This allows packaging the base system with pkg(8), including
but not limited to providing the ability to provide upstream
binary update possibilities for non-tier-1 architectures.
This merge is a requirement of the 11.0-RELEASE, and as such,
thank you to everyone that has tested the project branch.
Documentation in build(7) etc. is still somewhat sparse, but
updates to those parts will follow.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Note that now we have to account for possible partial writes
in dmu_write_uio_dbuf(). It seems that on illumos either all or none
of the data are expected to be written. But the partial writes are
quite expected when vn_io_fault support is enabled.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 7 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2790
Since we no longer need additional buffers for request and response IOCBs,
we can increase receive space by 192 bytes, that is enough for fetching 48
more ports. The new limit is 1020 fabric ports per virtual port.
MFC after: 1 month
The older AIO code awakened all pending AIO requests on a socket
when any data arrived. This could result in AIO daemons blocking on
an empty socket buffer. These requests could not be cancelled
which led to a deadlock during process exit. This test reproduces
this case. The newer AIO code is able to cancel the pending AIO
request correctly.
Reviewed by: ngie (-ish)
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4363
Fix a symbol table handling bug in elfcopy: elfcopy puts .symtab,
.strtab and .shstrtab sections in the end of the output object. If
the input objects have more sections after any of these 3 sections,
the section table will be reordered, and in that case the section
symbols should be regenerated for relocations.
The bug is triggered since newer clang puts .strtab section in the
beginning of the object produced.
Ticket: #525
Reported by: royger
Obtained from: ELF Tool Chain r3443
0.5.0:
document "trim" modifier
add xo_emit_field functions
Add xo_set_file{,_h} functions
Fix LIBXO_* variables; add -L and -I as needed
add --disable-silent-rules and an explicit make; s/PACKAGE-NAME/PACKAGE_NAME/; add /download/ to 'url'
fix silliness where xo_flush_h emitted closing tag (html); make the caller (xo_message) do it
flush after transitions; fix flush call in xo_do_emit
mkdir the version-specific packaging dir
use "XO_" instead of LIBXO_
0.6.0:
Add --with-retain-size to set the size (in bits) of the retain hash buckets
Add The Argument Modifier ({a:})
Add retain and no-retain to --libxo
autoconf: Add test for monitor.h
Document quote heuristic
go deep with nroff backslashes
Use "ULL" for 32 bit check
add xo_retain_clear and xo_retain_clear_all
docs: combine two 'handles' section; move command line argument section
handle GETTEXT when msgfmt isn't where it's supposed to be (FreeBSD)
make 'retain' a flag (XOEF_RETAIN) instead of a role; it's simpler, and doesn't feel as tacky. "{R:}" was painful to document, which means it's painful to use.
new xo_emit_f functions
nuke some unused UNUSEDs
test code: path must be static
update test cases
0.6.1:
fix version number (missed a commit during new-release)
Reviewed by: sjg
Approved by: sjg (mentor)
(And 4Kn minidump support, but only for amd64.)
Make sure all I/O to the dump device is of the native sector size. To
that end, we keep a native sector sized buffer associated with dump
devices (di->blockbuf) and use it to pad smaller objects as needed (e.g.
kerneldumpheader).
Add dump_write_pad() as a convenience API to dump smaller objects with
zero padding. (Rather than pull in NPM leftpad, we wrote our own.)
Savecore(1) has been updated to deal with these dumps. The format for
512-byte sector dumps should remain backwards compatible.
Minidumps for other architectures are left as an exercise for the
reader.
PR: 194279
Submitted by: ambrisko@
Reviewed by: cem (earlier version), rpokala
Tested by: rpokala (4Kn/512 except 512 fulldump), cem (512 fulldump)
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5848
Prior to this change, vdev_geom_open_by_path would call vdev_geom_attach
prior to verifying the device's GUIDs. vdev_geom_attach calls
vdev_geom_attrchange to set the physpath in the vdev object. The result is
that if the disk could not be found, then the labels for other disks in the
same TLD would overwrite the missing disk's physpath with the physpath of
whichever disk currently has the same devname as the missing one used to
have.
MFC after: 4 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
This revision suggests dtsi patches to be used with the original OpenWRT
dtsi files so we can re-use what has already been done in OpenWRT for the
Mediatek/Ralink SoCs.
The only thing that is required after importing this revision should be
the following:
1. Import OpenWRT dts/dtsi files into sys/gnu/dts/mips
2. Run the following script in sys/gnu/dts/mips:
for f in `ls [mr]t*.dtsi`; do
printf "\n#include <fbsd-$f>\n" > $f
done
This will apply our dtsi patches to OpenWRT's dtsi files and will allow us
to re-use dts/dtsi files for ~170 Mediatek/Ralink boards.
Currently our drivers are not 100% compatible with OpenWRT's dts files, but
they're compatible enough.
We can add more functionality in the future that would better leverage the
OpenWRT work as well.
Approved by: adrian (mentor)
Sponsored by: Smartcom - Bulgaria AD
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5965
fdt_static_dtb.S dependency in sys/conf/files is currently set as:
$S/boot/fdt/dts/${MACHINE}/${FDT_DTS_FILE}
This is wrong, as what fdt_static_dtb.S actually uses is the DTB file
produced from the FDT_DTS_FILE.
In addition it also makes using DTS files stored in $S/gnu/dts/${MACHINE}/
impossible.
So, change the dependency to "fdt_dtb_file", which seems to be the right
option here anyway.
Approved by: adrian (mentor)
Sponsored by: Smartcom - Bulgaria AD
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5963
A lot of dts files define the SPI flashes supported by mx25l as
compatible with 'jedec,spi-nor', so we add this to the mx25l
compat_data.
Approved by: adrian (mentor)
Sponsored by: Smartcom - Bulgaria AD
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5962
This revision gets our Mediatek/Ralink drivers closer to OpenWRT's dts
definitions, so we can reuse them with less modifications later in order
to bring support for a lot of boards at once.
Approved by: adrian (mentor)
Sponsored by: Smartcom - Bulgaria AD
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5961
This is actually initialized properly within xhci.c, so it's better to
not initialize it in mtk_xhci.c
Approved by: adrian (mentor)
Sponsored by: Smartcom - Bulgaria AD
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5935
the following:
1. Give the appropriate board dts file to be used by either:
1.1. edit the SoC kernel config required (e.g., MT7620A_FDT) and include
the required FDT_DTS_FILE makeoption; or
1.2. simply supply FDT_DTS_FILE="xx.dts" on the command line when building
the kernel
Of course, the user can also create a completely new kernel config to
match the desired board and include the SoC kernel config from within
it.
If required, edit the MEDIATEK config file, which includes optional
drivers and comment out the unneeded ones.
2.1. this would only make sense if kernel size is a concern. Even if we
build the kernel with all drivers, if we lzma it and package it as a uImage,
its size is still around 1.1MiB.
The user will have to choose a dts file (or create a new one) from
sys/gnu/dts/mips , where all Mediatek/Ralink dts files will be imported via
a later revision.
Approved by: adrian (mentor)
Sponsored by: Smartcom - Bulgaria AD
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5966
initially configured in the TSC deadline mode, eventtimer subsystem
can be switched to periodic, and then DCR register is loaded with
unitialized value.
Reset the LAPIC eventtimer frequency and min/max periods when changing
between deadline and counted periodic modes.
Reported and tested by: Vladimir Zakharov <zakharov.vv@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
write to the End of Interrupt (EOI) register before handling the interrupt.
This should be a noop as it will be set for all edge triggered interrupts,
however this will not be the case for MSI interrupts. These are also edge
triggered, however we should not write to the EOI register until later in
arm_gic_pre_ithread.
Obtained from: ABT Systems Ltd
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation