pthread_get_name_np() and pthread_set_name_np().
This re-applies r361770 after compatibility fixes.
Reviewed by: antoine, jkim, markj
Tested by: antoine (exp-run)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25117
Some environments in which execvPe may be called have a limited amount of
stack available. Currently, it avoidably allocates a segment on the stack
large enough to hold PATH so that it may be mutated and use strsep() for
easy parsing. This logic is now rewritten to just operate on the immutable
string passed in and do the necessary math to extract individual paths,
since it will be copying out those segments to another buffer anyways and
piecing them together with the name for a full path.
Additional size is also needed for the stack in posix_spawnp(), because it
may need to push all of argv to the stack and rebuild the command with sh in
front of it. We'll make sure it's properly aligned for the new thread, but
future work should likely make rfork_thread a little easier to use by
ensuring proper alignment.
Some trivial cleanup has been done with a couple of error writes, moving
strings into char arrays for use with the less fragile sizeof().
Reported by: Andrew Gierth <andrew_tao173.riddles.org.uk>
Reviewed by: jilles, kib, Andrew Gierth
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25038
If execve fails with ENOEXEC, execvp is expected to rebuild the command
with /bin/sh instead and try again.
The previous version did this, but overlooked two details:
argv[0] can conceivably be NULL, in which case memp would never get
terminated. We must allocate no less than three * sizeof(char *) so we can
properly terminate at all times. For the non-NULL argv standard case, we
count all the non-NULL elements and actually skip the first argument, so we
end up capturing the NULL terminator in our bcopy().
The second detail is that the spec is actually worded such that we should
have been preserving argv[0] as passed to execvp:
"[...] executed command shall be as if the process invoked the sh utility
using execl() as follows:
execl(<shell path>, arg0, file, arg1, ..., (char *)0);
where <shell path> is an unspecified pathname for the sh utility, file is
the process image file, and for execvp(), where arg0, arg1, and so on
correspond to the values passed to execvp() in argv[0], argv[1], and so on."
So we make this change at this time as well, while we're already touching
it. We decidedly can't preserve a NULL argv[0] as this would be incredibly,
incredibly fragile, so we retain our legacy behavior of using "sh" for
argv[] in this specific instance.
Some light tests are added to try and detect some components of handling the
ENOEXEC fallback; posix_spawnp_enoexec_fallback_null_argv0 is likely not
100% reliable, but it at least won't raise false-alarms and it did result in
useful failures with pre-change libc on my machine.
This is a secondary change in D25038.
Reported by: Andrew Gierth <andrew_tao173.riddles.org.uk>
Reviewed by: jilles, kib, Andrew Gierth
MFC after: 1 week
Specifically, add LIBUSB_CLASS_PHYSICAL and the libusb_has_capability API.
Descriptions and functionality for these derived from the
documentation at [0]. The current set of capabilities are all supported by
libusb.
These were detected as missing after updating net/freerdp to 2.1.1, which
attempted to use both.
[0] http://libusb.sourceforge.net/api-1.0/group__libusb__misc.html
Reviewed by: hselasky
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25194
Comparing the object files produced by GNU as 2.17.50 and Clang IAS
shows many immaterial changes in strtab etc., and one material change
in .text:
1bac: 4c 8b 4f 18 mov 0x18(%rdi),%r9
1bb0: eb 0e jmp 1bc0 <Skein1024_block_loop>
- 1bb2: 66 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 data16 nopw %cs:0x0(%rax,%rax,1)
- 1bb9: 00 00 00 00
- 1bbd: 0f 1f 00 nopl (%rax)
+ 1bb2: 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 nopw %cs:0x0(%rax,%rax,1)
+ 1bb9: 00 00 00
+ 1bbc: 0f 1f 40 00 nopl 0x0(%rax)
0000000000001bc0 <Skein1024_block_loop>:
Skein1024_block_loop():
1bc0: 4c 8b 47 10 mov 0x10(%rdi),%r8
1bc4: 4c 03 85 c0 00 00 00 add 0xc0(%rbp),%r8
That is, GNU as and Clang's integrated assembler use different multi-
byte NOPs for alignment (GNU as emits an 11 byte NOP + a 3 byte NOP,
while Clang IAS emits a 10 byte NOP + a 4 byte NOP).
Dependency cleanup hacks are not required, because we do not create
.depend files from GNU as.
Reviewed by: allanjude, arichardson, cem, tsoome
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8434
r360979 erroneously assumed that the lowest mapping in an address space
would be a file mapping, but of course this is not true in general.
Reported and tested by: Frederic Chardon <chardon.frederic@gmail.com>
MFC after: 3 days
Since we had a .set reorder, the nop after the "jal" was being placed after
the delay slot, resulting in two nops.
While changing this code also guard the .set noreorder with .set push/pop
and use $zero as the cpsetup save register since we don't need to save $gp.
Reviewed By: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25025
Copying the approach chosen in r309412. This fixes building the libc tests
on a macOS host since the macOS /bin/dd binary does not support status=none.
As there only seem to be two uses, this commit changes the two Makefiles.
If this becomes more common, we could also add a wrapper bootstrap script
that ignores status= and forwards the remaining args to the real dd.
Another alternative would be to remove the status flag and pipe stderr to
/dev/null, but them we lose error messages.
Reviewed By: brooks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24785
description of items residing in a so-called union. FreeBSD currently
only supports 4 such pop levels.
If the push level is not restored within the processing of the same
HID item, an invalid memory location may be used for subsequent HID
item processing.
Verify that the push level is always valid when processing HID items.
Reported by: Andy Nguyen (Google)
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
At this point, AES is the more common name for Rijndael128. setkey(8)
will still accept the old name, and old constants remain for
compatiblity.
Reviewed by: cem, bcr (manpages)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24964
This commit adds the priv(9) that waters down the sysctl to make it only
allow read(2) of a dirfd by the system root. Jailed root is not allowed, but
jail policy and superuser policy will abstain from allowing/denying it so
that a MAC module can fully control the policy.
Such a MAC module has been written, and can be found at:
https://people.freebsd.org/~kevans/mac_read_dir-0.1.0.tar.gz
It is expected that the MAC module won't be needed by many, as most only
need to do such diagnostics that require this behavior as system root
anyways. Interested parties are welcome to grab the MAC module above and
create a port or locally integrate it, and with enough support it could see
introduction to base. As noted in mac_read_dir.c, it is released under the
BSD 2 clause license and allows the restrictions to be lifted for only
jailed root or for all unprivileged users.
PR: 246412
Reviewed by: mckusick, kib, emaste, jilles, cy, phk, imp (all previous)
Reviewed by: rgrimes (latest version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24596
Historically, we've allowed read() of a directory and some filesystems will
accommodate (e.g. ufs/ffs, msdosfs). From the history department staffed by
Warner: <<EOF
pdp-7 unix seemed to allow reading directories, but they were weird, special
things there so I'm unsure (my pdp-7 assembler sucks).
1st Edition's sources are lost, mostly. The kernel allows it. The
reconstructed sources from 2nd or 3rd edition read it though.
V6 to V7 changed the filesystem format, and should have been a warning, but
reading directories weren't materially changed.
4.1b BSD introduced readdir because of UFS. UFS broke all directory reading
programs in 1983. ls, du, find, etc all had to be rewritten. readdir() and
friends were introduced here.
SysVr3 picked up readdir() in 1987 for the AT&T fork of Unix. SysVr4 updated
all the directory reading programs in 1988 because different filesystem
types were introduced.
In the 90s, these interfaces became completely ubiquitous as PDP-11s running
V7 faded from view and all the folks that initially started on V7 upgraded
to SysV. Linux never supported this (though I've not done the software
archeology to check) because it has always had a pathological diversity of
filesystems.
EOF
Disallowing read(2) on a directory has the side-effect of masking
application bugs from relying on other implementation's behavior
(e.g. Linux) of rejecting these with EISDIR across the board, but allowing
it has been a vector for at least one stack disclosure bug in the past[0].
By POSIX, this is implementation-defined whether read() handles directories
or not. Popular implementations have chosen to reject them, and this seems
sensible: the data you're reading from a directory is not structured in some
unified way across filesystem implementations like with readdir(2), so it is
impossible for applications to portably rely on this.
With this patch, we will reject most read(2) of a dirfd with EISDIR. Users
that know what they're doing can conscientiously set
bsd.security.allow_read_dir=1 to allow read(2) of directories, as it has
proven useful for debugging or recovery. A future commit will further limit
the sysctl to allow only the system root to read(2) directories, to make it
at least relatively safe to leave on for longer periods of time.
While we're adding logic pertaining to directory vnodes to vn_io_fault, an
additional assertion has also been added to ensure that we're not reaching
vn_io_fault with any write request on a directory vnode. Such request would
be a logical error in the kernel, and must be debugged rather than allowing
it to potentially silently error out.
Commented out shell aliases have been placed in root's chsrc/shrc to promote
awareness that grep may become noisy after this change, depending on your
usage.
A tentative MFC plan has been put together to try and make it as trivial as
possible to identify issues and collect reports; note that this will be
strongly re-evaluated. Tentatively, I will MFC this knob with the default as
it is in HEAD to improve our odds of actually getting reports. The future
priv(9) to further restrict the sysctl WILL NOT BE MERGED BACK, so the knob
will be a faithful reversion on stable/12. We will go into the merge
acknowledging that the sysctl default may be flipped back to restore
historical behavior at *any* point if it's warranted.
[0] https://www.freebsd.org/security/advisories/FreeBSD-SA-19:10.ufs.asc
PR: 246412
Reviewed by: mckusick, kib, emaste, jilles, cy, phk, imp (all previous)
Reviewed by: rgrimes (latest version)
MFC after: 1 month (note the MFC plan mentioned above)
Relnotes: absolutely, but will amend previous RELNOTES entry
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24596
for pthread_get_name_np() and pthread_set_name_np(), to be
compatible with Linux.
PR: 238404
Proposed and reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25117
One of the error descriptions referred to permissions; in context the
meaning was probably clear, but the prot values are properly called
protections.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The service handler for fileargs_open() tries to pre-open multiple files
and pass descriptors for each back to the sandboxed process in a single
message. This is to amortize the cost of round-trips between the two
processes.
The service process adds a "cache" nvlist to the reply to "open",
containing file descriptors for pre-opened files. However, when adding
that nvlist to the reply, it was making a copy, effectively leaking the
cached descriptors.
While here, fix spelling in a local variable name.
PR: 241226
Reviewed by: oshogbo
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25095
Because the install location was hardcoded in the Makefile as
/usr/lib/libxo/encoder, the lib32 version was installed over the native
version. Replace /usr/lib with ${LIBDIR}.
Also define SHLIB_NAME instead of LIB + FILES. This prevents building a
static library.
MFC after: 2 weeks
r316063 installed pf's embedded libevent as a private lib, with headers
in /usr/include/private/event. Unfortunately we also have a copy of
libevent v2 included in ntp, which needed to be updated for compatibility
with OpenSSL 1.1.
As unadorned 'libevent' generally refers to libevent v2, be explicit that
this one is libevent v1.
Reviewed by: vangyzen (earlier)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17275
The revision caused libprocstat to have two undefined symbols:
- __start_set_pcpu
- __stop_set_pcpu
probably because of __GLOBL() used in sys/pcpu.h under _KERNEL.
The symbols are not accessed by anything and the linker in base does not
complain about them, but some ports are failing to build.
Hack around the problem by providing definitions for those symbols.
Probably there is a better solution, but I could not think of it yet.
Reported by: zeising
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC with: r361363
Sponsored by: Panzura
As usual, the full release notes are found on Github:
https://github.com/facebook/zstd/releases/tag/v1.4.5
Notable changes include:
* Improved decompress performance on amd64 and arm (5-10%
and 15-50%, respectively).
* '--patch-from' zstd(1) CLI option, which provides something like a very fast
version of bspatch(1) with slightly worse compression. See release notes.
In this update, I dropped the 3-year old -O0 workaround for an LLVM ARM bug;
the bug was fixed in LLVM SVN in 2017, but we didn't remove this workaround
from our tree until now.
MFC after: I won't, but feel free
Relnotes: yes
First of all, znode_phys_t hasn't been used for storing file attributes
for a long time now. Modern ZFS versions use a System Attribute table
with a flexible layout. But more importantly all the required
information is available in znode_t itself.
It's not easy to include zfs_znode.h in userland without breaking code
because the most interesting parts of the header are kernel-only. And
hardcoding field offsets is too fragile. So, I created a new
compilation unit that includes zfs_znode.h using some mild kludges to
get it and its dependencies to compile in userland. The compilation
unit exports interesting field offsets and does not have any other code.
PR: 194117
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Panzura
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24941
Keep link_map l_addr binary layout compatible, rename l_addr to l_base
where rtld returns map base. Provide relocbase in newly added l_addr.
This effectively reverts the patch to the initial version of D24918.
Reported by: antoine (portmgr)
Reviewed by: jhb, markj
Tested by: markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24946
Update unbound 1.9.6 --> 1.10.1.
Bug Fixes:
- CVE-2020-12662 Unbound can be tricked into amplifying an incoming
query into a large number of queries directed to a target.
- CVE-2020-12663 Malformed answers from upstream name servers can be
used to make Unbound unresponsive.
Reported by: emaste
MFC after: 3 days
Relnotes: yes
Security: CVE-2020-12662, CVE-2020-12663
This seems to have been broken since r247602 (from year 2013!).
Can be easily tested with
fstat -N /boot/kernel/kernel -M /var/crash/vmcore.last
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Panzura
Comparing fsid_t objects requires internal knowledge of the fsid structure
and yet this is duplicated across a number of places in the code.
Simplify by creating a fsidcmp function (macro).
Reviewed by: mjg, rmacklem
Approved by: mav (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24749
It previously returned the object map base address, while all other
ELF operating systems return load offset, i.e. the difference between
map base and the link base.
Explain the meaning of the field in the man page.
Stop filling the mips-only l_offs member, which is apparently unused.
PR: 246561
Requested by: Damjan Jovanovic <damjan.jov@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: emaste, jhb, cem (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24918
Update libarchive to 3.4.3
Relevant vendor changes:
PR #1352: support negative zstd compression levels
PR #1359: improve zstd version checking
PR #1348: support RHT.security.selinux from GNU tar
PR #1357: support for archives compressed with pzstd
PR #1367: fix issues in acl tests
PR #1372: child handling cleanup
PR #1378: fix memory leak from passphrase callback
The CU-SeeMe videoconferencing client and associated protocol is at this
point a historical artifact; there is no need to retain support for this
protocol today.
Reviewed by: philip, markj, allanjude
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24790
Expose the special kernel LAPIC, IOAPIC, and HPET devices to userspace
for use in, e.g., fallback instruction emulation (when userspace has a
newer instruction decode/emulation layer than the kernel vmm(4)).
Plumb the ioctl through libvmmapi and register the memory ranges in
bhyve(8).
Reviewed by: grehan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24525
netgraph(3) points to #include <netgraph/netgraph.h>, which is kernel only.
The man page refers to the user-space part of the netgraph module, which is
located in <netgraph.h>.
Submitted by: lutz_donnerhacke.de
Approved by: bcr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23814
We were accidentally using stfd instead of stw in our SAVEGPR macro.
This has almost certainly been causing crashes when compiling with -Os.
Reviewed by: jhibbits (in irc)
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
kve_offset gives the offset into the backing file, which is not what we
want since different segments may map the same page. Use the base of
the mapping to determine the offset exported by librtld_db instead.
PR: 244732
Reported by: Jenkins, Nicolò Mazzucato <nicomazz97@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Assume gcc is at least 6.4, the oldest xtoolchain in the ports tree.
Assume clang is at least 6, which was in 11.2-RELEASE. Drop conditions
for older compilers.
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version), emaste, jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24802
Summary:
In r209294 kib added -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables to the compile
flags for the GNU C startup components. This was done to work around a
BFD ld assertion, "no .eh_frame_hdr table will be created", which is
produced because of the layout of the startup objects.
Add the same flag to lib/csu too, for the same reason. And similarly to
r209294, also add -fno-omit-frame-pointer.
This is primarily meant to quickly MFC to stable/11, so it can end up in
the 11.4 release, as a fix for https://bugs.freebsd.org/246322.
PR: 246322
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24797
functionality first appeared in FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Gordon Bergling gbergling_gmail.com
Approved by: bcr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24677