BZ_NO_COMPRESS support to the bzip2 sources directly (yes, this takes file
off the vendor branch, but looks like bzip2 maintainer doesn't care), so that
it will not be removed when the next upgrade is performed. Also, add a short
note on how to test bzip2 support.
Pointy hat to: obrien
Correct comment (libz -> libbz2) and remove useless full path to zutil.h
while I am here.
long (and unsigned long long) to long double conversions.
- Add a parameter that specifies the position of the sign bit to the _QP_TTOQ
macro, previously it always looked at bit 31. Pass a negative number to
disable sign inspection for unsigned types. This fixes _Qp_xtoq(),
_Qp_uitoq() and _Qp_uxtoq().
- In the functions __fpu_itof() and __fpu_xtof(), look at the sign bit to
decide whether we're doing a conversion from an unsigned type. If so, don't
negate the mantissa if the integer exceeds the biggest signed number.
PR: 55773
Patch by: Stephen Paskaluk (based upon)
MFC after: 2 weeks
and restoring the metadata. In particular, the metadata-restore
functions now all accept a file descriptor and a pathname. If the
file descriptor is set and the platform supports the appropriate
syscall, restore the metadata through the file descriptor. Otherwise,
restore it through the pathname. This is complicated by varying
syscall support (FreeBSD has an fchmod(2) but no fchflags(2), for
example) and because non-file entries don't have an fd to use in
restoring attributes (for example, mknod(2) doesn't return a file
handle).
MFC after: 14 days
bzip2 support provided, and amd64 depended on. Amd64 has a custom
${.OBJDIR}/machine symlink in it and the -I. picked this up. Without
it, the libstand code was being compiled in 32 bit mode, but with 64 bit
machine headers.
that use SSE. The compiler does attempt to do this in main() but not very
successfully - it still manages to use unaligned offsets from %ebp in some
cases. Also we need to have an aligned stack in case something uses SSE
via _init().
MFC After: 1 week
RFC 2553. In XNS5.2, and subsequently in POSIX-2001 and RFC
3493, it was changed to a socklen_t. And, the n_net of a
struct netent used to be an unsigned long integer. In XNS5,
and subsequently in POSIX-2001, it was changed to an uint32_t.
To accomodate for this while preserving ABI compatibility with
the old interface, we need to prepend or append 32 bits of
padding, depending on the (LP64) architecture's endianness.
- Correct 1st argument of getnetbyaddr() to uint32_t on 32
bit arch. Stay as is on 64 bit arch for ABI backward
compatibility for now.
Reviewed by: das, peter
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: rwatson at freebsd dot org
Approved by: rwatson at freebsd dot org
MFC after: 1 week
Fix the matchlen() function so that it handles the IPv4 (AF_INET)
case correctly. Until now it has been treating IPv4 addresses
as if they were IPv6 which could lead to corruption errors.
return the buffer immediately. This will permit ssh and/or PAM logins
broken by previous commit.
The (potential) underlying problem is still under investigation.
Point hat to: me
different from what has been offered in libc_r (the one spotted in the
original PR which is found in libthr has already been removed by David's
commit, which is rev. 1.44 of lib/libthr/thread/thr_private.h):
- Use POSIX standard prototype for ttyname_r, which is,
int ttyname_r(int, char *, size_t);
Instead of:
char *ttyname_r(int, char *, size_t);
This is to conform IEEE Std 1003.1, 2004 Edition [1].
- Since we need to use standard errno for return code, include
errno.h in ttyname.c
- Update ttyname(3) implementation according to reflect the API
change.
- Document new ttyname_r(3) behavior
- Since we already make use of a thread local storage for
ttyname(3), remove the BUGS section.
- Remove conflicting ttyname_r related declarations found in libc_r.
Hopefully this change should not have changed the API/ABI, as the ttyname_r
symbol was never introduced before the last unistd.h change which happens a
couple of days before.
[1] http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/ttyname.html
Requested by: Tom McLaughlin <tmclaugh sdf lonestar org>
Through PR: threads/76938
Patched by: Craig Rodrigues <rodrigc crodrigues org> (with minor changes)
Prompted by: mezz@
primarily of pointless $FreeBSD$ tags), sync most files in HEAD with
those in the ZLIB branch. This minimizes the differences between
HEAD and ZLIB and should simplify future imports.
After this, there are only three files with local modifications
(gzio.c, minigzip.c, and zconf.h) and two non-vendor files
(Makefile, zopen.c). The rest exactly match the vendor distribution.
PR: i386/76294
MFC after: 2 weeks
(symlink or hardlink) is already set. Instead, it was always setting
the hardlink field. In particular, this caused GNU tar format long
symlinks to be interpreted as hardlinks.
Thanks to: Brooks Davis
MFC after: 7 days
negative (in addition to returning EINVAL when called on a descriptor
that is not a socket).
Submitted by: Arne H Juul <arnej@europe.yahoo-inc.com>
PR: docs/80587
(((truncate to zero length) or (create)) (text file)) (for writing)
and not
((truncate file to zero length) or (create text file)) (for writing)
MFC after: 1 week
- Use /*- instead of /* for copyright section
- Include unistd.h for prototype of it
- Sort and separate includes as described in style(9)
- ANSIfy the function defination
- Use const for the traversing iterator
Have pmcstat(8) and pmccontrol(8) use these APIs.
Return PMC class-related constants (PMC widths and capabilities)
with the OP GETCPUINFO call leaving OP PMCINFO to return only the
dynamic information associated with a PMC (i.e., whether enabled,
owner pid, reload count etc.).
Allow pmc_read() (i.e., OPS PMCRW) on active self-attached PMCs to
get upto-date values from hardware since we can guarantee that the
hardware is running the correct PMC at the time of the call.
Bug fixes:
- (x86 class processors) Fix a bug that prevented an RDPMC
instruction from being recognized as permitted till after the
attached process had context switched out and back in again after
a pmc_start() call.
Tighten the rules for using RDPMC class instructions: a GETMSR
OP is now allowed only after an OP ATTACH has been done by the
PMC's owner to itself. OP GETMSR is not allowed for PMCs that
track descendants, for PMCs attached to processes other than
their owner processes.
- (P4/HTT processors only) Fix a bug that caused the MI and MD
layers to get out of sync. Add a new MD operation 'get_config()'
as part of this fix.
- Allow multiple system-mode PMCs at the same row-index but on
different CPUs to be allocated.
- Reject allocation of an administratively disabled PMC.
Misc. code cleanups and refactoring. Improve a few comments.
any query.
- don't query against IPv6 link-local address.
- use IN6_IS_ADDR_V4{MAPPED,COMPAT} macros.
- use memcpy() instead of bcopy().
Inspired by: NetBSD
These are two of the three files that have non-trivial differences from
the vendor branch. minigzip.c is the third, but there were no changes
from ZLib 1.2.1 to ZLib 1.2.2 in that file.
The rest of the files I intend to get reverted back to the vendor
branch (with cooperation of cvsadmin@).
PR: i386/76294
internal error if pax extended attributes were being generated. Being
< 255 characters, the first-pass path editing (to generate a
ustar-compatible name for the main entry) wouldn't occur, and the
second-pass path editing (to generate a ustar name for the pax
attributes entry) assumed the input was already < 245 chars.
The core problem here was using an abbreviated algorithm for the
second pass that relied on the first pass having already run. The
rewritten code is much simpler: It just uses the full path-shortening
algorithm for building both ustar pathnames. This way, the second
ustar pathname will always be short enough.
Thanks to: Mark Cammidge
Related to: bin/74385
us when <sys/pmc.h> is included.
o Replace "#if __i386__" and "#if __amd64__" with the equivalent of
"#ifdef __i386__" and "#ifdef __amd64__" (resp.) These tokens are
not defined on all platforms.
o Conditionally compile pmc_parse_mask() on i386 and amd64 only. It's
only referenced there. This will change when support for other
platforms is added, of course.
Ok'd by: jkoshy@
getnameinfo(3). POSIX standard does not require a sa_len field
in sockaddr struct, hence such requirement will cause problem
for portability.
PR: standards/80008
Requested by: Xin Liu <lx@knight.6test.edu.cn>
Reviewed by: freebsd-standards (das)
MFC After: 2 weeks
check the password or group database before attempting to parse as an
integer, as is done for the first {uid,gid} in an identity phrase.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: SPAWAR, SPARTA
a return instruction. (The latter is discouraged by the Opteron
optimization manual because it disables branch prediction for the return
instruction.)
Reviewed by: bde
* Handles entries with compressed size >2GB (signed/unsigned cleanup)
* Handles entries with compressed size >4GB ("ZIP64" extension)
* Handles Unix extensions (ctime, atime, mtime, mode, uid, etc)
* Format-specific "skip data" override allows ZIP reader to skip
entries without decompressing them, which makes "tar -t"
a lot faster.
* Handles "length-at-end" entries generated by, e.g., "zip -r - foo"
Many thanks to: Dan Nelson, who contributed the code and test files for
the first three items above and suggested the fourth.
libalias.
In /usr/src/lib/libalias/alias.c, the functions LibAliasIn and
LibAliasOutTry call the legacy PacketAliasIn/PacketAliasOut instead
of LibAliasIn/LibAliasOut when the PKT_ALIAS_REVERSE option is set.
In this case, the context variable "la" gets lost because the legacy
compatibility routines expect "la" to be global. This was obviously
an oversight when rewriting the PacketAlias* functions to the
LibAlias* functions.
The fix (as shown in the patch below) is to remove the legacy
subroutine calls and replace with the new ones using the "la" struct
as the first arg.
Submitted by: Gil Kloepfer <fgil@kloepfer.org>
Confirmed by: <nicolai@catpipe.net>
PR: 76839
MFC after: 3 days
implementations inspired by the ones in DragonFly. Unlike the
DragonFly versions, these have a small data cache footprint, and my
tests show that they're never slower than the old code except when the
charset or the span is 0 or 1 characters. This implementation is
generally faster than DragonFly until either the charset or the span
gets in the ballpark of 32 to 64 characters.
these at the moment, but applications that test for them will now
have a better chance of compiling.
I have intentionally omitted errnos that are only good for STREAMS,
since apps that use STREAMS won't compile anyway. The exception is
EPROTO, which was apparently intended for STREAMS, but worth having
anyway because Linux (mis)uses it for other things.
1. fast simple type mutex.
2. __thread tls works.
3. asynchronous cancellation works ( using signal ).
4. thread synchronization is fully based on umtx, mainly, condition
variable and other synchronization objects were rewritten by using
umtx directly. those objects can be shared between processes via
shared memory, it has to change ABI which does not happen yet.
5. default stack size is increased to 1M on 32 bits platform, 2M for
64 bits platform.
As the result, some mysql super-smack benchmarks show performance is
improved massivly.
Okayed by: jeff, mtm, rwatson, scottl
floating-point arithmetic on i386. Now I'm going to make excuses
for why this code is kinda scary:
- To avoid breaking the ABI with 5.3-RELEASE, we can't change
sizeof(fenv_t). I stuck the saved mxcsr in some discontiguous
reserved bits in the existing structure.
- Attempting to access the mxcsr on older processors results
in an illegal instruction exception, so support for SSE must
be detected at runtime. (The extra baggage is optimized away
if either the application or libm is compiled with -msse{,2}.)
I didn't run tests to ensure that this doesn't SIGILL on older 486's
lacking the cpuid instruction or on other processors lacking SSE.
Results from running the fenv regression test on these processors
would be appreciated. (You'll need to compile the test with
-DNO_STRICT_DFL_ENV.) If you have an 80386, or if your processor
supports SSE but the kernel didn't enable it, then you're probably out
of luck.
Also, I un-inlined some of the functions that grew larger as a result
of this change, moving them from fenv.h to fenv.c.