a macro with parameters. Remove a __DECONST hack and add consts instead
for gnu libiconv API compatability. This makes it work with things like
devel/boost-libs that expects to use "iconv" as though it were a pointer.
Expose iconv functions as weak symbols as well as their internal
remapped #define names. This is necessary for autoconf compatability -
on Linux it appears that #include <iconv.h> isn't a link time
prerequisite for their version that's built into glibc.
Initialize the pthread rwlock. Note that upstream has three
separate locks. The file-local static lock appears intentional.
I'm using this as a ports-compatible compile-time substitute for
converters/libiconv on one of my personal machines.
As mentioned before, we should at least aim to have one piece of code in
both user space and kernel space that uses C11 atomics, to get some
coverage. This piece of code can be migrated trivially, so it's a good
candidate.
- Reconnect with some minor modifications, in particular now selsocket()
internals are adapted to use sbintime units after recent'ish calloutng
switch.
cancellation point. When enabling the cancellation, only process the
pending cancellation for asynchronous mode.
Reported and reviewed by: Kohji Okuno <okuno.kohji@jp.panasonic.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
performance.
- Always free to the alloc bucket if there is space. This gives LIFO
allocation order to improve hot-cache performance. This also allows
for zones with a single bucket per-cpu rather than a pair if the entire
working set fits in one bucket.
- Enable per-cpu caches of buckets. To prevent recursive bucket
allocation one bucket zone still has per-cpu caches disabled.
- Pick the initial bucket size based on a table driven maximum size
per-bucket rather than the number of items per-page. This gives
more sane initial sizes.
- Only grow the bucket size when we face contention on the zone lock, this
causes bucket sizes to grow more slowly.
- Adjust the number of items per-bucket to account for the header space.
This packs the buckets more efficiently per-page while making them
not quite powers of two.
- Eliminate the per-zone free bucket list. Always return buckets back
to the bucket zone. This ensures that as zones grow into larger
bucket sizes they eventually discard the smaller sizes. It persists
fewer buckets in the system. The locking is slightly trickier.
- Only switch buckets in zalloc, not zfree, this eliminates pathological
cases where we ping-pong between two buckets.
- Ensure that the thread that fills a new bucket gets to allocate from
it to give a better upper bound on allocation time.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
real shared object and libssp_nonshared.a.
This was the last showstopper that prevented from enabling SSP for ports
by default. portmgr@ performed a buildworld which showed no significant
breakage with this patch.
Details:
On i386 for PIC objects, gcc uses the __stack_chk_fail_local hidden
symbol instead of calling __stack_chk_fail directly [1]. This happen
not only with our gcc-4.2.1 but also with the latest gcc-4.8. If you
want the very nasty details, see [2].
OTOH the problem doesn't exist on other architectures. It also doesn't
exist with Clang as the latter will somehow manage to create the
function in the object file at compile time (contrary to only
referencing it through a symbol that will be brought in at link time).
In a perfect world, when an object file is compiled with
-fstack-protector, it will be linked into a binary or a DSO with this
same flag as well, so GCC will add libssp_nonshared.a to the linker
command-line. Unfortunately, we don't control softwares in ports and we
may have such broken DSO. This is the whole point of this patch.
You can reproduce the problem on i386 by compiling a source file into an
object file with "-fstack-protector-all -fPIE" and linking it
into a binary without "-fstack-protector".
This ld script automatically proposes libssp_nonshared.a along with the
real libc DSO to the linker. It is important to understand that the
object file contained in this library will be pulled in the resulting
binary _only if_ the linker notices one of its symbols is needed (i.e.
one of the SSP symbol is missing).
A theorical performance impact could be when compiling, but my testing
showed less than 0.1% of difference.
[1] For 32-bit code gcc saves the PIC register setup by using
__stack_chk_fail_local hidden function instead of calling
__stack_chk_fail directly. See comment line 19460 in:
src/contrib/gcc/config/i386/i386.c
[2] When compiling a source file to an object file, if you use something
which is external to the compilation unit, GCC doesn't know yet if
this symbol will be inside or outside the DSO. So it expects the
worst case and routes the symbol through the GOT, which means
additional space and extra relocation for rtld(1).
Declaring a symbol has hidden tells GCC to use the optimal route (no
GOT), but on the other hand this means the symbol has to be provided
in the same DSO (namely libssp_nonshared.a).
On i386, GCC actually uses an hidden symbol for SSP in PIC objects
to save PIC register setup, as said in [1].
PR: ports/138228
PR: ports/168010
Reviewed by: kib, kan
Based on r134760:
Reset the seek pointer to 0 when a file is successfully opened,
since otherwise the initial seek offset will contain the directory
offset of the filesystem block that contained its directory entry.
This bug was mostly harmless because typically the directory is
less than one filesystem block in size so the offset would be zero.
It did however generally break loading a kernel from the (large)
kernel compile directory.
Also reset the seek pointer when a new inode is opened in read_inode(),
though this is not actually necessary now because all callers set
it afterwards.
PR: 177328
Submitted by: Eric van Gyzen
Reviewed by: iedowse
MFC after: 5 days
Store/restore the VFP registers in setjmp/longjmp on ARM EABI if VFP is
enabled in the kernel. It checks the hw.floatingpoint sysctl to see if
floating-point is available and uses this to determine if it should store
them. If it does it uses a different magic value so longjmp is able to know
if it should load them.
libusbx deprecated libusb_get_port_path and replaced it with
libusb_get_port_numbers. The latter omits an extra parameter which was
unused in the FreeBSD implementation anyway.
with merge the functions but leave out the code to save/load the VFP
registers as that requires other changes to ensure the VFP is enabled
first.
This removes storing the old fpa registers. These were never fully
supported, and the only user of this code I can find have moved to newer
CPUs which use a VFP.
as a fairly faithful implementation of the algorithm found in
PTP Tang, "Table-driven implementation of the Expm1 function
in IEEE floating-point arithmetic," ACM Trans. Math. Soft., 18,
211-222 (1992).
Over the last 18-24 months, the code has under gone significant
optimization and testing.
Reviewed by: bde
Obtained from: bde (most of the optimizations)
* Use integral numerical constants, and let the compiler do the
conversion to long double.
ld128/s_expl.c:
* Use integral numerical constants, and let the compiler do the
conversion to long double.
* Use the ENTERI/RETURNI macros, which are no-ops on ld128. This
however makes the ld80 and ld128 identical.
Reviewed by: bde (as part of larger diff)
* In the special case x = -Inf or -NaN, use a micro-optimization
to eliminate the need to access u.xbits.man.
* Fix an off-by-one for small arguments |x| < 0x1p-65.
ld128/s_expl.c:
* In the special case x = -Inf or -NaN, use a micro-optimization
to eliminate the need to access u.xbits.manh and u.xbits.manl.
* Fix an off-by-one for small arguments |x| < 0x1p-114.
Obtained from: bde
* Update the evaluation of the polynomial. This allows the removal
of the now unused variables t23 and t45.
ld128/s_expl.c:
* Update the evaluation of the polynomial and the intermediate
result t. This update allows several numerical constants to be
written as double rather than long double constants. Update
the constants as appropriate.
Obtained from: bde
and use macros to access the e component of the unions. This allows
the portions of the code in ld80 to be identical to the ld128 code.
Obtained from: bde
The names now coincide with the name used in PTP Tang's paper.
* Rename the variable from s to tbl to better reflect that
this is a table, and to be consistent with the naming scheme
in s_exp2l.c
Reviewed by: bde (as part of larger diff)
* Update Copyright years to include 2013.
ld128/s_expl.c:
* Correct and update Copyright years. This code originated from
the ld80 version, so it should reflect the same time period.
Reviewed by: bde (as part of larger diff)
I initially thought wchar_t was locale independent, but this seems to be
only the case on Linux. This means that we cannot depend on the *wc*()
routines to implement *c16*() and *c32*(). Instead, use the Citrus
libiconv that is part of libc.
I'll see if there is anything I can do to make the existing functions
somewhat useful in case the system is built without libiconv in the
nearby future. If not, I'll simply remove the broken implementations.
Reviewed by: jilles, gabor
identified, unify the code of check_deferred_signal() for all
architectures, making the variant under #ifdef x86 common.
Tested by: marius (sparc64)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Per the NetBSD Foundation statement
Third parties are encouraged to change the license on any files which
have a 4-clause license contributed to the NetBSD Foundation to a
2-clause license.
check_deferred_signal() returns twice, since handle_signal() emulates
the return from the normal signal handler by sigreturn(2)ing the
passed context. Second return is performed on the destroyed stack
frame, because __fillcontextx() has already returned. This causes
undefined and bad behaviour, usually the victim thread gets SIGSEGV.
Avoid nested frame and the need to return from it by doing direct call
to getcontext() in the check_deferred_signal() and using a new private
libc helper __fillcontextx2() to complement the context with the
extended CPU state if the deferred signal is still present.
The __fillcontextx() is now unused, but is kept to allow older
libthr.so to be used with the new libc.
Mark __fillcontextx() as returning twice [1].
Reported by: pgj
Pointy hat to: kib
Discussed with: dim
Tested by: pgj, dim
Suggested by: jilles [1]
MFC after: 1 week
* Use ENTERI/RETURNI to allow the use of FP_PE on i386 target.
Reviewed by: das (and bde a long time ago)
Approved by: das (mentor)
Obtained from: bde (polynomial coefficients)
are workarounds for various symptoms of the problem described in clang
bugs 3929, 8100, 8241, 10409, and 12958.
The regression tests did their job: they failed, someone brought it
up on the mailing lists, and then the issue got ignored for 6 months.
Oops. There may still be some regressions for functions we don't have
test coverage for yet.
implementations visible for use by applications. The functions $F that
are now weak symbols are:
allocm, calloc, dallocm, free, malloc, malloc_usable_size,
nallocm, posix_memalign, rallocm, realloc, sallocm
The non-weak implementations of $F are exported as __$F.
Submitted by: stevek@juniper.net
Reviewed by: jasone@, kib@
Approved by: jasone@ (jemalloc)
Obtained from: juniper Networks, Inc
- Remove an unneeded variable.
- Fix whitespace bugs.
- Fix typoes in comment.
- Improve string handling a bit. Don't handroll strstr() and don't
terminate a strdup()'ed string. Instead, simply strndup() the part we
need.
If we were already provided a struct _citrus_iconv (e.g. through
iconv_open_into()), we should not call free() in case io_init_context()
fails. Instead, call it on the pointer of the allocated object, which
will be NULL in case of iconv_open_into().
The <uchar.h> header, part of C11, adds a small number of utility
functions for 16/32-bit "universal" characters, which may or may not be
UTF-16/32. As our wchar_t is already ISO 10646, simply add light-weight
wrappers around wcrtomb() and mbrtowc().
While there, also add (non-yet-standard) _l functions, similar to the
ones we already have for the other locale-dependent functions.
Reviewed by: theraven
If 'e' is used, the kernel must support the recently added pipe2() system
call.
The use of pipe2() with O_CLOEXEC also fixes race conditions between
concurrent popen() calls from different threads, even if the close-on-exec
flag on the fd of the returned FILE is later cleared (because popen() closes
all file descriptors from earlier popen() calls in the child process).
Therefore, this approach should be used in all cases when pipe2() can be
assumed present.
The old version of popen() rejects "re" and "we" but treats "r+e" like "r+".
clang on head between r239347 and r245428.
The former revision introduced CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID as a clock id
for the clock_gettime() function and friends, but it was only added in
<sys/time.h>, not in <time.h>. Any program including <time.h> would
therefore not be able to use CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID, even though the
value of _POSIX_CPUTIME indicates its existence. The latter revision
synchronized the defines again.
Work around this problem by defining the id on the command line for the
particular .cpp file that needs it. If the id ever changes value, this
hack will need to be updated.
The ability to clear a file descriptor's close-on-exec flag via
posix_spawn_file_actions_adddup2() is in fact proposed in Austin Group issue
#411.
MFC after: 1 week
As per POSIX.1-2008, posix_spawn_file_actions_add* return [EBADF] if a file
descriptor is negative, not [EINVAL]. The bug was only in the manual page;
the code is correct.
MFC after: 1 week
kernel-based POSIX semaphore descriptors to userland via procstat(1) and
fstat(1):
- Change sem file descriptors to track the pathname they are associated
with and add a ksem_info() method to copy the path out to a
caller-supplied buffer.
- Use the fo_stat() method of shared memory objects and ksem_info() to
export the path, mode, and value of a semaphore via struct kinfo_file.
- Add a struct semstat to the libprocstat(3) interface along with a
procstat_get_sem_info() to export the mode and value of a semaphore.
- Teach fstat about semaphores and to display their path, mode, and value.
MFC after: 2 weeks
There is no point in hiding, e.g. pmc.xscale(3) from a developer running
on amd64, when the target arch in question will probably never have
manual pages installed at all.
Reviewed by: sbruno, hiren
The pipe2() function is similar to pipe() but allows setting FD_CLOEXEC and
O_NONBLOCK (on both sides) as part of the function.
If p points to two writable ints, pipe2(p, 0) is equivalent to pipe(p).
If the pointer is not valid, behaviour differs: pipe2() writes into the
array from the kernel like socketpair() does, while pipe() writes into the
array from an architecture-specific assembler wrapper.
Reviewed by: kan, kib
The accept4() function, compared to accept(), allows setting the new file
descriptor atomically close-on-exec and explicitly controlling the
non-blocking status on the new socket. (Note that the latter point means
that accept() is not equivalent to any form of accept4().)
The linuxulator's accept4 implementation leaves a race window where the new
file descriptor is not close-on-exec because it calls sys_accept(). This
implementation leaves no such race window (by using falloc() flags). The
linuxulator could be fixed and simplified by using the new code.
Like accept(), accept4() is async-signal-safe, a cancellation point and
permitted in capability mode.
that the method is not supported, return an empty string.
This looks more handy for callers like procstat(1), which will not
abort after the failed call and still output some useful information.
MFC after: 3 weeks
!defined(LIBRARIES_ONLY) so it is only created once on architectures
with 32-bit compat support.
Replace ln -fhs with ${INSTALL_SYMLINK} to the link is logged in the
METALOG.
is a bit obfuscated here, as ia64 adds string source files elsewhere, so
simply exclude it here.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Trim two now-unneeded (and likely harmful) lines from the libstand
setjmp/longjmp for MIPS.
Spotted by: jmallett
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Clang only supports atomic operations for ARMv6. For non-ARMv6, we still
need to emit these functions.
Clang's prototype for these functions slightly differs, as it is truly
based on GCC's documentation. It requires the use of signed types, but
also requires varargs. Still, we are not allowed to simply implement
this function directly. Cleverly work around this by implementing it
under a different name and using __strong_reference().
These APIs were relevant when memory for virtual machine allocation was
hard partitioned away from the rest of the system but that is no longer
the case. The sysctls that provided this information were garbage collected
a while back.
Obtained from: NetApp
There are no getdtablesize() bounds on the file descriptor to be duplicated;
it only has to be open. If the RLIMIT_NOFILE rlimit was decreased after
opening the file descriptor, it may be greater than or equal to
getdtablesize() but still valid.
MFC after: 1 week
Originally we disabled libcompiler-rt on MIPS and SPARC64, because of an
issue where __clzdi2 and __ctzdi2 would cause endless recursion. This
bug has been fixed in r230021 already, but for some reason we only
switched to libcompiler-rt on SPARC64 -- not MIPS.
This means we can finally use <stdatomic.h> on all our architectures.
This compiler flag enforces that that people either mark variables
static or use an external declarations for the variable, similar to how
-Wmissing-prototypes works for functions.
Due to the fact that Yacc/Lex generate code that cannot trivially be
changed to not warn because of this (lots of yy* variables), add a
NO_WMISSING_VARIABLE_DECLARATIONS that can be used to turn off this
specific compiler warning.
Announced on: toolchain@
The functions utx_active_add(), utx_active_remove(), utx_lastlogin_add() and
utx_log_add() set errno to 0 if they are successful. This not only violates
POSIX if pututxline() is successful, but may also overwrite a valid error
with 0 if, for example, utx_lastlogin_add() fails while utx_log_add()
succeeds.
Reviewed by: ed
signal.
- Fix the old ksem implementation for POSIX semaphores to not restart
sem_wait() or sem_timedwait() if interrupted by a signal.
MFC after: 1 week
and 64-bit MIPS. Don't use the floating-point coprocessor in the libstand
context for MIPS.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
/usr/lib/include ==> /usr/include
This fixes -print-file-name=include in clang (and is
arguably a better way to fix the same issue in GCC than
the change I made in r231336).
MFC after: 1 week
upcoming 3.3 release (branching and freezing expected in a few weeks).
Preliminary release notes can be found at the usual location:
<http://llvm.org/docs/ReleaseNotes.html>
An MFC is planned once the actual 3.3 release is finished.
extattr_set_{fd,file,link} is logically a write(2)-like operation and
should return ssize_t, just like extattr_get_*. Also, the user-space
utility was using an int for the return value of extattr_get_* and
extattr_list_*, both of which return an ssize_t.
MFC after: 1 week
Words in shell script are separated by spaces or tabs independent of the
value of IFS. The value of IFS is only relevant for the result of
substitutions. Therefore, there should be a space between 'wordexp' and the
words to be expanded, not an IFS character.
Paranoia might dictate that the shell ignore IFS from the environment (even
though our sh currently uses it), so do not depend on it in the new test
case.
0x3C: /* Per Intel document 325462-045US 01/2013. */
Add manpage to document all the goodness that is available in this
processor model.
Submitted by: hiren panchasara <hiren.panchasara@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: jimharris, sbruno
Obtained from: Yahoo! Inc.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Removed the check for regex.h in configure in order
to disable regex syntax checking, as it exposes
BIND to a critical flaw in libregex on some
platforms. [RT #32688]
Security: CVE-2013-2266
Approved by: delphij (mentor)
Sponsored by: DK Hostmaster A/S
While almost nobody uses O_ASYNC, and rightly so, the inheritance of the
related properties across accept() is a portability issue like the
inheritance of O_NONBLOCK.
on signed integer overflow wrapping. Otherwise mktime(3) and timegm(3)
can hang, in case the timestamp passed in struct tm is not representable
in a time_t. Specifically, any timestamp after 2038-01-19 03:14:07, in
combination with a 32-bit time_t.
Note that it would be better to change the code to not rely on undefined
behaviour, but it is contributed code, and it is not entirely trivial to
fix the issue properly.
MFC after: 3 days
Update libarchive to 3.1.2
Some of new features:
- support for lrzip and grzip compression
- support for writing tar v7 format
- b64encode and uuencode filters
- support for __MACOSX directory in Zip archives
- support for lzop compresion (external utility)
u_long. Before this change it was of type int for syscalls, but prototypes
in sys/stat.h and documentation for chflags(2) and fchflags(2) (but not
for lchflags(2)) stated that it was u_long. Now some related functions
use u_long type for flags (strtofflags(3), fflagstostr(3)).
- Make path argument of type 'const char *' for consistency.
Discussed on: arch
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This change allows creating file descriptors with close-on-exec set in some
situations. SOCK_CLOEXEC and SOCK_NONBLOCK can be OR'ed in socket() and
socketpair()'s type parameter, and MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC to recvmsg() makes file
descriptors (SCM_RIGHTS) atomically close-on-exec.
The numerical values for SOCK_CLOEXEC and SOCK_NONBLOCK are as in NetBSD.
MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC is the first free bit for MSG_*.
The SOCK_* flags are not passed to MAC because this may cause incorrect
failures and can be done later via fcntl() anyway. On the other hand, audit
is expected to cope with the new flags.
For MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC, unp_externalize() is extended to take a flags
argument.
Reviewed by: kib
command line option "-m <memsize in MB>" to specify the memory size.
Prior to this change the user needed to explicitly specify the amount of
memory allocated below 4G (-m <lowmem>) and the amount above 4G (-M <highmem>).
The "-M" option is no longer supported by 'bhyveload' and 'bhyve'.
The start of the PCI hole is fixed at 3GB and cannot be directly changed
using command line options. However it is still possible to change this in
special circumstances via the 'vm_set_lowmem_limit()' API provided by
libvmmapi.
Submitted by: Dinakar Medavaram (initial version)
Reviewed by: grehan
Obtained from: NetApp
multibyte support[0] and the new functions strenvisx and strsenvisx.
Add MLINKS for vis(3) functions add by this and the initial import from
NetBSD[1].
PR: bin/166364, bin/175418
Submitted by: "J.R. Oldroyd" <fbsd@opal.com>[0]
stefanf[1]
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
EAGAIN/EWOULDBLOCK when another daemon was running and had the pidfile open.
We should return EEXIST in that case, fix it.
Reported by: Dirk Engling <erdgeist@erdgeist.org>
Reviewed by: jhb, Dirk Engling <erdgeist@erdgeist.org>
MFC after: 1 week
It is almost always a bug if nscd closes the connection unexpectedly but
programs should not be killed with SIGPIPE for it.
Reviewed by: bushman
Tested by: Jan Beich
MFC after: 1 week
- Fix a compile warning where the return value of a call
to a write() function was ignored.
- Remove redundant include files from userland USB header files.
- Add some now needed include files to various C-files.
userland can reply to a message with NGM_HASREPLY bit set. In this case
we should not wait for a response to a responce.
PR: 176771
Submitted by: Keith Reynolds <keith.reynolds tidalscale.com>
LibYAML is a YAML 1.1 parser and emitter under MIT license which will
soon be used by the pkg boostrap (usr.bin/pkg) and bhyve
Reviewed by: roberto, antoine
int bindat(int fd, int s, const struct sockaddr *addr, socklen_t addrlen);
int connectat(int fd, int s, const struct sockaddr *name, socklen_t namelen);
which allow to bind and connect respectively to a UNIX domain socket with a
path relative to the directory associated with the given file descriptor 'fd'.
- Add manual pages for the new syscalls.
- Make the new syscalls available for processes in capability mode sandbox.
- Add capability rights CAP_BINDAT and CAP_CONNECTAT that has to be present on
the directory descriptor for the syscalls to work.
- Update audit(4) to support those two new syscalls and to handle path
in sockaddr_un structure relative to the given directory descriptor.
- Update procstat(1) to recognize the new capability rights.
- Document the new capability rights in cap_rights_limit(2).
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Discussed with: rwatson, jilles, kib, des
- Capability is no longer separate descriptor type. Now every descriptor
has set of its own capability rights.
- The cap_new(2) system call is left, but it is no longer documented and
should not be used in new code.
- The new syscall cap_rights_limit(2) should be used instead of
cap_new(2), which limits capability rights of the given descriptor
without creating a new one.
- The cap_getrights(2) syscall is renamed to cap_rights_get(2).
- If CAP_IOCTL capability right is present we can further reduce allowed
ioctls list with the new cap_ioctls_limit(2) syscall. List of allowed
ioctls can be retrived with cap_ioctls_get(2) syscall.
- If CAP_FCNTL capability right is present we can further reduce fcntls
that can be used with the new cap_fcntls_limit(2) syscall and retrive
them with cap_fcntls_get(2).
- To support ioctl and fcntl white-listing the filedesc structure was
heavly modified.
- The audit subsystem, kdump and procstat tools were updated to
recognize new syscalls.
- Capability rights were revised and eventhough I tried hard to provide
backward API and ABI compatibility there are some incompatible changes
that are described in detail below:
CAP_CREATE old behaviour:
- Allow for openat(2)+O_CREAT.
- Allow for linkat(2).
- Allow for symlinkat(2).
CAP_CREATE new behaviour:
- Allow for openat(2)+O_CREAT.
Added CAP_LINKAT:
- Allow for linkat(2). ABI: Reuses CAP_RMDIR bit.
- Allow to be target for renameat(2).
Added CAP_SYMLINKAT:
- Allow for symlinkat(2).
Removed CAP_DELETE. Old behaviour:
- Allow for unlinkat(2) when removing non-directory object.
- Allow to be source for renameat(2).
Removed CAP_RMDIR. Old behaviour:
- Allow for unlinkat(2) when removing directory.
Added CAP_RENAMEAT:
- Required for source directory for the renameat(2) syscall.
Added CAP_UNLINKAT (effectively it replaces CAP_DELETE and CAP_RMDIR):
- Allow for unlinkat(2) on any object.
- Required if target of renameat(2) exists and will be removed by this
call.
Removed CAP_MAPEXEC.
CAP_MMAP old behaviour:
- Allow for mmap(2) with any combination of PROT_NONE, PROT_READ and
PROT_WRITE.
CAP_MMAP new behaviour:
- Allow for mmap(2)+PROT_NONE.
Added CAP_MMAP_R:
- Allow for mmap(PROT_READ).
Added CAP_MMAP_W:
- Allow for mmap(PROT_WRITE).
Added CAP_MMAP_X:
- Allow for mmap(PROT_EXEC).
Added CAP_MMAP_RW:
- Allow for mmap(PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE).
Added CAP_MMAP_RX:
- Allow for mmap(PROT_READ | PROT_EXEC).
Added CAP_MMAP_WX:
- Allow for mmap(PROT_WRITE | PROT_EXEC).
Added CAP_MMAP_RWX:
- Allow for mmap(PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE | PROT_EXEC).
Renamed CAP_MKDIR to CAP_MKDIRAT.
Renamed CAP_MKFIFO to CAP_MKFIFOAT.
Renamed CAP_MKNODE to CAP_MKNODEAT.
CAP_READ old behaviour:
- Allow pread(2).
- Disallow read(2), readv(2) (if there is no CAP_SEEK).
CAP_READ new behaviour:
- Allow read(2), readv(2).
- Disallow pread(2) (CAP_SEEK was also required).
CAP_WRITE old behaviour:
- Allow pwrite(2).
- Disallow write(2), writev(2) (if there is no CAP_SEEK).
CAP_WRITE new behaviour:
- Allow write(2), writev(2).
- Disallow pwrite(2) (CAP_SEEK was also required).
Added convinient defines:
#define CAP_PREAD (CAP_SEEK | CAP_READ)
#define CAP_PWRITE (CAP_SEEK | CAP_WRITE)
#define CAP_MMAP_R (CAP_MMAP | CAP_SEEK | CAP_READ)
#define CAP_MMAP_W (CAP_MMAP | CAP_SEEK | CAP_WRITE)
#define CAP_MMAP_X (CAP_MMAP | CAP_SEEK | 0x0000000000000008ULL)
#define CAP_MMAP_RW (CAP_MMAP_R | CAP_MMAP_W)
#define CAP_MMAP_RX (CAP_MMAP_R | CAP_MMAP_X)
#define CAP_MMAP_WX (CAP_MMAP_W | CAP_MMAP_X)
#define CAP_MMAP_RWX (CAP_MMAP_R | CAP_MMAP_W | CAP_MMAP_X)
#define CAP_RECV CAP_READ
#define CAP_SEND CAP_WRITE
#define CAP_SOCK_CLIENT \
(CAP_CONNECT | CAP_GETPEERNAME | CAP_GETSOCKNAME | CAP_GETSOCKOPT | \
CAP_PEELOFF | CAP_RECV | CAP_SEND | CAP_SETSOCKOPT | CAP_SHUTDOWN)
#define CAP_SOCK_SERVER \
(CAP_ACCEPT | CAP_BIND | CAP_GETPEERNAME | CAP_GETSOCKNAME | \
CAP_GETSOCKOPT | CAP_LISTEN | CAP_PEELOFF | CAP_RECV | CAP_SEND | \
CAP_SETSOCKOPT | CAP_SHUTDOWN)
Added defines for backward API compatibility:
#define CAP_MAPEXEC CAP_MMAP_X
#define CAP_DELETE CAP_UNLINKAT
#define CAP_MKDIR CAP_MKDIRAT
#define CAP_RMDIR CAP_UNLINKAT
#define CAP_MKFIFO CAP_MKFIFOAT
#define CAP_MKNOD CAP_MKNODAT
#define CAP_SOCK_ALL (CAP_SOCK_CLIENT | CAP_SOCK_SERVER)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Reviewed by: Christoph Mallon <christoph.mallon@gmx.de>
Many aspects discussed with: rwatson, benl, jonathan
ABI compatibility discussed with: kib
system call, which has a nice property - it never fails, so it is a bit
easier to use. If there is no support for capability mode in the kernel
the function will return false (not in a sandbox). If the kernel is compiled
with the support for capability mode, the function will return true or false
depending if the calling process is in the capability mode sandbox or not
respectively.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
routines provide write-only stdio FILE objects that store their data in a
dynamically allocated buffer. They are a string builder interface somewhat
akin to a completely dynamic sbuf.
Reviewed by: bde, jilles (earlier versions)
MFC after: 1 month
* Reopen the directory using openat(fd, ".", ...) instead of opening the
pathname again. This fixes a race condition where the meaning of the
pathname changes and allows a reopen with fdopendir().
* Always reopen the directory for union stacks, not only when DTF_REWIND
is passed. Applications should be able to fchdir(dirfd(dir)) and
*at(dirfd(dir), ...). DTF_REWIND now does nothing.
sections and indirectly change the layout of an ELF file when
ELF_F_LAYOUT is not set.
PR: bin/167103
Approved by: rstone (co-mentor)
Obtained from: elftoolchain
MFC after: 2 weeks
example from bsearch(3) too, so that we don't have to duplicate
the example code in both places.
PR: docs/176197
Reviewed by: stefanf
Approved by: remko (mentor), gjb (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
- Remove unused #include.
- Do not cast away const.
- Use the canonical idiom to compare two numbers.
- Use proper type for sizes, i.e. size_t instead of int.
- Correct indentation.
- Simplify printf("\n") to puts("").
- Use return instead of exit() in main().
Submitted by: Christoph Mallon, christoph.mallon at gmx.de
Approved by: gjb (mentor)
Reviewed by: stefanf
MFC after: 1 week
qsort(3) can work together to sort an array of integers.
PR: docs/176197
Submitted by: Fernando, fapesteguia at opensistemas.com
Approved by: gjb (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
a section of type SHT_NULL.
- Update the man page to reflect the fact that elf_getdata() and
elf_rawdata() may return with an error of ELF_E_SECTION.
PR: bin/175491
Approved by: emaste (co-mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
now disables read-ahead. It used to effectively restore the system default
readahead hueristic if it had been changed; a negative value now restores
the default.
Reviewed by: kib
this is not a problem as they are resolved by libgcc. The exception is for
the __aeabi_mem* functions. These call back into libc to the appropriate
function. This causes issues for static binaries as we only link against
libc once so there is no way for it to call into libgcc and back.
The fix for this is to include these symbols in libc but keep them hidden
so binaries use the libgcc version.
Prior to this change pinning was implemented via an ioctl (VM_SET_PINNING)
that called 'sched_bind()' on behalf of the user thread.
The ULE implementation of 'sched_bind()' bumps up 'td_pinned' which in turn
runs afoul of the assertion '(td_pinned == 0)' in userret().
Using the cpuset affinity to implement pinning of the vcpu threads works with
both 4BSD and ULE schedulers and has the happy side-effect of getting rid
of a bunch of code in vmm.ko.
Discussed with: grehan
There are uncommon cases where fts_safe_changedir() may be called with a
non-NULL name that is not "..". Do not block or worse if an attacker put (a
(symlink to) a fifo or device where a directory used to be.
MFC after: 1 week
a few duplicates. This should fix building world with -stdlib=libc++
after r246028.
Submitted by: Yamaya Takashi <yamayan@kbh.biglobe.ne.jp>
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC-With: r246028
Dont use/link ARCMT, StaticAnalyzer and Rewriter to clang when the user
specifies not to. Dont build ASTMatchers with Rewriter disabled and
StaticAnalyzer when it's disabled.
Without all those three, the clang binary shrinks (x86_64) from ~36MB
to ~32MB (unstripped).
To disable these clang components, and get a smaller clang binary built
and installed, set WITHOUT_CLANG_FULL in src.conf(5). During the
initial stages of buildworld, those extra components are already
disabled automatically, to save some build time.
MFC after: 1 week
case 0x3E: /* Per Intel document 325462-045US 01/2013. */
Add manpage to document all the goodness that is available in this
processor model.
No support for uncore events at this time.
Submitted by: hiren panchasara <hiren.panchasara@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: davide, jimharris, sbruno
Obtained from: Yahoo! Inc.
MFC after: 2 weeks
with the user's namespace.
- Correct size and position variables type from long to size_t.
- Do not set errno to ENOMEM on malloc failure, as malloc already does so.
- Implement the concept of "buffer data length", which mandates what SEEK_END
refers to and the allowed extent for a read.
- Use NULL as read-callback if the buffer is opened in write-only mode.
Conversely, use NULL as write-callback when opened in read-only mode.
- Implement the handling of the ``b'' character in the mode argument. A binary
buffer differs from a text buffer (default mode if ``b'' is omitted) in that
NULL bytes are never appended to writes and that the "buffer data length"
equals to the size of the buffer.
- Remove shall from the man page. Use indicative instead. Also, specify that
the ``b'' flag does not conform with POSIX but is supported by glibc.
- Update the regression test so that the ``b'' functionality and the "buffer
data length" concepts are tested.
- Minor style(9) corrections.
Suggested by: jilles
Reviewed by: cognet
Approved by: cognet
but use normal references instead of weak. This makes the statically
linked binaries to use fast gettimeofday(2) by forcing the linker to
resolve references and providing the neccessary functions.
Reported by: bde
Tested by: marius (sparc64)
MFC after: 2 weeks
array of loaded objects to avoid a buffer overrun.
- Use reallocf() to avoid leaking memory if the realloc() fails.
PR: kern/175648
Submitted by: yuri@rawbw.com (1)
MFC after: 1 week
that were causing the runtime and STL libraries to see different versions of
various classes and functions when libstdc++ is used as a filter.
Note: This changes the ABI for libcxxrt, but libcxxrt is currently only in
-STABLE for testing and is not used by anything unless explicitly enabled by
the end user. No default compiler configurations use it.
libc++ will need to be recompiled after this change. make buildworld will do
this automatically, but make in lib/libc++ will not necessarily work unless the
new libcxxrt is installed first.
PR: kern/171610, stand/175453
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
'bhyve' was developed by grehan@ and myself at NetApp (thanks!).
Special thanks to Peter Snyder, Joe Caradonna and Michael Dexter for their
support and encouragement.
Obtained from: NetApp
in r7 and use ip to store the old version of r7 as it is not guaranteed to
be kept when calling a subroutine. The kernel will preserve the register
across system calls.
The threaded rtld lock implementation is faster even in the single-threaded
case because it postpones signal handlers via THR_CRITICAL_ENTER and
THR_CRITICAL_LEAVE instead of calling sigprocmask(2).
As a result, exception handling becomes faster in single-threaded
applications linked with libthr.
Reviewed by: kib
Preloaded library could have changed the environment, and
unconditional assingment to the environ undoes the customization.
The binaries needs to be recompiled to get the fix.
Move the common code to set up environ and __progname into the helper.
Note that ia64 possibly not fixed, due to it still using old csu.
Reported and tested by: John Hein <jhein@symmetricom.com>
Reviewed by: kan, scf
Approved by: secteam (simon)
MFC after: 2 weeks
"ed-argument-digit" (i. e. command 0) was incorrectly used
instead.
This bug comes from the original sources imported in 1994
and has been confirmed in upstream NetBSD.
Reported by: Yamagi Burmeister
Submitted by: Christoph Mallon
MFC after: 3 days
observed with -O2 (used by default).
Avoid function inlining for t1_bkpt_t on which we set a breakpoint.
Otherwise the address of the function is never called thus the
breakpoint never triggers.
Reported by: zont
Reviewed by: rpaulo
path longer than this.
- Fix an unreached case of check against sizeof buf, which in turn leads
to an off-by-one nul byte write on the stack. The original condition
can never be satisfied because the passed boundary is the maximum value
that can be returned, so code was harmless.
MFC after: 1 month
set of NetBSD software to compile as part of the FreeBSD build with
little or no modifiction. It is built as a static library and not
installed for general use. Likewise, its header files are not
installed.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
NetBSD's. This output size limited versions of vis and unvis functions
as well as a set of vis variants that allow arbitrary characters to be
specified for encoding.
Finally, MIME Quoted-Printable encoding as described in RFC 2045 is
supported.
* Don't provide clear_cache or the __sync_* functions on ARM with clang as
they are provided by clang as builtin functions.
* Tell clang it is aloud to compile some libgcc code using heinous GCC
extensions.
A fork/exec could happen between open and fcntl, leaking a file descriptor.
Using O_CLOEXEC fixes this and as a side effect simplifies the code.
NetBSD already had this (I checked this after making the change myself).
Reviewed by: gabor
Security Fixes
Prevents named from aborting with a require assertion failure
on servers with DNS64 enabled. These crashes might occur as a
result of specific queries that are received.
New Features
* Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm keys and signatures in
DNSSEC are now supported per RFC 6605. [RT #21918]
Feature Changes
* Improves OpenSSL error logging [RT #29932]
* nslookup now returns a nonzero exit code when it is unable to get
an answer. [RT #29492]
Other critical bug fixes are included.
Approved by: delphij (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
Security: CVE-2012-5688
Sponsored by: DK Hostmaster A/S
The changes were derived from what has been committed to NetBSD, with
modifications. These are:
1. Preserve the existsing GLOB_LIMIT behaviour by including the number
of matches to the set of parameters to limit.
2. Change some of the limits to avoid impacting normal use cases:
GLOB_LIMIT_STRING - change from 65536 to ARG_MAX so that glob(3)
can still provide a full command line of expanded names.
GLOB_LIMIT_STAT - change from 128 to 1024 for no other reason than
that 128 feels too low (it's not a limit that impacts the
behaviour of the test program listed in CVE-2010-2632).
GLOB_LIMIT_PATH - change from 1024 to 65536 so that glob(3) can
still provide a fill command line of expanded names.
3. Protect against buffer overruns when we hit the GLOB_LIMIT_STAT or
GLOB_LIMIT_READDIR limits. We append SEP and EOS to pathend in
those cases. Return GLOB_ABORTED instead of GLOB_NOSPACE when we
would otherwise overrun the buffer.
This change also modifies the existing behaviour of glob(3) in case
GLOB_LIMIT is specifies by limiting the *new* matches and not all
matches. This is an important distinction when GLOB_APPEND is set or
when the caller uses a non-zero gl_offs. Previously pre-existing
matches or the value of gl_offs would be counted in the number of
matches even though the man page states that glob(3) would return
GLOB_NOSPACE when gl_matchc or more matches were found.
The limits that cannot be circumvented are GLOB_LIMIT_STRING and
GLOB_LIMIT_PATH all others can be crossed by simply calling glob(3)
again and with GLOB_APPEND set.
The entire description above applies only when GLOB_LIMIT has been
specified of course. No limits apply when this flag isn't set!
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc
equivalent to malloc(size). This eliminates the conditional expression
used for calling either realloc() or malloc() when realloc() will do
all the time.
free and clear the gl_pathv pointer in the glob_t structure. Such
breaks the invariant of the glob_t structure, as stated in the comment
right in front of the globextend() function. If gl_pathv was non-NULL,
then gl_pathc was > 0. Making gl_pathv a NULL pointer without also
setting gl_pathc to 0 is wrong.
Since we otherwise don't free the memory associated with a glob_t in
error cases, it's unlikely that this change will cause a memory leak
that wasn't already there to begin with. Callers of glob(3) must
call globfree(3) irrespective of whether glob(3) returned an error
or not.
This commit adds a new mode option 'e' that must follow any 'b', '+' and/or
'x' options. C11 is clear about the 'x' needing to follow 'b' and/or '+' and
that is what we implement; therefore, require a strict position for 'e' as
well.
For freopen() with a non-NULL path argument and fopen(), the close-on-exec
flag is set iff the 'e' mode option is specified. For freopen() with a NULL
path argument and fdopen(), the close-on-exec flag is turned on if the 'e'
mode option is specified and remains unchanged otherwise.
Although the same behaviour for fopen() can be obtained by open(O_CLOEXEC)
and fdopen(), this needlessly complicates the calling code.
Apart from the ordering requirement, the new option matches glibc.
PR: kern/169320
libc.a and libc_p.a. In addition, define isnan in libm.a and libm_p.a,
but not in libm.so.
This makes it possible to statically link executables using both isnan
and isnanf with libc and libm.
Tested by: kargl
MFC after: 1 week
There is one known issue: Some probes will display an error message along the
lines of: "Invalid address (0)"
I tested this with both a simple dtrace probe and dtruss on a few different
binaries on 32-bit. I only compiled 64-bit, did not run it, but I don't expect
problems without the modules loaded. Volunteers are welcome.
MFC after: 1 month