead
of spelling out oid.h
- Add a missing DPADD for ${LIBCRYPTO} when compiled MK_BSNMP == yes and
MK_OPENSSL == yes and not compiling for /rescue/rescue
sbin/atm/atmconfig/main.c:
Change #ifndef RESCUE to #ifdef WITH_BSNMP in main.c to make it
clear that we're compiling bsnmp support into atmconfig
Approved by: jmmv (mentor)
Phabric: D579
PR: 143830
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This change consists of two merges from projects/zfsd/head along with the
addition of an ATF test case for the new functionality.
sbin/devd/tests/Makefile
sbin/devd/tests/client_test.c
Add ATF test cases for reading events from both devd socket types.
r266519:
sbin/devd/devd.8
sbin/devd/devd.cc
Create a new socket, of type SOCK_SEQPACKET, for communicating with
clients. SOCK_SEQPACKET sockets preserve record boundaries,
simplying code in the client. The old SOCK_STREAM socket is retained
for backwards-compatibility with existing clients.
r269993:
sbin/devd/devd.8
Fix grammar bug.
CR: https://reviews.freebsd.org/rS266519
MFC after: 5 days
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
Microsoft recommends avoiding the use of spaces in the
string structures for FAT. Unfortunately they do just
that by default in the case of unlabeled filesystems.
Follow the default MS behavior to avoid confusion in
common tools like file(1). This was actually the
default behavior before r203868.
Obtained from: NetBSD (CVS rev. 1.39)
MFC after: 3 days
Most of the tablearg-supported opcodes does not accept 0 as valid value:
O_TAG, O_TAGGED, O_PIPE, O_QUEUE, O_DIVERT, O_TEE, O_SKIPTO, O_CALLRET,
O_NETGRAPH, O_NGTEE, O_NAT treats 0 as invalid input.
The rest are O_SETDSCP and O_SETFIB.
'Fix' them by adding high-order bit (0x8000) set for non-tablearg values.
Do translation in kernel for old clients (import_rule0 / export_rule0),
teach current ipfw(8) binary to add/remove given bit.
This change does not affect handling SETDSCP values, but limit
O_SETFIB values to 32767 instead of 65k. Since currently we have either
old (16) or new (2^32) max fibs, this should not be a big deal:
we're definitely OK for former and have to add another opcode to deal
with latter, regardless of tablearg value.
* Since there seems to be lack of consensus on strict value typing,
remove non-default value types. Use userland-only "value format type"
to print values.
Kernel changes:
* Add IP_FW_XMODIFY to permit table run-time modifications.
Currently we support changing limit and value format type.
Userland changes:
* Support IP_FW_XMODIFY opcode.
* Support specifying value format type (ftype) in tablble create/modify req
* Fine-print value type/value format type.
* Implement proper checks for switching between global and set-aware tables
* Split IP_FW_DEL mess into the following opcodes:
* IP_FW_XDEL (del rules matching pattern)
* IP_FW_XMOVE (move rules matching pattern to another set)
* IP_FW_SET_SWAP (swap between 2 sets)
* IP_FW_SET_MOVE (move one set to another one)
* IP_FW_SET_ENABLE (enable/disable sets)
* Add IP_FW_XZERO / IP_FW_XRESETLOG to finish IP_FW3 migration.
* Use unified ipfw_range_tlv as range description for all of the above.
* Check dynamic states IFF there was non-zero number of deleted dyn rules,
* Del relevant dynamic states with singe traversal instead of per-rule one.
Userland changes:
* Switch ipfw(8) to use new opcodes.
Our mount_nfs does use -o nfsv<2|3|4> or -2 or -3 to specify the version.
OSX (these days), Solaris, and Linux use -o vers=<2,3,4>.
With the upcoming autofs support we can make a lot of (entrerprisy) setups
getting mount options from LDAP just work by providing -o vers= compatibility.
PR: 192379
Reviewed by: wblock, bjk (man page), rmacklem, emaste
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA,AFRL
Kernel changes:
* Add opcode IP_FW_TABLE_XSWAP
* Add support for swapping 2 tables with the same type/ftype/vtype.
* Make skipto cache init after ipfw locks init.
Userland changes:
* Add "table X swap Y" command.
Kernel changes:
* Add TEI_FLAGS_DONTADD entry flag to indicate that insert is not possible
* Support given flag in all algorithms
* Add "limit" field to ipfw_xtable_info
* Add actual limiting code into add_table_entry()
Userland changes:
* Add "limit" option as "create" table sub-option. Limit modification
is currently impossible.
* Print human-readable errors in table enry addition/deletion code.
* Add "flow:hash" algorithm
Kernel changes:
* Add O_IP_FLOW_LOOKUP opcode to support "flow" lookups
* Add IPFW_TABLE_FLOW table type
* Add "struct tflow_entry" as strage for 6-tuple flows
* Add "flow:hash" algorithm. Basically it is auto-growing chained hash table.
Additionally, we store mask of fields we need to compare in each instance/
* Increase ipfw_obj_tentry size by adding struct tflow_entry
* Add per-algorithm stat (ifpw_ta_tinfo) to ipfw_xtable_info
* Increase algoname length: 32 -> 64 (algo options passed there as string)
* Assume every table type can be customized by flags, use u8 to store "tflags" field.
* Simplify ipfw_find_table_entry() by providing @tentry directly to algo callback.
* Fix bug in cidr:chash resize procedure.
Userland changes:
* add "flow table(NAME)" syntax to support n-tuple checking tables.
* make fill_flags() separate function to ease working with _s_x arrays
* change "table info" output to reflect longer "type" fields
Syntax:
ipfw table fl2 create type flow:[src-ip][,proto][,src-port][,dst-ip][dst-port] [algo flow:hash]
Examples:
0:02 [2] zfscurr0# ipfw table fl2 create type flow:src-ip,proto,dst-port algo flow:hash
0:02 [2] zfscurr0# ipfw table fl2 info
+++ table(fl2), set(0) +++
kindex: 0, type: flow:src-ip,proto,dst-port
valtype: number, references: 0
algorithm: flow:hash
items: 0, size: 280
0:02 [2] zfscurr0# ipfw table fl2 add 2a02:6b8::333,tcp,443 45000
0:02 [2] zfscurr0# ipfw table fl2 add 10.0.0.92,tcp,80 22000
0:02 [2] zfscurr0# ipfw table fl2 list
+++ table(fl2), set(0) +++
2a02:6b8::333,6,443 45000
10.0.0.92,6,80 22000
0:02 [2] zfscurr0# ipfw add 200 count tcp from me to 78.46.89.105 80 flow 'table(fl2)'
00200 count tcp from me to 78.46.89.105 dst-port 80 flow table(fl2)
0:03 [2] zfscurr0# ipfw show
00200 0 0 count tcp from me to 78.46.89.105 dst-port 80 flow table(fl2)
65535 617 59416 allow ip from any to any
0:03 [2] zfscurr0# telnet -s 10.0.0.92 78.46.89.105 80
Trying 78.46.89.105...
..
0:04 [2] zfscurr0# ipfw show
00200 5 272 count tcp from me to 78.46.89.105 dst-port 80 flow table(fl2)
65535 682 66733 allow ip from any to any
Kernel changes:
* s/IPFW_TABLE_U32/IPFW_TABLE_NUMBER/
* Force "lookup <port|uid|gid|jid>" to be IPFW_TABLE_NUMBER
* Support "lookup" method for number tables
* Add number:array algorihm (i32 as key, auto-growing).
Userland changes:
* Support named tables in "lookup <tag> Table"
* Fix handling of "table(NAME,val)" case
* Support printing "number" table data.
restore was failing because ZFS was reporting a blocksize that was
not a multiple of 1024. Replace restore's failed assertion with
code that writes restored files in a blocksize that works for
restore (a multiple of 1024) despite being non-optimal for ZFS.
Submitted by: Dmitry Morozovsky
Tested by: Dmitry Morozovsky
MFC after: 1 week
* Rewrite interface tables to use interface indexes
Kernel changes:
* Add generic interface tracking API:
- ipfw_iface_ref (must call unlocked, performs lazy init if needed, allocates
state & bumps ref)
- ipfw_iface_add_ntfy(UH_WLOCK+WLOCK, links comsumer & runs its callback to
update ifindex)
- ipfw_iface_del_ntfy(UH_WLOCK+WLOCK, unlinks consumer)
- ipfw_iface_unref(unlocked, drops reference)
Additionally, consumer callbacks are called in interface withdrawal/departure.
* Rewrite interface tables to use iface tracking API. Currently tables are
implemented the following way:
runtime data is stored as sorted array of {ifidx, val} for existing interfaces
full data is stored inside namedobj instance (chained hashed table).
* Add IP_FW_XIFLIST opcode to dump status of tracked interfaces
* Pass @chain ptr to most non-locked algorithm callbacks:
(prepare_add, prepare_del, flush_entry ..). This may be needed for better
interaction of given algorithm an other ipfw subsystems
* Add optional "change_ti" algorithm handler to permit updating of
cached table_info pointer (happens in case of table_max resize)
* Fix small bug in ipfw_list_tables()
* Add badd (insert into sorted array) and bdel (remove from sorted array) funcs
Userland changes:
* Add "iflist" cmd to print status of currently tracked interface
* Add stringnum_cmp for better interface/table names sorting
ping6(8) would quit before the remote side gets a chance to respond.
Solve this by resetting the itimer when we have reached the maximum packet
number have reached, but let the other handling to continue.
PR: bin/151023
Submitted by: tjmao at tjmao.net
MFC after: 2 weeks
* Add resize callbacks for upcoming table-based algorithms.
Kernel changes:
* s/ipfw_modify_table/ipfw_manage_table_ent/
* Simplify add_table_entry(): make table creation a separate piece of code.
Do not perform creation if not in "compat" mode.
* Add ability to perform modification of algorithm state (like table resize).
The following callbacks were added:
- prepare_mod (allocate new state, without locks)
- fill_mod (UH_WLOCK, copy old state to new one)
- modify (UH_WLOCK + WLOCK, switch state)
- flush_mod (no locks, flushes allocated data)
Given callbacks are called if table modification has been requested by add or
delete callbacks. Additional u64 tc->'flags' field was added to pass these
requests.
* Change add/del table ent format: permit adding/removing multiple entries
at once (only 1 supported at the moment).
Userland changes:
* Auto-create tables with warning
variants. This allows usable file system images (i.e. those with both a
shell and an editor) to be created with only one copy of the curses library.
Exp-run: antoine
PR: 189842
Discussed with: bapt
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
The free space value in the FSInfo block is merely unitialized when it is
0xffffffff. This fixes a bug found in NetBSD.
It must be noted that we never supported all the checks that NetBSD does
as some of them would cause failures with a freshly created FAT32
from MS-Windows.
While here, bring some space fixes.
Obtained from: NetBSD (rev. 1.22)
MFC after: 3 days
* Switch kernel to use per-cpu counters for rules.
* Keep ABI/API.
Kernel changes:
* Each rules is now exported as TLV with optional extenable
counter block (ip_fW_bcounter for base one) and
ip_fw_rule for rule&cmd data.
* Counters needs to be explicitly requested by IPFW_CFG_GET_COUNTERS flag.
* Separate counters from rules in kernel and clean up ip_fw a bit.
* Pack each rule in IPFW_TLV_RULE_ENT tlv to ease parsing.
* Introduce versioning in container TLV (may be needed in future).
* Fix ipfw_cfg_lheader broken u64 alignment.
Userland changes:
* Use set_mask from cfg header when requesting config
* Fix incorrect read accouting in ipfw_show_config()
* Use IPFW_RULE_NOOPT flag instead of playing with _pad
* Fix "ipfw -d list": do not print counters for dynamic states
* Some small fixes
This includes:
o All directories named *ia64*
o All files named *ia64*
o All ia64-specific code guarded by __ia64__
o All ia64-specific makefile logic
o Mention of ia64 in comments and documentation
This excludes:
o Everything under contrib/
o Everything under crypto/
o sys/xen/interface
o sys/sys/elf_common.h
Discussed at: BSDcan
Kernel changes:
* Change dump format for dynamic states:
each state is now stored inside ipfw_obj_dyntlv
last dynamic state is indicated by IPFW_DF_LAST flag
* Do not perform sooptcopyout() for !SOPT_GET requests.
Userland changes:
* Introduce foreach_state() function handler to ease work
with different states passed by ipfw_dump_config().
* Bump table dump format preserving old ABI.
Kernel size:
* Add IP_FW_TABLE_XFIND to handle "lookup" request from userland.
* Add ta_find_tentry() algorithm callbacks/handlers to support lookups.
* Fully switch to ipfw_obj_tentry for various table dumps:
algorithms are now required to support the latest (ipfw_obj_tentry) entry
dump format, the rest is handled by generic dump code.
IP_FW_TABLE_XLIST opcode version bumped (0 -> 1).
* Eliminate legacy ta_dump_entry algo handler:
dump_table_entry() converts data from current to legacy format.
Userland side:
* Add "lookup" table parameter.
* Change the way table type is guessed: call table_get_info() first,
and check value for IPv4/IPv6 type IFF table does not exist.
* Fix table_get_list(): do more tries if supplied buffer is not enough.
* Sparate table_show_entry() from table_show_list().
partitions of types other than "freebsd-boot" (in particular, "efi").
This allows the removal of some nasty hacks for supporting PowerPC systems,
in particular aliasing freebsd-boot to apple-boot on APM and an IBM-specific
code on MBR.
This changes the installer to use the correct names, which also breaks a
degeneracy in the meaning of "freebsd-boot" that allows the addition
of support for some newer IBM systems that can boot from GPT in addition to
MBR. Since I have no idea how to detect which those systems are, leave
the default on IBM PPC systems as MBR for now.
camcontrol(8) now supports a new 'persist' subcommand that allows users to
issue SCSI PERSISTENT RESERVE IN / OUT commands.
sbin/camcontrol/Makefile:
Add persist.c.
sbin/camcontrol/persist.c:
New persistent reservation support for camcontrol(8).
We have support for all known operation modes for PERSISTENT RESERVE
IN and PERSISTENT RESERVE OUT.
exceptions noted above.
sbin/camcontrol/camcontrol.8:
Document the new 'persist' subcommand.
In the section on the Transport ID (-I) option, explain what
Transport IDs for each protocol should look like. At some point
some of this information could probably get moved off in a
separate man page, either on Transport IDs alone or a man page
documenting the Transport ID parsing code.
Add a number of examples of persistent reservation commands.
Persistent Reservations are complex enough that the average user
probably won't be able to get the commands exactly right by just
reading the man page. These examples show a few basic and
advanced examples of how to use persistent reservations.
sbin/camcontrol/camcontrol.h:
Move the definition for camcontrol_optret here, so we can use it
for the persistent reservation code.
Add a definition for the new scsipersist() function.
sbin/camcontrol/camcontrol.c:
Add 'persist' to the list of subcommands.
Document 'persist' in the help text.
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.c:
Add the scsi_persistent_reserve_in() and
scsi_persistent_reserve_out() CCB building functions.
Add a new function, scsi_transportid_sbuf(). This takes a
SCSI Transport ID (documented in SPC-4), and prints it to
an sbuf(9). There are some transports (like ATA, USB, and
SSA) for which there is no transport defined. We need to
come up with a reasonable thing to do if we're presented
with a Transport ID that claims to be for one of those
protocols.
Add new routines scsi_get_nv() and scsi_nv_to_str().
These functions do a table lookup to go between a string and an
integer. There are lots of table lookups needed in the
persistent reservation code in camcontrol(8).
Add a new function, scsi_parse_transportid(), along with leaf node
functions to parse:
FC, 1394 and SAS (scsi_parse_transportid_64bit())
iSCSI (scsi_parse_transportid_iscsi())
SPI (scsi_parse_transportid_spi())
RDMA (scsi_parse_transportid_rdma())
PCIe (scsi_parse_transportid_sop())
Transport IDs. Given a string with the general form proto,id these
functions create a SCSI Transport ID structure.
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h:
Update the various persistent reservation data structures to
SPC4r36l, but also rename some fields that were previously
obsolete with the proper names from older SCSI specs. This
allows using older, obsolete persistent reservation types when
desired.
Add function prototypes for the new persistent reservation CCB
building functions.
Add a data strucure for the READ FULL STATUS service action
of the PERSISTENT RESERVE IN command.
Add Transport ID structures for all protocols described in SPC-4.
Add a new series of SCSI_PROTO_XXX definitions, and
redefine other defines in terms of these new definitions.
Add a prototype for scsi_transportid_sbuf().
Change a couple of "obsolete" persistent reservation data
structure fields into something more meaningful, based on
what the field was called when it was defined in the spec.
(e.g. SPC, SPC-2, etc.)
Create a new define, SPRI_MAX_LEN, for the maximum allocation
length allowed for the PERSISTENT RESERVE IN command.
Add data structures and enumerations for the new name/value
translation functions.
Add data structures for SCSI over PCIe Routing IDs.
Bring the PERSISTENT RESERVE OUT Register and Move parameter list
structure (struct scsi_per_res_out_parms) up to date with SPC-4.
Add a data structure for the transport IDs that can optionally be
appended to the basic PERSISTENT RESERVE OUT parameter list.
Move SCSI protocol macro definitions out of the VPD page 0x83
definition and combine them with the more up to date protocol
definitions higher in the file.
Add function prototypes for scsi_nv_to_str(), scsi_get_nv(),
scsi_parse_transportid_64bit(), scsi_parse_transportid_spi(),
scsi_parse_transportid_rdma(), scsi_parse_transportid_iscsi(),
scsi_parse_transportid_sop(), and scsi_parse_transportid().
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
MFC after: 1 week
Kernel changes:
* Introduce ipfw_obj_tentry table entry structure to force u64 alignment.
* Support "update-on-existing-key" "add" bahavior (TEI_FLAGS_UPDATED).
* Use "subtype" field to distingush between IPv4 and IPv6 table records
instead of previous hack.
* Add value type (vtype) field for kernel tables. Current types are
number,ip and dscp
* Fix sets mask retrieval for old binaries
* Fix crash while using interface tables
Userland changes:
* Switch ipfw_table_handler() to use named-only tables.
* Add "table NAME create [type {cidr|iface|u32} [valtype {number|ip|dscp}] ..."
* Switch ipfw_table_handler to match_token()-based parser.
* Switch ipfw_sets_handler to use new ipfw_get_config() for mask retrieval.
* Allow ipfw set X table ... syntax to permit using per-set table namespaces.
Kernel changes:
* change base TLV header to be u64 (so size can be u32).
* Introduce ipfw_obj_ctlv generc container TLV.
* Add IP_FW_XGET opcode which is now used for atomic configuration
retrieval. One can specify needed configuration pieces to retrieve
via flags field. Currently supported are
IPFW_CFG_GET_STATIC (static rules) and
IPFW_CFG_GET_STATES (dynamic states).
Other configuration pieces (tables, pipes, etc..) support is planned.
Userland changes:
* Switch ipfw(8) to use new IP_FW_XGET for rule listing.
* Split rule listing code get and show pieces.
* Make several steps forward towards libipfw:
permit printing states and rules(paritally) to supplied buffer.
do not die on malloc/kernel failure inside given printing functions.
stop assuming cmdline_opts is global symbol.
* Use one u16 from op3 header to implement opcode versioning.
* IP_FW_TABLE_XLIST has now 2 handlers, for ver.0 (old) and ver.1 (current).
* Every getsockopt request is now handled in ip_fw_table.c
* Rename new opcodes:
IP_FW_OBJ_DEL -> IP_FW_TABLE_XDESTROY
IP_FW_OBJ_LISTSIZE -> IP_FW_TABLES_XGETSIZE
IP_FW_OBJ_LIST -> IP_FW_TABLES_XLIST
IP_FW_OBJ_INFO -> IP_FW_TABLE_XINFO
IP_FW_OBJ_INFO -> IP_FW_TABLE_XFLUSH
* Add some docs about using given opcodes.
* Group some legacy opcode/handlers.
Kernel changes:
* Add IP_FW_OBJ_FLUSH opcode (flush table based on its name/set)
* Add IP_FW_OBJ_DUMP opcode (dumps table data based on its names/set)
* Add IP_FW_OBJ_LISTSIZE / IP_FW_OBJ_LIST opcodes (get list of kernel tables)
Userland changes:
* move tables code to separate tables.c file
* get rid of tables_max
* switch "all"/list handling to new opcodes
Kernel-side changelog:
* Split general tables code and algorithm-specific table data.
Current algorithms (IPv4/IPv6 radix and interface tables radix) moved to
new ip_fw_table_algo.c file.
Tables code now supports any algorithm implementing the following callbacks:
+struct table_algo {
+ char name[64];
+ int idx;
+ ta_init *init;
+ ta_destroy *destroy;
+ table_lookup_t *lookup;
+ ta_prepare_add *prepare_add;
+ ta_prepare_del *prepare_del;
+ ta_add *add;
+ ta_del *del;
+ ta_flush_entry *flush_entry;
+ ta_foreach *foreach;
+ ta_dump_entry *dump_entry;
+ ta_dump_xentry *dump_xentry;
+};
* Change ->state, ->xstate, ->tabletype fields of ip_fw_chain to
->tablestate pointer (array of 32 bytes structures necessary for
runtime lookups (can be probably shrinked to 16 bytes later):
+struct table_info {
+ table_lookup_t *lookup; /* Lookup function */
+ void *state; /* Lookup radix/other structure */
+ void *xstate; /* eXtended state */
+ u_long data; /* Hints for given func */
+};
* Add count method for namedobj instance to ease size calculations
* Bump ip_fw3 buffer in ipfw_clt 128->256 bytes.
* Improve bitmask resizing on tables_max change.
* Remove table numbers checking from most places.
* Fix wrong nesting in ipfw_rewrite_table_uidx().
* Add IP_FW_OBJ_LIST opcode (list all objects of given type, currently
implemented for IPFW_OBJTYPE_TABLE).
* Add IP_FW_OBJ_LISTSIZE (get buffer size to hold IP_FW_OBJ_LIST data,
currenly implemented for IPFW_OBJTYPE_TABLE).
* Add IP_FW_OBJ_INFO (requests info for one object of given type).
Some name changes:
s/ipfw_xtable_tlv/ipfw_obj_tlv/ (no table specifics)
s/ipfw_xtable_ntlv/ipfw_obj_ntlv/ (no table specifics)
Userland changes:
* Add do_set3() cmd to ipfw2 to ease dealing with op3-embeded opcodes.
* Add/improve support for destroy/info cmds.
* Add namedobject set-aware api capable of searching/allocation objects by their name/idx.
* Switch tables code to use string ids for configuration tasks.
* Change locking model: most configuration changes are protected with UH lock, runtime-visible are protected with both locks.
* Reduce number of arguments passed to ipfw_table_add/del by using separate structure.
* Add internal V_fw_tables_sets tunable (set to 0) to prepare for set-aware tables (requires opcodes/client support)
* Implement typed table referencing (and tables are implicitly allocated with all state like radix ptrs on reference)
* Add "destroy" ipfw(8) using new IP_FW_DELOBJ opcode
Namedobj more detailed:
* Blackbox api providing methods to add/del/search/enumerate objects
* Statically-sized hashes for names/indexes
* Per-set bitmask to indicate free indexes
* Separate methods for index alloc/delete/resize
Basically, there should not be any user-visible changes except the following:
* reducing table_max is not supported
* flush & add change table type won't work if table is referenced
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
This partitioning scheme is used in DragonFlyBSD. It is similar to
BSD disklabel, but has the following improvements:
* metadata has own dedicated place and isn't accessible through partitions;
* all offsets are 64-bit;
* supports 16 partitions by default (has reserved place for more);
* has reserved place for backup label (but not yet implemented);
* has UUIDs for partitions and partition types;
No objections from: geom
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
This is currently an opt-in build flag. Once ASLR support is ready and stable
it should changed to opt-out and be enabled by default along with ASLR.
Each application Makefile uses opt-out to ensure that ASLR will be enabled by
default in new directories when the system is compiled with PIE/ASLR. [2]
Mark known build failures as NO_PIE for now.
The only known runtime failure was rtld.
[1] http://www.bsdcan.org/2014/schedule/events/452.en.html
Submitted by: Shawn Webb <lattera@gmail.com>
Discussed between: des@ and Shawn Webb [2]
Note that the -c argument's parameter is compared against the digest of
the file, not the file. [1]
Update the "current time" parentheticals for notes about reversing
and colliding the hash functions. [1]
Some general mdoc updates.
PR: docs/188043 [1]
Submitted by: Jamie Landeg-Jones [1]
Approved by: hrs (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
Add `flags` u16 field to the hole in ipfw_table_xentry structure.
Kernel has been guessing address family for supplied record based
on xent length size.
Userland, however, has been getting fixed-size ipfw_table_xentry structures
guessing address family by checking address by IN6_IS_ADDR_V4COMPAT().
Fix this behavior by providing specific IPFW_TCF_INET flag for IPv4 records.
PR: bin/189471
Submitted by: Dennis Yusupoff <dyr@smartspb.net>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Since radix has been ignoring sa_family in passed sockaddrs,
no one ever has bothered filling valid sa_family in netmasks.
Additionally, radix adjusts sa_len field in every netmask not to
compare zero bytes at all.
This leads us to rt_mask with sa_family of AF_UNSPEC (-1) and
arbitrary sa_len field (0 for default route, for example).
However, rtsock have been passing that rt_mask intact for ages,
requiring all rtsock consumers to make ther own local hacks.
We even have unfixed on in base:
do `route -n monitor` in one window and issue `route -n get addr`
for some directly-connected address. You will probably see the following:
got message of size 304 on Thu May 8 15:06:06 2014
RTM_GET: Report Metrics: len 304, pid: 30493, seq 1, errno 0, flags:<UP,DONE,PINNED>
locks: inits:
sockaddrs: <DST,GATEWAY,NETMASK,IFP,IFA>
10.0.0.0 link#1 (255) ffff ffff ff em0:8.0.27.c5.29.d4 10.0.0.92
_________________^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
after the change:
got message of size 312 on Thu May 8 15:44:07 2014
RTM_GET: Report Metrics: len 312, pid: 2895, seq 1, errno 0, flags:<UP,DONE,PINNED>
locks: inits:
sockaddrs: <DST,GATEWAY,NETMASK,IFP,IFA>
10.0.0.0 link#1 255.255.255.0 em0:8.0.27.c5.29.d4 10.0.0.92
_________________^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 1 month
- Fix typos preventing -f to actually work with the create command.
- Initialize flags to zero rather than using stack garbage when handling
the grow command.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Bally Wulff Games & Entertainment GmbH
melifaro, we agreed that ifconfig's behavior was not a bug. The main
motivation for bin/187551 was to partially resolve kern/187549, but we
resolved kern/187549 in a different way instead.
ObsoleteFiles.inc
etc/mtree/BSD.tests.dist
sbin/ifconfig/tests/fibs_test.sh
sbin/ifconfig/tests/Makefile
sbin/ifconfig/Makefile
Remove /usr/tests/sbin/ifconfig
PR: bin/187551
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
FAT12 1..4084
FAT16 4085..65524
FAT32 65525..
This is required for interoperability with other FAT implementations,
and in particular UEFI.
Obtained from: NetBSD
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
After r263152 this leaves unused variables if route(8) is compiled
without INET support.
Switch the remaining variable accesses to flags and remove now obsolete
variables.
Reviewed by: glebius
MFC after: 1 week
and finish the job. ncurses is now the only Makefile in the tree that
uses it since it wasn't a simple mechanical change, and will be
addressed in a future commit.
all the SUBDIR entries in parallel, instead of serially. Apply this
option to a selected number of Makefiles, which can greatly speed up the
build on multi-core machines, when using make -j.
This can be extended to more Makefiles later on, whenever they are
verified to work correctly with parallel building.
I tested this on a 24-core machine, with make -j48 buildworld (N = 6):
before stddev after stddev
======= ====== ======= ======
real time 1741.1 16.5 959.8 2.7
user time 12468.7 16.4 14393.0 16.8
sys time 1825.0 54.8 2110.6 22.8
(user+sys)/real 8.2 17.1
E.g. the build was approximately 45% faster in real time. On machines
with less cores, or with lower -j settings, the speedup will not be as
impressive. But at least you can now almost max out a machine with
buildworld!
Submitted by: jilles
MFC after: 2 weeks
from clang about possible keywords being treated as identifiers for the
remainder of the translation unit (a.k.a. -Wkeyword-compat), when using
libstdc++ in combination with -Wsystem-headers. This will not only fix
devd, but any C++ program using libstdc++.
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC-With: r263694
and -Wsystem-headers enabled (which is the default for any non-zero
WARNS level, crazily enough!). This is primarily meant to be MFC'd as
soon as possible.
MFC after: 3 days
AppleTalk was a network transport protocol for Apple Macintosh devices
in 80s and then 90s. Starting with Mac OS X in 2000 the AppleTalk was
a legacy protocol and primary networking protocol is TCP/IP. The last
Mac OS X release to support AppleTalk happened in 2009. The same year
routing equipment vendors (namely Cisco) end their support.
Thus, AppleTalk won't be supported in FreeBSD 11.0-RELEASE.