usage message for each nvmecontrol command. This helps reduce some code
clutter both now and for future commits which will add logpage and
firmware support to nvmecontrol(8).
Also move helper function prototypes to the end of the header file, after
the per-command functions.
Sponsored by: Intel
MFC after: 3 days
specified, only md(4) devices which have the specified file as backing
store are displayed.
- Use MD_NAME instead of "md".
- Use _PATH_DEV instead of "/dev/".
MFC after: 1 week
C11 atomics now work on all the architectures. Have at least a single
piece of software in our base system that uses C11 atomics. This
somewhat makes it less likely that we break it because of LLVM imports,
etc.
- When operating on a core file (-M) and -c is specified we don't clear
the message buffer of the running system.
- If we don't have permission to clear the buffer print the error message
only. That's what Linux does in this case, where this feature was ported
from, and it ensures that the error message doesn't get lost in the noise.
Discussed with: antoine, cognet
Approved by: cognet
This allows setting attributes on tables. One simply does not provide
an index in that case. Otherwise the entry corresponding the index has
the attribute set or unset.
Use this change to fix a relatively longstanding bug in our GPT scheme
that's the result of rev 198097 (relatively harmless) followed by rev
237057 (damaging). The damaging part being that our GPT scheme always
has the active flag set on the PMBR slice. This is in violation with
EFI. Existing EFI implementions for both x86 and ia64 reject the GPT.
As such, GPT disks created by us aren't usable under EFI because of
that.
After this change, GPT disks never have the active flag set on the PMBR
slice. In order to make the GPT disk bootable under some x86 BIOSes,
the reason of rev 198097, one must now set the active attribute on the
gpt table. The kernel will apply this to the PMBR slice For (S)ATA:
gpart set -a active ada0
To fix an existing GPT disk that has the active flag set in the PMBR,
and that does not need the flag, use (again for (S)ATA):
gpart unset -a active ada0
The EBR, MBR & PC98 schemes, which also impement at least 1 attribute,
now check to make sure the entry passed is valid. They do not have
attributes that apply to the table.
The "failok" option doesn't have any effect at all unless specified in
fstab(5) and combined with the -a flag. The "failok" option is already
documented in fstab(5).
PR: 177630
No objection: eadler
MFC after: 1 week
recreating the filesystem, check for and output the -i, -k, and -l
options if appropriate.
Note the remaining deficiencies of the -m option in the dumpfs(8)
manual page. Specifically that newfs(8) options -E, -R, -S, and -T
options are not handled and that -p is not useful so is omitted.
Also document that newfs(8) options -n and -r are neither checked
for nor output but should be. The -r flag is needed if the filesystem
uses gjournal(8).
PR: bin/163992
Reported by: Dieter <freebsd@sopwith.solgatos.com>
Submitted by: Andy Kosela <akosela@andykosela.com>
MFC after: 1 week
If an expander returns 0x00 (no device attached) in the ATTACHED DEVICE
field of the SMP DISCOVER response, ignore the value of ATTACHED SAS
ADDRESS, because it is invalid. Some expanders zero out the address
when the attached device is removed, but others do not. Section
9.4.3.10 of the SAS Protocol Layer 2 revision 04b does not require them
to do so.
Approved by: ken (mentor)
MFC after: 3 weeks
been printed. This provides compatibility with other *nix systems
(including Linux).
While here use stdbool booleans for 'all'.
PR: bin/178295
Submitted by: Levent Serinol <lserinol@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: will
This adds the support to the config keyword (vlan operation mode), ports
flags, prints the vlan mode and vlan capabilities. It also adds some basic
information to usage() and support the keyword 'help' as a shortcut to
usage(). The manual page is also updated with the new options.
Submitted by: Luiz Otavio O Souza <loos.br@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: ray
Address. Although KAME implementation used FF02:0:0:0:0:2::/96 based on
older versions of draft-ietf-ipngwg-icmp-name-lookup, it has been changed
in RFC 4620.
The kernel always joins the /104-prefixed address, and additionally does
/96-prefixed one only when net.inet6.icmp6.nodeinfo_oldmcprefix=1.
The default value of the sysctl is 1.
ping6(8) -N flag now uses /104-prefixed one. When this flag is specified
twice, it uses /96-prefixed one instead.
Reviewed by: ume
Based on work by: Thomas Scheffler
PR: conf/174957
MFC after: 2 weeks
names within the std namespace (and possibly within the global
namespace).
The main advantage is that the C++ versions can provide optimized
versions or simplified interfaces.
piece them together from multiple reads(). It's as if /dev/devctl is
a datagram device instead of a stream device. However, devd's
internal buffer was too small (1025 bytes) to read an entire
ereport.fs.zfs.checksum event (variable, up to ~1300 bytes). This
commit enlarges the buffer to 8k.
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: ken (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
than VLAN groups.
Some chips (eg this rtl8366rb) has a VLAN group per port - you first
define a set of VLANs in a vlan group, then you assign a VLAN group
to a port.
Other chips (eg the AR8xxx switch chips) have a VLAN ID array per
port - there's no group per se, just a list of vlans that can be
configured.
So for now, the switch API will use the latter and rely on drivers
doing the heavy lifting if one wishes to use the VLAN group method.
Maybe later on both can be supported.
PR: kern/177878
PR: kern/177873
Submitted by: Luiz Otavio O Souza <loos.br@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: ray
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@
disks such as SSD's
Adds the ability to run ATA commands via the SCSI ATA Pass-Through(16) comand
Reviewed by: mav
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
most kernels before FreeBSD 9.0. Remove such modules and respective kernel
options: atadisk, ataraid, atapicd, atapifd, atapist, atapicam. Remove the
atacontrol utility and some man pages. Remove useless now options ATA_CAM.
No objections: current@, stable@
MFC after: never
fail in nvmecontrol(8).
While here, use consistent checks of return values from stat, open and
ioctl.
Sponsored by: Intel
Suggested by: carl
Reviewed by: carl
invoke it from nvmecontrol(8).
Controller reset will be performed in cases where I/O are repeatedly
timing out, the controller reports an unrecoverable condition, or
when explicitly requested via IOCTL or an nvme consumer. Since the
controller may be in such a state where it cannot even process queue
deletion requests, we will perform a controller reset without trying
to clean up anything on the controller first.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
Clang errors around printf could be trivially fixed, but the breakage in
sbin/fsdb were to significant for this type of change.
Submitter of this changeset has been notified and hopefully this can be
restored soon.
that they do not need to be read again in pass5. As this nearly
doubles the memory requirement for fsck, the cache is thrown away
if other memory needs in fsck would otherwise fail. Thus, the
memory footprint of fsck remains unchanged in memory constrained
environments.
This work was inspired by a paper presented at Usenix's FAST '13:
www.usenix.org/conference/fast13/ffsck-fast-file-system-checker
Details of this implementation appears in the April 2013 of ;login:
www.usenix.org/publications/login/april-2013-volume-38-number-2.
A copy of the April 2013 ;login: paper can also be downloaded
from: www.mckusick.com/publications/faster_fsck.pdf.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: Peter Holm
MFC after: 4 weeks
running time for a full fsck. It also reduces the random access time
for large files and speeds the traversal time for directory tree walks.
The key idea is to reserve a small area in each cylinder group
immediately following the inode blocks for the use of metadata,
specifically indirect blocks and directory contents. The new policy
is to preferentially place metadata in the metadata area and
everything else in the blocks that follow the metadata area.
The size of this area can be set when creating a filesystem using
newfs(8) or changed in an existing filesystem using tunefs(8).
Both utilities use the `-k held-for-metadata-blocks' option to
specify the amount of space to be held for metadata blocks in each
cylinder group. By default, newfs(8) sets this area to half of
minfree (typically 4% of the data area).
This work was inspired by a paper presented at Usenix's FAST '13:
www.usenix.org/conference/fast13/ffsck-fast-file-system-checker
Details of this implementation appears in the April 2013 of ;login:
www.usenix.org/publications/login/april-2013-volume-38-number-2.
A copy of the April 2013 ;login: paper can also be downloaded
from: www.mckusick.com/publications/faster_fsck.pdf.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: Peter Holm
MFC after: 4 weeks
Setting DSCP support is done via O_SETDSCP which works for both
IPv4 and IPv6 packets. Fast checksum recalculation (RFC 1624) is done for IPv4.
Dscp can be specified by name (AFXY, CSX, BE, EF), by value
(0..63) or via tablearg.
Matching DSCP is done via another opcode (O_DSCP) which accepts several
classes at once (af11,af22,be). Classes are stored in bitmask (2 u32 words).
Many people made their variants of this patch, the ones I'm aware of are
(in alphabetic order):
Dmitrii Tejblum
Marcelo Araujo
Roman Bogorodskiy (novel)
Sergey Matveichuk (sem)
Sergey Ryabin
PR: kern/102471, kern/121122
MFC after: 2 weeks
given descriptors, use Capsicum sandboxing for hastd in primary and secondary
modes. Allow for DIOCGDELETE and DIOCGFLUSH ioctls on provider descriptor and
for G_GATE_CMD_MODIFY, G_GATE_CMD_START, G_GATE_CMD_DONE and G_GATE_CMD_DESTROY
on GEOM Gate descriptor.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
more terse output more observable for both scripts and humans.
Also, it shifts hastctl closer to GEOM utilities with their list/status command
pairs.
Approved by: pjd
MFC after: 4 weeks
of upgrading older machines using ataraid(4) to newer releases.
This optional parameter is controlled via kern.geom.raid.legacy_aliases
and will create a /dev/ar0 device that will point at /dev/raid/r0 for
example.
Tested on Dell SC 1425 DDF-1 format software raid controllers installing from
stable/7 and upgrading to stable/9 without having to adjust /etc/fstab
Reviewed by: mav
Obtained from: Yahoo!
MFC after: 2 Weeks
from the tree since few months (please note that the userland bits
were already disconnected since a long time, thus there is no need
to update the OLD* entries).
This is not targeted for MFC.
why it will now be the default.
- Bump protocol version to 2 and add backward compatibility for version 1.
- Allow to specify hosts by kern.hostid as well (in addition to hostname and
kern.hostuuid) in configuration file.
Sponsored by: Panzura
Tested by: trociny
Since ARP and routing are separated, "proxy only" entries
don't have any meaning, thus we don't need additional field
in sockaddr to pass SIN_PROXY flag.
New kernel is binary compatible with old tools, since sizes
of sockaddr_inarp and sockaddr_in match, and sa_family are
filled with same value.
The structure declaration is left for compatibility with
third party software, but in tree code no longer use it.
Reviewed by: ru, andre, net@
heavily used when parsing config files. Mostly these changes avoid making
temporary copies of the strings, and avoid doing byte at a time append
operations, on the most-used code path.
On a 1.2 GHz ARM processor this reduces the time to parse the config files
from 13 to 6 seconds.
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: cognet (mentor)
their socket connection any time, and devd only notices that when it gets an
error trying to write an event to the client. On a system with no device
change activity, clients could connect and disappear repeatedly without devd
noticing, leading to an ever-growing list of open socket descriptors in devd.
Now devd uses poll(2) looking for POLLHUP on all existing clients every time
a new client connection is established, and also periodically (once a minute)
to proactively find zombie clients and reap the socket descriptors. It also
now has a connection limit, configurable with a new -l <num> command line arg.
When the maximum number of connections is reached it stops accepting new
connections until some current clients drop off.
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: cognet (mentor)
- Simplify diagnostic messages.
- Adopt lowercase first letters to make the messages
more canonical.
PR: bin/175404
Submitted by: Christoph Mallon
Reviewed by: bde
MFC after: 3 days
It stops treating the address on the interface as special by source
address selection rule even when the interface is outgoing interface.
This is desired in some situation.
Requested by: hrs
Reviewed by: IHANet folks including hrs
MFC after: 1 week
when comparing its size with the size of the media, to determine if
the last disk block is unused.
Submitted by: Andreas Longwitz <longwitz@incore.de>
Reviewed by: pjd
MFC after: 2 weeks
provided by Bas Smeelen <b.smeelen@ose.nl>. Use of 'gpart list'
suggested by by Andrey V. Elsukov <ae@FreeBSD.org>.
PR: docs/174270
Submitted by: Ronald F.Guilmette <rfg@tristatelogic.com>
Reviewed by: ae (block sizes)
MFC after: 1 week
- Add a range condition of given FIB number and the related error messages.
- Fix free() problem.
Spotted by: Artyom Mirgorodskiy
Discussed with: glebius
last one. To make it easier to find the last one create symlinks with 'last'
suffix that will point to the files of the last coredump, eg.:
info.last -> info.5
textdump.tar.last.gz -> textdump.tar.5.gz
Reviewed by: avg
Obtained from: WHEEL Systems
provide dump directory. Eliminate this redundant argument. This changes
the usage, but the only risk here is that a warning will be printed
about directory given as device.
- Update usage of -C option.
- When clearing dump header from the given device there is also no need to
provide dump directory, although additional arguments for -c were not
documented.
- Document that -v can be used with -c and that list of devices can be given.
Obtained from: WHEEL Systems
Add the following flags to sysctl:
-W - show only writable sysctls
-T - show only tuneable sysctls
This can be used to create a /var/run/sysctl.boot to
compare set tunables versus booted tunables.
Sponsored by: iXsystems
lists it reads from its configuration files on the priority field.
Because some items in the lists have the same priority, and std::sort()
is not stable, the exact order in which the items are enumerated does
not have to correspond to the order they appear in the configuration
files.
Apparently this was never noticed with libstdc++, but with libc++ it
could cause the "uhid" entry from /etc/devd/usb.conf to be used instead
of the "ums" entry (which is earlier in the file). This caused the
problem described in the PR: the USB mouse module was never loaded, and
the other actions (such as starting moused) were not executed.
To fix the problem, make devd use std:stable_sort() instead.
Reported by: Jan Beich <jbeich@tormail.org>
PR: bin/172958
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Deembed scope id in L3 address in in6_lltable_dump().
- Simplify scope id recovery in rtsock routines.
- Remove embedded scope id handling in ndp(8) and route(8) completely.
- Check V_deembed_scopeid before checking if sa_family == AF_INET6.
- Fix scope id handing in route(8)[2] and ifconfig(8).
Reported by: rpaulo[1], Mateusz Guzik[1], peter[2]
- The feature is dangerous because the kernel code didn't check
validity of the memory address provided from user space.
- It seems that mdconfig(8) never really supported attaching preloaded
memory disks.
- Preloaded memory disks are automatically attached during md(4)
initialization. Thus there shouldn't be much use for the feature.
PR: kern/169683
Discussed on: freebsd-hackers
userland via routing socket or sysctl. This eliminates the following
KAME-specific sin6_scope_id handling routine from each userland utility:
sin6.sin6_scope_id = ntohs(*(u_int16_t *)&sin6.sin6_addr.s6_addr[2]);
This behavior can be controlled by net.inet6.ip6.deembed_scopeid. This is
set to 1 by default (sin6_scope_id will be filled in the kernel).
Reviewed by: bz
comma-separated list and/or range specification:
# route add -inet 192.0.2.0/24 198.51.100.1 -fib 1,3-5,6
Although all of the subcommands supports the modifier, "monitor" does not
support the list or range specification at this moment.
Reviewed by: bz
than we're claiming it should still be considered an exact match. This
would previously leak frags that had been extended.
- If there is a sequence number problem in the journal print the sequence
numbers we've seen so far for debugging.
- Clean up the block mask related debuging printfs. Some are redundant.
MFC after: 1 week
seemingly mysterious actions that are not done by ifconfig itself, but
by devd triggering on events caused by ifconfig.
PR: docs/173405
Submitted by: Mateusz Kwiatkowski <mateusz.kwiatkowski@atlashost.eu>
MFC after: 1 week
Instead, add protocol specific mbuf flags M_IP_NEXTHOP and
M_IP6_NEXTHOP. Use them to indicate that the mbuf's chain
contains the PACKET_TAG_IPFORWARD tag. And do a tag lookup
only when this flag is set.
Suggested by: andre
extended using growfs(8). The problem here is that geom_label checks if
the filesystem size recorded in UFS superblock is equal to the provider
(i.e. device) size. This check cannot be removed due to backward
compatibility. On the other hand, in most cases growfs(8) cannot set
fs_size in the superblock to match the provider size, because, differently
from newfs(8), it cannot recompute cylinder group sizes.
To fix this problem, add another superblock field, fs_providersize, used
only for this purpose. The geom_label(4) will attach if either fs_size
(filesystem created with newfs(8)) or fs_providersize (filesystem expanded
using growfs(8)) matches the device size.
PR: kern/165962
Reviewed by: mckusick
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
on the related functionality in the runtime via the sysctl variable
net.pfil.forward. It is turned off by default.
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Discussed with: net@
MFC after: 2 weeks
current version of FreeBSD, this isn't guarenteed by the API. Custom
security modules, or future implementations of the setuid and setgid
may fail.
PR: bin/172289
PR: bin/172290
PR: bin/172291
Submittud by: Erik Cederstrand <erik@cederstrand.dk>
Discussed by: freebsd-security
Approved by: cperciva
MFC after: 1 week
current version of FreeBSD, this isn't guarenteed by the API.
Custom security modules, or future implementations of the setuid and
setgid may fail.
Submitted by: Erik Cederstrand
Approved by: cperciva
MFC after: 3 days
In addition to adding `static' where possible:
- bin/date: Move `retval' into extern.h to make it visible to date.c.
- bin/ed: Move globally used variables into ed.h.
- sbin/camcontrol: Move `verbose' into camcontrol.h and fix shadow warnings.
- usr.bin/calendar: Remove unneeded variables.
- usr.bin/chat: Make `line' local instead of global.
- usr.bin/elfdump: Comment out unneeded function.
- usr.bin/rlogin: Use _Noreturn instead of __dead2.
- usr.bin/tset: Pull `Ospeed' into extern.h.
- usr.sbin/mfiutil: Put global variables in mfiutil.h.
- usr.sbin/pkg: Remove unused `os_corres'.
- usr.sbin/quotaon, usr.sbin/repquota: Remove unused `qfname'.
This self-written compiler warning, which is hopefully going to be
committed into LLVM sources soon, warns about potentially missing
`static' keywords, similar to -Wmissing-prototypes.
- bin/pax: Move external declaration of chdname and s_mask into extern.h.
- bin/setfacl: Move setfacl.c-specific stuff out of setfacl.h.
- sbin/mount_fusefs: Remove char *progname; use getprogname().
- others: add `static' where possible.
GIANT from VFS. In addition, disconnect also netsmb, which is a base
requirement for SMBFS.
In the while SMBFS regular users can use FUSE interface and smbnetfs
port to work with their SMBFS partitions.
Also, there are ongoing efforts by vendor to support in-kernel smbfs,
so there are good chances that it will get relinked once properly locked.
This is not targeted for MFC.
GIANT from VFS. This code is particulary broken and fragile and other
in-kernel implementations around, found in other operating systems,
don't really seem clean and solid enough to be imported at all.
If someone wants to reconsider in-kernel NTFS implementation for
inclusion again, a fair effort for completely fixing and cleaning it
up is expected.
In the while NTFS regular users can use FUSE interface and ntfs-3g
port to work with their NTFS partitions.
This is not targeted for MFC.
GIANT from VFS. In addition, disconnect also netncp, which is a base
requirement for NWFS.
In the possibility of a future maintenance of the code and later
readd to the FreeBSD base, maybe we should think about a better location
for netncp. I'm not entirely sure the / top location is actually right,
however I will let network people to comment on that more specifically.
This is not targeted for MFC.
This has been developed during 2 summer of code mandates and being revived
by gnn recently.
The functionality in this commit mirrors entirely content of fusefs-kmod
port, which doesn't need to be installed anymore for -CURRENT setups.
In order to get some sparse technical notes, please refer to:
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-fs/2012-March/013876.html
or to the project branch:
svn://svn.freebsd.org/base/projects/fuse/
which also contains granular history of changes happened during port
refinements. This commit does not came from the branch reintegration
itself because it seems svn is not behaving properly for this functionaly
at the moment.
Partly Sponsored by: Google, Summer of Code program 2005, 2011
Originally submitted by: ilya, Csaba Henk <csaba-ml AT creo DOT hu >
In collabouration with: pho
Tested by: flo, gnn, Gustau Perez,
Kevin Oberman <rkoberman AT gmail DOT com>
MFC after: 2 months
reside, and move there ipfw(4) and pf(4).
o Move most modified parts of pf out of contrib.
Actual movements:
sys/contrib/pf/net/*.c -> sys/netpfil/pf/
sys/contrib/pf/net/*.h -> sys/net/
contrib/pf/pfctl/*.c -> sbin/pfctl
contrib/pf/pfctl/*.h -> sbin/pfctl
contrib/pf/pfctl/pfctl.8 -> sbin/pfctl
contrib/pf/pfctl/*.4 -> share/man/man4
contrib/pf/pfctl/*.5 -> share/man/man5
sys/netinet/ipfw -> sys/netpfil/ipfw
The arguable movement is pf/net/*.h -> sys/net. There are
future plans to refactor pf includes, so I decided not to
break things twice.
Not modified bits of pf left in contrib: authpf, ftp-proxy,
tftp-proxy, pflogd.
The ipfw(4) movement is planned to be merged to stable/9,
to make head and stable match.
Discussed with: bz, luigi
This structure is not part of POSIX. According to POSIX, gettimeofday()
has the following prototype:
int gettimeofday(struct timeval *restrict tp, void *restrict tzp);
Also, POSIX states that gettimeofday() shall return 0 (as long as tzp is
not used). Remove dead error handling code. Also use NULL for a
nul-pointer instead of integer 0.
While there, change all pieces of code that only use tv_sec to use
time(3), as this provides less overhead.
First, don't exit when the link goes down on an interface. Instead,
teach dhclient to track changes in link state and to enter the reboot
state when the link on an interface goes up causing dhclient to attempt
to renew its existing lease.
Second, remove the change I added to clear the old lease when dhclient
exits due to an error (such as ifconfig down). If an interface is
using autoconfiguration it should keep its autoconfiguration as much as
possible. If the next time it needs a configuration it is able to reuse
the previous autoconfiguration, then leaving the settings intact allows
existing connections to survive temporary outages, etc.
PR: bin/166656
MFC after: 1 month