This is to make the Makefile more easily extendable for new ABIs.
This also makes several other subtle changes:
- The build now is given a list of ABIs to use based on the MACHINE_ARCH or
MACHINE_CPUARCH. These ABIs have a related path in sys/ that is used
to generate their syscalls. For each ABI to build check for a
ABI.c, MACHINE_ARCH-ABI.c, or a MACHINE_CPUARCH-ABI.c. This matches
the old behavior needed for archs such as powerpc* and mips*.
- The ABI source file selection allows for simpler assignment of common
ABIs such as "fbsd32" from sys/compat/freebsd32, or cloudabi64.
- Expand 'fbsd' to 'freebsd' everywhere for consistency.
- Split out the powerpc-fbsd.c file into a powerpc64-freebsd32.c to be more
like the amd64-freebsd32.c file and to more easily allow the auto-generation
of ABI handling to work.
- Rename 'syscalls.h' to 'fbsd_syscalls.h' to lessen the ambiguity and
avoid confusion with syscall.h (such as in r288997).
- For non-native syscall header files, they are now renamed to be
ABI_syscalls.h, where ABI is what ABI the Makefile is building.
- Remove all of the makesyscalls config files. The "native" one being
name i386.conf was a long outstanding bug. They were all the same
except for the data they generated, so now it is just auto-generated
as a build artifact.
- The syscalls array is now fixed to be static in the syscalls header to
remove the compiler warning about non-extern. This was worked around
in the aarch64-fbsd.c file but not the others.
- All syscall table names are now just 'syscallnames' since they don't
need to be different as they are all static in their own ABI files. The
alternative is to name them ABI_syscallnames which does not seem
necessary.
Reviewed by: ed, jhb
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3851
the FreeBSD test suite
functional_test.sh was ported from bin/sh/tests/functional_test.sh, as a
small wrapper around libarchive_test, bsdcpio_test, and bsdtar_test provided
by upstream.
A handful of testcases in lib/libarchive/tests have been disabled as they
were failing when run with kyua test (see BROKEN_TESTS in
lib/libarchive/tests/Makefile)
As a sidenote: this removes the check/test targets from the Makefiles as they
don't match the pattern used in the rest of the FreeBSD test suite.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Formal release notes are available:
https://subversion.apache.org/docs/release-notes/1.9.html
Of particular note, the client checkout format has *not* changed so
upgrades should *not* be required.
When reading a repository (file:// or running as a local server), an
improved fsfs version 7 is available with significant performance
improvements. An optional upgrade is possible to use the new features.
Without the upgrade, this is fully read/write compatible with the
version 6 fsfs as in svn-1.8.
Relnotes: yes
netbsd-tests.test.mk (r289151)
- Eliminate explicit OBJTOP/SRCTOP setting
- Convert all ad hoc NetBSD test integration over to netbsd-tests.test.mk
- Remove unnecessary TESTSDIR setting
- Use SRCTOP where possible for clarity
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Divison
Without this, the signals are shown seemingly randomly in the output before
the final summary is shown. This is especially noticeable when there is
not much output from the application being traced.
Discussed with: jhb
Relnotes: yes
CloudABI has approximately 50 system calls that do not depend on the
pointer size of the system. As the ABI is pretty compact, it takes
little effort to each truss(8) the formatting rules for these system
calls. Start off by formatting pointer size independent system calls.
Changes:
- Make it possible to include the CloudABI system call definitions in
FreeBSD userspace builds. Add ${root}/sys to the truss(8) Makefile so
we can pull in <compat/cloudabi/cloudabi_syscalldefs.h>.
- Refactoring: patch up amd64-cloudabi64.c to use the CLOUDABI_*
constants instead of rolling our own table.
- Add table entries for all of the system calls.
- Add new generic formatting types (UInt, IntArray) that we'll be using
to format unsigned integers and arrays of integers.
- Add CloudABI specific formatting types.
Approved by: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3836
This uses the kdump(1) utrace support code directly until a common library
is created.
This allows malloc(3) tracing with MALLOC_CONF=utrace:true and rtld tracing
with LD_UTRACE=1. Unknown utrace(2) data is just printed as hex.
PR: 43819 [inspired by]
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3819
The functional_test.sh harness for each test subdir was inspired
by the version in bin/sh/tests/functional_test.sh
Some gymnastics were required to deal with implicit rules for
.c / .o -> .out as the suffix transformation rules were
incorrectly trying to create the test outputs from some of the
source files
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The latter is already defined in bsd.libnames.mk, so avoid the conflict
in case someone copy-pastes make variables
While here, switch path to the top of the source tree with SRCTOP
and move from the pattern of:
.if ${MK_FOO} != "no"
SUBDIR+= bar
.endif
to
SUBDIR.${MK_FOO}+= bar
since we know that MK_FOO is always either yes or no and the latter
form is easier to follow and much shorter. Various exception to this
pattern dealt with on an ah-hoc basis.
Discussed on arch@ a while ago.
This is done by changing get_syscall() to either lookup the known syscall
or add it into the list with the default handlers for printing.
This also simplifies some code to not have to check if the syscall variable
is set or NULL.
Reviewed by: jhb
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3792
This change adds the bits that are necessary to fetch system call
arguments and return values from trapframes for CloudABI. This allows us
to properly print system calls with the right name. We need to make sure
that we properly convert error numbers when system calls fail.
We still need to improve truss to pretty-print some of the system calls
that have flags.
address's length (and then overriding it if it "looks wrong"), use the
next argument to the system call to determine the length. This is more
reliable since this is what the kernel depends on anyway and is also
simpler.
integer. Fix the argument decoding to treat this as a quad instead of an
int. This includes using QUAD_ALIGN and QUAD_SLOTS as necessary. To
continue printing IDs in decimal, add a new QuadHex argument type that
prints a 64-bit integer in hex, use QuadHex for the existing off_t arguments,
repurpose Quad to print a 64-bit integer in decimal, and use Quad for id_t
arguments.
This fixes the decoding of wait6(2) and procctl(2) on 32-bit platforms.
probably fallout from the removal of the extra padding argument before
off_t in 7. However, that padding still exists for 32-bit powerpc, so
use QUAD_ALIGN.
- Fix QUAD_ALIGN to be zero for powerpc64. It should only be set to 1
for 32-bit platforms that add padding to align 64-bit arguments.
- Refactor the interface between the ABI-independent code and the
ABI-specific backends. The backends now provide smaller hooks to
fetch system call arguments and return values. The rest of the
system call entry and exit handling that was previously duplicated
among all the backends has been moved to one place.
- Merge the loop when waiting for an event with the loop for handling stops.
This also means not emulating a procfs-like interface on top of ptrace().
Instead, use a single event loop that fetches process events via waitid().
Among other things this allows us to report the full 32-bit exit value.
- Use PT_FOLLOW_FORK to follow new child processes instead of forking a new
truss process for each new child. This allows one truss process to monitor
a tree of processes and truss -c should now display one total for the
entire tree instead of separate summaries per process.
- Use the recently added fields to ptrace_lwpinfo to determine the current
system call number and argument count. The latter is especially useful
and fixes a regression since the conversion from procfs. truss now
generally prints the correct number of arguments for most system calls
rather than printing extra arguments for any call not listed in the
table in syscalls.c.
- Actually check the new ABI when processes call exec. The comments claimed
that this happened but it was not being done (perhaps this was another
regression in the conversion to ptrace()). If the new ABI after exec
is not supported, truss detaches from the process. If truss does not
support the ABI for a newly executed process the process is killed
before it returns from exec.
- Along with the refactor, teach the various ABI-specific backends to
fetch both return values, not just the first. Use this to properly
report the full 64-bit return value from lseek(). In addition, the
handler for "pipe" now pulls the pair of descriptors out of the
return values (which is the true kernel system call interface) but
displays them as an argument (which matches the interface exported by
libc).
- Each ABI handler adds entries to a linker set rather than requiring
a statically defined table of handlers in main.c.
- The arm and mips system call fetching code was changed to follow the
same pattern as amd64 (and the in-kernel handler) of fetching register
arguments first and then reading any remaining arguments from the
stack. This should fix indirect system call arguments on at least
arm.
- The mipsn32 and n64 ABIs will now look for arguments in A4 through A7.
- Use register %ebp for the 6th system call argument for Linux/i386 ABIs
to match the in-kernel argument fetch code.
- For powerpc binaries on a powerpc64 system, fetch the extra arguments
on the stack as 32-bit values that are then copied into the 64-bit
argument array instead of reading the 32-bit values directly into the
64-bit array.
Reviewed by: kib (earlier version)
Tested on: amd64 (FreeBSD/amd64 & i386), i386, arm (earlier version)
Tested on: powerpc64 (FreeBSD/powerpc64 & powerpc)
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3575
These are only handled as 'build-tools' in Makefile.inc1. This causes
'make clean' from the top of the tree to not clean the directories. It also
effectively has kept them disconnected and risks them bitrotting. The
buildworld process never cleans them either.
Connect them so they will always be built, cleaned, etc, but never installed.
Discussed with: imp (briefly)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division