of NaNs before possible returning a NaN.
The remquo*() and remainder*() functions should now give bitwise identical
results across arches and implementations, and bitwise consistent results
(with lower precisions having truncated mantissas) across precisions. x86
already had consistency across amd64 and i386 and precisions by using the
i387 consistently and normally not using the C versions. Inconsistencies
for C reqmquol() were first detected on sparc64.
Remove double second clearing of the sign bit and extra blank lines.
[ELF] Update addends in non-allocatable sections for REL targets when
creating a relocatable output.
LLVM PR: 37735
LLVM Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48929
PR: 225128
Obtained from: LLVM r336799 by Igor Kudrin
remainder*(x, y) and remquo*(x, y, quo) were broken for y = 0 by changing
multiplication by y to addition of y. (When y is 0, the result should be
NaN but became 1 for finite x.)
Use a new macro nan_mix_op() to give more control over the mixing, and
expand comments.
Recent re-testing missed finding this bug since I only tested the macro
version on amd64 and i386 and these arches don't use the C versions (they
use either asm versions or builtins).
Reported by: enh via freebsd-numerics
jedec_dimm(4) is a superset of the functionality of jedec_ts(4). Mark
jedec_ts(4) as removed in FreeBSD 12, and include a pointer to the migration
instructions in the jedec_dimm(4) manpage, in both the jedec_ts(4) code and
the jedec_ts(4) manpage. Add a note to the jedec_dimm(4) manpage about the
fact that it is a superset of jedec_ts(4).
This change will be MFCed to stable/11 and stable/10; the followup change
to actually remove jedec_ts(4) from -HEAD will not.
Reviewed by: avg
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16412
they use same passphrase and keyfiles.
Unique salt will be randomly generated for each provider to ensure the
Master Key for each is unique.
This change follows on from r335673 and r336602, which allowed multiple
providers to be attached in a single command.
Reviewed by: asomers
Approved by: sobomax
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16115
loading.
If we are booting in a conforming UEFI Boot Manager Environment, then
use the BootCurrent variable to find the BootXXXX we're using. Once we
find that, then if it contains more than one EFI_DEVICE_PATH in its
what to boot section, try to use the last one as the kernel to
load. This will also set the default root partition as well. If
there's only one path, or if there's an error along the way, assume
that nothing specific was specified and revert to the old
algorithm. If something was specified, but not found, then fail the
boot. Otherwise you that, specific thing. On FreeBSD, this can be set
using efibootmgr -l <loader> -k <kernel>. We try a few variations of
kernel to cope with the fact that UEFI comes from a DOS world where
paths might be upper case and/or contain back-slashes.
Note: In an ideal world, we'd work out where we are in chain loading
by looking at the passed-in image handle and doing name
matching. However, that's unreliable since at least boot1.efi booted
images don't have that, hence the assumption that loader.efi needs to
load the last thing on the list, if possible.
The reason we fail for something specific is so that we can fully
participate in the UEFI Boot Manager Protocol and fail over to the
next item in the list of BootOrder choices when something goes wrong
at this stage.
This implements was was talked about in freebsd-arch@ last year
https://docs.freebsd.org/cgi/getmsg.cgi?fetch=3576+0+archive/2017/freebsd-arch/20171022.freebsd-arch
and documented in full (after changed resulting from the discussion) in
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1aK9IqF-60JPEbUeSAUAkYjF2W_8EnmczFs6RqCT90Jg/edit#
although one or two minor details may have been modified in this
implementation to make it work, and the ZFS MEDIA PATH extension isn't
implemented. This does not yet move things to ESP:\efi\freebsd\loader.efi.
RelNotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16403
Lookup a block device by it's device path. We use a 'loose' lookup
whereby we scan forward to the first Media Path portion of the device
path, then look at all our handles for one whose first Media Path
matches. This will also work if the device path pointed to has a
following file path (or paths) as that's ignored. It assumes that
there's only one media path node that describes the entire device,
which is true as of the latest UEFI spec (2.7 Errata A) as far as I've
been able to determine.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Returns true if the first node pointed to by devpath1 is identical to
the first node pointed to by devpath2, with care taken to not read
past the end of the valid parts of either devpath1 or
devpath2. Otherwise, returns false.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Takes a generic device path as its input. Scans through it to find the
first media_path node in it and returns a pointer to it. If none is
found, NULL is returned.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Compilers may define multiple variants of architecture-specific macros
(for example, both __x86_64 and __x86_64__). Add a note that the macros
documented in arch.7 are the preferred ones for FreeBSD.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Temporarily decompress a copy of a crash dump compressed with either
gzip or zstd and run various tools against the decompressed copy while
generating the crash information. The uncompressed copy is deleted when
the script exits.
Note that crashinfo is enabled by default, so this will attempt to
decompress the most recent compressed crash dump after a crash that
generates a compressed crash dump. Users who wish to only do offline
analysis of compressed crash dumps can disable crashinfo in rc.conf.
Tested by: ler
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
The primary reason for this commit is to separate mechanical and nearly
mechanical code changes from an upcoming fix for unsafe teardown of
shared interrupt handlers that have only filters (see D15905).
The technical rationale is that SLIST is sufficient. The only operation
that gets worse performance -- O(n) instead of O(1) is a removal of a
handler, but it is not a critical operation and the list is expected to
be rather short.
Additionally, it is easier to reason about SLIST when considering the
concurrent lock-free access to the list from the interrupt context and
the interrupt thread.
CK_SLIST is used because the upcoming change depends on the memory order
provided by CK_SLIST insert and the fact that CL_SLIST remove does not
trash the linkage in a removed element.
While here, I also fixed a couple of whitespace issues, made code under
ifdef notyet compilable, added a lock assertion to ithread_update() and
made intr_event_execute_handlers() static as it had no external callers.
Reviewed by: cem (earlier version)
MFC after: 4 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16016
o The correct value for _JB_SIGMASK is 27.
o The storage size for double-precision floating
point register is 8 bytes.
Submitted by: "James Clarke" <jrtc4@cam.ac.uk>
Reviewed by: markj@
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16344
line args. I had thought console would be NULL, but it's efi. Set it
to efi (as a clue) before we initialize the console, then test it to
see if it changed on the command line to do the automatic
override. This gets my serial console back.
zfsloader as a hard link. While newer ones do, the whole point of the
link was to transition to the new world order smoothly. A hard link is
less flexible, but it works and will result in fewer bumps. Adjust
UPDATING entry to match.
users. Without -R, pw(8) uses getpwnam(3), which will open master.passwd
for the root user or passwd for non-root users. With -R <path> pw(8) was
always opening <path>/master.passwd, which would fail for a non-root user,
then falsely claim the userid you're trying to show doesn't exist.
Now for a non-root user it opens <path>/passwd and zeroes out the 3 fields
that aren't available in the passwd file, which duplicates the behavior of
getpwnam(3). The net effect is that the showuser output is identical
whether using -R or not.
This change allows one to set the busy_detect flag
required by the synopsys UART at the loader prompt.
This is needed by the EPYC 3000 SoC.
This will give users a working console up to the point where getty is required:
hw.uart.console="mm:0xfedc9000,rs:2,bd:1"
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 4 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16399
The change made in r336593 assumes that the build is happening in a
svn checkout resulting in misleading debug output. Check that we're
actually working in an svn checkout before proceeding to call svn.
Since r336313, TSO support for LEM-class devices is removed again as it
was before the conversion of {l,}em(4) to iflib(4) in r311849 and as a
result, isc_tx_tso_segments_max is 0 for LEM-class devices now. Thus,
inappropriate watermarks were used for this class.
This is really only a band-aid, though, because so far iflib(9) doesn't
fully take into account that DMA engines can support different maxima
of segments for transfers of TSO and non-TSO packets. For example, the
DESC_RECLAIMABLE macro is based on isc_tx_nsegments while MAX_TX_DESC
used isc_tx_tso_segments_max only. For most in-tree consumers that
doesn't make a difference as the maxima are the same for both kinds of
transfers (that is, apart from the fact that TSO may require up to 2
sentinel descriptors but also not with every MAC supported). However,
isc_tx_nsegments is 8 but isc_tx_tso_segments_max is 85 by default
with ixl(4).
tests for avail > 0, avail can never be 0 within that loop. Thus, move
decrementing avail and budget_left into the loop and before the code which
checks for additional descriptors having become available in case all the
previous ones have been processed but there still is budget left so the
latter code works as expected. [1]
- In iflib_{busdma_load_mbuf_sg,parse_header}(), remove dead stores to m
and n respectively. [2, 3]
- In collapse_pkthdr(), ensure that m_next isn't NULL before dereferencing
it. [4]
- Remove a duplicate assignment of segs in iflib_encap().
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1356027 [1], 1356047 [2], 1368205 [3], 1356028 [4]
- Don't bother calling if_setbaudrate(9) as iflib_link_state_change(9)
takes care of that,
- correctly check for E1000_CTRL_EXT_LINK_MODE_GMII in E1000_CTRL_EXT [1],
- properly convert the uint16_t link_speed to a uint64_t baudrate by
using IF_Mbps() which contains an appropriate cast [2],
- remove the duplicate link down announcement when bootverbose isn't
zero and bring the remaining one in line with the other link state
messages.
o Remove a dead store to rid in em_if_msix_intr_assign(). [3]
o Or in the DMA coalescing Rx threshold so the other bits set in E1000_DMACR
remain intact as intended in igb_init_dmac(). [4]
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1378464 [1], 1368765 [2], 1381681 [3], 1304929 [4]
Some of the changes are in the libexec/tftpd directory, but to functions that
are only used by tftp(1) (they share some code).
* strcpy => strlcpy (1006793, 1006794, 1006796, 1006741)
* Unchecked return value and TOCTTOU (1009314)
* NULL pointer dereference (1018035, 1018036)
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1006793, 1006794, 1006796, 1006741, 1009314, 1018035
CID: 1018036
MFC after: 2 weeks