interface numbering for USB descriptors in userspace. Else certain USB
control requests using the interface number, won't be recognized by the
USB firmware.
Refer to section 9.2.3 in the USB 2.0 specification:
Interfaces are numbered from zero to one less than the number of concurrent interfaces
supported by the configuration.
PR: 251784
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies // NVIDIA Networking
Without this we risk having the .interp section be placed earlier in the
file and mess with section offsets; in particular it has been seen to be
placed at the start of the file and cause the PE/COFF header to not be
at address 0. This is the same fix as was done for arm64 in r365578.
Reviewed by: mhorne, imp
Approved by: mhorne, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27603
Linux claims 4.3BSD, we claim 4.4BSD and OpenBSD claims 4.3BSD-Reno. It turns
out that OpenBSD got it right: the function was added in late 1988 a few months
after 4.3BSD-Tahoe, well in advance of 4.3BSD-Reno.
Reviewed by: bcr
Approved by: bcr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27392
These aligned the address but then always used the least significant
bits of the value in memory, which is the wrong half 50% of the time for
16-bit atomics and the wrong quarter 75% of the time for 8-bit atomics.
These bugs were all present in r178172, the commit that added the mips
port, and have remained for its entire existence to date.
Reviewed by: jhb (mentor)
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27343
For the first second otime and ntime are equal so no message gets
printed. Instead we should print the countdown right from the start,
although we do it at the end of the first iteration so that if a key has
already been pressed then the message is suppressed.
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26935
collision. This avouds an out-of-bounce access in case the peer can
break the cookie signature. Thanks to Felix Wilhelm from Google for
reporting the issue.
MFC after: 1 week
Move the include of langinfo.h out of the WITH_ICONV condition block,
since it is not dependent on ICONV. This was correct when nl_langinfo()
had only been called in the WITH_ICONV case, but that is no longer the
case.
Submitted by: yuripv
Sync libarchive with vendor.
Vendor changes:
Issue #1461: Unbreak build without lzma
Issue #1462: warc reader: Fix build with gcc11
Issue #1463: Fix code compatibility in test_archive_read_support.c
Issue #1464: Use built-in strnlen on platforms where not available
Issue #1465: warc reader: fix undefined behaviour in deconst() function
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC-With: 368234
Vendor changes:
Issue #1461: Unbreak build without lzma
Issue #1462: warc reader: Fix build with gcc11
Issue #1463: Fix code compatibility in test_archive_read_support.c
Issue #1464: Use built-in strnlen on platforms where not available
Issue #1465: warc reader: fix undefined behaviour in deconst() function
There was an unprotected use of nl_langinfo() to determine the order of
day vs. month in the generated output.
When building without ICONV support, the order will be: month, day.
a restart.
This fixes a use-after-free scenario, which was reported by Felix
Wilhelm from Google in case a peer is able to modify the cookie.
However, this can also be triggered by an assciation restart under
some specific conditions.
MFC after: 1 week
This is nearly a 1:1 mapping of the pager API from libsa. The only real
difference is that pager.output() will accept any number of arguments and
coerce all of them to strings for output using luaL_tolstring (i.e. the
__tostring metamethod will be used).
The only consumer planned at this time is the upcoming "show-module-options"
implementation.
MFC after: 1 week
Mark request_maxcount as RWTUN so we can set it both at runtime and from
loader.conf. This avoids usings getting caught out by the change from tunable
to run time configuration.
Suggested by: Franco Fichtner
MFC after: 3 days
This is an import of the Google Summer of Code 2018 project completed by
Christian Kramer (and, sadly, ignored by us for two years now). The goals
stated for that project were:
FreeBSD already has support for interrupts implemented in the GPIO
controller drivers of several SoCs, but there are no interfaces to take
advantage of them out of user space yet. The goal of this work is to
implement such an interface by providing descriptors which integrate
with the common I/O system calls and multiplexing mechanisms.
The initial imported code supports the following functionality:
- A kernel driver that provides an interface to the user space; the
existing gpioc(4) driver was enhanced with this functionality.
- Implement support for the most common I/O system calls / multiplexing
mechanisms:
- read() Places the pin number on which the interrupt occurred in the
buffer. Blocking and non-blocking behaviour supported.
- poll()/select()
- kqueue()
- signal driven I/O. Posting SIGIO when the O_ASYNC was set.
- Many-to-many relationship between pins and file descriptors.
- A file descriptor can monitor several GPIO pins.
- A GPIO pin can be monitored by multiple file descriptors.
- Integration with gpioctl and libgpio.
I added some fixes (mostly to locking) and feature enhancements on top of
the original gsoc code. The feature ehancements allow the user to choose
between detailed and summary event reporting. Detailed reporting provides
a record describing each pin change event. Summary reporting provides the
time of the first and last change of each pin, and a count of how many times
it changed state since the last read(2) call. Another enhancement allows
the recording of multiple state change events on multiple pins between each
call to read(2) (the original code would track only a single event at a time).
The phabricator review for these changes timed out without approval, but I
cite it below anyway, because the review contains a series of diffs that
show how I evolved the code from its original state in Christian's github
repo for the gsoc project to what is being commited here. (In effect,
the phab review extends the VC history back to the original code.)
Submitted by: Christian Kramer
Obtained from: https://github.com/ckraemer/freebsd/tree/gsoc2018
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27398
yesexpr is an extended regular expression for quite some time now,
use appropriate flag when compiling it.
PR: 238762
Reviewed by: kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27509
After the commit of the current version, Scott Long pointed out, that an
attacker might be able to cause a use-after-free access if this function
returned the value of the sysctl variable "user.localbase" by freeing
the allocated memory without the cached address being cleared in the
library function.
To resolve this issue, I have proposed the originally suggested version
with a statically allocated buffer in a review (D27370). There was no
feedback on this review and after waiting for more than 2 weeks, the
potential security issue is fixed by this commit. (There was no security
risk in practice, since none of the programs converted to use this
function attempted to free the buffer. The address could only have
pointed into the heap if user.localbase was set to a non-default value,
into r/o data or the environment, else.)
This version uses a static buffer of size LOCALBASE_CTL_LEN, which
defaults to MAXPATHLEN. This does not increase the memory footprint
of the library at this time, since its data segment grows from less
than 7 KB to less than 8 KB, i.e. it will get two 4 KB pages on typical
architectures, anyway.
Compiling with LOCALBASE_CTL_LEN defined as 0 will remove the code
that accesses the sysctl variable, values between 1 and MAXPATHLEN-1
will limit the maximum size of the prefix. When built with such a
value and if too large a value has been configured in user.localbase,
the value defined as ILLEGAL_PREFIX will be returned to cause any
file operations on that result to fail. (Default value is "/dev/null/",
the review contained "/\177", but I assume that "/dev/null" exists and
can not be accessed as a directory. Any other string that can be assumed
not be a valid path prefix could be used.)
I do suggest to use LOCALBASE_CTL_LEN to size the in-kernel buffer for
the user.localbase variable, too. Doing this would guarantee that the
result always fit into the buffer in this library function (unless run
on a kernel built with a different buffer size.)
The function always returns a valid string, and only in case it is built
with a small static buffer and run on a system with too large a value in
user.localbase, the ILLEGAL_PREFIX will be returned, effectively causing
the created path to be non-existent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27370
Allow geom(8) to list geoms with the '/dev/' prefix.
`geom part show` accepts the '/dev/' prefix but `geom part list` does not.
Modify find_geom() in sbin/geom/core/geom.c to be consistent with the behavior
of find_geom() in lib/geom/part/geom_part.c.
PR: 188213
Reported by: Ronald F. Guilmette <rfg@tristatelogic.com>
Reviewed by: imp, kevans
Approved by: kevans (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27556
Specifically, we have:
- enable-module
- disable-module
- toggle-module
These can be used to add/remove modules to be loaded or force modules to be
loaded in spite of modules_blacklist. In the typical case, a user is
expected to use them to recover an issue happening due to a module directive
they've added to their loader.conf or because they discover that they've
under-specified what to load.
MFC after: 1 week
Don't tell it to look for headers in a non-existent directory.
Reviewed by: imp, mmacy
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27565
nids(4) was a clever idea in the early 2000's when the market was
flooded with 10/100 NICs with Windows-only drivers, but that hasn't been
the case for ages and the driver has had no meaningful maintenance in
ages. It only supports Windows-XP era drivers.
Reviewed by: imp, bcr
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27527
The hme (Happy Meal Ethernet) driver was the onboard NIC in most
supported sparc64 platforms. A few PCI NICs do exist, but we have seen
no evidence of use on non-sparc systems.
Reviewed by: imp, emaste, bcr
Sponsored by: DARPA
Prefer atomics to critical section. This reduces the cost of the
increment operation and removes the possibility of it being interrupted
by counter_u64_zero().
Use CPU_FOREACH() macro to skip absent CPUs.
Replace hand-rolled address calculation with zpcpu_get().
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27536