The macOS /bin/sh complains about using return outside of functions.
Replace `return 0` with `exit 0` to fix this. While editing this files
I've also fixed all the shellcheck warnings that were displayed by my IDE.
Reviewed By: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28016
If we set STRIPBIN, we also have to set XSTRIPBIN since we otherwise
use the host /usr/bin/strip during buildworld. However, this does not
work on macOS since /usr/bin/strip doesn't handle ELF binaries.
As suggested in D27598. This also supports MK_WERROR.clang=no and
MK_WERROR.gcc=no to support the existing NO_WERROR.<compiler> uses.
Reviewed By: brooks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27601
With this change and D27598 make kernel-toolchain no longer emits any
warnings for me.
Reviewed By: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27599
Support for NS_MOREFRAG is broken, as NS_MOREFRAG is copied from
the TX slot to the RX slot rather than the other way around.
Also, the NS_MOREFRAG must be copied also in case of packet
copy (no zerocopy).
Reported by: rajesh1.kumar_amd.com
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27980
We've created a new pf_ruleset.c file for pfctl and no longer use the
kernel vrsion, but the build system doesn't handle this dependency
change correctly. Delete the dependency file if it contains the kernel
version of the file.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Only keep the widechar version of ncurses as libncursesw.so.9
Keep the old name to avoid breaking the ABI compatibility (the non
widechar version libncurses.so.9 is not binary compatible with
libncursesw.so.9) since all ports and base are already only linking
against the widechar version we can simply remove libncurses.so.9
Since the .9 version only lived in the dev branch and never ended in a
release, it is simply removed and not added to any binary compat
package.
Add symlinks to keep build time compatibility for anyone linking against
-lncurses
- Files for colldef were generated by duplicating UTF-8 collation files
for each language and included invalid characters in the non-UTF-8
encodings. localedef(1) does not allow those characters.
cldr2def.pl now checks if the characters are valid based on charmap files.
TODO: ja_JP.UTF-8 locale should not be generated solely from CLDR because
it was standardized in a document "UI-OSF Application Platform Profile for
Japanese Environment" which was incompatible with information in CLDR.
Most of commercial Unix vendors adopt this pre-Unicode-era document
as the reference even for UTF-8 locale. Newer versions of Solaris have
added a CLDR version as ja_JP.UTF-8@cldr, and IBM AIX has used
JA_JP.UTF-8 for the UI-OSF specification and ja_JP.UTF-8 for CLDR.
Note that this commit does not change generation of ja_JP.UTF-8.
Changes related to this issue will be committed separately later.
- Generate POSIX charamap UTF-32 as a reference. It was confusing that
charmap.xml used Unicode names defined in UnicodeData.txt though POSIX
charmap used slightly different names for the same code points.
cldr2def.pl now uses UTF-32.cm as single information source for Unicode
symbol names and code points. Charset.xml is also updated to use them.
- Fix a bug in get_encodings() in cldr2def.pl which did not understand
0x00+0x00 notation correctly in charmaps/ISCII-DEV.TXT.
- Do not regenerate posix/xx_Comm_C.UTF-8.src every time when doing
"make build".
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27809
* argc/argv are currently unused
* msglen is currently unused
* "default" is a const buffer, but char *cp isn't, so
change default string to be a non-const global string variable
* Make 'cp' private to each context that's using it, which fixes
a "variable shadows previous declaration" warning and makes it
easier to track where it was being leaked between address family
sections
* Remove unused verbose global; things are now done through syslog
* Mark a variable as unused in handle_rtmsg()
Tested:
* FreeBSD/mips32 using gcc-6.4
Unconditionally install bsdgrep as grep, bootstrap or not. Remove all
build glue and stop installing both gnugrep and libgnuregex now that
all consumers of the latter are gone.
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27732
git's default commit message includes the list of staged, unstaged, and
untracked files; adding our metadata tags and then their descriptions
made for a very long template.
Move the descriptions to the metadata lines themselves.
Reviewed by: bcr
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27664
Do not explicitly encode control characters widths as 0
allowing wcwidth() to return the proper implicit value for
non-printable characters (-1).
Reported by: naddy
Start with a slightly modified version of the SVN commit template, to
allow developers to experiment. This will be updated in the future as
our process and techniques evolve.
This can be installed by copying or symlinking into the .git/hooks/
directory.
Feedback from: cem, jhb
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27633
luacheck rightfully complains that i is unused in the show-module-options
loop at the end (it was used for some debugging in the process).
We've added a new pager module that's compiled in, so declare that as an
acceptable global.
GDB 6.1.1 was released in June 2004 and is long obsolete. It does not
support all of the architectures that FreeBSD does, and imposes
limitations on the FreeBSD kernel build, such as the continued use of
DWARF2 debugging information.
It was kept (in /usr/libexec/) only for use by crashinfo(8), which
extracts some basic information from a kernel core dump after a crash.
Crashinfo already prefers gdb from port/package if installed.
Future work may add kernel debug support to LLDB or find another path
for crashinfo's needs, but in any case we do not want to ship the
excessively outdated GDB in FreeBSD 13.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27610
This is an import of the Google Summer of Code 2018 project completed by
Christian Kramer (and, sadly, ignored by us for two years now). The goals
stated for that project were:
FreeBSD already has support for interrupts implemented in the GPIO
controller drivers of several SoCs, but there are no interfaces to take
advantage of them out of user space yet. The goal of this work is to
implement such an interface by providing descriptors which integrate
with the common I/O system calls and multiplexing mechanisms.
The initial imported code supports the following functionality:
- A kernel driver that provides an interface to the user space; the
existing gpioc(4) driver was enhanced with this functionality.
- Implement support for the most common I/O system calls / multiplexing
mechanisms:
- read() Places the pin number on which the interrupt occurred in the
buffer. Blocking and non-blocking behaviour supported.
- poll()/select()
- kqueue()
- signal driven I/O. Posting SIGIO when the O_ASYNC was set.
- Many-to-many relationship between pins and file descriptors.
- A file descriptor can monitor several GPIO pins.
- A GPIO pin can be monitored by multiple file descriptors.
- Integration with gpioctl and libgpio.
I added some fixes (mostly to locking) and feature enhancements on top of
the original gsoc code. The feature ehancements allow the user to choose
between detailed and summary event reporting. Detailed reporting provides
a record describing each pin change event. Summary reporting provides the
time of the first and last change of each pin, and a count of how many times
it changed state since the last read(2) call. Another enhancement allows
the recording of multiple state change events on multiple pins between each
call to read(2) (the original code would track only a single event at a time).
The phabricator review for these changes timed out without approval, but I
cite it below anyway, because the review contains a series of diffs that
show how I evolved the code from its original state in Christian's github
repo for the gsoc project to what is being commited here. (In effect,
the phab review extends the VC history back to the original code.)
Submitted by: Christian Kramer
Obtained from: https://github.com/ckraemer/freebsd/tree/gsoc2018
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27398
RISC-V has the same booting requirements as arm64 (loader.efi, no legacy
boot options), so generated images for both architectures have the same
partition layout.
Reviewed by: gjb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27044
Character width data being out of date is a constant source
of weird rendering issues and wasted time trying to diagnose
those, e.g. as reported by Jeremy Chadwick:
https://gitlab.com/muttmua/mutt/-/issues/67
Sadly, there is no real ("standard") wcwidth data source, so
this tries to rectify the problem using the utf8proc one (through
its C API) which would hopefully benefeat both FreeBSD and
utf8proc through bug reports (if any).
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27259
This was introduced and then disabled by default primarily to avoid dealing
with bugs in libgnuregex. rS363823 switched to using libregex for it, so
let's just rip the option out now so we can make sure we're getting tested
with libregex via bsdgrep.
Reviewed by: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27476
When invoked as "ping6", ping will now attempt to use ICMPv6 for hostnames
that resolve both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
Reviewed by: bz, manu
MFC-With: r368045
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27384
Also fix the run by setting up the environment in non-deprecated way.
Always run with --debug to understand better what sort of stuff is happening in
the background. Also split out the bmake bootstrap stage (takes about 31s on
ubuntu, but 1m14 on macOS?)
Drops the dependency on coreutils (realpath, nproc) and thus (?) fixes macOS to
be just as fast (4 logical cores vs 2 physical cores before, go figure.)
Reviewed by: arichardson
There is now a single ping binary, which chooses to use ICMP or ICMPv4
based on the -4 and -6 options, and the format of the address.
Submitted by: Ján Sučan <sucanjan@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: Google LLC (Google Summer of Code 2019)
MFC after: Never
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21377
Crypto file descriptors were added in the original OCF import as a way
to provide per-open data (specifically the list of symmetric
sessions). However, this gives a bit of a confusing API where one has
to open /dev/crypto and then invoke an ioctl to obtain a second file
descriptor. This also does not match the API used with /dev/crypto on
other BSDs or with Linux's /dev/crypto driver.
Character devices have gained support for per-open data via cdevpriv
since OCF was imported, so use cdevpriv to simplify the userland API
by permitting ioctls directly on /dev/crypto descriptors.
To provide backwards compatibility, CRIOGET now opens another
/dev/crypto descriptor via kern_openat() rather than dup'ing the
existing file descriptor. This preserves prior semantics in case
CRIOGET is invoked multiple times on a single file descriptor.
Reviewed by: markj
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27302