Apparently, LIBZFS is set to a non-empty string when WITHOUT_CDDL/WITHOUT_ZFS
are set, I think this is a bug, but work around this feature for now.
Reviewed by: grehan
Modelled after the i386 zfsloader. However, with no
2nd stage zfsboot to search for a bootable dataset,
attempt a ZFS boot if there is more than one ZFS
dataset found during the disk probe.
sys/boot/userboot/zfs
- build the ZFS boot library
sys/boot/userboot/userboot/
conf.c
- Add the ZFS pool and filesystem tables
devicename.c
- correctly format ZFS devices
main.c
- increase the size of the libstand malloc pool
to account for the increased usage from ZFS buffers
- probe for a ZFS dataset, and if one is
found, attempt to boot from it.
usr.sbin/bhyveload/bhyveload.c
- allow multiple invocations of the '-d' option
to specify multiple disks e.g. a raidz set.
Up to 32 disks are supported.
Tested with various combinations of GPT, MBR, single
and multiple disks, RAID-Z, mirrors.
Reviewed by: neel
Discussed with: avg
Tested by: Michael Dexter and others
MFC after: 3 weeks
- Similar to the hack for bootinfo32.c in userboot, define
_MACHINE_ELF_WANT_32BIT in the load_elf32 file handlers in userboot.
This allows userboot to load 32-bit kernels and modules.
- Copy the SMAP generation code out of bootinfo64.c and into its own
file so it can be shared with bootinfo32.c to pass an SMAP to the i386
kernel.
- Use uint32_t instead of u_long when aligning module metadata in
bootinfo32.c in userboot, as otherwise the metadata used 64-bit
alignment which corrupted the layout.
- Populate the basemem and extmem members of the bootinfo struct passed
to 32-bit kernels.
- Fix the 32-bit stack in userboot to start at the top of the stack
instead of the bottom so that there is room to grow before the
kernel switches to its own stack.
- Push a fake return address onto the 32-bit stack in addition to the
arguments normally passed to exec() in the loader. This return
address is needed to convince recover_bootinfo() in the 32-bit
locore code that it is being invoked from a "new" boot block.
- Add a routine to libvmmapi to setup a 32-bit flat mode register state
including a GDT and TSS that is able to start the i386 kernel and
update bhyveload to use it when booting an i386 kernel.
- Use the guest register state to determine the CPU's current instruction
mode (32-bit vs 64-bit) and paging mode (flat, 32-bit, PAE, or long
mode) in the instruction emulation code. Update the gla2gpa() routine
used when fetching instructions to handle flat mode, 32-bit paging, and
PAE paging in addition to long mode paging. Don't look for a REX
prefix when the CPU is in 32-bit mode, and use the detected mode to
enable the existing 32-bit mode code when decoding the mod r/m byte.
Reviewed by: grehan, neel
MFC after: 1 month
WITH[OUT]_SSP to avoid hitting an error if user has WITH_SSP in their
make.conf. Ports now use this knob.
make[7]: "/usr/src/share/mk/bsd.own.mk" line 466: WITH_SSP and
WITHOUT_SSP can't both be set.
This is similar to previous cleanup done in r188895
Approved by: bapt
Reviewed by: jlh (earlier version)
Approved by: re (marius)
MFC after: 1 week
machine/signal.h and machine/ucontext.h into common x86 includes,
copying from amd64 and merging with i386.
Kernel-only compat definitions are kept in the i386/include/sigframe.h
and i386/include/signal.h, to reduce amd64 kernel namespace pollution.
The amd64 compat uses its own definitions so far.
The _MACHINE_ELF_WANT_32BIT definition is to allow the
sys/boot/userboot/userboot/elf32_freebsd.c to use i386 ELF definitions
on the amd64 compile host. The same hack could be usefully abused by
other code too.
r238966
Bump up the heap size to 1MB. With a few kernel modules, libstand
zalloc and userboot seem to want to use ~600KB of heap space, which
results in a segfault when malloc fails in bhyveload.
r241180
Clarify comment about default number of FICL dictionary cells.
r241153
Allow the number of FICL dictionary cells to be overridden.
Loading a 7.3 ISO with userboot/amd64 takes up 10035 cells,
overflowing the long-standing default of 10000.
Bump userboot's value up to 15000 cells.
Reviewed by: dteske (r238966,241180)
Obtained from: NetApp
.. so that consistent compilation algorithms are used for both
architectures as in practice the binaries are expected to be
interchangeable (for time being).
Previously i386 used default setting which were equivalent to
-march=i486 -mtune=generic.
The only difference is using smaller but slower "leave" instructions.
Discussed with: jhb, dim
MFC after: 29 days
disk_open(). Very often this is called several times for one file.
This leads to reading partition table metadata for each call. To
reduce the number of disk I/O we have a simple block cache, but it
is very dumb and more than half of I/O operations related to reading
metadata, misses this cache.
Introduce new cache layer to resolve this problem. It is independent
and doesn't need initialization like bcache, and will work by default
for all loaders which use the new DISK API. A successful disk_open()
call to each new disk or partition produces new entry in the cache.
Even more, when disk was already open, now opening of any nested
partitions does not require reading top level partition table.
So, if without this cache, partition table metadata was read around
20-50 times during boot, now it reads only once. This affects the booting
from GPT and MBR from the UFS.
It uses new API from the part.c to work with partition tables.
Update userboot's disk driver to use new API. Note that struct
loader_callbacks_v1 has changed.
(x86 assembler optimization disabled for now because it
requires the new .cfi_* directives that is not supported
by base system binutils).
MFC after: 1 week
As I looked through the C library, I noticed the FreeBSD MIPS port has a
hand-written version of index(). This is nice, if it weren't for the
fact that most applications call strchr() instead.
Also, on the other architectures index() and strchr() are identical,
meaning we have two identical pieces of code in the C library and
statically linked applications.
Solve this by naming the actual file strchr.[cS] and let it use
__strong_reference()/STRONG_ALIAS() to provide the index() routine. Do
the same for rindex()/strrchr().
This seems to make the C libraries and static binaries slightly smaller,
but this reduction in size seems negligible.