being a bootstrap tool. However, for reproducible build output,
FreeBSD added dd status=none because it was otherwise difficult to
suppress the status information, but retain any errors that might
happen. There's no real reason that dd has to be a build tool, other
than we use status=none unconditional. Remove dd from a bootstrap tool
entirely by only using status=none when available. This may also help
efforts to build the system on non-FreeBSD hosts as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8605
rtld-elf has some vestigial support for building as a static executable.
r45501 introduced a partial implementation with a prescient note that it
"might never be enabled." r153515 introduced ELF symbol versioning
support, and removed part of the unused build infrastructure for static
rtld.
GNU ld populates rela relocation addends and GOT entries with the same
values, and rtld's run-time dynamic executable check relied on this.
Alternate toolchains may not populate the GOT entries, which caused
RTLD_IS_DYNAMIC to return false. Simplify rtld by just removing the
unused check.
If we want to restore static rtld support later on we ought to introduce
a build-time #ifdef flag.
PR: 214972
Reviewed by: kan
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8687
- It should say 'read' in the I2CREAD section.
- last in the struct indicates the last command in a sequence, not the
reverse.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 3 days
Sync libarchive with vendor.
Vendor bugfixes:
Fix for heap-buffer-overflow in archive_le16dec()
Fix for heap-buffer-overflow in uudecode_bidder_bid()
Reworked fix for compatibility with archives created by Perl Archive::Tar
MFC after: 1 week
callout_stop() recently started returning -1 when the callout is already
stopped, which is not handled by the netgraph code. Properly filter
the return value. Netgraph callers only want to know if the callout
was cancelled and not draining or already stopped.
Discussed with: julian, glebius
MFC after: 2 weeks
Vendor bugfixes:
Fix for heap-buffer-overflow in archive_le16dec()
Fix for heap-buffer-overflow in uudecode_bidder_bid()
Reworked fix for compatibility with archives created by Perl Archive::Tar
When handling a GPE ACPI interrupt object the EcSpaceHandler()
function can be called which checks the EC_EVENT_SCI bit and then
recurse on the EcGpeQueryHandler() function. If there are multiple GPE
events pending the EC_EVENT_SCI bit will be set at the next call to
EcSpaceHandler() causing it to recurse again via the
EcGpeQueryHandler() function. This leads to a slow never ending
recursion during boot which prevents proper system startup, because
the EC_EVENT_SCI bit never gets cleared in this scenario.
The behaviour is reproducible with the ALASKA AMI in combination with
a newer Skylake based mainboard in the following way:
Enter BIOS and adjust the clock one hour forward. Save and exit the
BIOS. System fails to boot due to the above mentioned bug in
EcGpeQueryHandler() which was observed recursing multiple times.
This patch adds a simple recursion guard to the EcGpeQueryHandler()
function and also also adds logic to detect if new GPE events occurred
during the execution of EcGpeQueryHandler() and then loop on this
function instead of recursing.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
When a TCP segment with the FIN bit set was received in the CLOSED state,
a TCP RST-ACK-segment is sent. When computing SEG.ACK for this, the
FIN counts as one byte. This accounting was missing and is fixed by this
patch.
Reviewed by: hiren
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Netflix, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://svn.freebsd.org/base/head
Use after free happens for state that is deleted. The reference
count is what prevents the state from being freed. When the
state is dequeued, the reference count is dropped and the memory
freed. We can't dereference the next pointer or re-queue the
state.
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8671
Teach indent(1) about storage-class specifiers. Don't assume
"in_parameter_declaration" state if "in_decl" hasn't been set. Don't set
"in_decl" for storage-class specifiers.
That set of changes helps with recognizing the difference between file
scope declarations like this:
static LIST_HEAD(, alq) ald_active;
static int ald_shuttingdown = 0;
struct thread *ald_thread;
and old style function declarators like this:
static int
do_execve(td, args, mac_p)
struct thread *td;
struct image_args *args;
struct mac *mac_p;
{
Unfortunately, at the same time this change makes indent(1) require
explicit int in declarations like "static a;", in order to understand that
it's part of a declaration. On the other hand, declarations like in the
first example are no longer indented as if ald_shuttingdown and ald_thread
were parameters of a function named LIST_HEAD.
Submitted by: Piotr Stefaniak
This adds support to camcontrol(8) and libcam(3) for getting and setting
the time on SCSI protocol drives. This is more commonly found on tape
drives, but is a SPC (SCSI Primary Commands) command, and may be found
on any device that speaks SCSI.
The new camcontrol timestamp subcommand allows getting the current device
time or setting the time to the current system time or any arbitrary time.
sbin/camcontrol/Makefile:
Add timestamp.c.
sbin/camcontrol/camcontrol.8:
Document the new timestamp subcommand.
sbin/camcontrol/camcontrol.c:
Add the timestamp subcommand to camcontrol.
sbin/camcontrol/camcontrol.h:
Add the timestamp() function prototype.
sbin/camcontrol/timestamp.c:
Timestamp setting and reporting functionality.
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.c:
Add two new CCB building functions, scsi_set_timestamp() and
scsi_report_timestamp(). Also, add a new helper function,
scsi_create_timestamp().
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h:
Add CDB and parameter data for the the set and report timestamp
commands.
Add function declarations for the new CCB building and helper
functions.
Submitted by: Sam Klopsch
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
MFC After: 2 weeks
This uses the same fix as r294894 did for the mlock test. The code from
that commit is moved into a common object file which PROGS supports
building first.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8689
buf_ring contains an assert that checks whether an item being
enqueued already exists on the ring. There is a subtle bug in
this assert. An item can be returned by a peek() function and
freed, and then the consumer thread can be preempted before
calling advance(). If this happens the item appears to still be
on the queue, but another thread may allocate the item from the
free pool and wind up trying to enqueue it again, causing the
assert to trigger incorrectly.
Fix this by skipping the head of the consumer's portion of the
ring, as this index is what will be returned by peek().
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
MFC After: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8685
Reviewed by: hselasky
Do not set WARNS, so it gets the current default of 6.
Fix the warnings by sprinkling static, const, or strdup.
Make some constant data tables const. Fix whitespace.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Squash EBADF from closed stdin, stdout, or stderr in caph_limit_stdio().
Any program used during special shell scripts may commonly be forked
from a parent process with closed standard stream. Do the common sense
thing for this common use.
Reported by: Iblis Lin <iblis AT hs.ntnu.edu.tw>
Reviewed by: oshogbo@ (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8657
called to allocate a new page of radix trie nodes, there could be a call to
vm_radix_remove() on the same trie (of PG_CACHED pages) as the in-progress
vm_radix_insert(). With the removal of PG_CACHED pages, we can simplify
vm_radix_insert() and vm_radix_remove() by removing the flags on the root of
the trie that were used to detect this case and the code for restarting
vm_radix_insert() when it happened.
Reviewed by: kib, markj
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8664
Also, handle signed and unsigned chars, and more gracefully handle
invalid input.
Submitted by: bde in response to r309331
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Sync libarchive with vendor.
Small improvements, style fixes, bugfixes.
Restores compatibility with tar archives created with Perl Archive::Tar (1)
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: Matthew Seaman <matthew@freebsd.org> (1)
actual numbers would help debugging (also, `MSR' and `ACPI' are standard
abbreviations and thus should be properly capitalized)
- Rephrase unsupported AMD CPUs message and wrap as an overly long line:
`sorry' 1) is wrongly spelled after period (starts with a small letter)
and 2) carries emotional "tinge" that is unnecessary and even bogus in
debug message; `implemented' is not the best word as `supported' suits
better in this context
- Improve readability when reporting resulted P-state transition (debug)
Approved by: jhb
Prior to this change the loader self relocation code interpreted amd64's
rela relocations as if they were rel relocations, discarding the addend.
This "works" because GNU ld 2.17.50 stores the addend value in both the
r_addend field of the relocation (as expected) and at the target of the
relocation.
Other linkers, and possibly other versions of GNU ld, won't have this
behaviour, so interpret the relocations correctly.
Reported by: George Rimar
Reviewed by: andrew
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8681
This includes a security fix for a component that we do not build, and
two potentially useful client side fixes for reintegrate merges and tree
conflict handling. See CHANGES for full details.
USB in places, as well as having the potential for reducing
performance. Since this is used even when powerd isn't enabled, these
two problems can cause on servers. Supermicro X9 motherboards, for
example, have problems with the virtual IPMI USB keyboards and mice
attaching and detaching repeatedly. Since there are issues on some
CPUs with C2, fail safe by defaulting to not altering it.
MFC After: 3 days
miibus_writereg.
Reduce the DELAY() between reads while waiting for MII access.
Spotted by: yongari
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
If bufring is used for per-TX ring descs, don't update "available"
counter, which is only used to help debugging.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Microsoft
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8674
Writing the full queue size to it every time was makeing it overflow with a
lot of bogus values.
This fixes the interrupt storms on irq 40.
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
pr_comment() did avoid adding surplus space character when a comment
contained it at the end. Now it's also paying attention to tabs.
Taken from: Piotr Stefaniak
indent.c has a special loop that stores tokens from between an if () and
the next statement into a buffer. The loop ignored all newlines, but that
resulted in not calling dump_line() when it was needed to produce the
final line of the buffered up comment.
Taken from: Piotr Stefaniak
Work-around a somewhat complex interaction within the code. From
Piotr's commit [1]:
When pr_comment() calls dump_line() for the first line of a multiline
comment, it doesn't include any indentation - it starts with the "/*".
This is consistent for both boxed and not boxed comments. Where the logic
diverges is in how it treats the rest of the lines of the comment. For box
comments indent assumes that it must not change anything, so lines are
dumped as they were, including the indentation where it exists. For the
rest of comments, it will first remove the indentation to store plain text
of the comment and then add it again where indent thinks it's appropriate
-- this is part of comment re-indenting process.
For continuations of multi-line comments, the code that handles comments
in dump_line() will use pad_output() to create indentation from the
beginning of the line (what indent calls the first column) and then write
string pointed by s_com afterwards. But if it's a box comment, the string
will include original indentation, unless it's the first line of the
comment. This is why tab characters from s_com have to be considered when
calculating how much padding is needed and the "while (*com_st == '\t')
com_st++, target += 8;" does that.
In dump_line(), /target/ is initially set to ps.com_col, so it always
assumes that indentation needs to be produced in this function, regardless
of which line of a box comment it is. But for the first line of a box
comment it is not true, so pr_comment() signals it by setting
ps.n_comment_delta, the negative comment delta, to a negative number which
is then added to /target/ in dump_line() on all lines except the first
one, so that the function produces adequate indentation in this special
case.
The bug was in how that negative offset was calculated: pr_comment() used
count_spaces() on in_buffer, which pr_comment() expected to contain
non-null terminated sequence of characters, originating from whatever
originally was on the left side of the comment. Understanding that
count_spaces() requires a string, pr_comment() temporarily set buf_ptr[-2]
to 0 in hope that it would nul-terminate the right thing in in_buffer and
calling count_spaces() would be safe and do the expected thing. This was
false whenever buf_ptr would point into save_com, an entirely different
char array than in_buffer.
The short-term fix is to recognize whether buf_ptr points into in_buffer
or save_com.
Reference:
[1]
ea486a2aa3
Taken from: Piotr Stefaniak
Fix ioat_release to only set is_completion_pending if DMAs were actually
queued. Otherwise, the spurious flag could trigger an assert in the
reset path on INVARIANTS kernels.
Reviewed by: bdrewery, Suraj Raju @ Isilon
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Any .debug or .symbols files under /usr/lib/debug which correspond to
OLD_FILES entries in ObsoleteFiles.inc are also automatically cleaned up
by the delete-old target. Make this also apply to any OLD_DIRS entries.
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8683
This was needed on stable/10. Apparently, sys/param.h supplies CHAR_MAX
on head. Include limits.h anyway, for consistency, and because C says so.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC