1. separating L2 tables (ARP, NDP) from the L3 routing tables
2. removing as much locking dependencies among these layers as
possible to allow for some parallelism in the search operations
3. simplify the logic in the routing code,
The most notable end result is the obsolescent of the route
cloning (RTF_CLONING) concept, which translated into code reduction
in both IPv4 ARP and IPv6 NDP related modules, and size reduction in
struct rtentry{}. The change in design obsoletes the semantics of
RTF_CLONING, RTF_WASCLONE and RTF_LLINFO routing flags. The userland
applications such as "arp" and "ndp" have been modified to reflect
those changes. The output from "netstat -r" shows only the routing
entries.
Quite a few developers have contributed to this project in the
past: Glebius Smirnoff, Luigi Rizzo, Alessandro Cerri, and
Andre Oppermann. And most recently:
- Kip Macy revised the locking code completely, thus completing
the last piece of the puzzle, Kip has also been conducting
active functional testing
- Sam Leffler has helped me improving/refactoring the code, and
provided valuable reviews
- Julian Elischer setup the perforce tree for me and has helped
me maintaining that branch before the svn conversion
contrib/openbsm (svn merge) and sys/{bsm,security/audit} (manual merge).
- Add OpenBSM contrib tree to include paths for audit(8) and auditd(8).
- Merge support for new tokens, fixes to existing token generation to
audit_bsm_token.c.
- Synchronize bsm includes and definitions.
OpenBSM history for imported revisions below for reference.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Apple Inc.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
--
OpenBSM 1.1 alpha 2
- Include files in OpenBSM are now broken out into two parts: library builds
required solely for user space, and system includes, which may also be
required for use in the kernels of systems integrating OpenBSM. Submitted
by Stacey Son.
- Configure option --with-native-includes allows forcing the use of native
include for system includes, rather than the versions bundled with OpenBSM.
This is intended specifically for platforms that ship OpenBSM, have adapted
versions of the system includes in a kernel source tree, and will use the
OpenBSM build infrastructure with an unmodified OpenBSM distribution,
allowing the customized system includes to be used with the OpenBSM build.
Submitted by Stacey Son.
- Various strcpy()'s/strcat()'s have been changed to strlcpy()'s/strlcat()'s
or asprintf(). Added compat/strlcpy.h for Linux.
- Remove compatibility defines for old Darwin token constant names; now only
BSM token names are provided and used.
- Add support for extended header tokens, which contain space for information
on the host generating the record.
- Add support for setting extended host information in the kernel, which is
used for setting host information in extended header tokens. The
audit_control file now supports a "host" parameter which can be used by
auditd to set the information; if not present, the kernel parameters won't
be set and auditd uses unextended headers for records that it generates.
OpenBSM 1.1 alpha 1
- Add option to auditreduce(1) which allows users to invert sense of
matching, such that BSM records that do not match, are selected.
- Fix bug in audit_write() where we commit an incomplete record in the
event there is an error writing the subject token. This was submitted
by Diego Giagio.
- Build support for Mac OS X 10.5.1 submitted by Eric Hall.
- Fix a bug which resulted in host XML attributes not being arguments so
that const strings can be passed as arguments to tokens. This patch was
submitted by Xin LI.
- Modify the -m option so users can select more then one audit event.
- For Mac OS X, added Mach IPC support for audit trigger messages.
- Fixed a bug in getacna() which resulted in a locking problem on Mac OS X.
- Added LOG_PERROR flag to openlog when -d option is used with auditd.
- AUE events added for Mac OS X Leopard system calls.
- This also removes $FreeBSD$ from two now unmodifed source files
ncurses/tinfo/lib_raw.c and ncurses/tinfo/lib_baudrate.c
MFC after: 2 months (after 7.1 and 6.4 are released)
Some time ago I got some reports MPSAFE TTY broke telnetd(8). Even
though it turned out to be a different problem within the TTY code, I
spotted a small issue with telnetd(8). Instead of allocating PTY's using
openpty(3) or posix_openpt(2), it used its own PTY allocation routine.
This means that telnetd(8) still uses /dev/ptyXX-style devices.
I've also increased the size of line[]. Even though 16 should be enough,
we already use 13 bytes ("/dev/pts/999", including '\0'). 32 bytes gives
us a little more freedom.
Also enable -DSTREAMSPTY. Otherwise telnetd(8) strips the PTY's pathname
to the latest slash instead of just removing "/dev/" (e.g. /dev/pts/0 ->
0, instead of pts/0).
Reviewed by: rink
previously in order to ensure it fit properly in the bufer when encoded.
This prevents a debugging printf from firing if a source or destination
host name for an smb mount exceeds 15 characters.
MFC after: 3 days
Obtained from: Apple, Inc.
different version has been committed upstream in the libpcap vendor branch.
This will allow people to experiment with zero-copy bpf(4) without requiring
external patches.
Note to enable this functionality:
sysctl net.bpf.zerocopy_enable=1
By default, libpcap will use the legacy buffering method unless this sysctl
variable is set to 1.
For the details about zero-copy bpf(4) implementation see svn change r177548.
Requested by: many
Discussed with: sam
In collaboration with: rwatson
loop pointed out by cognet@ that occurs when calling strtod() with a
string representing a number between DBL_MAX and 2*DBL_MAX, when the
rounding mode is anything other than the default.
Note: As the first merge since the conversion to svn, it includes many
propset changes to get the proper svn:eol-style and svn:mime-type on the
files (as merged from the fixed up vendor/dist area).
MFC after: 3 days
operating systems. Previously, gcc would inhibit the generation of
fsqrt, fsin, and several other floating point instructions, for the
benefit of the old in-kernel math emulator, which was removed over 5
years ago.
This works around a bug in HP-UX's telnet client and also gives a much
saner user experience when using FreeBSD's telnet client.
PR: bin/19405
Submitted by: Joel Ray Holveck joelh of gnu.org
MFC after: 1 month
own purposes. To pull this off, it defines _KERNEL before including the
headers where these structures are defined. This leads to no end of
trouble when some of these headers, or other headers that they include,
change, as demonstrated by r180755.
The quick fix in this particular case is to define _WANT_FILE instead of
_KERNEL, conditional on __FreeBSD__. A better long-term fix is left as
an exercise to the reader.
The xgetpass() function pushes a cleanup entry for &osa, but then
attempts to flush the stack until an entry matching &sa. The two
object pointers do not match, so the stack is popped too much,
and then cleanup_until calls abort() when it unexpectedly hits
the bottom of the cleanup stack.
Reported by: Paul B. Mahol, onemda at gmail.com,
Pietro Cerutti, gahr at gahr.ch
PR: bin/124191
Reviewed by: mp, kris
MFC after: 2 days
the patch from ISC for lib/bind9/check.c and deletion of unused
files in lib/bind.
This version will by default randomize the UDP query source port
(and sequence number of course) for every query.
In order to take advantage of this randomization users MUST have an
appropriate firewall configuration to allow UDP queries to be sent and
answers to be received on random ports; and users MUST NOT specify a
port number using the query-source[-v6] options.
The avoid-v[46]-udp-ports options exist for users who wish to eliminate
certain port numbers from being chosen by named for this purpose. See
the ARM Chatper 6 for more information.
Also please note, this issue applies only to UDP query ports. A random
ephemeral port is always chosen for TCP queries.
This issue applies primarily to name servers whose main purpose is to
resolve random queries (sometimes referred to as "caching" servers, or
more properly as "resolving" servers), although even an "authoritative"
name server will make some queries, primarily at startup time.
All users of BIND are strongly encouraged to upgrade to the latest
version, and to utilize the source port randomization feature.
This update addresses issues raised in:
http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2008-1447http://www.kb.cert.org/vuls/id/800113http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-dnsext-forgery-resilience
conflicts due to radically different approaches to security and bug fixes.
In some cases I re-started from the vendor version and reimplemented our
patches. Fortunately, this is not enabled by default in -current.