Macfilter to route packets through different hooks based on sender MAC address.
Based on ng_macfilter written by Pekka Nikander
Sponsered by Retina b.v.
Reviewed by: afedorov
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27268
As discussed on -current, -stable, -toolchain, and with jhb@ and imp@,
disable the obsolete in-tree GDB 6.1.1 by default. This was kept only
to provide kgdb for the crashinfo tool, but is long-obsolete, does not
support all architectures that FreeBSD does, and held back other work
(such as forcing the use of DWARF2 for kernel debug).
Crashinfo will use kgdb from the gdb package or devel/gdb port, and will
privde a message referencing those if no kgdb is found.
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This has been years in the making, and we all knew it was bound to happen
some day. Switch to the BSDL grep implementation now that it's been a
little more thoroughly tested and theoretically supports all of the
extensions that gnugrep in base had with our libregex(3).
Folks shouldn't really notice much from this update; bsdgrep is slower than
gnugrep, but this is currently the price to pay for fewer bugs. Those
dissatisfied with the speed of grep and in need of a faster implementation
should check out what textproc/ripgrep and textproc/the_silver_searcher
can do for them.
I have some WIP to make bsdgrep faster, but do not consider it a blocker
when compared to the pros of switching now (aforementioned bugs, licensing).
PR: 228798 (exp-run)
PR: 128645, 156704, 166842, 166862, 180937, 193835, 201650
PR: 232565, 242308, 246000, 251081, 191086, 194397
Relnotes: yes, please
This is being done for the formatting and context changes. While the net content
hasn't been changed, the content/context changes were sufficient to warrant the
date bump.
MFC after: 1 week
MFC with: r368431, r368433, r368434, r368435
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
While some of the syscalls' behavior were documented and implied in the
RETURN VALUES section by earlier, e.g., the DESCRIPTION sections, as having
behavior of the other calls (`*_fd` vs `*_file` vs `*_link`), there was a lot
of implied return value behavior in the section prior to this change.
Explicitly document the syscall behavior per the current implementation in
sys/kern/vfs_extattr.c so others can better develop based on its explicit
documented behavior instead of having to digest the context of the manpage to
understand the appropriate behavior.
MFC after: 1 week
MFC with: r368431, r368433, r368434
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
- Remove an unnecessary trailing comma separating a two-item clause.
- Sort more function calls alphabetically (in the same vein as r368433).
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
Although some sections of the manpage sort the syscalls alphabetically, many
core areas of the manpage do not. Sort the syscalls so it is easier to pick out
functional changes and to improve manpage readability.
This formatting change is also being done to make future functional changes
easier to spot.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
The date with .Dd prior to this change isn't canonically spelled out: it
should have been "December", not "Dec".
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
- The CAVEATS section was misspelled as "CAVEAT".
- The CAVEATS section should come before the "BUGS" section and after
other existing sections by convention.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: make manlint
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
For platforms that don't have any of the memstick, cdrom, or dvdrom
release images (i.e. riscv64), the release-install target will trip up
when invoking md5(1) on the non-existent image files. Skipping this
allows the install to complete successfully.
Add two release flavors for RISC-V. First, the traditional "big-iron"
images, capable of generating distribution sets and VM images. Installer
images won't be built yet, but can be trivially enabled in the future
with the addition of riscv/make-memstick.sh.
Second, a GENERICSD embedded image. I've opted for this instead of
board-specific SD card images as it allows users to just dd the u-boot
they want. The RISC-V hardware ecosystem is still young, so a
configuration for e.g. the new PolarFire SoC Icicle Kit would likely see
very few users.
Reviewed by: gjb
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27045
RISC-V has the same booting requirements as arm64 (loader.efi, no legacy
boot options), so generated images for both architectures have the same
partition layout.
Reviewed by: gjb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27044
Since the few existing RISC-V hardware platforms are single board
computers, we can piggyback off of arm/arm64's embedded build support
for generating SD card images.
I don't see a pressing need to change the naming in this file at this
time.
Reviewed by: gjb, manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27043
We assume the boot CPU is always CPU 0 on arm64. To allow for this reserve
cpuid 0 for the boot CPU in the ACPI and FDT cases but otherwise start the
CPU as normal. We then check for the boot CPU in start_cpu and return as if
it was started.
While here extract the FDT CPU init code into a new function to simplify
cpu_mp_start and return FALSE from start_cpu when the CPU fails to start.
Reviewed by: mmel
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27497
This can be handy if gdb's stack unwinder fails, for example because of
a bug in kgdb's trap frame unwinder.
PR: 251463
Submitted by: Dmitry Salychev <dsl@mcusim.org>
MFC after: 1 week
In some error paths we would fail to detach from the iflib taskqueue
groups. Also move the detach code into its own subroutine instead of
duplicating it.
Submitted by: Sai Rajesh Tallamraju <stallamr@netapp.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27342
The integer arrays are encoded in nvlist as counted array <count, i0, i1...>,
loader xdr_array() is missing the count. This will affect the pool import when
there are hole devices in pool.
Also fix the new data add and print functions.
in the LinuxKPI. Linux defines min() to be a macro, while in FreeBSD
min() is a static inline function clamping its arguments to
"unsigned int".
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies // NVIDIA Networking
The old implementation chose the largest bucket zone such that if the
per-CPU caches are fully populated, the total number of items cached is
no larger than the specified limit. If no such zone existed, UMA would
not do any caching.
We can now use uz_bucket_size_max to set a precise limit on the number
of items in a zone's bucket, so the total size of per-CPU caches can be
bounded more easily. Implement a new policy in uma_zone_set_maxcache():
choose a bucket size such that up to half of the limit can be cached in
per-CPU caches, with the rest going to the full bucket cache. This
fixes a problem with the kstack_cache zone: the limit of 4 * mp_ncpus
items meant that the zone would not do any caching, defeating the whole
purpose of the zone. That's because the smallest bucket size holds up
to 2 items and we may cache up to 3 full buckets per CPU, and
2 * 3 * mp_ncpus > 4 * mp_ncpus.
Reported by: mjg
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27168
uz_bucket_size_max is the maximum permitted bucket size. When filling a
new bucket to satisfy uma_zalloc(), the bucket is populated with at most
uz_bucket_size_max items. The maximum number of entries in the bucket
may be larger. When freeing items, however, we will fill per-CPPU
buckets up to their maximum number of entries, potentially exceeding
uz_bucket_size_max. This makes it difficult to precisely limit the
number of items that may be cached in a zone. For example, if one wants
to limit buckets to 1 entry for a particular zone, that's not possible
since the smallest bucket holds up to 2 entries.
Try to solve the problem by using uz_bucket_size_max to limit the number
of entries in a bucket. Note that the ub_entries field is initialized
upon every bucket allocation. Most zones are not affected since they do
not impose any specific limit on the maximum bucket size.
While here, remove the UMA_ZONE_MINBUCKET flag. It was unused and we
now have uma_zone_set_maxcache() to control the zone's cache size more
precisely.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27167
Sync serial (T1/E1) interfaces are largely irrelevant today and phk
confirms this driver is unnecessary in review D23928.
This leaves ce(4) and cp(4) in the tree. They're likely not relevant
either, but glebius contacted the manufacturer and those devices are
still available for purchase. At glebius' suggestion leave them in
the tree as long as they do not impose a maintenace burden.
Approved by: phk
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
r368355 removed the GNU_GREP_COMPAT knob (off by default) and forgot that
bsdgrep may be built/used for bootstrap on some systems.
All base uses should strive to use only POSIX-compliant expressions anyways
and we haven't had libregex by default here up to this point, so just don't
do that if we're bootstrapping.
Note that the resulting binary has the wrong `grep -V` information as it
falsely claims to be GNU compatible, but it is only for bootstrap.
Reported by: GitHub cross-builds via yuripv
Character width data being out of date is a constant source
of weird rendering issues and wasted time trying to diagnose
those, e.g. as reported by Jeremy Chadwick:
https://gitlab.com/muttmua/mutt/-/issues/67
Sadly, there is no real ("standard") wcwidth data source, so
this tries to rectify the problem using the utf8proc one (through
its C API) which would hopefully benefeat both FreeBSD and
utf8proc through bug reports (if any).
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27259
This has already confused me once (and I'm pretty sure I wrote it), so let's
clarify: unjailing after the command has completed will only happen if we're
interactive and -U has not been specified.
This just folds two conditionals together to make it obvious how -b/-U
interact with each other.
MFC after: 3 days
linux_common.c to linux_util.c so they become available on i386.
linux_common.c defines the linux_common kernel module but this module does
not exist on i386 and linux_common.c is not included in the linux module.
linux_util.c is included in the linux_common module on amd64 and the linux
module on i386.
Remove linux_common.c from files.i386 again. It was added recently in
r367433 when the DTrace provider definitions were moved.
The V4L feature declarations were moved to linux_common in r283423.