In fact, it doesn't even work with single-byte codesets like ISO-8859-1.
The comparison blows up at index 128 (the range is 0 to UCHAR_MAX (255).
As a temporary workaround, all comparisons will be done in C locale
regardless of the environment setting. The regex library needs to be
updated to handle all codesets.
Obtained from: Dragonfly
packed LC_COLLATE binary formats. These were generated with the colldef
tool, but the new LC_COLLATE files are going to be generated by the new
localedef tool using CLDR POSIX files as input. The BSD-flavored
version of localedef identifies the format as "BSD 1.0". Any
LC_COLLATE file with a different version will simply not be loaded, and
all LC* categories will get set to "C" (aka "POSIX") locale.
This work is based off of Nexenta's contribution to Illumos.
The integration with xlocale is John Marino's work for Dragonfly.
The following commits will enable localedef tool, disable the colldef
tool, add generated colldef directory, and finally remove colldef from
base.
The only difference with Dragonfly are:
- a few fixes to build with clang
- And identification of the flavor as "BSD 1.0" instead of "Dragonfly 4.4"
Obtained from: Dragonfly
It looks like EVFILT_READ and EVFILT_WRITE trigger under the same
conditions as poll()'s POLLRDNORM and POLLWRNORM as described by POSIX.
The only difference is that POLLRDNORM has to be triggered on regular
files unconditionally, whereas EVFILT_READ only triggers when not EOF.
Introduce a new flag, NOTE_FILE_POLL, that can be used to make
EVFILT_READ and EVFILT_WRITE behave identically to poll(). This flag
will be used by cloudlibc's poll() function.
Reviewed by: jmg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3303
of the timehands, from the kern_tc.c implementation to vdso. Add
comments giving hints where to look for the algorithm explanation.
To compensate the removal of rmb() in userspace binuptime(), add
explicit lfence instruction before rdtsc. On i386, add usual
complications to detect SSE2 presence; assume that old CPUs which do
not implement SSE2 also execute rdtsc almost in order.
Reviewed by: alc, bde (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Summary:
Back in 2005, maxim@ attempted to fix shutdown() to return ENOTCONN in case the socket was not connected (r150152). This had to be rolled back (r150155), as it broke some of the existing programs that depend on this behavior. I reapplied this change on my system and indeed, syslogd failed to start up. I fixed this back in February (279016) and MFC'ed it to the supported stable branches. Apart from that, things seem to work out all right.
Since at least Linux and Mac OS X do the right thing, I'd like to go ahead and give this another try. To keep old copies of syslogd working, only start returning ENOTCONN for recent binaries.
I took a look at the XNU sources and they seem to test against both SS_ISCONNECTED, SS_ISCONNECTING and SS_ISDISCONNECTING, instead of just SS_ISCONNECTED. That seams reasonable, so let's do the same.
Test Plan:
This issue was uncovered while writing tests for shutdown() in CloudABI:
https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc/blob/master/src/libc/sys/socket/shutdown_test.c#L26
Reviewers: glebius, rwatson, #manpages, gnn, #network
Reviewed By: gnn, #network
Subscribers: bms, mjg, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3039
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
SIGCHLD signal, should keep full 32 bits of the status passed to the
_exit(2).
Split the combined p_xstat of the struct proc into the separate exit
status p_xexit for normal process exit, and signalled termination
information p_xsig. Kernel-visible macro KW_EXITCODE() reconstructs
old p_xstat from p_xexit and p_xsig. p_xexit contains complete status
and copied out into si_status.
Requested by: Joerg Schilling
Reviewed by: jilles (previous version), pho
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This is based on work done by jeff@ and jhb@, as well as the numa.diff
patch that has been circulating when someone asks for first-touch NUMA
on -10 or -11.
* Introduce a simple set of VM policy and iterator types.
* tie the policy types into the vm_phys path for now, mirroring how
the initial first-touch allocation work was enabled.
* add syscalls to control changing thread and process defaults.
* add a global NUMA VM domain policy.
* implement a simple cascade policy order - if a thread policy exists, use it;
if a process policy exists, use it; use the default policy.
* processes inherit policies from their parent processes, threads inherit
policies from their parent threads.
* add a simple tool (numactl) to query and modify default thread/process
policities.
* add documentation for the new syscalls, for numa and for numactl.
* re-enable first touch NUMA again by default, as now policies can be
set in a variety of methods.
This is only relevant for very specific workloads.
This doesn't pretend to be a final NUMA solution.
The previous defaults in -HEAD (with MAXMEMDOM set) can be achieved by
'sysctl vm.default_policy=rr'.
This is only relevant if MAXMEMDOM is set to something other than 1.
Ie, if you're using GENERIC or a modified kernel with non-NUMA, then
this is a glorified no-op for you.
Thank you to Norse Corp for giving me access to rather large
(for FreeBSD!) NUMA machines in order to develop and verify this.
Thank you to Dell for providing me with dual socket sandybridge
and westmere v3 hardware to do NUMA development with.
Thank you to Scott Long at Netflix for providing me with access
to the two-socket, four-domain haswell v3 hardware.
Thank you to Peter Holm for running the stress testing suite
against the NUMA branch during various stages of development!
Tested:
* MIPS (regression testing; non-NUMA)
* i386 (regression testing; non-NUMA GENERIC)
* amd64 (regression testing; non-NUMA GENERIC)
* westmere, 2 socket (thankyou norse!)
* sandy bridge, 2 socket (thankyou dell!)
* ivy bridge, 2 socket (thankyou norse!)
* westmere-EX, 4 socket / 1TB RAM (thankyou norse!)
* haswell, 2 socket (thankyou norse!)
* haswell v3, 2 socket (thankyou dell)
* haswell v3, 2x18 core (thankyou scott long / netflix!)
* Peter Holm ran a stress test suite on this work and found one
issue, but has not been able to verify it (it doesn't look NUMA
related, and he only saw it once over many testing runs.)
* I've tested bhyve instances running in fixed NUMA domains and cpusets;
all seems to work correctly.
Verified:
* intel-pcm - pcm-numa.x and pcm-memory.x, whilst selecting different
NUMA policies for processes under test.
Review:
This was reviewed through phabricator (https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2559)
as well as privately and via emails to freebsd-arch@. The git history
with specific attributes is available at https://github.com/erikarn/freebsd/
in the NUMA branch (https://github.com/erikarn/freebsd/compare/local/adrian_numa_policy).
This has been reviewed by a number of people (stas, rpaulo, kib, ngie,
wblock) but not achieved a clear consensus. My hope is that with further
exposure and testing more functionality can be implemented and evaluated.
Notes:
* The VM doesn't handle unbalanced domains very well, and if you have an overly
unbalanced memory setup whilst under high memory pressure, VM page allocation
may fail leading to a kernel panic. This was a problem in the past, but it's
much more easily triggered now with these tools.
* This work only controls the path through vm_phys; it doesn't yet strongly/predictably
affect contigmalloc, KVA placement, UMA, etc. So, driver placement of memory
isn't really guaranteed in any way. That's next on my plate.
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.; Dell
the 'user' sysctl tree, which have all been coming back 0 or empty
since r240176.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2945
Reviewed by: sbruno
Approved by: jmallett (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
This function is equivalent to fclose(3) function except that it
does not close the underlying file descriptor.
fdclose(3) is step forward to make FILE structure private.
Reviewed by: wblock, jilles, jhb, pjd
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2697
to be before the lavel, otherwise an extra word may be added between the
label and the data.
Obtained from: ABT Systems Ltd
Sponsored by: The FReeBSD Foundation
Since METAMODE has been added, sys.mk loads bsd.mkopt.mk which ends load loading
bsd.own.mk which then defines SHLIBDIR before all the Makefile.inc everywhere.
This makes /lib being populated again.
Reported by: many
Use a constant array for the MIB. Newer LLVM decided that mib[] warranted
stack protections, with the obvious crash after the setup was done.
As a positive side effect, code size shrinks a bit.
I'm not sure why this hasn't bitten us yes, but it is certainly possible and
there are no real drawbacks to this change anyway.
Submitted by: pfg
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 1 week
Off by default, build behaves normally.
WITH_META_MODE we get auto objdir creation, the ability to
start build from anywhere in the tree.
Still need to add real targets under targets/ to build packages.
Differential Revision: D2796
Reviewed by: brooks imp
within all of these functions, and is only stored in some to correctly pad
the stack.
This will be needed to build as Thumb-2 as, unlike with ARM instructions,
the msr instruction only takes a register as the input.
The arm version hasn't been used in ages.
The mips version uses a valid, but pointless check of v1 and has been
unhooked from the build since r276630.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2592
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
This function originated in glibc, and this matches their behaviour
(and NetBSD, OpenBSD, and musl).
An empty big string (arg "l") is handled by the existing
l_len < s_len test.
Reviewed by: bapt, ngie
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2657
to handle the ARM conditional execution.
While here fix a bug found by this in the hard-float code, cc is the
opposite of cs. The former is used for 'less than' in floating-point code
and is executed when the C (carry) bit is clear, the latter is used when
greater than, equal, or unordered, and is executed when the C bit is set.
recv() and send()'s calls to recvfrom() and sendto() are much like
waitpid()'s call to wait4(), and likewise need not allow PLT interposing on
the called function.
as seek to teh last location saved will still work. This is needed for Samba
to be able to correctly handle delete requests from windows. This does not
completely fix seekdir when deletes are present but fixes the worst of the
problems. The real solution must involve some changes to the API for eh VFS
and getdirentries(2).
Obtained from: Panzura inc
MFC after: 1 week
- Note that ftruncate(2) can operate on shared memory objects and cross
reference shm_open(2).
- Note that ftruncate(2) does not change the file position pointer (aka
seek pointer) of the file descriptor.
- ftruncate(2) will fail with EINVAL for all sorts of other fd types than
just sockets, so instead note that it fails for all but regular files and
shared memory objects.
- Note that ftruncate(2) also appeared in 4.2BSD along with truncate(2).
(Or at least the manpage for both appeared in 4.2, I did not check the
kernel code itself to see if either predated 4.2.)
PR: 199472 (2)
Submitted by: andrew@ugh.net.au (2)
MFC after: 1 week
domain, not a file descriptor. Use 'domain' instead of the original 'd'
for this argument to match socket(2).
PR: 199491
Reported by: sp55aa@qq.com
MFC after: 1 week
Add a manpage for it, assign the copyright to the OpenBSD project on it since it
is mostly copy/paste from OpenBSD manpage.
style(9) fixes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2420
Reviewed by: kib
Fix a missing .h and change the recommended include for the POSIX2008 functions from xlocale.h to locale.h. Including xlocale.h is for legacy / Darwin compatibility so should not be encouraged.
* Add VCREAT flag to indicate when a new file is being created
* Add VVERIFY to indicate verification is required
* Both VCREAT and VVERIFY are only passed on the MAC method vnode_check_open
and are removed from the accmode after
* Add O_VERIFY flag to rtld open of objects
* Add 'v' flag to __sflags to set O_VERIFY flag.
Submitted by: Steve Kiernan <stevek@juniper.net>
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
GitHub Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/27
Relnotes: yes
kernel, but keep explanation of the old ps_strings structure to make
it clear what sanity check tries to accomplish.
Noted by: Oliver Pinter <oliver.pinter@hardenedbsd.org>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
pwrite(2) syscalls are wrapped to provide compatibility with pre-7.x
kernels which required padding before the off_t parameter. The
fcntl(2) contains compatibility code to handle kernels before the
struct flock was changed during the 8.x CURRENT development. The
shims were reasonable to allow easier revert to the older kernel at
that time.
Now, two or three major releases later, shims do not serve any
purpose. Such old kernels cannot handle current libc, so revert the
compatibility code.
Make padded syscalls support conditional under the COMPAT6 config
option. For COMPAT32, the syscalls were under COMPAT6 already.
Remove WITHOUT_SYSCALL_COMPAT build option, which only purpose was to
(partially) disable the removed shims.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp (previous versions)
Discussed with: peter
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
waitid() function is required to be cancellable by the standard. The
wait6() and ppoll() follow the other syscalls in their groups.
Reviewed by: jhb, jilles (previous versions)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
dependent functions have been implemented, but this is enough for world.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2132
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
When following symlinks, fts returned FTS_SLNONE when fstatat(flag=0)
failed, but a subsequent fstatat(flag=AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) succeeded. This
incorrectly triggered if a filename existed to be read from the directory,
was deleted before the fstatat(flag=0) and created again after the
fstatat(flag=0).
Fix this by only returning FTS_SLNONE if the result from
fstatat(flag=AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) is actually a symlink. If it is not a
symlink, treat it as if fstatat(flag=0) succeeded.
PR: 196724
Reported and tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
Both .weak and .alias assembler directives only work when assembling
the file which defines the symbol.
Reported and tested by: andrew
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Per Austin group issue #884, sh should not import IFS from the environment
but always set it to $' \t\n'. For wordexp(), however, it is documented and
useful for it to use IFS from the environment.
Since sh currently imports IFS from the environment, this change has no
functional effect.
MFC after: 1 week
Note that to cancel blocked kevent(2) call, changelist must be empty,
since we cannot cancel a call which already made changes to the
process state. And in reverse, call which only makes changes to the
kqueue state, without waiting for an event, is not cancellable. This
makes a natural usage model to migrate kqueue loop to support
cancellation, where existing single kevent(2) call must be split into
two: first uncancellable update of kqueue, then cancellable wait for
events.
Note that this is ABI-incompatible change, but it is believed that
there is no cancel-safe code that relies on kevent(2) not being a
cancellation point. Option to preserve the ABI would be to keep
kevent(2) as is, but add new call with flags to specify cancellation
behaviour, which only value seems to add complications.
Suggested and reviewed by: jilles
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
only adds support for kernel-toolchain, however it is expected further
changes to add kernel and userland support will be committed as they are
reviewed.
As our copy of binutils is too old the devel/aarch64-binutils port needs
to be installed to pull in a linker.
To build either TARGET needs to be set to arm64, or TARGET_ARCH set to
aarch64. The latter is set so uname -p will return aarch64 as existing
third party software expects this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2005
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This should also save and restore non-volatile Altivec registers, but that
needs to wait on solving two problems:
1. Adding the nonvolatile vector registers means we need 5 more than _JBLEN
entries in jmp_buf on 32-bit targets (64-bit is OK).
2. Need to figure out how to determine if saving/restoring vector regs
is supported on the current CPU from userland.
MFC after: 1 month
Implement a small enhancement to the original qsort implementation:
If the data is 32 bit aligned we can side-step the long type
version and use int instead.
The change brings a modest but significant improvement in
32 bit workloads.
Relnotes: yes
PR: 135718
Taken from: ache
We do not use iconv.alias file, so avoid using the vestiges
of the code that do.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1729
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 2 weeks
Commit r279154 changed the API and ABI significantly, and {NZERO} is still
wrong.
Also, preserve errno on success instead of setting it to 0.
PR: 189821
Reported by: bde
Relnotes: yes
On FreeBSD socklen_t is unsigned so the check negative len
in inet6_opt_append() is redundant and likely to be optimized
away by the compiler.
On other operating systems this is not necessarily so, and
in the future we may want to sign it so leave the check in
but place it in a secondary position as a subtle indication
that the bogus check is intentional.
Discussed with: rpaulo
CID: 1017783
any applications which need unpredictable random numbers, not merely those
which are cryptographic in nature.
If you work for a lottery and you're using random(3) to select the winning
numbers, please let me know.
Our man page already documented this partially but now
we have some consistent behavior.
PR: 136669
Obtained from: NetBSD (CVS rev. 1.31, 1.33)
Relnotes: yes
MFC after: 3 weeks
These were found by gcc 5.0 on Dragonfly BSD, however I
made no attempt to silence the false positives.
Obtained from: DragonFly (cf515c3a6f3a8964ad592e524442bc628f8ed63b)
rlim_t is at least as large as long, so we don't need the
extra variable to keep the intermediate step. We don't
need the volatile either.
The code was tested on i386 and amd64.
Suggested by: bde
X-MFC with: r278803
As a followup to r278363, there is one more case where
stayopen can be accessed uninitialized, but even after
swapping arguments, access is possible in some other
cases so prevent it completely by initializing stayopen.
CID: 1018729
CID: 1018732
The existing implementation had a broken comparison that could
overflow and return confusing values. Replace this with a check
that avoids the overflow before it happens.
Consistently return a maximum value also on the case of negative
arguments since negative is considered an overflow and means
infinity for our current setrlimit().
New revamped version is credited to Bruce Evans.
CID: 1199295
MFC after: 1 week
particular, stdio locking was affected.
Reported and tested by: "Matthew D. Fuller" <fullermd@over-yonder.net>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 days
The existing implementation had a broken comparison that could overflow.
Replace this with a check that avoids the overflow before it happens.
Consistently return a maximum value also on the case of negative
arguments since negative is considered an overflow and means
infinity for our current setrlimit().
Discussed with: bde (rather extensively)
CID: 1199295
MFC after: 1 week
from r202992. The refcount on the cache entry is not initialized, so
any attempt to clean the cache will skip over this item since it likely
has a >0 value.
This change is currently a NOP. There is work in progress to support
freeing the cache which requires this change to avoid a memory leak.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
In a couple of cases a variable "stayopen" can be checked
unitialized. This is of no danger as the complementary
condition is false but prevent the access by switching
the checks.
CID: 1018729
CID: 1018732
This was a local addition to the original change from NetBSD.
Being this libc there is some chance for it to interfere with
user's cget*() functions usage. The memory leak was finely
plugged by r278300.
Pointed out by: ache
It seems GAS makes the substitution automatically, but Clang's
integrated assembler does not (yet). It fails with "invalid operand for
instruction."
Reported by: sbruno
The core kernel part is patch file utimes.2008.4.diff from
pluknet@FreeBSD.org. I updated the code for API changes, added the manual
page and added compatibility code for old kernels. There is also audit and
Capsicum support.
A new UTIME_* constant might allow setting birthtimes in future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1426
Submitted by: pluknet (partially)
Reviewed by: delphij, pluknet, rwatson
Relnotes: yes
attachment to the process. Note that the command is not intended to
be a security measure, rather it is an obfuscation feature,
implemented for parity with other operating systems.
Discussed with: jilles, rwatson
Man page fixes by: rwatson
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Some users build FreeBSD as non-root in Perforce workspaces. By default,
Perforce sets files read-only unless they're explicitly being edited.
As a result, the -f argument must be used to cp in order to override the
read-only flag when copying source files to object directories. Bare use of
'cp' should be avoided in the future.
Update all current users of 'cp' in the src tree.
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
Only i386 and amd64 provide a non-trivial __getcontextx(). Use a common
trivial implementation in gen/ for other architectures, rather than
copying the file to each MD subdirectory.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1472
cancellation-handling code in the libthr. Translate some syscalls
into their more generic counterpart, and remove translated syscalls
from the table.
List of the affected syscalls:
creat, open -> openat
raise -> thr_kill
sleep, usleep -> nanosleep
pause -> sigsuspend
wait, wait3, waitpid -> wait4
Suggested and reviewed by: jilles (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
though GOT, by staticizing and hiding. Add setter for
__error_selector to hide it as well.
Suggested and reviewed by: jilles
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
(or loading a dso linked to libthr.so into process which was not
linked against threading library).
- Remove libthr interposers of the libc functions, including
__error(). Instead, functions calls are indirected through the
interposing table, similar to how pthread stubs in libc are already
done. Libc by default points either to syscall trampolines or to
existing libc implementations. On libthr load, libthr rewrites the
pointers to the cancellable implementations already in libthr. The
interposition table is separate from pthreads stubs indirection
table to not pull pthreads stubs into static binaries.
- Postpone the malloc(3) internal mutexes initialization until libthr
is loaded. This avoids recursion between calloc(3) and static
pthread_mutex_t initialization.
- Reinstall signal handlers with wrapper on libthr load. The
_rtld_is_dlopened(3) is used to avoid useless calls to sigaction(2)
when libthr is statically referenced from the main binary.
In the process, fix openat(2), swapcontext(2) and setcontext(2)
interposing. The libc symbols were exported at different versions
than libthr interposers. Export both libc and libthr versions from
libc now, with default set to the higher version from libthr.
Remove unused and disconnected swapcontext(3) userspace implementation
from libc/gen.
No objections from: deischen
Tested by: pho, antoine (exp-run) (previous versions)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Some files lack required #include <sys/stat.h>. The #ifdef is per ngie's
request; the includes are clearly necessary for struct stat.
The faccessat test fails because it tries to use AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW with
faccessat(), which is not specified by POSIX.1-2008.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1411
Reviewed by: ngie
job
The h_raw application doesn't do proper bounds checking without the option
being supplied via the build, which means that it doesn't throw signals and
fail as expected
PR: 196430
X-MFC with: r276479
the orphaned descendants. Base of the API is modelled after the same
feature from the DragonFlyBSD.
Requested by: bapt
Reviewed by: jilles (previous version)
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
_p and _w are adjusted to account for the partial write (if any).
However, _p and _w should not be unconditionally adjusted and should only
be changed when we actually wrote some bytes, or the accumulated accounting
error will eventually result in a heap buffer overflow.
Reported by: adrian and alfred (Norse Corporation)
Security: FreeBSD-SA-14:27.stdio
Security: CVE-2014-8611
In r228193 the test of CONNPRIV have been moved to before the _usleep
and send in vsyslog(). When syslogd restarts, this would prevent the
message being logged after the disconnect/connect dance for
scenario #1.
PR: 194751
Submitted by: Peter Creath <pjcreath+freebsd gmail com>
Reviewed By: glebius
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1227
b64_pton would sometimes erroneously fail to decode a base64 string into
a precisely sized buffer. The overflow check was a little too greedy.
Reported by: Ted Unangst on freebsd-hackers@
Reviewed by: loos, trasz
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1218
getgroupmembership() from invoking the correct backend in the compat case.
Replace it with a nesting depth counter so it only blocks one level (the
first is the group -> group_compat translation, the second is the actual
backend). This is one of two bugs that break getgrouplist() in the compat
case, the second being that the backend's own getgroupmembership() method
is ignored. Unfortunately, that is not easily fixable without a redesign
of our nss implementation (which is also needed to implement the +@group
syntax in /etc/passwd).
PR: 190055
MFC after: 1 week
This change saves/restores the callee-saved MIPS floating point
registers as documented by the o32/n32/n64 spec ("MIPSpro N32
ABI Handbook", Table 2-1) for the _setjmp(3), _longjmp(3),
setjmp(3) and longjmp(3) C library functions. This is only
included when the C library is built with hardware floating point
support (or when "SOFTFLOAT" is not defined).
Submitted by: sson
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
It is automatically set when -fPIC is passed to the compiler.
Reviewed by: dim, kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1179
have chosen different (and more traditional) stateless/statuful
NAT64 as translation mechanism. Last non-trivial commits to both
faith(4) and faithd(8) happened more than 12 years ago, so I assume
it is time to drop RFC3142 in FreeBSD.
No objections from: net@
500 new testcases
Various TODOs have been sprinkled around the Makefiles for items that even need
to be ported (missing features), testcases have issues with building/linking, or
issues at runtime.
A variant of this code has been tested extensively on amd64 and i386
10-STABLE/11-CURRENT for several months without issue. It builds on other
architectures, but the code will remain off until I have prove it works on
virtual hardware or real hardware on other architectures
In collaboration with: pho, Casey Peel <casey.peel@isilon.com>
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
NSS configuration state.
As a side effect, this fixes a race condition which can occur if multiple
threads call nsdispatch(3) concurrently before nsswitch.conf has been
parsed. Previously, the thread holding conf_lock could cause other threads
to return from nss_configure() before nsswitch.conf had been parsed, forcing
them to fall back to the default sources for their NSS methods.
Reviewed by: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D994
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
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
existing functions with the exception they use the condition flags to
store the result.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D872
Silence from: current@ and numerics@
MFC after: 1 week
POSIX treats negative time_t as undefined (i.e. may be valid too,
depends on system's policy we don't have) and we don't set EOVERFLOW
in mktime/timegm as POSIX requires to surely distinguish -1 return
as valid negative time from -1 as error return.
Almost never needed in real life because %s is tends to be
only one format spec.
1) Return code of gmtime_r() is checked.
2) All flags are set.
Submitted by: ache
MFC after: 3 weeks
the oabi is still in the tree, but it is expected this will be removed
as developers work on surrounding code.
With this commit the ARM EABI is the only supported supported ABI by
FreeBSD on ARMa 32-bit processors.
X-MFC after: never
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D876
Add support for the missing POSIX-2001 %U and %W features: the
existing FreeBSD strptime code recognizes both directives and
validates that the week number lies in the permitted range,
but then simply discards the value.
Initial support for the feature was written by Paul Green.
David Carlier added the initial handling of tm_wday/tm_yday.
Major credit goes to Andrey Chernov for detecting much of the
brokenness, and rewriting/cleaning most of the code, making it
much more robust.
Tested independently with the strptime test from the GNU C
library.
PR: 137307
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
The patch still needs to be more robust and it broke the
build on MIPS so revert it for now while all the issues
are fixed.
Reported by: ache, davide
PR: 137307
Add support for the missing POSIX-2001 %U and %W features: the
existing FreeBSD strptime code recognizes both directives and
validates that the week number lies in the permitted range,
but then simply discards the value.
Initial support for the feature was written by Paul Green with
important fixes by Andrey Chernov. Additional support for
handling tm_wday/tm_yday was written by David Carlier.
PR: 137307
MFC after: 1 month
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
POSIX compliance and to improve compatibility with Linux and NetBSD
The issue was identified with lib/libc/sys/t_access:access_inval from
NetBSD
Update the manpage accordingly
PR: 181155
Reviewed by: jilles (code), jmmv (code), wblock (manpage), wollman (code)
MFC after: 4 weeks
Phabric: D678 (code), D786 (manpage)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division