when -fstack-protector-strong is not available, like it was implicitly before
r288669
As noted by antoine@, devel/gcc (which is 4.8.5) lacks -fstack-protector-strong
support, whereas 4.8.4i (devel/gcc48) has the support.
Until a version is available which has -fstack-protector-strong support, be
conservative and only enable support with 4.9+.
Reviewed by: pfg
X-MFC with: r288669, r289465
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3924
This includes clang 3.5.0+, gcc 4.2.1, gcc 4.8.4+
This allows me to do subdirectory makes again after setting
MAKESYSPATH on 10.2-RELEASE as it comes with clang 3.4.1.
As a sidenote: this isn't technically correct for all vintages
of gcc 4.2.1, but will be correct when gcc is rebuilt/reinstalled
after r286074, so this version check should be good enough.
X-MFC with: r288669
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3924
Reviewed by: emaste, pfg
Bmake has a documented feature of '-N' to skip executing commands which is
specifically intended for debugging top-level builds and not recursing into
sub-directories. This matches the older 'make -n' behavior we added which made
'-n -n' the recursing target and '-n' a non-recursing target.
Removing the '-n -n' feature allows the build to work as documented in
the bmake manpage with '-n' and '-N'. The older '-n -n' feature was also
not documented anywhere that I could see.
Note that the ${_+_} var is still needed as currently bmake incorrectly
executes '+' commands when '-N' is specified.
The '-n' and '-n -n' features were broken for several reasons prior to this.
r251748 made '_+_' never expand with '-n -n' which resulted in many
sub-directories not being visited until fixed 2 years later in r288391, and
many targets were given .MAKE over the past few years which resulted in
non-sub-make commands, such as rm and ln and mtree, to be executed.
This should also allow removing some indirection hacks in bsd.subdir.mk and
other cases of .USE that have a .MAKE by using '+'.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Discussed on: arch@ (mostly silence)
bug of installing 'realtek' and 'intel_iwn' as files rather then as
a 'LICENSE' file in their directories.
Also add obsolete entries for the older names and names that existed in head
for a period of time.
Suggested by: jmg
X-MFC-With: r289391
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Before this, if a file was installed to DESTDIR/some/dir and that directory
was missing due to not having ran 'make distrib-dirs' yet, the file would
be installed as 'some/dir'. For something like bsd.incs.mk with INCLUDEDIR
being a sub-directory of /usr/include, this could result in all of the headers
being installed to a file rather than getting a directory of them.
Now it will error that the file/directory does not exist rather than hide
the issue.
Another option being discussed is to implement GNU's install -D flag which
would auto create any missing directories.
This is a mitigation of the problem. The proper order to the build is to
run 'make distrib-dirs' first, but that can be forgotten if building from
a sub-directory after updating the source code to the latest revision.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The 'config' target isn't really needed right now so just remove it to avoid
any clashes with config(8) building. It's also likely misspelled and should
be 'configs' if we decide to add it back. This was just a convenience
target recently added.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
On each resolver query, use stat(2) to see if the modification time
of /etc/resolv.conf has changed. If so, reload the file and reinitialize
the resolver library. However, only call stat(2) if at least two seconds
have passed since the last call to stat(2), since calling it on every
query could kill performance.
This new behavior is enabled by default. Add a "reload-period" option
to disable it or change the period of the test.
Document this behavior and option in resolv.conf(5).
Polish the man page just enough to appease igor.
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2015-October/017342.html
Reviewed by: kp, wblock
Discussed with: jilles, imp, alfred
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3867
For example in lib/atf/libatf-c++/tests/detail it is now possible to
run 'make application_test'. This was intended to worked for PROGS,
but lacked support for PROGS_CXX.
Also fix redefining the main PROG target to recurse. This isn't needed
since the main process is setting PROG/PROG_CXX to handle it directly
via bsd.prog.mk.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Some example where this is a problem:
lib/atf/libatf-c++/tests/Makefile:SRCS.${_T}= ${_T}.cpp test_helpers.cpp
lib/atf/libatf-c++/tests/detail/Makefile:SRCS.${_T}= ${_T}.cpp test_helpers.cpp
lib/atf/libatf-c/tests/Makefile:SRCS.${_T}= ${_T}.c test_helpers.c
lib/atf/libatf-c/tests/detail/Makefile:SRCS.${_T}= ${_T}.c test_helpers.c
lib/libpam/libpam/tests/Makefile:SRCS.${test} = ${test}.c ${COMMONSRC}
A similar change may be needed for FILES, SCRIPTS, or INCS, but for now stay
with just SRCS.
Reported by: rodrigc
MFC after: 3 weeks
X-MFC-With: r288218
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
more typical ALL_SUBDIR_TARGETS entries and target hooks in bsd.incs.mk,
bsd.files.mk and bsd.confs.mk.
This allows the targets to be NOPs if unneeded and still work with the
shortcut 'make includes' to build and then install in a parallel-safe manner.
Sort and re-indent the ALL_SUBDIR_TARGETS with the new entries.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Also improve documentation.
The SUBDIR_TARGETS variable should really be named LOCAL_SUBDIR_TARGETS, but
renaming it may be a surprise for downstream vendors who use this variable.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Before this, the target was unknown. Now it will recurse on subdirs and run
the target in the current directory. It is required to recurse as there
may be subdirs that have objs in their directory or in the object directory,
so it is not enough to just delete the objdir of the subdir parent.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
netbsd-tests.test.mk (r289151)
- Eliminate explicit OBJTOP/SRCTOP setting
- Convert all ad hoc NetBSD test integration over to netbsd-tests.test.mk
- Remove unnecessary TESTSDIR setting
- Use SRCTOP where possible for clarity
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Divison
When run from bin/ls/tests, for example, the value of TESTSDIR would be
${TESTSBASE}/${RELDIR:H} -> /usr/tests/bin/ls/tests/.. ->
/usr/tests/bin/ls
Document the new behavior in bsd.README.
While here, also document TESTSBASE
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: D1022
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- projects/bmake and subsequent commits provide SRCTOP; there's no need to
manually specify it now.
- Compute a sane default for OBJTOP based on .OBJDIR and RELDIR. Manually
specifying this is probably no longer needed, but it persists just in case
(supporting commits will need to be made to move it out of some of the meta
.mk files).
- Compute a sane default for TESTSRC. Error out if the path cannot be found.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This allows to set delete method via tunable, before device capabilities
are known. Also allow ZERO method for devices not reporting LBP, if user
explicitly requests it -- it may be useful if storage supports compression
and WRITE SAME, but does not support UNMAP.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Simplifying maintainance and options (only one place to deal with MK_DMAGENT)
This also makes packaging base less intrusive by getting a single point where
to add tags.
locales.
When using a Chinese locale, such as zh_TW.UTF-8 or zh_CN.UTF-8,
nl_langinfo(ABMON_*) only returned numbers. For instance,
nl_langinfo(ABMON_1) returns 1, nl_langinfo(ABMON_2) returns 2, and
so on.
This causes problems in applications that put the short month name
and the day of the month together. For example, 'Apr 14' in English
becomes '414日' in Chinese on the top bar of GNOME Shell.
This problem may be resolved by appending '月' to all short month
names and replacing %b with %_m in date_fmt. ja_JP.UTF-8 already
does this, and this matches the en_US.ISO8859-1 behavior, which
returns 'Oct'. The GNU C Library also returns values with '月'
appended.
PR: 199441
Submitted by: Ting-Wei Lan <lantw44 gmail com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
stage_* targets.
In non-jobs mode we can achieve the same result by simply introducing
the targets in the correct order.
Thus in bsd*.mk we simply add targets to STAGE_TARGETS which we
realize in meta.stage.mk
Reviewed by: bdrewery
This fix is spiritually similar to r287442 and was discovered thanks to
the KASSERT added in that revision.
NT_PROCSTAT_VMMAP output length, when packing kinfo structs, is tied to
the length of filenames corresponding to vnodes in the process' vm map
via vn_fullpath. As vnodes may move during coredump, this is racy.
We do not remove the race, only prevent it from causing coredump
corruption.
- Add a sysctl, kern.coredump_pack_vmmapinfo, to allow users to disable
kinfo packing for PROCSTAT_VMMAP notes. This avoids VMMAP corruption
and truncation, even if names change, at the cost of up to PATH_MAX
bytes per mapped object. The new sysctl is documented in core.5.
- Fix note_procstat_vmmap to self-limit in the second pass. This
addresses corruption, at the cost of sometimes producing a truncated
result.
- Fix PROCSTAT_VMMAP consumers libutil (and libprocstat, via copy-paste)
to grok the new zero padding.
Reported by: pho (https://people.freebsd.org/~pho/stress/log/datamove4-2.txt)
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3824
only when _WITHOUT_SRCCONF wasn't defined. Restore this
behavior because bsd.ports.mk depends on this in subtle
ways. The compat include of bsd.compiler.mk should
be removed in 12 anyway.
PR: 203540
The general stack protector is known to be weak and has pretty small
coverage. While setting stack-protector-all would give better protection
it would come with a performance cost: for this reason Google's Chrome OS
team developed a new stack-protector-strong variant.
In addition to the protections offered by -fstack-protector, the new option
will guard any function that declares any type or length of local array,
even those in structs or unions. It will also protect functions that use a
local variable's address in a function argument or on the right-hand side
of an assignment.
The option was introduced in GCC-4.9, but support for it has been
back-ported to our base GCC (r286074) and is also available in clang.
The change was tested with dbench and doesn't introduce performance
regressions. An exp-run over the ports tree revealed no failures when
using the stricter stack-protector-all. Thanks to all testers involved.
Reference:
https://outflux.net/blog/archives/2014/01/27/fstack-protector-strong/
Tested by: pho, portmgr (antoine)
Discussed with: secteam (delphij)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3463
PR: 203394 (exp-run)
Relnotes: yes
MFC: no (not supported in older clang)
event loop and should sleep only when waiting for events (eg. via kevent(2)).
When a program is going to sleep in the kernel, the script will show its name,
PID, kernel stack trace and userland stack trace. Sleeping in kevent(2) is
ignored as it is expected to be valid.
Sample output:
# ./blocking lynxd
lynxd(15042) is blocking...
kernel`_cv_wait_sig+0x124
kernel`seltdwait+0xae
kernel`sys_poll+0x3a3
kernel`amd64_syscall+0x343
kernel`0xffffffff806c79ab
lynxd`poll+0xa
lynxd`pqSocketCheck+0xa2
lynxd`pqWaitTimed+0x29
lynxd`connectDBComplete+0xd7
lynxd`PQsetdbLogin+0x2ec
lynxd`db_connect+0x3c
lynxd`main+0x198
lynxd`_start+0x16f
0x2
lynxd(1925) is blocking...
kernel`_cv_wait+0x125
zfs.ko`zio_wait+0x5b
zfs.ko`dmu_buf_hold_array_by_dnode+0x1dc
zfs.ko`dmu_read+0xcb
zfs.ko`zfs_freebsd_getpages+0x37b
kernel`VOP_GETPAGES_APV+0xa7
kernel`vnode_pager_getpages+0x9a
kernel`vm_fault_hold+0x885
kernel`vm_fault+0x77
kernel`trap_pfault+0x211
kernel`trap+0x506
kernel`0xffffffff806c76c2
lynxd`EVP_add_cipher+0x13
lynxd`SSL_library_init+0x11
lynxd`main+0x94
lynxd`_start+0x16f
0x2
lynxd(1925) is blocking...
kernel`_cv_wait+0x125
zfs.ko`zio_wait+0x5b
zfs.ko`dbuf_read+0x791
zfs.ko`dbuf_findbp+0x12f
zfs.ko`dbuf_hold_impl+0xa2
zfs.ko`dbuf_hold+0x1b
zfs.ko`dmu_buf_hold_array_by_dnode+0x153
zfs.ko`dmu_read_uio+0x66
zfs.ko`zfs_freebsd_read+0x3a3
kernel`VOP_READ_APV+0xa1
kernel`vn_read+0x13a
kernel`vn_io_fault+0x10b
kernel`dofileread+0x95
kernel`kern_readv+0x68
kernel`sys_read+0x63
kernel`amd64_syscall+0x343
kernel`0xffffffff806c79ab
lynxd`_read+0xa
lynxd`__srefill+0x122
lynxd`fgets+0x78
lynxd`file_gets+0x1d
lynxd`BIO_gets+0x64
lynxd`PEM_read_bio+0xf5
lynxd`PEM_X509_INFO_read_bio+0x90
lynxd`X509_load_cert_crl_file+0x47
lynxd`by_file_ctrl+0x2e
lynxd`X509_STORE_load_locations+0x4a
lynxd`sslctx_init+0x255
lynxd`main+0x215
lynxd`_start+0x16f
0x2
Requested by: gnn
Obtained from: Wheel Systems http://wheelsystems.com
This fixes staging errors for non-parallel builds that have LINKS.
Creating hardlinks must always happen after the actual files are installed.
The staging code was protected by an .ORDER statement that only affected
parallel -j builds but not non-parallel builds. Fix this by making the
real stage_links.SET (stage_links.links, stage_links.mlinks, etc) targets
depend on the main targets for all of the other possible staging needs. For
example, stage_links.links will depend on stage_as and stage_files, which have
their own dependencies to stage_as.prog or stage_files.prog or stage_files.SET,
which is enough to satistfy the ordering.
Also remove the requirement that symlinks be created last, as they can
safely be made without the source being present unlike hardlinks. This also
fixes symlinks to come before hardlinks as it is possible, in theory, to
hardlink a symlink. This is not actually supported here though.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This is converting the path usr/share/tmac.*stage to something else, but
nothing ever installs or reads from such a path. They might look in
stage.*usr/share/tmac, but that's not what this is matching. Additionally
the .dirdeps match all of the tmac files back to gnu/usr.bin/groff/tmac
fine.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
When bmake was initially imported at r241298 shell commands were no longer
ran with 'set -e' as they were before. This was fixed in r254980 so they
again always use 'set -e'.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This is a NOP as r254419 enabled this by default in bmake. Add it here though
to ensure it is known that we are using this as a default and in case a
bmake import removes the default we have.
This tells bmake to always pass job tokens into sub-commands. Otherwise
it would only do so if the target being built depended on the special
.MAKE target (which causes _all_ commands to be executed with -n as well)
or if the command matches '${MAKE}/${.MAKE}/$(MAKE)/$(.MAKE)/make' (before
expansion, so ${LIB32WMAKE} would not qualify). Using '+' on a command
(which runs the command with -n) would not pass the job token even though it
is a documented way to achieve the .MAKE effect on a command.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This fixes atf-c.h not properly being installed to /usr/include/ (in
the stagedir) via its override of 'INCSDIR_atf-c.h= ${INCLUDEDIR}'.
This fixes building things that depend on atf.
Staging seems to ignore OWN/GRP/MODE settings and needs further exploration.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
bsd.obj.mk handles the needs fine. When an objdir exists it will
just rm -Rf the objdir. When it does not exist though it will
call 'clean' and 'cleandepend', which properly recurse in bsd.progs.mk.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Refer to the usb_quirk(4) manual page for more details on how to use
this new feature.
Submitted by: Maxime Soule <btik-fbsd@scoubidou.com>
PR: 203249
MFC after: 2 weeks
This fixes the following errors:
make: don't know how to make bsd.README. Stop
make: don't know how to make auto.obj.mk. Stop
This is easily seen in sys/dev/*.
The new behavior is now the expected output:
make: no target to make.
This would happen as MAKESYSPATH (.../share/mk) is auto added to the -I list.
Any directory where make is ran in the src tree that has no local Makefile
would then try executing the target in share/mk/Makefile, which by default
was to build the first entry in FILES. Of course, because bsd.README and
auto.obj.mk are not in the current directory the error is shown.
This check only works for bmake, but I will still MFC it with an extra
'!defined(.PARSEDIR) ||' guard for stable/10.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This avoids needing a large boot partition / file system in order to
accommodate multiple kernels, and provides consistency with userland
debug. This also simplifies the process of moving kernel debug files
to a separate package and installing them on demand.
In addition, change kernel debug file extension to .debug, to match
userland debug files.
When using the supported kernel installation method the
/usr/lib/debug/boot/kernel directory will be renamed (to kernel.old)
as is done with /boot/kernel.
Developers wishing to maintain the historical behavior of installing
debug files in /boot/kernel/ can set KERN_DEBUGDIR="" in src.conf(5).
Reviewed by: bdrewery, brooks, imp, markj
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1006
This mostly fixes an interaction with bsd.test.mk with PROGS and SCRIPTS.
This was most notable with 'make clean' and 'make install', which r281055
and r272055 attempted to address but were inadequate.
It also addresses similar issues in bsd.progs.mk when not using bsd.test.mk.
This also fixes cases of NOT running commands in the parent when using
bsd.progs.mk:
- 'make clean' was not run for the main process for Makefiles which had both
FILES and SUBDIR but no PROGS or SCRIPTS. This usually was just a
leftover Kyuafile.auto. One such example is usr.bin/bmake/tests/sysmk/t1/2.
- 'make obj' was not running in the current directory with bsd.test.mk due
to early inclusion of bsd.subdir.mk. This was not really a problem due to
the SUBDIRS using 'mkdir -p' for their objdirs.
There were subtle bugs causing this wrong behavior:
1. bsd.progs.mk needs to set SCRIPTS to empty when recursing to avoid
the sub-makes from installing, cleaning or building the SCRIPTS;
only the parent make should be doing this. r281055 effectively did
the same but wasn't enough.
2. CLEANFILES may contain (especially from *.test.mk) files which only
the parent should clean, such as from FILES and SCRIPTS. To resolve
sub-makes also cleaning these, reset CLEANFILES and CLEANDIRS in the
children before including bsd.prog.mk. A tempting alternative would be
to only handle CLEANFILES in the parent but then the child bsd.prog.mk
CLEANFILES of per-PROGS wouldn't be setup.
3. bsd.subdir.mk was included too soon in bsd.test.mk. It needs to be
included after bsd.prog.mk as the SCRIPTS logic is short-circuitted if
'install:' is already defined (which bsd.subdir.mk does). There is
actually no need to include bsd.subdir.mk from bsd.test.mk as bsd.prog.mk
and bsd.obj.mk will do so in the proper order. The description in r257095
covers this for FILES and was fixed differently, though changing the
handling of target(install) in bsd.prog.mk may make sense after more
research.
4. bsd.progs.mk had extra logic to handle recursing SCRIPTS if PROGS was
empty, which isn't its business to be doing. SCRIPTS is handled fine
by bsd.prog.mk. This mostly reverts and reworks the fix in r259209 and
partially reverts r272055.
5. bsd.progs.mk has no need to depend 'all:' on SCRIPTS and FILES. These
are handled by bsd.prog.mk/bsd.files.mk fine. This also partially reverts
r272055.
6. bsd.progs.mk was not drop-in safe for bsd.prog.mk. Move the PROGS
check from r273186 to allow it to be used safely.
Specific tested cases:
SCRIPTS:no PROGS:no FILES:yes SUBDIR:yes
usr.bin/bmake/tests/sysmk/t1/2
SCRIPTS:yes PROGS:no FILES:yes SUBDIR:no
usr.bin/bmake/tests/sysmk/t1/2/1
SCRIPTS:yes PROGS:yes FILES:yes SUBDIR:yes
lib/libthr/tests
SCRIPTS:yes PROGS:no FILES:yes SUBDIR:no
usr.bin/yacc/tests
libexec/atf/atf-sh/tests
A full buildworld/installworld/clean comparison with mtree was also done.
The only relevant difference was the new fixed behavior of removing
Kyuafile.auto from the objdir in 'clean'.
Converting SCRIPTS to be a special case FILES group will make this less
fragile and is being explored.
One known remaining issue is 'cleandepend' removing the tags files for
every recursive call.
Note that the 'make clean' command runs for the CURDIR last, which can make
it appear to run multiple times when cleaning in tests/, but each command is
for a SUBDIR returning up the chain. This is purely bsd.subdir.mk behavior.
PR: 191055
PR: 191955
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
In the first build the TOOLSDIR does not exit yet which causes CC to default
to the sys.mk version. Once a TOOLSDIR is created during the build though,
this logic was changing CC to ${TOOLSDIR}/usr/bin/cc even though that file
did not exist. Thus CC went from 'cc' to '/usr/bin/cc' which forced a
rebuild of everything while using the same compiler. Check that TOOLSDIR is
not empty to avoid this. If there is actually a TOOLSDIR cc then it will be
used and properly rebuild.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Filemon(4) will record paths as they are seen, not as fully resolved. make(1)
will take the .MAKE.META.IGNORE_PATHS values and resolve them. This creates
a discrepancy if CCACHE_DIR is a symlink. Fix this by ensuring it is
resolved for its actual usage.
Submitted by: sjg
When inspecting this value it is more expected to have it show the
automatically-created directory value rather than CURDIR.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This limits CLEANFILES removal to just bsd.obj.mk now and removes the need
for NOPATH_FILES.
This reverts r96529 which was done due to the command line being too long
for libc. Since then all architectures now use 256k for ARG_MAX (r170102).
Regardless of that, the libc CLEANFILES is only 72k now. Others
may be larger but not likely to hit the limit. If needed, we can improve
the bsd.obj.mk clean: target to split up the list via bmake features.
This also removes some workarounds that are no longer needed.
- a.out removal
- OBJS.tmp, which has not been needed since r117080.
- *.so, which has not been needed since a .so->.So rename in r42450.
This also fixes STATICOBJS and SHLIB_LINK not being in the .NOPATH list.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
r284708 addressed this slightly but seems to have put the make(showconfig)
guard in the wrong place. Rather than guard setting the default obj directory,
guard inclusion of auto.obj.mk. This avoids creating SRCTOP/obj and
SRCTOP/release/obj when running makeman.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This avoids easily colliding multiple src trees with the same objects. Having
multiple checkouts in dir/ dir2/ dir3/ would all use obj/ without any unique
identifier inside of obj/. This pattern is more likely to be used due
to the non-META_MODE behavior working with it fine.
In environments where ../obj/ is wanted as the obj directory the value of
OBJROOT can be set to ${SRCTOP:H}/obj/ instead via src-env.conf (set by
SRC_ENV_CONF) or environment. For environment it must be single quoted or
escaped. This will be more likely for vendors who are building images or using
NFS for builds. In those cases MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX may already be utilized and
is supported.
Discussed with: imp
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The preferred way to modify the object directory root is to use OBJROOT.
However, setting OBJROOT to ${MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX}/${SRCTOP}/ effectively behaves
as expected.
The problem with this before was that setting OBJROOT to contain SRCTOP
resulted in a recursive replacement (/usr/obj/usr/obj/usr/src/). Anchoring to
the start of the path for replacing SRCCTOP in CURDIR resolves this by
avoiding replacing SRCTOP when CURDIR is within the OBJDIR.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This would lead to the 2nd build (after the first with a missing OBJROOT) to
always rebuild everything as the 'command' would have changed due to the path
changing from having // to only /.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MAKEOBJDIR is based on OBJTOP so cannot be expanded until OBJTOP is set.
Reported by: Nikolai Lifanov <lifanov@mail.lifanov.com>
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
branch.
This function is used to drain a callout via a callback instead of
blocking the caller until the drain is complete. Refer to the
callout_drain_async() manual page for a detailed description.
Limitation: If a lock is used with the callout, the callout can only
be drained asynchronously one time unless the callout_init_mtx()
function is called again. This limitation is not present in
projects/hps_head and will require more invasive changes to the
timeout code, which was not in the scope of this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3521
Reviewed by: wblock
MFC after: 1 month
to provide the TCPDEBUG functionality with pure DTrace.
Reviewed by: rwatson
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: D3530
If MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX is set, use it for default OBJROOT.
If MAKEOBJDIR is empty or not a suitable value (no '/')
set a default that works.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Coredump notes depend on being able to invoke dump routines twice; once
in a dry-run mode to get the size of the note, and another to actually
emit the note to the corefile.
When a note helper emits a different length section the second time
around than the length it requested the first time, the kernel produces
a corrupt coredump.
NT_PROCSTAT_FILES output length, when packing kinfo structs, is tied to
the length of filenames corresponding to vnodes in the process' fd table
via vn_fullpath. As vnodes may move around during dump, this is racy.
So:
- Detect badly behaved notes in putnote() and pad underfilled notes.
- Add a fail point, debug.fail_point.fill_kinfo_vnode__random_path to
exercise the NT_PROCSTAT_FILES corruption. It simply picks random
lengths to expand or truncate paths to in fo_fill_kinfo_vnode().
- Add a sysctl, kern.coredump_pack_fileinfo, to allow users to
disable kinfo packing for PROCSTAT_FILES notes. This should avoid
both FILES note corruption and truncation, even if filenames change,
at the cost of about 1 kiB in padding bloat per open fd. Document
the new sysctl in core.5.
- Fix note_procstat_files to self-limit in the 2nd pass. Since
sometimes this will result in a short write, pad up to our advertised
size. This addresses note corruption, at the risk of sometimes
truncating the last several fd info entries.
- Fix NT_PROCSTAT_FILES consumers libutil and libprocstat to grok the
zero padding.
With suggestions from: bjk, jhb, kib, wblock
Approved by: markj (mentor)
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3548
go asking what debug flags to set for GEOM to make it work. Advice
them to use gpart(8) instead.
Something similar should probably done with disklabel,
but I need to rewrite the disklabel examples first.
Reviewed by: wblock@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3315
Go ahead and defined -D_STANDALONE for all targets (only strictly
needed for some architecture, but harmless on those it isn't required
for). Also add -msoft-float to all architectures uniformly rather
that higgley piggley like it is today.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3496
only gpiobus configured via FDT is supported. Bus enumeration is
supported. Devices are created for each device found. 1-Wire
temperature controllers are supported, but other drivers could be
written. Temperatures are polled and reported via a sysctl. Errors
are reported via sysctl counters. Mis-wired bus detection is included
for more trouble shooting. See ow(4), owc(4) and ow_temp(4) for
details of what's supported and known issues.
This has been tested on Raspberry Pi-B, Pi2 and Beagle Bone Black
with up to 7 devices.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2956
Relnotes: yes
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: loos@ (with many insightful comments)
The crop/drop-ovl fragment scrub modes are not very useful and likely to confuse
users into making poor choices.
It's also a fairly large amount of complex code, so just remove the support
altogether.
Users who have 'scrub fragment crop|drop-ovl' in their pf configuration will be
implicitly converted to 'scrub fragment reassemble'.
Reviewed by: gnn, eri
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3466
To make it easier to understand how Capsicum interacts with linkat() and
renameat(), rename the rights to CAP_{LINK,RENAME}AT_{SOURCE,TARGET}.
This also addresses a shortcoming in Capsicum, where it isn't possible
to disable linking to files stored in a directory. Creating hardlinks
essentially makes it possible to access files with additional rights.
Reviewed by: rwatson, wblock
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3411
remove duplicates. We cannot sort SUBDIR because many Makefiles
have .WAIT in the list which is strongly ordering. Rather than
try to second guess when to sort and when to not sort depending
on .WAIT being in the list, just remove duplicates.
armv6. It's too ambiguous. We do use the softfp ABI for the moment on
armv6, but we allow floating point register use (and the compilers
will generate it). This is too ambiguous to use it as a decider for
which algorithms to use on the platform. Err on the side of caution
and not define it.
Submitted by: ian@
Reviewed by: andrew@
float targets. It is added for booke on powerpc and all arm with hf in
the string. Also add arm to all arm builds and armv6 to armv6 and
newer builds.
PR: 202641
I/OAT is also referred to as Crystal Beach DMA and is a Platform Storage
Extension (PSE) on some Intel server platforms.
This driver currently supports DMA descriptors only and is part of a
larger effort to upstream an interconnect between multiple systems using
the Non-Transparent Bridge (NTB) PSE.
For now, this driver is only built on AMD64 platforms. It may be ported
to work on i386 later, if that is desired. The hardware is exclusive to
x86.
Further documentation on ioat(4), including API documentation and usage,
can be found in the new manual page.
Bring in a test tool, ioatcontrol(8), in tools/tools/ioat. The test
tool is not hooked up to the build and is not intended for end users.
Submitted by: jimharris, Carl Delsey <carl.r.delsey@intel.com>
Reviewed by: jimharris (reviewed my changes)
Approved by: markj (mentor)
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Intel
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3456
Provide and document the RANDOM_ENABLE_UMA option.
Change RANDOM_FAST to RANDOM_UMA to clarify the harvesting.
Remove RANDOM_DEBUG option, replace with SDT probes. These will be of
use to folks measuring the harvesting effect when deciding whether to
use RANDOM_ENABLE_UMA.
Requested by: scottl and others.
Approved by: so (/dev/random blanket)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3197
CoDel is a parameterless queue discipline that handles variable bandwidth
and RTT.
It can be used as the single queue discipline on an interface or as a sub
discipline of existing queue disciplines such as PRIQ, CBQ, HFSC, FAIRQ.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3272
Reviewd by: rpaulo, gnn (previous version)
Obtained from: pfSense
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications (Netgate)
This driver allows read the software reset switch state and control the
status LEDs.
The GPIO pins have their direction (input/output) locked down to prevent
possible short circuits.
Note that most people get a reset button that is a hardware reset. The
software reset button is available on boards from Netgate.
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications (Netgate)
For most cases they are equivalent, but BINUTILS_BOOTSTRAP is a
BROKEN_OPTION on arm64 as the in-tree GNU binutils do not support it,
so we need a separate internal flag for ELF Tool Chain.
Reviewed by: andrew, brooks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3381
if desired.
Retire randomdev_none.c and introduce random_infra.c for resident
infrastructure. Completely stub out random(4) calls in the "without
DEV_RANDOM" case.
Add RANDOM_LOADABLE option to allow loadable Yarrow/Fortuna/LocallyWritten
algorithm. Add a skeleton "other" algorithm framework for folks
to add their own processing code. NIST, anyone?
Retire the RANDOM_DUMMY option.
Build modules for Yarrow, Fortuna and "other".
Use atomics for the live entropy rate-tracking.
Convert ints to bools for the 'seeded' logic.
Move _write() function from the algorithm-specific areas to randomdev.c
Get rid of reseed() function - it is unused.
Tidy up the opt_*.h includes.
Update documentation for random(4) modules.
Fix test program (reviewers, please leave this).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3354
Reviewed by: wblock,delphij,jmg,bjk
Approved by: so (/dev/random blanket)
- Add
nvlist_{add,get,take,move,exists,free}_{number,bool,string,nvlist,
descriptor} functions.
- Add support for (un)packing arrays.
- Add the nvl_array_next field to the nvlist structure.
If an array is added by the nvlist_{move,add}_nvlist_array function
this field will contains next element in the array.
- Add the nitems field to the nvpair and nvpair_header structure.
This field contains number of elements in the array.
- Add special flag (NV_FLAG_IN_ARRAY) which is set if nvlist is a part of
an array.
- Add special type (NV_TYPE_NVLIST_ARRAY_NEXT).This type is used only
on packing/unpacking.
- Add new API for traversing arrays (nvlist_get_array_next).
- Add the nvlist_get_pararr function which combines the
nvlist_get_array_next and nvlist_get_parent functions. If nvlist is in
the array it will return next element from array. If nvlist is last
element in array or it isn't in array it will return his
container (parent). This function should simplify traveling over nvlist.
- Add tests for new features.
- Add documentation for new functions.
- Add my copyright.
- Regenerate the sys/cddl/compat/opensolaris/sys/nvpair.h file.
PR: 191083
Reviewed by: allanjude (doc)
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
As the name indicates, these are flags to pass to nm(1). The newer
binutils have a plugin mechanism so, to build something with LLVM's
LTO, we need to pass flags to nm(1). This commit also extends
lorder(1) to pass NMFLAGS to nm(1).
operation as a write barrier. That description has never been correct,
and it has caused confusion. An acquire operation orders writes as well
as reads, and a release operation orders reads as well as writes.
Also, explicitly say that a thread doesn't see its own accesses being
reordered. The reordering of a thread's accesses is only (potentially)
visible to another thread. Thus, memory barriers need only be used to
control the ordering of accesses between threads, not within a thread.
Reviewed by: bde, kib
Discussed with: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
with higher quality registers (presumably in a module that has just been
loaded), do not undo the user's choice by switching to the new timecounter.
Document that behavior, and also the fact that there is no way to unregister
a timecounter (and thus no way to unload a module containing one).
eliminating the need to build a custom kernel to use the CTS signal.
The historical UART_PPS_ON_CTS kernel option is still honored, but now it
can be overridden at runtime using a tunable to configure all uart devices
(hw.uart.pps_mode) or specific devices (dev.uart.#.pps_mode). The per-
device config is both a tunable and a writable sysctl.
This syncs the PPS capabilities of uart(4) with the enhancements recently
recently added to ucom(4) for capturing from USB serial devices.
Relnotes: yes
multiple processors. In particular, clearly state that the operations
are always atomic when they are applied to the default memory type
that is used by the kernel (and applications).
Reviewed by: kib, jhb (an earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
There are still several bugs, but I've been using it for a while now.
Thanks to all the testers and to Adrian for his help with this
driver.
This driver isn't connected to the build yet, but it will be soon.
There's no MFC planned because the driver isn't very stable yet.
Reviewed by: adrian
Obtained from: https://github.com/rpaulo/iwm
Tested by: adrian, gjb, dumbbell (others that I forgot).
Relnotes: yes
Clang emits SSE instructions on amd64 in the common path of
pthread_mutex_unlock. If the thread does not otherwise use SSE,
this usage incurs a context-switch of the FPU/SSE state, which
reduces the performance of multiple real-world applications by a
non-trivial amount (3-5% in one application).
Instead of this change, I experimented with eagerly switching the
FPU state at context-switch time. This did not help. Most of the
cost seems to be in the read/write of memory--as kib@ stated--and
not in the #NM handling. I tested on machines with and without
XSAVEOPT.
One counter-argument to this change is that most applications already
use SIMD, and the number of applications and amount of SIMD usage
are only increasing. This is absolutely true. I agree that--in
general and in principle--this change is in the wrong direction.
However, there are applications that do not use enough SSE to offset
the extra context-switch cost. SSE does not provide a clear benefit
in the current libthr code with the current compiler, but it does
provide a clear loss in some cases. Therefore, disabling SSE in
libthr is a non-loss for most, and a gain for some.
I refrained from disabling SSE in libc--as was suggested--because
I can't make the above argument for libc. It provides a wide variety
of code; each case should be analyzed separately.
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2015-March/055193.html
Suggestions from: dim, jmg, rpaulo
Approved by: kib (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
CloudABI has two separate kernel modules: cloudabi and cloudabi64. The
first module contains all the pointer size independent code, whereas
cloudabi64 contains the actual 64-bits specific system calls and the ELF
loader.
Reviewed by: wblock
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/freebsd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3258
doubt most people will read to the end... Note the use of sys/cdefs.h
for pre-C11 compilers...
I didn't included a note about being compatibile w/ userland since a
C11 feature should be obviously usable in userland...
Suggested by: imp
We previously disabled CLANG_FULL on (little-endian) ARM because the
build failed. This is no longer the case and as of Clang 3.5 we cannot
build any part of the in-tree Clang with in-tree GCC, so it's no longer
necessary to disable CLANG_FULL.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2525
ELF Tool Chain elfcopy is nearly a drop-in replacement for GNU objcopy,
but does not currently support PE output which is needed for building
x86 UEFI bits.
Add a src.conf knob to allow installing it as objcopy and set it by
default for aarch64 only, where we don't have a native binutils.
Reviewed by: bapt
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2887
to no longer claim they are experimental.
Reviewed by: rwatson@, wblock@
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2985
The random_get() system call works similar to getentropy()/getrandom()
on OpenBSD/Linux. It fills a buffer with random data.
This change introduces a new function, read_random_uio(), that is used
to implement read() on the random devices. We can call into this
function from within the CloudABI compatibility layer.
Approved by: secteam
Reviewed by: jmg, markm, wblock
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/freebsd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3053
- Tweek man page.
- Remove all mention of RANDOM_FORTUNA. If the system owner wants YARROW or DUMMY, they ask for it, otherwise they get FORTUNA.
- Tidy up headers a bit.
- Tidy up declarations a bit.
- Make static in a couple of places where needed.
- Move Yarrow/Fortuna SYSINIT/SYSUNINIT to randomdev.c, moving us towards a single file where the algorithm context is used.
- Get rid of random_*_process_buffer() functions. They were only used in one place each, and are better subsumed into those places.
- Remove *_post_read() functions as they are stubs everywhere.
- Assert against buffer size illegalities.
- Clean up some silly code in the randomdev_read() routine.
- Make the harvesting more consistent.
- Make some requested argument name changes.
- Tidy up and clarify a few comments.
- Make some requested comment changes.
- Make some requested macro changes.
* NOTE: the thing calling itself a 'unit test' is not yet a proper
unit test, but it helps me ensure things work. It may be a proper
unit test at some time in the future, but for now please don't make
any assumptions or hold any expectations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2025
Approved by: so (/dev/random blanket)