kernel via the global cpuset_domain[] array. To export these to userland,
add a CPU_WHICH_DOMAIN level that can be used to fetch the mask for a
specific domain. Add a -d flag to cpuset(1) that can be used to fetch
the mask for a given domain.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1232
Submitted by: jeff (kernel bits)
Reviewed by: adrian, jeff
to ease any rework of how clang is built to take arm64 in to account.
Submitted by: andrew
Reviewed by: andrew, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1446
When not using the --foreground option timeout(1) is supported to signal all
command children hierarchy, timeout(1) now acquire the reaper to ensure this
really happens and no children process can escaper from timeout(1) control
Exit with EXIT_FAILURE for invalid arguments.
Fixes NetBSD-PR 43517.
Print version string to stdout instead of stderr;
it is user-requested and not an error.
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 5 days
The function savestr allows NULL return values during Plan A patching so in
case of out of memory conditions, Plan B can step in. In many cases, NULL
value is not properly handled, so use xstrdup here (it's outside Plan A/B
patching, which means that even Plan B relies on successful operations).
Clean up some whitespaces while here
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
number of clusters it occupies. It's not the number of entries in the table,
as it is for the L1 cluster table.
For small images, the two are the same. With the unit tests based on small
images, this change has therefore no effect on the unit test. For larger
images (like the FreeBSD 10.1-RELEASE image), this gives a discrepancy that
actually shows up when running "qemu-img check".
Bump the version number of mkimg.
While here, fix a white-space bug.
MFC after: 1 week
Introduce strtolinenum to properly check line numbers while parsing:
no signs, no spaces, just digits, 0 <= x <= LONG_MAX
Properly validate line ranges supplied in diff file to prevent overflows.
Also fixes an out of boundary memory access because the resulting values
are used as array indices.
PR: 195436
Obtained from: OpenBSD (CVS pch.c rev 1.45, 1,46, common.h rev 1.28)
MFC after: 1 week
Check fstat return value. Also, use off_t for file size and offsets.
Avoid iterating over end of string.
Obtained from: OpenBSD (CVS rev. 1.41, 1.43)
MFC after: 1 week
- Compatiblity with existing manpages has been improved
- Now support ".so" directive with compressed manpages (which fixes a regression
we have since we have new man(1))
Set WITH_ELFTOOLCHAIN_TOOLS in src.conf to use the elftoolchain version
of the following tools:
* addr2line
* elfcopy (strip / mcs)
* nm
* size
* strings
Reviewed by: bapt (earlier version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1224
o Introduce a notion of "not ready" mbufs in socket buffers. These
mbufs are now being populated by some I/O in background and are
referenced outside. This forces following implications:
- An mbuf which is "not ready" can't be taken out of the buffer.
- An mbuf that is behind a "not ready" in the queue neither.
- If sockbet buffer is flushed, then "not ready" mbufs shouln't be
freed.
o In struct sockbuf the sb_cc field is split into sb_ccc and sb_acc.
The sb_ccc stands for ""claimed character count", or "committed
character count". And the sb_acc is "available character count".
Consumers of socket buffer API shouldn't already access them directly,
but use sbused() and sbavail() respectively.
o Not ready mbufs are marked with M_NOTREADY, and ready but blocked ones
with M_BLOCKED.
o New field sb_fnrdy points to the first not ready mbuf, to avoid linear
search.
o New function sbready() is provided to activate certain amount of mbufs
in a socket buffer.
A special note on SCTP:
SCTP has its own sockbufs. Unfortunately, FreeBSD stack doesn't yet
allow protocol specific sockbufs. Thus, SCTP does some hacks to make
itself compatible with FreeBSD: it manages sockbufs on its own, but keeps
sb_cc updated to inform the stack of amount of data in them. The new
notion of "not ready" data isn't supported by SCTP. Instead, only a
mechanical substitute is done: s/sb_cc/sb_ccc/.
A proper solution would be to take away struct sockbuf from struct
socket and allow protocols to implement their own socket buffers, like
SCTP already does. This was discussed with rrs@.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
implementation, merge ^/head r275078 through r275117.
Note that all the extraneous mergeinfo is there because Subversion
created it. I'll hopefully be able to remove it again when merging back
to head.
man(1) now first test the manpage to run with mandoc to make sure it can be
rendered.
In case groff cannot be found (because base has been built WITHOUT_GROFF) it
recommands to install groff from the packages
usr.bin/locate:
usr.bin/locate/locate/util.c:249:29: error: taking the absolute value of unsigned type 'unsigned int' has no effect [-Werror,-Wabsolute-value]
MAXPATHLEN, abs(i) < abs(htonl(i)) ? i : htonl(i));
^
usr.bin/locate/locate/util.c:249:29: note: remove the call to 'abs' since unsigned values cannot be negative
MAXPATHLEN, abs(i) < abs(htonl(i)) ? i : htonl(i));
^~~
usr.bin/locate/locate/util.c:274:32: error: taking the absolute value of unsigned type 'unsigned int' has no effect [-Werror,-Wabsolute-value]
MAXPATHLEN, abs(word) < abs(htonl(word)) ? word :
^
usr.bin/locate/locate/util.c:274:32: note: remove the call to 'abs' since unsigned values cannot be negative
MAXPATHLEN, abs(word) < abs(htonl(word)) ? word :
^~~
The problem is that ntohl() always returns an unsigned quantity. In
this case, it's expected to be cast back to a signed integer, but to
stop complaints about abs() we just store it into an integer, and don't
call ntohl() again.
Reviewed by: ngie
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1196
mandoc(1) does not provide an equivalent of the GNU groff's soelim(1) as an
external binary. It does provide the funcitonnality but internally.
Lots if manpages in ports uses ".so" directives to include the content of
another manpage, which works properly if the manpages are not compressed.
With compressed manpages it will fail. So we need to preprocess those manpages
with soelim(1) before compressing them.
soeliminate(1) add the minimum functionnality from soelim(1) required for that
task, in order to still be able to prepare properly those manpages in case we
ship the base system only with mandoc as a manpage renderer.
soeliminate(1) accept all the arguments from soelim(1) for compatibility but
only '-I dir' is really functionnal.
Name it soeliminate and not soelim, so groff from base or ports can still call
soelim(1) for its internal use and avoid potential incompatibilities
MFC after: 1 month
- Dump an NT_X86_XSTATE note if XSAVE is in use. This note is designed
to match what Linux does in that 1) it dumps the entire XSAVE area
including the fxsave state, and 2) it stashes a copy of the current
xsave mask in the unused padding between the fxsave state and the
xstate header at the same location used by Linux.
- Teach readelf() to recognize NT_X86_XSTATE notes.
- Change PT_GET/SETXSTATE to take the entire XSAVE state instead of
only the extra portion. This avoids having to always make two
ptrace() calls to get or set the full XSAVE state.
- Add a PT_GET_XSTATE_INFO which returns the length of the current
XSTATE save area (so the size of the buffer needed for PT_GETXSTATE)
and the current XSAVE mask (%xcr0).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1193
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
proper way to ensure that the command line compile works the way we intend.
Add explicity DPADD statemens on LIBMD and LIBPTHREAD depending on which
options are used in the build.
Reviewed by: andrew
MFC after: 2 weeks
with 128K of random data and truncated to 800K can have SEEK_DATA return -1
when given an offset of 128K. On UFS, the SEEK_DATA returns 800K (the size
of the file). SEEK_HOLE on ZFS seems to behave the same as UFS.
To handle this, map -1 to the size of the file (`end') when lseek returns
this for either SEEK_HOLE or SEEK_DATA. When sparse files are not supported
by the file system both `hole' and `data' will now be equal to `end' and we
will treat the entire file as data. This way, the -1 return for SEEK_DATA
on ZFS will end up doing the right thing.
Reported by: gjb@
MFC after: 3 days
shortly thereafter via r274124 until I could get the right recipe
down w/respect to SUBDIR_DEPEND.
Thanks to: ngie, ian
Reviewed by: ian
MFC after: 21 days
X-MFC-to: stable/10 stable/9
X-MFC-with: 274116 274120 274121 274123 274144 274146
NB: Should also address `make -j' building
Remove "+" from "+=" in assignments to DPADD/LDADD while here.
NB: Also move CFLAGS for style measure.
Reviewed by: shurd
MFC after: 21 days
X-MFC-to: stable/10 stable/9
X-MFC-with: 274116 274120 274121
According to the coreutils regression testsuite for timeout(1)
It is expect to exit with a status being:
125 in case an invalid duration or signal is passed in arguments
126 in case an invalid command is passed in arguments
127 in case the command passed in arguments does not exists.
While here document this behaviour in the man page
in a separate word from the _count. This does not permit both items to
be updated atomically in a portable manner. As a result, sem_post()
must always perform a system call to safely clear _has_waiters.
This change removes the _has_waiters field and instead uses the high bit
of _count as the _has_waiters flag. A new umtx object type (_usem2) and
two new umtx operations are added (SEM_WAIT2 and SEM_WAKE2) to implement
these semantics. The older operations are still supported under the
COMPAT_FREEBSD9/10 options. The POSIX semaphore API in libc has
been updated to use the new implementation. Note that the new
implementation is not compatible with the previous implementation.
However, this only affects static binaries (which cannot be helped by
symbol versioning). Binaries using a dynamic libc will continue to work
fine. SEM_MAGIC has been bumped so that mismatched binaries will error
rather than corrupting a shared semaphore. In addition, a padding field
has been added to sem_t so that it remains the same size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D961
Reported by: adrian
Reviewed by: kib, jilles (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Norse
Older binaries are still permitted to use these flags.
PR: 193961 (exp-run in ports)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D848
Reviewed by: kib
cylinder, head and track numbers. Return ~0U for these values when
mkimg wasn't given both -T and -H (i.e. no geometry) or the cylinder
would be larger than the provided maximum.
Use mkimgs_chs() for the EBR, MBR and PC98 schemes to fill in the
appropriate fields. Make sure to use a "rounded" size so that the
partition is always a multiple of the track size. We reserved the
room for it in the metadata callback so that's a valid thing to
do.
Bump the mkimg version number.
While doing that again: have mkimg.o depend on the Makefile so that
a version change triggers a rebuild as needed.
that keeps track of a particular region of the image. In particular the
image_data() function needs to return to the caller whether a region
contains data or is all zeroes. This required reading the region from
the temporary file and comparing the bytes. When image_data() is used
multiple times for the same region, this will get painful fast.
With a chunk describing a region of the image, we now also have a way
to refer to the image provided on the command line. This means we don't
need to copy the image into a temporary file. We just keep track of the
file descriptor and offset within the source file on a per-chunk basis.
For streams (pipes, sockets, fifos, etc) we now use the temporary file
as a swap file. We read from the input file and create a chunk of type
"zeroes" for each sequence of zeroes that's a multiple of the sector
size. Otherwise, we allocte from the swap file, mmap(2) it, read into
the mmap(2)'d memory and create a chunk representing data.
For regular files, we use SEEK_HOLE and SEEK_DATA to handle sparse files
eficiently and create a chunk of type zeroes for holes and a chunk of
type data for data regions. For data regions, we still compare the bytes
we read to handle differences between a file system's block size and our
sector size.
After reading all files, image_write() is used by schemes to scribble in
the reserved sectors. Since this never amounts to much, keep this data
in memory in chunks of exactly 1 sector.
The output image is created by looking using the chunk list to find the
data and write it out to the output file. For chunks of type "zeroes"
we prefer to seek, but fall back to writing zeroes to handle pipes.
For chunks of type "file" and "memoty" we simply write.
The net effect of this is that for reasonably large images the execution
time drops from 1-2 minutes to 10-20 seconds. A typical speedup is about
5 to 8 times, depending on partition sizes, output format whether in
input files are sparse or not.
Bump version to 20141001.
"export foo=bar" form instead of "foo=bar; export foo" since the
former allows the shell to catch variable names that are not valid
shell identifiers. This will cause /bin/sh to exit with an error
(which gets mailed to the at user) and it will not run the script.
Obtained from: OpenBSD (r1.63 millert)
MFC after: 3 days
The "systat -ifstat" command was using a u_int to store byte counters.
With a 10Gbps or faster interface, this overflows within the default
5 second refresh period. Switch to using a uint64_t across the board,
which matches the size used for all counters as of r263102.
PR: 182448
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Sandvine Inc
options. Bump the version number to 20140927.
While here, use explicit fputc() calls to skip a line in the output.
This to avoid having to hunt for extra '\n' characters in the printf
format strings.
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
--version print the version of mkimg and also whether it's
64- or 32-bit.
--formats list the supported output formats separated by space.
--schemes list the supported partitioning schemes separated by
space.
Inspired by a patch from: gjb@
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
We have a different ordering for the RC block(s) and L2 tables.
This is expected to be a non-issue, because everything is found
through file offsets in the corresponding RC table and L1 table.
Files that grow organically have RC blocks and L2 tables scattered
all over the place anyway.
The reason for the difference is that mkimg needs to be able to
write to a pipe. We can't seek forward and backward to fill in
the bits in non-sequential order.
variable was assigned the image offset in bytes and not in blocks
(i.e. sectors). This had image_data() return FALSE, which meant that
we didn't assign a cluster when we needed and also meant that we
didn't write parts of the L2 table when we should have. The result
being that the actual data clusters were written at the wrong offset.
Improve support for QCOW version 2. We're having the right layout
and even know how many refcnt blocks we need. All we need to do is
populate the refcnt blocks for every cluster we write and allocate
a cluster when we need a new refcnt block. The allocation part is
tricky in that it'll interleave with the assignment of clusters to
L2 tables and data. Since version 2 is not quite done, keep it
compiled out for now.
Since the code stats and mkdirs in 2 separate steps, it is possible that
the directory will be created in the meantime by something else (e.g.
concurrent install).[1]
While here alter the code to properly report stat failure, previously it
would always claim it was mkdir which failed.
Noted by: royger [1]
MFC after: 1 week
trying to get the test name right, failed, gave up and used a sequence
number instead. When I realized it wasn't because of the number of
underscores in the name that I really started to think. I didn't have
braces around the variable names ...
Thus: test_1 is now called apm_1x1_512_qcow, which gives you all you
need to run mkimg by hand.
Dumb-ass: marcel
to the baseline. Since we don't run gzip with the -n option, the output
of gzip varies for identical result files if and when they are created
at different time. Ouch...
Rather than add -n and commit a 600K+ diff for the changes to all the .uu
files, it's less of a churn to uudecode and gunzip the baseline file and
compare that to the new result file to determine if the baseline file
needs to be updated.
This way, "atf-sh mkimg.sh rebase" can be run as many times as people like
and a subsequent "svn status" will not show unnecessary diffs.
And because of that, it's entirely disabled for now. Both versions
are similar enough that a single header definition works for both
of them. The only "diverting" side-effect is that the union of the
two is larger than the official V1 header.
What this means for our V1 support is that we can't put the L1 table
adjacent to the V1 header (i.e. at offset 0x30 in the file), unless
we revert to hackery and klugery. Let's not. Instead, we align the L1
table at the cluster boundary. This is in line with the V2 layout and
perfectly ok for V1 anyway (ok -- as far as I've seen so far).
Due to the alignment, our V1 image seems to be 1 cluster larger than
the V1 image created by qemu-img (on average).
Compression of the clusters is not supported at this time.
MFC after: 2 months
-T (track size) or -H (number of heads) is given:
o scheme_metadata() always rounded to the block size. This is not
always valid (e.g. vtoc8 that must have partitions start at cylinder
boundaries).
o The bsd and vtoc8 schemes "resized" the image to make it match the
geometry, but since the geometry is an approximation and the size
of the image computed from cylinders * heads * sectors is always
smaller than the original image size, the partition information ran
out of bounds.
The fix is to have scheme_metadata() simply pass it's arguments to the
per-scheme metadata callback, so that schemes not only know where the
metadata is to go, but also what the current block address is. It's now
up to the per-scheme callback to reserve room for metadata and to make
sure alignment and rounding is applied.
The BSD scheme now has the most elaborate alignment and rounding. Just
to make the point: partitions are aligned on block boundaries, but the
image is rounded to the next cyclinder boundary.
vtoc8 now properly has all partitions aligned (and rounded) to the
cyclinder boundary.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
MFC after: 3 days
Makefiles should not assume that source files can be overwritten. This is the
common case for Perforce source trees.
This is a followup commit to r211243 in the same vein.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
MFSpectraBSD: r1036319 on 2014/01/29, r1046711 on 2014/03/06
numbers or names. This gives more control over the actual layout and
helps to construct BSD disklabels with /usr or /var at dedicated
partitions.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
MFC after: 3 days
Relnotes: yes
the second sector by only clearing the amount of bytes needed for the
disklabel in the second sector. Previously we were clearing exactly 1
sector worth of bytes and as such writing over boot code that may have
been there.
Since we do support more than 8 partitions, make sure to set all fields
in d_partitions. For the first 8 partitions this is unneeded, but for
partitioons 9 and up this compensates for the fact that we don't clear
an entire sector anymore.
Obviously, one cannot use more than 8 partitions when using boot code
that starts right after the disk label.
Relevant GRNs:
107879 - Employ unused bytes after the disklabel in the second sector.
189500 - Revert the part of change 107879 that employs the unused bytes
after the disklabel in the 2nd sector for boot code.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
MFC after: 3 days
1. Iterate over all partitions counted in the label, which can be more
than the number of partitions given to mkimg(1).
2. Start the checksum from the beginning of the label; not the beginning
of the bootarea.
Tested with bsdlabel(8).
MFC after: 3 days
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
Also, add a missing LIBPANEL dependency for lldb
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
Suggested by: brooks
MFC after: 5 days
Phabric: D675 (as part of a larger diff)
PR: 192762
This provides a minor cleanup in elfdump; there are otherwise no
consumers in the tree. Old SUN documentation can be found for either
variant, but GNU binutils switched to DT_FEATURE around 2000.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
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
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.
submitted via r268811
- Install the Kyuafile by adding FILES to FILESGROUPS
- Run the testcases with an unprivileged user
Some of the testcases depend upon behavior that's broken when
run as root on FreeBSD because of how permissions are treated
with access(2) vs eaccess(2), open(2), etc
- Simplify the test driver to just inspect the exit code from
run_test because it now exits with 0 if successful and exits
with !0 if unsuccessful
- Don't do ad hoc temporary directory creation/deletion; let Kyua
handle that
- Add entries for files removed in r268811 to
OptionalObsoleteFiles.inc
PR: 191020
X-MFC with: r268811
Approved by: jmmv (mentor)
Reviewed by: bapt
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
cheating by assigning the same sector offset to both directories,
but it seems that VirtualBox doesn't like that. Neither does
qemu from the looks of it. We now actually write the directory
and table twice.
MFC after: 3 days
While here, change how we check if the current line is the last one.
Before, we just checked if there were more files after the current one.
Now, we check the actual content of those files: they files may not have
a line at all. This matches the definition of the "last line" by the
Open Group.
The new behavior is closer to GNU sed.
PR: 160745
Phabric: https://phabric.freebsd.org/D431
Reviewed by: jilles
Approved by: jilles
Exp-run by: antoine
Correct the usage in both the manpage and in usage() to indicate
that the wait interval and repetition count may be given either
with the respective -w/-c arguments, or as the final positional
arguments. [0]
The corresponding code to implement the positional arguments has
been conditional on the (always-enabled) BACKWARD_COMPATIBILITY
macro since the original 4.4-lite import. It's no longer reasonable
to remove the functionality, so remove the macro and conditional
instead.
Note that multiple disks may be given on the command line.
While here, sort arguments and apply minor mdoc fixes.
PR: 184755 [0]
Approved by: hrs (mentor, src committer)
Error was:
cc1: warnings being treated as errors
.../usr.bin/m4/misc.c: In function 'm4errx':
.../usr.bin/m4/misc.c:268: warning: declaration of 'eval' shadows a global declaration
.../usr.bin/m4/extern.h:40: warning: shadowed declaration is here
Make sure everything linking to a privatelib and/or an internallib does it directly
from the OBJDIR rather than DESTDIR.
Add src.libnames.mk so bsd.libnames.mk is not polluted by libraries not existsing
in final installation
Introduce the LD* variable which is what ld(1) is expecting (via LDADD) to link to
internal/privatelib
Directly link to the .so in case of private library to avoid having to complexify
LDFLAGS.
Phabric: https://phabric.freebsd.org/D553
Reviewed by: imp, emaste
The SHT range 0x70000000-0x7fffffff is processor-specific. Pass the
ELF machine type header to sh_types so the section header type name can
be reported correctly for the given processor.
For all ranges report the actual value for unknown types.
Add MIPS-specific type SHT_MIPS_OPTIONS.
CR: D483
Reviewed by: sbruno, marcel
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
- Make sure the tests go into the right directory. The location was
wrong so they were overwriting the bin/chown tests!
- Use the right naming scheme for the test program.
- Remove the svn:executable property from the shell script.
columns available anyway. Also left align as we tend to do for flags
fields, although you can't see that currently as the string fully fills
that available columns.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Document the exit values and the duration format
Improve wording
Pet mandoc -Tlint
Sort SEE ALSO
Phabric: https://phabric.freebsd.org/D432
Reviewed by: wblock
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
a raw image with a VHD footer appended. There's little value that I
can see to use the fixed image type, but in order to make VHD images
for use by Microsoft's Azure platform, they must be fixed VHD images.
Support has been added by refactoring the code to re-use common code
and by adding a second output format structure. To created fixed VHD
images, specify "vhdf" as the output format.
Bring a couple of changes from NetBSD:
queue.c (CVS Rev. 1.4. 1.5)
Fix memory leaks.
NULL does not need a cast.
grep.c (CVS Rev. 1.6)
Use the more portable getline.
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 3 days
it fully passes the GNU timeout regression tests, it is written in a mostly
portable way (only signal parsing is relying on non portable structures)
Phabric: D377
Use this for VHD and VMDK to avoid allocating space in the image
for empty sectors.
Note that this negatively affects performance because mkimg uses a
temporary file for the intermediate storage. When mkimg has better
internal book keeping, performance can be significantly improved.
Disabling them breaks build on archs using GCC. The problem is at line 156 of
bits/basic_ios.h:
if (this->exceptions() & __state)
__throw_exception_again;
With exceptions disabled __throw_exception_again is defined as
#define __throw_exception_again
at line 45 of exception_defines.h and the code results in an empty loop body,
which fails because of -Werror.
Approved by: cognet
This was showing as:
vmstat: undefined symbols:
_cnt
To remain backwards compatible with older dumps, if 'vm_cnt' symbol is not
found then try again with 'cnt'.
Reported by: pho
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- Use set instead of std::set, to be consistent with the rest of the file.
- Remove return (0); it's not required.
- Add a dash at the beginning of the copyright, per style(9).
This reduces the lines of code by roughly 50% (not counting the COPYRIGHT
header) and makes it more readable by using standard algorithms.
Approved by: bapt
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
gentoo has "util-linux 2.24.1" with long options. Other distributions
have similar.
usage() is intentionally unchanged to keep it short and sweet
Reviewed by: jmg
Discussed with: adrian, jilles
among others.
Add an undocumented option for unit testing (-y). When given, the image
will have UUIDs and timestamps synthesized in a way that gives identical
results across runs. As such, UUIDs stop being unique, globally or
otherwise.
VHD support requested by: gjb@
The _SUPPORT knobs have a consistent meaning which differs from the
behaviour controlled by this knob. As the knob is opt-out and has not
appeared in a release the impact should be low.
Suggested by: imp, wblock
MFC after: 1 week
With the move by the FreeBSD Project away from CVSup as a distribution
mechanism, there is no longer a need to keep this in base.
Approved by: mux (around a year ago), silence on -hackers
X-MFC-after: never
detected.
Certain criteria must be met for this bug to show up:
* the -w flag is specified, and
* neither -o or --color are specified, and
* the pattern is part of another word in the line, and
* the other word that contains the pattern occurs first
PR: 181973
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
more obvious imprecision in the previous top changes.
Specifically, top uses a delta of clock_gettime() calls right after
invoking the kern.proc sysctl to fetch the process/thread list to
compute the time delta between the fetches. However, the kern.proc
sysctl handler does not run in constant time. It can spin on locks,
be preempted by an interrupt handler, etc. As a result, the time
between the gathering of stats for individual processes or threads
between subsequent kern.proc handlers can vary. If a "slow" kern.proc
run is followed by a "fast" kern.proc run, then the threads/processes
at the start of the "slow" run will have a longer time delta than the
threads/processes at the end. If the clock_gettime() time delta is
not itself skewed by preemption, then the delta may be too short for
a given thread/process resulting in a higher percent CPU than actual.
However, there is no good way to calculate the exact amount of overage,
nor to know which threads to subtract the overage from. Instead, just
punt and fix the definitely-wrong case of an individual thread having
more than 100% CPU.
Discussed with: zonk
Other implementations of patch(1), including GNU patch and "svn patch"
have a --dry-run option which does the same as our -C or --check
option.
Add a new alias to make our implementation more compatible.
MFC after: 1 week
Patch(1) uses a short int for the line length, which is usually
sufficient for regular diffs, but makes no effort to signal
when there is an overflow.
Change the line length to an unsigned short int to better use
the fact that a length is never negative. The change is loosely
inspired on a related change in DragonFly, but we avoid spending
more memory than necessary.
While here adjust the messages to be clearer on what is happening.
MFC after: 1 week
of invalid characters of the current file instead of an accumulated
value.
- Make do_conv return an error when invalid characters have been found.
Return EXIT_FAILURE from main if any file contained invalid characters.
This matches the behaviour of GNU iconv.
- Mark usage with __dead2 attribute.
- Make the long_options array const.
This change reverts a change from OpenBSD which made use of
calloc, and therefore wasted time initializing arrays that
will later be realloc'ed. Consistently use FreeBSD's
reallocf().
While here also merge the changes from OpenBSD's manpage
patch.1 Rev 1.27:
"patch was moved from user portability (UP) to base in issue 7
and is no longer optional"
MFC after: 1 week
vtfontcvt is useful for end users to convert arbitrary bitmap fonts
for use by vt(4). It can also be used as a build tool, allowing us
to keep the source font data in the src tree rather than uuencoded
binaries.
Reviewed by: ray, wblock (D183)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The change to expand_number (r204654) broke detection of too large sizes and
relative sizes ('+'/'-').
Also add some tests.
PR: 190735
Submitted by: Kirk Russell
MFC after: 1 week
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]
In r266650, we made libatf-c and libatf-c++ private libraries so that no
components outside of the source tree could unintendedly depend on them.
This change does the same for the "atf-sh library" by moving the atf-sh
interpreter from its public location in /usr/bin/ to the private location
in /usr/libexec/. Our build system will ensure that our own test programs
use the right binary, but users won't be able to depend on atf-sh by
"mistake".
Committing this now to ride the UPDATING notice added with r267172 today.
* -Sc was generating code without a return type on main.
* -Sm was generating an unusable clean target due to undefined RM.
* -Sm was generating clean target with extra preceding space.
PR: 185582
Submitted by: Pawel Biernacki <pawel.biernacki@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
remove the now-redundant checks for RELEASE_CRUNCH. This originally
was defined for building smaller sysinstall images, but was later also
used by picobsd builds for a similar purpose. Now that we've moved
away from sysinstall, picobsd is the only remaining consumer of this
interface. Adding these two options reduces the RELEASE_CRUNCH
special cases in the tree by half.
- Reformat the entire man page
- Create a proper synopsis section
- Use itemized-lists to describe each flag, rather than paragraphs
- Cross-reference common flags to a 'general flags' sub-section with short
inline description of the flag
- Label 'general flags' sub-section
- Apply additional fixes suggested by wblock, brueffer, and bdrewery
- Update .Dd that got undone previously
- Change the order of the .Op Fl to be alphabetical
- Add the -i | -I interface flags to the description of 'interface
display mode'
- Fix missing parameters in man page
- Fix missing parameters in usage()
- Sync man page and usage()
MFC Note: stable/9 and stable/10 do not have -R, will need to be removed
when merged
CR: D58
Reviewed by: brueffer, bcr
Approved by: wblock (mentor)
MFC after: 7 days
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
The directory hierarchy is created by an mtree file (BSD.usr.dist,
in the case of calendar(1)). An explicit "mkdir -p" in a program's
Makefile is redundant, and can mask a missing mtree entry.
This is not really a good test as the behaviour for /c is unspecified.
For the record, ksh93 returns:
$ printf "abc\n\cdef"
abc
ef$
Discussed with: Garret D'Amore (Illumos)
displays after a pause, use the difference in runtime divided by the
length of the pause as the percentage of CPU used instead of the value
calculated by the kernel. In addition, when determing if a process or
thread is idle or not, treat any process or thread that has used any
runtime or performed any context switches during the interval as busy.
Note that the percent CPU is calculated as a double and stored in an
array to avoid recalculating the value multiple times in the comparison
method used to sort processes in the CPU display.
Tested by: Jamie Landeg-Jones <jamie@dyslexicfish.net>
Reviewed by: emaste (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
We should not be leaking these interfaces to the outside world given
that it's much easier for third-party components to use the devel/atf
package from ports.
As a side-effect, we can also drop the ATF pkgconfig and aclocal files
from the base system. Nothing in the base system needs these, and it
was quite ugly to have to get them installed only so that a few ports
could build. The offending ports have been fixed to depend on
devel/atf explicitly.
Reviewed by: bapt
problem with broken in-tree builds (which are used far more
pervasively than I'd known outside the tree). However, weird results
may now happen if at any point in the tree above you there happens to
be a directory that has subdirectory of share/mk, as unpredictable
results will follow. This was considered the lessor of the two evils,
at least for now. In the future this will be removed again when the
underlying issues are resolved.
- Increase WID_IF_DEFAULT() from 6 to 8 (the default for AF_INET6) because
we have interfaces with longer names than 6 chars like epairN{a,b}.
- Style fixes.
This is intended to help in diagnostics and debugging of NIC and stack
flowid support.
Eventually this will grow another column (RSS CPU ID) but
that currently isn't cached in the inpcb.
There's also no clean flowtype -> flowtype identifier string. This is
the mbuf M_HASHTYPE_* values for RSS.
Here's some example output:
adrian@adrian-hackbox:~/work/freebsd/head/src % netstat -Rn | more
Active Internet connections
Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address flowid ftype
tcp4 0 0 10.11.1.65.22 10.11.1.64.12409 29041942 2
udp4 0 0 127.0.0.1.123 *.* 00000000 0
udp6 0 0 fe80::1%lo0.123 *.* 00000000 0
udp6 0 0 ::1.123 *.* 00000000 0
udp4 0 0 10.11.1.65.123 *.* 00000000 0
Tested:
* amd64 system w/ igb NIC; local driver changes to expose RSS flowid in if_igb.
flag to procstat.
- Add an -H flag to request information about threads rather than processes
when dumping statistics. Currently it is only used for -r to display
resource usage for individual threads instead of the entire process.
Reviewed by: kib (older version without -H)
MFC after: 1 month
Add support for different output formats:
1. The output file that was previously written is now called the raw format.
2. Add the vmdk output format to create VMDK images.
When the format is not given, the raw output format is assumed.
in SUBDIRS having tests added to it, which fails. Work around this by
checking to make sure tests exists before adding it to subdirs and
work to get the generated file fixed so we can rename Makefile.inc to
something else so it isn't automatically included by subdirs...
This first step is mostly to prevent the code from rotting even further
and to ensure these do not get wiped when fmake's code is removed from
the tree.
These tests are currently being skipped because they detect the underlying
make is not fmake and thus disable themselves -- and the reason is that
some of the tests fail, possibly due to legitimate bugs. Enabling them to
run against bmake will come separately.
Lastly, it would be ideal if these tests were fed upstream but they are
not ready for that yet. In the interim, just put them under usr.bin/bmake/
while we sort things out. The existence of a different unit-tests directory
within here makes me feel less guilty about this.
Change confirmed working with a clean amd64 build.
If a numeric argument is missing, zero should be assumed, for signed as well
as unsigned conversions.
This fixes the 'zero' regression tests.
r265592 erroneously reverted r244407.
The "bltin/bltin.h" wrappers do not support exit() and attempting
to call it will exit sh completely.
Note that errx() is acceptable but will always return with status 2.
Reported by: jilles (and the testing framework)
Fix by: jilles
Pointyhat: pfg