This is a painful change, but it is needed. On the one hand, we avoid
modifying them, and this slows down some ideas, on the other hand we still
eventually modify them and tools like netstat(1) never work on next version of
FreeBSD. We maintain a ton of spares in them, and we already got some ifdef
hell at the end of tcpcb.
Details:
- Hide struct inpcb, struct tcpcb under _KERNEL || _WANT_FOO.
- Make struct xinpcb, struct xtcpcb pure API structures, not including
kernel structures inpcb and tcpcb inside. Export into these structures
the fields from inpcb and tcpcb that are known to be used, and put there
a ton of spare space.
- Make kernel and userland utilities compilable after these changes.
- Bump __FreeBSD_version.
Reviewed by: rrs, gnn
Differential Revision: D10018
Decode the last argument to ioctl() as a pointer rather than an int.
Eventually this could use 'int' for the _IOWINT() case and pointers for
all others.
The last argument to sendto() is a socklen_t value, not a pointer.
Provides:
amount of compressed data
logical size of compressed data (how much it would have taken uncompressed)
compression ratio (logical size : total ARC size)
Overhead (space consumed for compression headers)
Example output:
ARC: 31G Total, 18G MFU, 9067M MRU, 2236K Anon, 615M Header, 2947M Other
25G Compressed, 54G Uncompressed, 1.76:1 Ratio, 2265M Overhead
Reviewed by: jpaetzel, smh, imp, jhb (previous version)
MFC after: 2 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9829
Previously, the offset in a system call description specified the
array index of the start of a system call argument. For most system
call arguments this was the same as the index of the argument in the
function signature. 64-bit arguments (off_t and id_t values) passed
on 32-bit platforms use two slots in the array however. This was
handled by adding (QUAD_SLOTS - 1) to the slot indicies of any
subsequent arguments after a 64-bit argument (though written as ("{
Quad, 1 }, { Int, 1 + QUAD_SLOTS }" rather than "{ Quad, 1 }, { Int, 2
+ QUAD_SLOTS - 1 }"). If a system call contained multiple 64-bit
arguments (such as posix_fadvise()), then additional arguments would
need to use 'QUAD_SLOTS * 2' but remember to subtract 2 from the
initial number, etc. In addition, 32-bit powerpc requires 64-bit
arguments to be 64-bit aligned, so if the effective index in the array
of a 64-bit argument is odd, it needs QUAD_ALIGN added to the current
and any subsequent slots. However, if the effective index in the
array of a 64-bit argument was even, QUAD_ALIGN was omitted.
This approach was messy and error prone. This commit replaces it with
automated pre-processing of the system call table to do fixups for
64-bit argument offsets. The offset in a system call description now
indicates the index of an argument in the associated function call's
signature. A fixup function is run against each decoded system call
description during startup on 32-bit platforms. The fixup function
maintains an 'offset' value which holds an offset to be added to each
remaining system call argument's index. Initially offset is 0. When
a 64-bit system call argument is encountered, the offset is first
aligned to a 64-bit boundary (only on powerpc) and then incremented to
account for the second argument slot used by the argument. This
modified 'offset' is then applied to any remaining arguments. This
approach does require a few things that were not previously required:
1) Each system call description must now list arguments in ascending
order (existing ones all do) without using duplicate slots in the
register array. A new assert() should catch any future
descriptions which violate this rule.
2) A system call description is still permitted to omit arguments
(though none currently do), but if the call accepts 64-bit
arguments those cannot be omitted or incorrect results will be
displated on 32-bit systems.
Tested on: amd64 and i386
.../usr.bin/diff/diff_test
Some minor adjustment needed to be done for :same as it currently
has the test script hardcoded into the test, instead of using an
idiom like $(dirname $0)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Prefer ${SRCTOP}/foo over ${.CURDIR}/../../foo and ${SRCTOP}/usr.bin/foo
over ${.CURDIR}/../foo for paths in Makefiles.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9932
Sponsored by: Netflix
Silence on: arch@ (twice)
longer a special case.
- Prefer PREFIX/share/man over PREFIX/man.
- Add /usr/local/share/man to man_default_path.
- Update manpath man page.
Reviewed by: bapt
The additional testcases use absolute paths for sources and targets,
as the other testcase which tested `-l sr` used flat relative paths in
the same directory.
Please note that these testcases do not test `-l a` -- that's already
addressed in the battery of tests.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Unfortunately kyua does not omit the path mismatch on failure, so it must be coded
into the error message.
Cache the values, run the test(1) call, then print out the values in an atf_fail
call to emit the required diagnostics to debug why things are failing.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
The MANPATH environment variable behaviour is documented properly in the manpage
and it now has extended to new feature that allows to make MANPATH env variable
extending the default search path rather than overwriting it making the warning
painful
Reported by: kargl
MFC after: 1 week
mandoc.
If MANPATH begins with a colon, it is appended to the default list; if it ends
with a colon, it is prepended to the default list; or if it contains two
adjacent colons, the standard search path is inserted between the colons. If
none of these conditions are met, it overrides the standard search path.
Import the MANPATH description from mandoc into the man(1) man page
Reported by: kargl
MFC after: 1 week
localbase is not consistent with base for manpages:
/usr/local/man vs /usr/share/man adding share/man allows to fix that
inconsistency and would permit to remove tons of patches/modifications in the
ports tree
Some of the modifications from the previous summer of code has been integrated
Modification for compatibility with GNU diff output has been added
Main difference with OpenBSD:
Implement multiple GNU diff options:
* --ignore-file-name-case
* --no-ignore-file-name-case
* --normal
* --tabsize
* --strip-trailing-cr
Make diff -p compatible with GNU diff
Implement diff -l
Make diff -r compatible with GNU diff
Capsicumize diffing 2 regular files
Add a simple test suite
Approved by: AsiaBSDcon devsummit
Obtained from: OpenBSD, GSoC
Relnotes: yes
The localdef(1) changes are breaking world:
00:18:40.750 /usr/src/share/colldef/af_ZA.UTF-8.src: 2421: error: Bad file
descriptor
I will fix them offline.
Reported by: lwshu and many others