All of these are defined as mandatory by POSIX.
While here, mark all non-standard ones as FreeBSD-only as
other systems (at least, GNU/Linux and illumos) do not handle
them, so we should not encourage their use.
PR: 237752
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21490
Compared to current version in base:
- great improvements on the Unicode support
- full support for filename completion including quoting
which means we do not need anymore our custom addition)
- Improved readline compatiblity
Upgrading libedit has been a pain in the past, because somehow we never
managed to properly cleanup the tree in lib/libedit and each merge has always
been very painful. After years of fighting give up and refresh a merge from
scrarch properly in contrib.
Note that the switch to this version will be done in another commit.
In FreeBSD 11 along with the rework on the collation, mklocale(1) and colldef(1)
has been replaced by localedef(1) (a note has been added to the manpage to state
it).
mklocale(1) and colldef(1) has been kept around to be able to build older
versions of FreeBSD. None of the version requiring those tools are supported
anymore so it is time to remove them from base
o Do not run any iconv() processing in -a. The locale of root user is not
what is desired by most of the users who receive their calendar mail.
Just assume that users store their calendars in a format that is readable
to them. This fixes regression from r344340.
o fork() and setusercontext(LOGIN_SETALL) for every user. This makes LANG
set inside a calendar file mostly excessive, as we will pick up user's
login class LANG.
o This also executes complex function cal() that parses user owned files
with appropriate user privileges.
Previously it was run with privileges dropped only temporary for execution
of cal(), and fully dropped only before invoking sendmail (see r22473).
Reviewed by: bapt (older version of patch)
These commands show the route resolved for a specified destination, or
print out the entire routing table for a given address family (or all
families, if none is explicitly provided).
Discussed with: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21510
Previously without -m parameter it worked mostly by concodence.
While there, make page/subpage values validation more strict.
MFC after: 5 days
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
There are several mechanisms by which a vm_page reference is held,
preventing the page from being freed back to the page allocator. In
particular, holding the page's object lock is sufficient to prevent the
page from being freed; holding the busy lock or a wiring is sufficent as
well. These references are protected by the page lock, which must
therefore be acquired for many per-page operations. This results in
false sharing since the page locks are external to the vm_page
structures themselves and each lock protects multiple structures.
Transition to using an atomically updated per-page reference counter.
The object's reference is counted using a flag bit in the counter. A
second flag bit is used to atomically block new references via
pmap_extract_and_hold() while removing managed mappings of a page.
Thus, the reference count of a page is guaranteed not to increase if the
page is unbusied, unmapped, and the object's write lock is held. As
a consequence of this, the page lock no longer protects a page's
identity; operations which move pages between objects are now
synchronized solely by the objects' locks.
The vm_page_wire() and vm_page_unwire() KPIs are changed. The former
requires that either the object lock or the busy lock is held. The
latter no longer has a return value and may free the page if it releases
the last reference to that page. vm_page_unwire_noq() behaves the same
as before; the caller is responsible for checking its return value and
freeing or enqueuing the page as appropriate. vm_page_wire_mapped() is
introduced for use in pmap_extract_and_hold(). It fails if the page is
concurrently being unmapped, typically triggering a fallback to the
fault handler. vm_page_wire() no longer requires the page lock and
vm_page_unwire() now internally acquires the page lock when releasing
the last wiring of a page (since the page lock still protects a page's
queue state). In particular, synchronization details are no longer
leaked into the caller.
The change excises the page lock from several frequently executed code
paths. In particular, vm_object_terminate() no longer bounces between
page locks as it releases an object's pages, and direct I/O and
sendfile(SF_NOCACHE) completions no longer require the page lock. In
these latter cases we now get linear scalability in the common scenario
where different threads are operating on different files.
__FreeBSD_version is bumped. The DRM ports have been updated to
accomodate the KPI changes.
Reviewed by: jeff (earlier version)
Tested by: gallatin (earlier version), pho
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20486
If ipv4_prefer is specified, Section 10.3 is relevant.
If ipv6_prefer is specified, Section 2.1 is relevant.
This change makes the corresponding options/sections 'respective'
PR: docs/234249
Submitted by: David Fiander <david@fiander.info>
This turns into a warning in GCC 4.2 that 'reverse' may be used
uninitialized in this function. While I don't immediately see where it's
deciding this from (there's only two paths that make column != NULL, and
they both set reverse), initializing reverse earlier is good for clarity.
MFC after: 3 days
- Remove incomplete and dangerous ata_res decoding from ata_do_cmd().
Instead switch all functions that need the result to use get_ata_status(),
doing the same, but more careful, also reducing code duplication.
- Made get_ata_status() to also decode fixed format sense. In many cases
it is still not enough to make it useful, since it can only report results
of 28-bit command, but it is slightly better then nothing.
- Organize error reporting in ata_do_cmd(), so that if caller specified
AP_FLAG_CHK_COND, it is responsible for command errors (non-ioctl ones).
- Make HPA/AMA errors not fatal for `identify` subcommand.
- Fix reprobe() not being called on HPA/AMA when in quiet mode.
- Remove not very useful messages from `format` and `sanitize` commands
with -y flag. Once they started, they often can't be stopped any way.
MFC after: 5 days
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Allow commands to specify that (hex) numbers may start with A-F, by adding
the DRT_HEX flag for db_read_token_flags(). As before, numbers containing
invalid digits for the current radix are rejected.
Also, lex ':' and '::' tokens as tCOLON and tCOLONCOLON respectively.
There is a mild conflict here with lexed "identifiers" (tIDENT): ddb
identifiers may contain arbitrary colons, and the ddb lexer is greedy. So
the identifier lex will swallow any colons it finds inside identifiers, and
consumers are still unable to expect the token sequence 'tIDENT tCOLON'.
That limitation does not matter for IPv6 addresses, because the lexer always
attempts to lex numbers before identifiers.
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21509
Add a db_read_token_flags() variant of db_read_token() with configurable
parameters.
Allow specifying an explicit radix for tNUMBER lexing. It overrides the
default inference and db_radix setting.
Also provide the option of yielding any lexed whitespace (tWSPACE) (instead
of ignoring it). This is useful for whitespace-sensitive CS_OWN commands.
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21459
This fixes hitting a KASSERT with a valid packet exchange.
Reviewed by: rrs@, Richard Scheffenegger
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Netflix, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21567
This makes clearing it (from locore.S) work without misaligned accesses
(which can trap to machine mode, and be slow).
Reviewed by: br
Sponsored by: Axiado
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21538
patch by espie@
replace sloppy parsing of numeric values with strtonum (incr, decr, divert)
still use integers, so use the natural bounds for these.
POSIX says m4 should error when these use non numeric values, and now they
do.
okay millert@
Obtained from: OpenBSD
by espie@
ifelse is special, fix argv parsing to avoid segfault
problem noticed by Matthew Green (netbsd), slightly different fix
so that argc counting makes more sense.
we might want to warn on wrong number of parameters later, but this is
somewhat inconsistent depending on the builtin right now.
okay millert@
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Add -E flag (make warnings fatal), following the behavior of GNU m4 1.4.9+
Help and direction millert@ espie@ anton@ deraadt@
ok espie@
Obtained from: OpenBSD