groff will try to produce fancy angle brackets like
Foo ⟨foo@FreeBSD.org⟩
This is nice and well, but no email client will understand them. For
ease of copy&paste keep the one-true pair of brackets 0x3c/0x3e.
See: RFC 822, RFC 2822
PR: gnu/154822
Submitted by: Dominic Fandrey <kamikaze@bsdforen.de>
MFC after: 2 weeks
There are several bugfixes in this update, but the most important one is
to ensure __start_ and __stop_ symbols for linker sets and kernel module
metadata are always emitted in object files:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=9292
Before this fix, if you compiled kernel modules with clang, they would
not be properly processed by kldxref, and if they had any dependencies,
the kernel would fail to load those. Another problem occurred when
attempting to mount a tmpfs filesystem, which would result in 'operation
not supported by device'.
arguments passed to ld, when linking. This was to appease configure
scripts in several ports, that grep for such a -L option in "${CC} -v"
output, to determine the startup objects passed to ld. Note ld itself
does not need to be told about /usr/lib, since it has this path builtin
anyway.
However, if clang is built as a bootstrap tool during buildworld, it
should not use *anything* outside ${WORLDTMP} to include or link with.
The upstream fix to add -L/usr/lib breaks this assumption, and can thus
cause libraries from /usr/lib to be linked in during buildworld.
This can result in buildworld dying during linking of zinject, where it
picks up the wrong copy of libzpool.so, eventually leading to:
/usr/obj/usr/src/tmp/lib/libthr.so.3: undefined reference to `_rtld_get_stack_prot'
Fix this issue by not adding any hardcoded paths, but by looping through
the run-time library path list, which is already correctly set for the
bootstrap phase.
Reported by: datastream.freecity@gmail.com
Pointy hat to: dim
and k8-sse3 cpu-types for -march=/-mtune= gcc options.
These new cpu-types include the SSE3 instruction set that is supported
by all newer AMD Athlon 64 and Opteron processors.
All three cpu-types are supported by clang and all gcc versions
starting with 4.3 SVN rev 124339 (at that time GPLv2 licensed).
PR: gnu/154906
Discussed with: kib, kan, dim
Obtained from: gcc 4.3 (r124339, GPLv2 licensed)
MFC after: 2 weeks
x86 CPU support, better support for powerpc64, some new directives, and
many other things. Bump __FreeBSD_version, and add a note to UPDATING.
Thanks to the many people that have helped to test this.
Obtained from: projects/binutils-2.17
All 9.6 users with DNSSEC validation enabled should upgrade to this
version, or the latest version in the 9.7 branch, prior to 2011-03-31
in order to avoid validation failures for names in .COM as described
here:
https://www.isc.org/announcement/bind-9-dnssec-validation-fails-new-ds-record
In addition the fixes for this and other bugs, there are also the
following:
* Various fixes to kerberos support, including GSS-TSIG
* Various fixes to avoid leaking memory, and to problems that could
prevent a clean shutdown of named
Also remove local overrides that are now in the contrib tree.
This is a direct commit to contrib/ as we will no longer import any
newer groff snapshots, due to licensing issues.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Mark gcc-provided asm files as not requiring executable stack.
It seems that non-FreeBSD ABIs for powerpc64 claim stack non-executable.
Due to this, rs6000_elf_end_indicate_exec_stack() only emit the note for
32 bit target. I decided not to change FreeBSD ABI and patch
emit the notes for both variants.
Reviewed and tested by: nwhitehorn
'linker stubs'. Add .note.GNU-stack for the stubs objects. Without this,
final binary will have RWE mode for PT_GNU_STACK regardless of the
actual requirements.
Tested by: nwhitehorn
Reviewed by: dim, nwhitehorn
dialog is distributed from GPLv2 to LGPLv2 and introduces a number of new
features and a new and better libdialog API. The existing libdialog will
be kept temporarily as libodialog for compatibility purposes until sade,
sysinstall and tzsetup have been either updated or replaced.
__FreeBSD_version is now 900030.
Discussed on: -current
Approved by: core
Obtained from: http://invisible-island.net/dialog
it should also be MI. The problem here arises when ld ends up linking a
link-once section with relocations against sections that point back to it
that are as yet unresolved. Instead of piecemeal finding sections we
think are potentially subject to this issue, just defer processing for
sections that have yet to be relocated instead of immediately bailing.
actually work, linking of libgcc_s.so.1 on ia64 will fail with:
unwind-ia64.So(.text+0x1762): In function `_Unwind_FindEnclosingFunction':
: undefined reference to `_Unwind_FindTableEntry'
unwind-ia64.So(.text+0x1d82): In function `uw_frame_state_for':
: undefined reference to `_Unwind_FindTableEntry'
/usr/bin/ld: libgcc_s.so.1: hidden symbol `_Unwind_FindTableEntry' isn't defined
Repair this by not hiding the _Unwind_FindTableEntry symbol; on FreeBSD,
it is in libc, not in libgcc.
Silence from: current@
thread specific informations.
In order to do that, and in order to avoid KBI breakage with existing
infrastructure the following semantic is implemented:
- For live programs, a new member to the PT_LWPINFO is added (pl_tdname)
- For cores, a new ELF note is added (NT_THRMISC) that can be used for
storing thread specific, miscellaneous, informations. Right now it is
just popluated with a thread name.
GDB, then, retrieves the correct informations from the corefile via the
BFD interface, as it groks the ELF notes and create appropriate
pseudo-sections.
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
Tested by: gianni
Discussed with: dim, kan, kib
MFC after: 2 weeks