This flag has been set on startup since 65618fdda0.
However, This causes some of the math-related tests to fail as they report
zero instead of a tiny number. This fixes at least
/usr/tests/lib/msun/ldexp_test and possibly others.
Additionally, setting this flag prevents printf() from printing subnormal
numbers in decimal form.
See also https://www.openwall.com/lists/musl/2021/02/26/1
PR: 253847
Reviewed By: mmel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28938
This caused LDBL_MANT_DIG to not be defined and therefore the scalbnl
alias was not being emitted for double==long double platforms.
Fixes: 760b2ffc ("Update scalbn* functions to the musl versions")
Reported by: Jenkins
We could just use a C implementation using __builtin_fabs(), but using
this assembly version guarantees that there is no additional prolog/epilog
code. Additionally, clang generates worse code for masking off the top bit
than GCC: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49377.
This fixes the RISCV64 softfloat world build after cf97d2a1da. That commit
added -fno-builtin to the msun tests which resulted in the first references to
fabs (previously the compiler inlined all calls).
Reviewed By: dim
Reported by: mjg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28994
The only diff compared to musl is a minor change to scalbnl() to replace
musl's union ldshape with union IEEEl2bits.
This fixes the scalbn tests on non-x86 (since x86 has an assembly version
that is used instead).
Musl commit messages:
commit 8c44a060243f04283ca68dad199aab90336141db
Author: Szabolcs Nagy <nsz@port70.net>
Date: Mon Apr 3 02:38:13 2017 +0200
fix scalbn when result is in the subnormal range
in nearest rounding mode scalbn could introduce double rounding error
when an intermediate value and the final result were both in the
subnormal range e.g.
scalbn(0x1.7ffffffffffffp-1, -1073)
returned 0x1p-1073 instead of 0x1p-1074, because the intermediate
computation got rounded to 0x1.8p-1023.
with the fix an intermediate value can only be in the subnormal range
if the final result is 0 which is correct even after double rounding.
(there still can be two roundings so signals may be raised twice, but
that's only observable with trapping exceptions which is not supported.)
commit 2eaed464e2080d8321d3903b71086a1ecfc4ee4a
Author: Szabolcs Nagy <nsz@port70.net>
Date: Wed Sep 4 15:52:54 2013 +0000
math: use float_t and double_t in scalbnf and scalbn
remove STRICT_ASSIGN (c99 semantics is assumed) and use the conventional
union to prepare the scaling factor (so libm.h is no longer needed)
commit 1b77b9072f374bd26eb0574b83a0d5f18d75ec60
Author: Szabolcs Nagy <nsz@port70.net>
Date: Thu Aug 15 10:07:46 2013 +0000
math: minor scalbn*.c simplification
commit c4359e01303da2755fe7e8033826b132eb3659b1
Author: Szabolcs Nagy <nsz@port70.net>
Date: Tue Nov 13 10:55:35 2012 +0100
math: excess precision fix modf, modff, scalbn, scalbnf
old code was correct only if the result was stored (without the
excess precision) or musl was compiled with -ffloat-store.
now we use STRICT_ASSIGN to work around the issue.
(see note 160 in c11 section 6.8.6.4)
commit 666271c105e4137bdfa195e217799d74143370d4
Author: Szabolcs Nagy <nsz@port70.net>
Date: Tue Nov 13 10:30:40 2012 +0100
math: fix scalbn and scalbnf on overflow/underflow
old code was correct only if the result was stored (without the
excess precision) or musl was compiled with -ffloat-store.
(see note 160 in n1570.pdf section 6.8.6.4)
commit 8051e08e10d2b739fcfcbc6bc7466e8d77fa49f1
Author: nsz <nsz@port70.net>
Date: Mon Mar 19 10:54:07 2012 +0100
simplify scalbn*.c implementations
The old scalbn.c was wrong and slow, the new one is just slow.
(scalbn(0x1p+1023,-2097) should give 0x1p-1074, but the old code gave 0)
Reviewed By: dim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28872
Building R on powerpc64 exposed a problem in fpsetmask() whereby we
were not properly clamping the provided mask to the valid range.
This same issue affects powerpc and powerpcspe.
Properly limit the range of bits that can be set via fpsetmask().
While here, use the correct fp_except_t type instead of fp_rnd_t.
Reported by: pkubaj, jhibbits (in IRC)
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
Building R exposed a problem in fpsetmask() whereby we were not properly
clamping the provided mask to the valid range.
R initilizes the mask by calling fpsetmask(~0) on FreeBSD. Since we
recently enabled precise exceptions, this was causing an immediate
SIGFPE because we were attempting to set invalid bits in the fpscr.
Properly limit the range of bits that can be set via fpsetmask().
While here, use the correct fp_except_t type instead of fp_rnd_t.
Reported by: pkubaj (in IRC)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
This should return -1 with OTHER/ENOMEM set in the handle when malloc
fails, like everywhere else in libifconfig.
Reviewed by: kp
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28964
Regenerate the list of generated symbols for libifconfig:
```
grep -hr ^ifconfig_sfp_ /usr/obj/usr/src/amd64.amd64/lib/libifconfig \
| sed 's/(.*/;/' | sort -u
```
Spotted by build failures caused by a missing symbol while working on
upgrading libifconfig from internal to private.
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28927
Remove -x flag from sh used to execute MKuserdefs.sh during ncurses
build and stop polluting make -s output
Reviewed by: bapt, manu
Approved by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28885
Along with the termcap database, ncurses will now lookup for the
terminfo database, note that the terminfo database is being looked
up first and then it fallsback on the termcap one.
While here drop our custom reader for the termcap database, over the
time it is needed maintenance to be able to catchup with changes on ncurses
side.
Install the ncurses tools which are needed to deal with the terminfo
database: tic, infocmp, toe
Replace our termcap only aware tools with the ncurses counterpart:
tput, tabs, tset, clear and reset
In particular they can your the extra capabilities described in the
terminfo database, which does not exist in termcap
Note that to add a new terminfo information to the database from ports
the ports will just need to add their extra information into:
/usr/local/share/site-terminfo/<firstletteroftheterm>/<term>
Tested by: jbeich, manu
This forces the compiler to emit calls to libm functions, instead of
possibly substituting pre-calculated results at compile time, which
should help to actually test those functions.
Reviewed by: emaste, arichardson, ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28577
MFC after: 3 days
All supported platforms support thread-local vars and __thread.
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28796
The makefs msdosfs code includes fs/msdosfs/denode.h which directly uses
struct buf from <sys/buf.h> rather than the makefs struct m_buf.
To work around this problem provide a local denode.h that includes
ffs/buf.h and defines buf as an alias for m_buf.
Reviewed By: kib, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28835
I did this without a full vendor update since that would cause too many
conflicts. Since these files now almost match the NetBSD sources the
next git subtree merge should work just fine.
Reviewed By: lwhsu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28797
Make sys/buf.h, sys/pipe.h, sys/fs/devfs/devfs*.h headers usable in
userspace, assuming that the consumer has an idea what it is for.
Unhide more material from sys/mount.h and sys/ufs/ufs/inode.h,
sys/ufs/ufs/ufsmount.h for consumption of userspace tools, with the
same caveat.
Remove unacceptable hack from usr.sbin/makefs which relied on sys/buf.h
being unusable in userspace, where it override struct buf with its own
definition. Instead, provide struct m_buf and struct m_vnode and adapt
code to use local variants.
Reviewed by: mckusick
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28679
Add a BUGS section about using pwrite(2) when O_APPEND is set on the fd.
MFC after: 3 days
Submitted by: Ka Ho Ng <khng300@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: gbe, yuripv
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28372
jail_attach(2) performs an internal chroot operation, leaving it up to
the calling process to assure the working directory is inside the jail.
Add a matching internal chdir operation to the jail's root. Also
ignore kern.chroot_allow_open_directories, and always disallow the
operation if there are any directory descriptors open.
Reported by: mjg
Approved by: markj, kib
MFC after: 3 days
Some ibnd_* manpages source other manpages from a `man3/` directory when it
should reference the pages in the current directory.
Instead of modifying contributing sources and using `.so` (discouraged by
mandoc(1)) use MLINKS in the proper Makefile and do not install the affected
manpages.
PR: 237693
Reported by: wosch@FreeBSD.org
Reviewed by: gbe@ (mentor) yuripv@
Approved by: gbe@ (mentor) yuripv@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28727
KCSAN complains about racy accesses in the locking code. Those races are
fine since they are inside a TD_SET_RUNNING() loop that expects the value
to be changed by another CPU.
Use relaxed atomic stores/loads to indicate that this variable can be
written/read by multiple CPUs at the same time. This will also prevent
the compiler from doing unexpected re-ordering.
Reported by: GENERIC-KCSAN
Test Plan: KCSAN no longer complains, kernel still runs fine.
Reviewed By: markj, mjg (earlier version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28569
This causes problems when using ASAN with a runtime older than 12.0 since
the intercept does not expect qsort() to call itself using an interposable
function call. This results in infinite recursion and stack exhaustion
when a binary compiled with -fsanitize=address calls qsort.
See also https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46832 and
https://reviews.llvm.org/D84509 (ASAN runtime patch).
To prevent this problem, this patch uses a static helper function
for the actual qsort() implementation. This prevents interposition and
allows for direct calls. As a nice side-effect, we can also move the
qsort_s checks to the top-level function and out of the recursive calls.
Reviewed By: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28133
struct checkpoint_op, enum checkpoint_opcodes, and
MAX_SNAPSHOT_VMNAME are not vmm specific, move them out of the vmmapi
header.
They are used for the save/restore functionality that bhyve(8)
provides and are better suited in usr.sbin/bhyve/snapshot.h
Since bhyvectl(8) requires these, the Makefile for bhyvectl has been
modified to include usr.sbin/bhyve/snapshot.h
Reviewed by: kevans, grehan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28410
This applies musl commit b02eed9c4841913d690a2d0029737d72615384fe by
Szabolcs Nagy and updates the tests accordingly. This also allows
removing an XFAIL from the test.
musl commit message:
complex: fix ctanh(+-0+i*nan) and ctanh(+-0+-i*inf)
These cases were incorrect in C11 as described by
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1886.htm
PR: 217528
Reviewed By: dim
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28578
Revision r334749 Added some C++ code to libpmc. It didn't change the ABI,
but it did introduce a dependency on libc++. Nobody noticed because every
program that in the base system that uses libpmc is also C++.
Reported-by: Dom Dwyer <dom@itsallbroken.com>
Reviewed By: vangyzen
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28550
Preserve more space for swap devise names.
Prevent line overflow with long devise name.
Don't draw a bar when swap is not used at all.
Simplify and optimize code.
Change the label to end at end of 100%.
PR: 251655
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27496
It was reported that getdirentries(2) was
returning dirents with d_off set to 0 for an NFS
mount.
This is believed to be correct behaviour at
this time (it may change for some NFS mounts
in the future), but is inconsistent with what the
getdirentries(2) man page says.
This patch fixes the man page.
This is a content change.
PR: 253428
Reviewed by: asomers
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28664
This adjusts the factor used to scale the subnormal numbers, so it
becomes the right value after adjusting its exponent. Thanks to Steve
Kargl for finding the most elegant fix.
Also enable the hypot tests, and add a test case for this bug.
PR: 253313
MFC after: 1 week
This allows instrumenting e.g. test binaries even when compiling with an
external clang (e.g. CROSS_TOOLCHAIN=llvm11). I have some upcoming patches
that allow building the entire base system with ASan/UBSan/etc.
instrumentation and this is required in preparation for this.
Reviewed By: dim, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28532
TCP_FASTOPEN_MIN_COOKIE_LEN was incorrectly registered as a name of
a IPPROTO_TCP level socket option, which overwrote TCP_NOPUSH.
TCP_FASTOPEN_PSK_LEN was incorrectly registered as a name of an
IPPROTO_TCP level socket option, which overwrote TCP_MD5SIG.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Netflix, Inc.
This sprinkles a few strategic volatiles in an attempt to defeat clang's
optimization interfering with the expected floating-point exception
flags.
Reported by: lwhsu
PR: 244732
MFC after: 3 days
Historically receive buffer overflows have been ignored and programs
could not tell if they missed messages or messages had been truncated
because of overflows. Since programs historically do not expect to get
receive overflow errors, this behavior is not the default.
This is really really important for programs that use route(4) to keep in sync
with the system. If we loose a message then we need to reload the full system
state, otherwise the behaviour from that point is undefined and can lead
to chasing bogus bug reports.
This includes improvements to the atf-sh helper functions that
significantly reduce the number of spawned processes for each test
and therefore speeds up running the testsuite noticeably.
This reverts commit 710e45c4b8.
It breaks for some corner cases on big endian ppc64.
Given the stage of the release process it is best to revert for now.
Reported by: jhibbits
Currently, we encode the full path and compile flags for the build
compiler in libatf. However, these values are not correct when
cross-compiling: For example, when I build on macOS, CC is set to the
host path /usr/local/Cellar/llvm/11.0.0_1/bin/clang-11. This path will
not exist on the target system.
Simplify this logic and use cc/cpp/c++ since those binaries will exist
on the target system unless the compiler was explicitly disabled.
I'm not convinced ATF needs to encode these values, but this is a
minimal fix for these tests when using a non-bootstrapped compiler.
Reviewed By: ngie, brooks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28414
A few shared libraries in the base system link against ncurses. An
upgrade from a 12.x host to 13 results in ABI breakage for existing
binaries since the newer versions of these libraries link against the
newer ncurses while the binary itself links against the older ncurses.
For example, dialog4ports built on 12.x sometimes crashes on 13 since
it depends on libdialog which links against ncurses internally.
MFC after: 3 days
Reviewed by: kib, delphij
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28448
This option has been equivalent to any form of C++ support since libstdc++
was removed. Therefore, replace all MK_LIBCPLUSPLUS uses with MK_CXX.
Reviewed By: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27974
This is a tradeoff which saves jumps for smaller sizes while making
the 8-16 range slower (roughly in line with the other cases).
Tested with glibc test suite.
For example size 3 (most common with vfs namecache) (ops/s):
before: 407086026
after: 461391995
The regressed range of 8-16 (with 8 as example):
before: 540850489
after: 461671032
The previous code neglected to use primitives which can find the end
of the string without having to branch on every character.
While here augment the somewhat misleading commentary -- strlen as
implemented here leaves performance on the table, especially so for
userspace. Every arch should get a dedicated variant instead.
In the meantime this commit lessens the problem.
Tested with glibc test suite.
Naive test just calling strlen in a loop on Haswell (ops/s):
$(perl -e "print 'A' x 3"):
before: 211198039
after: 338626619
$(perl -e "print 'A' x 100"):
before: 83151997
after: 98285919
This tests fork()s, so if there is still data in the stdout buffer on fork
it will print it again in the child process. This was happening in the
CheriBSD CI and caused the test to complain about malformed TAP output.
Reviewed By: ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28397
SVN r343917 fixed this for in-tree clang, but when building with a newer
out-of-tree clang the test was still marked as XFAIL.
Reviewed By: dim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28390
This is all code only run on ARMv4 and ARMv5. Support for these have
been dropped from FreeBSD.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28314
This was only used when building for ARMv4 or some ARMv5 or when
_STANDALONE is defined. As ARMv4 and ARMv5 support has been removed,
and we only define _STANDALONE in the bootloader where we don't use
this version of memcpy we can remove it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28313
When building natively on RISC-V, linking the bootstrap clang-tblgen
fails with:
ld: error: undefined symbol: llvm::EnableABIBreakingChecks
>>> referenced by PrettyStackTrace.cpp
>>> PrettyStackTrace.o:(.sdata+0x0) in archive
/usr/obj/usr/src/freebsd-src/riscv.riscv64/tmp/obj-tools/lib/clang/libllvmminimal/libllvmminimal.a
>>> referenced by Signals.cpp
>>> Signals.o:(.sdata+0x8) in archive
/usr/obj/usr/src/freebsd-src/riscv.riscv64/tmp/obj-tools/lib/clang/libllvmminimal/libllvmminimal.a
>>> referenced by Timer.cpp
>>> Timer.o:(.sdata+0x28) in archive
/usr/obj/usr/src/freebsd-src/riscv.riscv64/tmp/obj-tools/lib/clang/libllvmminimal/libllvmminimal.a
This is likely due to Error.h's inclusion of abi-breaking.h. It's
unclear why this only affects RISC-V, but perhaps relates to its more
eager use of .sdata due to the ABI's support for linker relaxations.
Regardless, this is theoretically an issue for all architectures.
Reported by: Dennis Clarke <dclarke@blastwave.org>
Reviewed by: dim
Tested by: mhorne
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28367
These tests are basic fuzz tests that permute input to trigger crashes
rather than regression or unit tests. Additionally, some of them take a
rather long time to run and should probably be run on a dedicated fuzzing
job instead. Moreover, these simple tests use rand() instead of a real
fuzzing tool that generates interesting inputs (e.g. LLVM libFuzzer) so are
unlikely to find anything interesting when run in CI.
This allows removing one BROKEN_TESTS case due to timeouts and speeds up
running tests on emulated platforms such as QEMU.
Reviewed By: lwhsu, mm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27153
WITHOUT_LIBTHR has been broken for a little over five years now, since the
xz 5.2.0 update introduced a hard liblzma dependency on libthr, and building
a useful system without threading support is becoming increasingly more
difficult.
Additionally, in the five plus years that it's been broken more reverse
dependencies have cropped up in libzstd, libsqlite3, and libcrypto (among
others) that make it more and more difficult to reconcile the effort needed
to fix these options.
Remove the broken options.
PR: 252760
Reviewed by: brooks, emaste, kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28263
Some tests verify that the capgrp capability does not permit calls to
setgrent(3), but all tests need to ensure that they reset the
capability's group database handle, otherwise the local process and
casper process will be out of sync.
The cap_pwd tests already handle this.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 month
Because the "files" and "compat" implementations failed to set the
"stayopen", keyed lookups would close the database handle, contrary to
the purpose of setgroupent(3). setpassent(3)'s implementation does not
have this bug.
PR: 165527
Submitted by: Andrey Simonenko
MFC after: 1 month
The getpwent(3) and getgrent(3) implementations maintain some internal
iterator state. Interleaved calls to functions which do passwd/group
lookups using a key, such as getpwnam(3), would in some cases clobber
this state, causing a subsequent getpwent() or getgrent() call to
restart iteration from the beginning of the database or to terminate
early. This is particularly troublesome in programming environments
where execution of green threads is interleaved within a single OS
thread.
Take care to restore any iterator state following a keyed lookup. The
"files" provider for the passwd database was already handling this
correctly, but "compat" was not, and both providers had this problem
when accessing the group database.
PR: 252094
Submitted by: Viktor Dukhovni <ietf-dane@dukhovni.org>
MFC after: 1 month
Some NSS regression tests for getgrent(3) and getpwent(3) were not
testing anything because the test incorrectly requested creation of a
database snapshot.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 month
This file has other questionable code and "optimizations" (such as copying
one int at a time) that are probably no longer useful, so it might make
sense to replace it with a different implementation at some point.
Reviewed By: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28134
Define a non-const static char EMSG[] = "" to avoid having to add
__DECONST() to all uses of EMSG. Also make current_dash a const char *
to fix this warning.
This is a no-op for now since libifconfig is only built as a static lib.
Reviewed by: freqlabs, kp, adrian
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28119
In libcasper, the first argument to the function is a structure that
represents a connection to Casper. On systems without Casper, macros
are used to interpose the Casper functions to standard libc ones.
This may cause errors/warnings that the variable is not used.
With the inline function, there is no such problem.
I omitted this file in: 8c121177f0
One possible way the recursion can happen is during fork: suppose
that fork is called from early code that did not triggered
jemalloc(3) initialization yet. Then we lock thr_malloc lock, and
call malloc_prefork() that might require initialization of jemalloc
pthread_mutexes, calling into libthr malloc. It is safe to allow
recursion for this occurence.
PR: 252579
Reported by: Vasily Postnicov <shamaz.mazum@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Previously, we would accept any kind of LIO_* opcode, including ones
that were intended for in-kernel use only like LIO_SYNC (which is not
defined in userland). The situation became more serious with
022ca2fc7f. After that revision, setting
aio_lio_opcode to LIO_WRITEV or LIO_READV would trigger an assertion.
Note that POSIX does not specify what should happen if aio_lio_opcode is
invalid.
MFC-with: 022ca2fc7f
Reviewed by: jhb, tmunro, 0mp
Differential Revision: <https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28078
Without wrapping, rtld services and malloc(3) are not guaranteed
to operate correctly in the forked child.
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28088
which makes stack prot correct for non-main threads created by binaries
with statically linked libthr.
Cache result, but do not engage into the full double-checked locking,
since calculation of the return value is idempotent.
PR: 252549
Reported and reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28075
Detect and use RDTSCP if available, instead of fence+RDTSC. For AMD Zens+,
use LFENCE+RDTSC instead of RDTSCP (or MFENCE;RDTSC previously).
Reviewed by: gallatin, markj
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27986
Create array of rdtsc selectors and provide helper that calculate the
index into the selectors array.
Reviewed by: gallatin, markj
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27986
Instead of providing ifuncs for each kind of fence, define ifuncs
that combine fence and invocation of RDTSC. This refactoring makes
introduction of RDTSCP use possible.
Reviewed by: gallatin, markj
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27986
Instead of trying to maintain pg_jobc counter on each process group
update (and sometimes before), just calculate the counter when needed.
Still, for the benefit of the signal delivery code, explicitly mark
orphaned groups as such with the new process group flag.
This way we prevent bugs in the corner cases where updates to the counter
were missed due to complicated configuration of p_pptr/p_opptr/real_parent
(debugger).
Since we need to iterate over all children of the process on exit, this
change mostly affects the process group entry and leave, where we need
to iterate all process group members to detect orpaned status.
(For MFC, keep pg_jobc around but unused).
Reported by: jhb
Reviewed by: jilles
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27871
The tests are generally expected to pass, uncomment the annotation that
lets `make check` work. Note that `make check` currently requires kyua
from ports or an appropriate symlink into /usr/local/bin.
regcomp.c uses the "start + count < end" idiom to check that there are
"count" bytes available in an array of char "start" and "end" both point to.
This is fine, unless "start + count" goes beyond the last element of the
array. In this case, pedantic interpretation of the C standard makes the
comparison of such a pointer against "end" undefined, and optimizers from
hell will happily remove as much code as possible because of this.
An example of this occurs in regcomp.c's bothcases(), which defines
bracket[3], sets "next" to "bracket" and "end" to "bracket + 2". Then it
invokes p_bracket(), which starts with "if (p->next + 5 < p->end)"...
Because bothcases() and p_bracket() are static functions in regcomp.c, there
is a real risk of miscompilation if aggressive inlining happens.
The following diff rewrites the "start + count < end" constructs into "end -
start > count". Assuming "end" and "start" are always pointing in the array
(such as "bracket[3]" above), "end - start" is well-defined and can be
compared without trouble.
As a bonus, MORE2() implies MORE() therefore SEETWO() can be simplified a
bit.
PR: 252403
the current one first. And if it fails to do so, it abandons activation.
However, with the new bootonce feature, there is a legitimate case when
a pool doesn't have "bootfs" property set. Check for this case before
calling be_deactivate().
Reviewed by: kevans
aio_fsync(O_DSYNC, ...) is the asynchronous version of fdatasync(2).
Reviewed by: kib, asomers, jhb
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25071
POSIX O_DSYNC means that writes include an implicit fdatasync(2), just
as O_SYNC implies fsync(2).
VOP_WRITE() functions that understand the new IO_DATASYNC flag can act
accordingly, but we'll still pass down IO_SYNC so that file systems that
don't understand it will continue to provide the stronger O_SYNC
behaviour.
Flag also applies to fcntl(2).
Reviewed by: kib, delphij
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25090
As suggested in D27598. This also supports MK_WERROR.clang=no and
MK_WERROR.gcc=no to support the existing NO_WERROR.<compiler> uses.
Reviewed By: brooks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27601
Only keep the widechar version of ncurses as libncursesw.so.9
Keep the old name to avoid breaking the ABI compatibility (the non
widechar version libncurses.so.9 is not binary compatible with
libncursesw.so.9) since all ports and base are already only linking
against the widechar version we can simply remove libncurses.so.9
Since the .9 version only lived in the dev branch and never ended in a
release, it is simply removed and not added to any binary compat
package.
Add symlinks to keep build time compatibility for anyone linking against
-lncurses
In libcasper, the first argument to the function is a structure that
represents a connection to Casper. On systems without Casper, macros
are used to interpose the Casper functions to standard libc ones.
This may cause errors/warnings that the variable is not used.
With the inline function, there is no such problem.
runtime contain what is needed to boot in single user and repair a
system, bectl could be handy to have in this situation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27708
POSIX AIO is great, but it lacks vectored I/O functions. This commit
fixes that shortcoming by adding aio_writev and aio_readv. They aren't
part of the standard, but they're an obvious extension. They work just
like their synchronous equivalents pwritev and preadv.
It isn't yet possible to use vectored aiocbs with lio_listio, but that
could be added in the future.
Reviewed by: jhb, kib, bcr
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27743
PR#252358 reported a serious performance problem w.r.t.
cp(1) when copying large non-sparse files.
This problem appears to have been caused by cp(1)
calling copy_file_range(2) with a small "len" argument.
This patch adds a recommendation to use a large "len"
value where possible, for performance reasons.
Reviewed by: asomers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27935
The current POSIX.1-202x draft (1.1) was used as source material.
Submitted by: Soumendra Ganguly <soumendraganguly@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27787
The cpuset(2) tests should be run as root (require.user properly set) with
>= 3 cpus for maximum coverage. All tests that want to modify the cpuset
don't assume any particular cpu layout (i.e. the first cpu may not be 0, the
last may not be first + count) and the following scenarios are tested:
1.) newset: basic execute cpuset() to grab a new cpuset, make sure the
assigned cpuset then has a different ID.
2.) transient: create a new cpuset then assign the process its original
cpuset, ensuring that the one we created is now gone.
3.) deadlk: test assigning an anonymous mask, then resetting the process
base affinity with 1-cpu overlap w.r.t. the anonymous mask and with
0-cpu overlap w.r.t. the anonymous mask.
4.) jail_attach_newbase: process attaches to a jail with its own
cpuset+mask (e.g. cpuset -c -l 1,2 jail -c path=/ command=/bin/sh)
5.) jail_attach_newbase_plain: process attaches to a jail with its own
cpuset (e.g. cpuset -c jail -c path=/ command=/bin/sh)
6.) jail_attach_prevbase: process attaches to a jail with the containing
jail's root cpuset (e.g. jail -c path=/ command=/bin/sh)
7.) jail_attach_plain: process attaches to a jail with the containing jail's
root cpuset+mask.
8.) badparent: creates a new cpuset and modifies the anonymous thread mask,
then setid's back to the original and checks that cpuset_getid() returns
the expected set.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27307
Add shims to map NetBSD's API to CPUSET(9). Obviously the invalid input
parts of these tests are relatively useless since we're just testing the
shims that aren't used elsewhere, there's still some amount of value in
the parts testing valid inputs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27307
Leaving zeroing to the clients leads to error-prone pointer
tricks (zeroing needs to preserve the CCB header), and this
code is not performance-critical, so there's really no reason
to not do it.
Reviewed By: imp, rpokala (manpages)
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27333
libcompiler_rt implements certain functions that clang and gcc emit
calls to as part of their codegen (e.g. for extended width math). Build
it without stack smashing protection (SSP, -fstack-protector) in order
to support building binaries without SSP, especially the dynamic linker.
Besides, SSP is probably not very valuable in this library.
Reviewed by: arichardson, dim, kib
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27786
These functions get/set tty winsize respectively, and are trivial wrappers
around corresponding termio ioctls.
The functions are expected to be a part of POSIX.1 issue 8:
https://www.austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=1151#c3856.
They are currently available in NetBSD and in musl libc.
PR: 251868
Submitted by: Soumendra Ganguly <soumendraganguly@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27650
- varios "new sentence, new line" warnings
- varios "sections out of conventional order" warnings
- varios "unusual Xr order" warnings
- varios "missing section argument" warnings
- varios "no blank before trailing delimiter" warnings
- varios "normalizing date format" warnings
MFC after: 1 month
Only for the arches that provide user-mode TLS.
PR: 251651
Requested by: yuri
Discussed with: emaste, jilles, tijl
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27495
MFC after: 2 weeks
interface numbering for USB descriptors in userspace. Else certain USB
control requests using the interface number, won't be recognized by the
USB firmware.
Refer to section 9.2.3 in the USB 2.0 specification:
Interfaces are numbered from zero to one less than the number of concurrent interfaces
supported by the configuration.
PR: 251784
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies // NVIDIA Networking
Linux claims 4.3BSD, we claim 4.4BSD and OpenBSD claims 4.3BSD-Reno. It turns
out that OpenBSD got it right: the function was added in late 1988 a few months
after 4.3BSD-Tahoe, well in advance of 4.3BSD-Reno.
Reviewed by: bcr
Approved by: bcr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27392
Sync libarchive with vendor.
Vendor changes:
Issue #1461: Unbreak build without lzma
Issue #1462: warc reader: Fix build with gcc11
Issue #1463: Fix code compatibility in test_archive_read_support.c
Issue #1464: Use built-in strnlen on platforms where not available
Issue #1465: warc reader: fix undefined behaviour in deconst() function
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC-With: 368234
After the commit of the current version, Scott Long pointed out, that an
attacker might be able to cause a use-after-free access if this function
returned the value of the sysctl variable "user.localbase" by freeing
the allocated memory without the cached address being cleared in the
library function.
To resolve this issue, I have proposed the originally suggested version
with a statically allocated buffer in a review (D27370). There was no
feedback on this review and after waiting for more than 2 weeks, the
potential security issue is fixed by this commit. (There was no security
risk in practice, since none of the programs converted to use this
function attempted to free the buffer. The address could only have
pointed into the heap if user.localbase was set to a non-default value,
into r/o data or the environment, else.)
This version uses a static buffer of size LOCALBASE_CTL_LEN, which
defaults to MAXPATHLEN. This does not increase the memory footprint
of the library at this time, since its data segment grows from less
than 7 KB to less than 8 KB, i.e. it will get two 4 KB pages on typical
architectures, anyway.
Compiling with LOCALBASE_CTL_LEN defined as 0 will remove the code
that accesses the sysctl variable, values between 1 and MAXPATHLEN-1
will limit the maximum size of the prefix. When built with such a
value and if too large a value has been configured in user.localbase,
the value defined as ILLEGAL_PREFIX will be returned to cause any
file operations on that result to fail. (Default value is "/dev/null/",
the review contained "/\177", but I assume that "/dev/null" exists and
can not be accessed as a directory. Any other string that can be assumed
not be a valid path prefix could be used.)
I do suggest to use LOCALBASE_CTL_LEN to size the in-kernel buffer for
the user.localbase variable, too. Doing this would guarantee that the
result always fit into the buffer in this library function (unless run
on a kernel built with a different buffer size.)
The function always returns a valid string, and only in case it is built
with a small static buffer and run on a system with too large a value in
user.localbase, the ILLEGAL_PREFIX will be returned, effectively causing
the created path to be non-existent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27370
Sort by manpage section, then sort entries alphabetically.
This makes the manpages `make manlint` clean.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
Months should be fully spelled as their local-specific equivalents: in this
case `Oct` should have been spelled like `October`.
Reported by: make manlint
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
The CAVEATS section was misspelled as "CAVEAT" before this change. Fix the
spelling to identify issues related to the section.
Furthermore, given that the section order was incorrect, move the CAVEATS
section down to the bottom of the manpage, per the conventional section
order.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: make manlint
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
`vfork(2)` should be referenced in paragraphs as `.Fn vfork`, not `vfork()`.
This change switches the reference to use `.Fn`, which in turn makes the
manpage `make manlint` clean.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: make manlint
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
Sorting order should be done by manpage section (2 vs 3), then alphabetically.
This change fixes the order to sort by the manpage section, first.
Reported by: make manlint
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
- pthreads(3) should actually be pthread(3).
- getentropy(2) should actually be getentropy(3).
This makes the manpage `make manlint` clean.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DellEMC Isilon
These values are taken directly from the density report from an
IBM LTO-9 tape drive. (Using mt getdensity)
A LTO-9 drive stores 18TB raw (45TB with compression) on an LTO-9 tape.
lib/libmt/mtlib.c:
Add the LTO-9 density code, and bpmm/bpi values.
usr.bin/mt/mt.1:
Add the LTO-9 density code, bpmm/bpi values and number of
tracks. Bump the man page date.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
Assume that UMTX_OP with a double underbar following is a flag, while any
underbar+alphanumeric combination immeiately following is an op.
This was a part of D27325.
Reviewed by: kib