type of compiler is being used (currently clang or gcc). COMPILER_TYPE
is set in the new bsd.compiler.mk file based on the value of the CC
variable or, should it prove informative, by running ${CC} --version
and examining the output.
To avoid negative performance impacts in the default case and correct
value for COMPILER_TYPE type is determined and passed in the environment
of submake instances while building world.
Replace adhoc attempts at determining the compiler type by examining
CC or MK_CLANG_IS_CC with checks of COMPILER_TYPE. This eliminates
bootstrapping complications when first setting WITH_CLANG_IS_CC.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Reviewed by: Yamaya Takashi <yamayan@kbh.biglobe.ne.jp>, imp, linimon
(with some modifications post review)
MFC after: 2 weeks
r238211:
Support TARGET_ARCH=armv6 and TARGET_ARCH=armv6eb
This adds a new TARGET_ARCH for building on ARM
processors that support the ARMv6K multiprocessor
extensions. In particular, these processors have
better support for TLS and mutex operations.
This mostly touches a lot of Makefiles to extend
existing patterns for inferring CPUARCH from ARCH.
It also configures:
* GCC to default to arm1176jz-s
* GCC to predefine __FreeBSD_ARCH_armv6__
* gas to default to ARM_ARCH_V6K
* uname -p to return 'armv6'
* make so that MACHINE_ARCH defaults to 'armv6'
It also changes a number of headers to use
the compiler __ARM_ARCH_XXX__ macros to configure
processor-specific support routines.
Submitted by: Tim Kientzle <kientzle@freebsd.org>
MDIO/MII rendezvous proxy.
* Add an 'mdio' bus, which is the "IO" side of an MII bus (but by design
can be anything which implements the underlying register access API.)
* Add 'miiproxy' and 'mdioproxy', which provides a rendezvous mechanism
for MII busses to appear hanging off arbitrary busses (ie, that aren't
necessarily a traditional looking MII bus.)
MII busses can now hang off anything that implements an mdiobus.
For the AR71xx SoC, there's one MDIO bus but two MII busses. So to
properly support two or more real PHYs, this can be done:
# arge0 MDIO bus - there's no arge1 MDIO bus for AR71xx
hint.argemdio.0.at="nexus0"
hint.argemdio.0.maddr=0x19000000
hint.argemdio.0.msize=0x1000
hint.argemdio.0.order=0
# Create two mdioproxy instances
hint.mdioproxy.0.at="mdio0"
hint.mdioproxy.1.at="mdio0"
# .. and with a follow-up patch
hint.arge.0.mdio=mdioproxy0
hint.arge.1.mdio=mdioproxy0
TODO:
* Do a sweep or two and add appropriate locking in mdio/mdioproxy/miiproxy.
Submitted by: Stefan Bethke <stb@lassitu.de>
Reviewed by: ray
This makes our naming scheme more closely match other systems and the
expectations of much third-party software. MIPS builds which are little-endian
should require and exhibit no changes. Big-endian TARGET_ARCHes must be
changed:
From: To:
mipseb mips
mipsn32eb mipsn32
mips64eb mips64
An entry has been added to UPDATING and some foot-shooting protection (complete
with warnings which should become errors in the near future) to the top-level
base system Makefile.
that it is better to error out when people attempt to build using the
wrong bsd.*.mk files, than to silently ignore the problem.
This means, that after this commit, if you want to build kernel modules
by hand (or via a port) from a head source tree, you *must* make sure
the files in /usr/share/mk are in sync with that tree. If that isn't
possible, for example when you are running on an older FreeBSD branch,
you can:
- Run "make buildenv" from your head source tree, to have the correct
environment setup. (It's advisable to have run "make buildworld", or
at a minimum "make toolchain" first.)
- Alternatively, set MAKESYSPATH to the share/mk directory under your
head source tree. If your build tools are too old, other problems may
still occur.
- Alternatively, use "make -m" and specify the share/mk directory under
your head source tree. Again, build tools that are too old may still
result in trouble.
MFC after: 2 weeks
kernel modules using their old installed /usr/share/mk/bsd.*.mk files,
instead of the updated ones in their source tree. This leads to errors
like:
"sys/conf/kmod.mk", line 111: Malformed conditional (${MK_CLANG_IS_CC} == "no" && ${CC:T:Mclang} != "clang")
Obviously, these errors will go away after a "make installworld", or
alternatively, by using "make buildenv" before attempting to manually
build modules.
However, since it is apparently an expected use case to build using old
.mk files, change the way we test for clang, so it also works when the
MK_CLANG_IS_CC macro doesn't exist.
Note the conditional expressions are becoming rather unreadable now, but
I will attempt to fix that on a followup commit.
MFC after: 2 weeks
installs clang as /usr/bin/cc, /usr/bin/c++ and /usr/bin/cpp.
Note this does *not* disable building and installing gcc, which will
still be available as /usr/bin/gcc, /usr/bin/g++ and /usr/bin/gcpp. If
you want to disable gcc completely, you must use WITHOUT_GCC.
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Huge old hdac driver was split into three independent pieces: HDA
controller driver (hdac), HDA CODEC driver (hdacc) and HDA sudio function
driver (hdaa).
- Support for multichannel recording was added. Now, as specification
defines, driver checks input associations for pins with sequence numbers
14 and 15, and if found (usually) -- works as before, mixing signals
together. If it doesn't, it configures input association as multichannel.
- Signal tracer was improved to look for cases where several DACs/ADCs in
CODEC can work with the same audio signal. If such case found, driver
registers additional playback/record stream (channel) for the pcm device.
- New controller streams reservation mechanism was implemented. That
allows to have more pcm devices then streams supported by the controller
(usually 4 in each direction). Now it limits only number of simultaneously
transferred audio streams, that is rarely reachable and properly reported
if happens.
- Codec pins and GPIO signals configuration was exported via set of
writable sysctls. Another sysctl dev.hdaa.X.reconfig allows to trigger
driver reconfiguration in run-time.
- Driver now decodes pins location and connector type names. In some cases
it allows to hint user where on the system case connectors, related to the
pcm device, are located. Number of channels supported by pcm device,
reported now (if it is not 2), should also make search easier.
- Added workaround for digital mic on some Asus laptops/netbooks.
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
defined based on WITH/WITHOUT_CTF settings, default is WITHOUT_CTF,
NO_CTF overrides WITH_CTF (used by Makefile.inc1)
- CTFCONVERT_CMD/NORMAL_CTFCONVERT are now defined to empty string
if make(1) can handle empty commands
- CTFCONVERT_CMD=... is a hack (should be defined to empty string instead):
make(1) should be taught to ignore empty commands silently in compat mode
(as it does in !compat mode, GNU make also silently ignores empty commands)
and to skip printing empty commands in !compat mode
- config(8) should generate ${NORMAL_CTFCONVERT} invocation without '@':
this will allow to simplify kern.pre.mk even more and lessen the number
of shell invocations during kernel build when CTF is turned off
- WITH_CTF can now be converted to usual MK_CTF=yes/no infrastructure
Pointy hat to: fjoe [1]
wihtout updating world (good transition aide for -current, but also
allows kernels to be built on -stable the old way too). This likely
should go away around FreeBSD 10.0 or so.
WITH{OUT,}_KERNEL_SYMBOLS (defaulting to WITH). In the fullness of
time, likely around 2020, INSTALL_NODEBUG will be removed. For now,
don't print a warning when using INSTALL_NODEBUG, but that will be
coming soon.
This support has not worked for several years, and is not likely to work
again, unless Intel decides to release a native FreeBSD version of their
compiler. ;)
to amd64, i386, and pc98. The headers are installed to /usr/include/x86
during an installworld, and an 'x86' symlink is created for kernel builds
similar to 'machine' so that the headers can be included as <x86/foo.h>.
Reviewed by: imp
Makefiles or *.mk files, use ${CC:T:Mfoo} instead, so only the basename
of the compiler command (excluding any arguments) is considered.
This allows you to use, for example, CC="/nondefault/path/clang -xxx",
and still have the various tests in bsd.*.mk identify your compiler as
clang correctly.
ICC if cases were also changed.
Submitted by: Dimitry Andric <dimitry at andric.com>
MACHINE_CPUARCH isn't defined. I believe that this will cover all
options.
I didn't define it in kern.mk because $M is set to MACHINE_CPUARCH and
then is expanded for the genassym.o rule in kern.post.mk and kern.mk
is included after this, so the expansion isn't quite right. I think
this is a bug in make, but don't have the time to track it to ground
(and even if I did, fixing it would require a MFC of the change to the
very old systems we're targetting with this fix).
driver for CAM ATA subsystem. This driver supports same hardware as
atamarvell, ataadaptec and atamvsata drivers from ata(4), but provides
many additional features, such as NCQ, PMP, etc.
are some problems with static executables), make.conf (would also
affect ports which do not use GNU make and do not override the
compile targets) or in the kernel config (via "makeoptions
WITH_CTF=yes").
Additional (related) changes:
- propagate WITH_CTF to module builds
- do not add -g to the linker flags, it's a noop there anyway
(at least according to the man page of ld)
- do not add -g to CFLAGS unconditionally
we need to have a look if it is really needed (IMO not) or if there
is a way to add it only when WITH_CTF is used
Note: ctfconvert / ctfmerge lines will not appear in the build output,
to protect the innocent (those which do not build with WITH_CTF would
see the shell-test and may think WITH_CTF is used).
Reviewed by: imp, jhb, scottl (earlier version)
Discussed on: arch@
* Driver for ACPI HP extra functionations, which required
ACPI WMI driver.
Submitted by: Michael <freebsdusb at bindone.de>
Approved by: re
MFC after: 2 weeks
reimplementation of the same. Note that this changes -std=c99
to -std=iso9899:1999 but those two are synonyms.
Approved by: kib (mentor)
Reviewed by: ru
bumped to 800004 to note the change though userland apps should not be
affected since they use <sys/agpio.h> rather than the headers in
sys/dev/agp.
Discussed with: anholt
Repocopy by: simon
ELF files. On ia64 the ELF header contains information about
characteristics of the machine code and ld(1) needs that to
determine whether input files are compatible for linking. To
this end non-ELF files are not supported by binutils on ia64.
However, the resulting ELF file seems to be correct despite the
warnings and the non-supportedness of non-ELF files and it
appears enough to unbreak the build of firmware(9) files on ia64
by simply supressing the warning.
Ran into by: gallatin@
Approved by: re (hrs)
Looks good to me: mlaier@
o make all crypto drivers have a device_t; pseudo drivers like the s/w
crypto driver synthesize one
o change the api between the crypto subsystem and drivers to use kobj;
cryptodev_if.m defines this api
o use the fact that all crypto drivers now have a device_t to add support
for specifying which of several potential devices to use when doing
crypto operations
o add new ioctls that allow user apps to select a specific crypto device
to use (previous ioctls maintained for compatibility)
o overhaul crypto subsystem code to eliminate lots of cruft and hide
implementation details from drivers
o bring in numerous fixes from Michale Richardson/hifn; mostly for
795x parts
o add an optional mechanism for mmap'ing the hifn 795x public key h/w
to user space for use by openssl (not enabled by default)
o update crypto test tools to use new ioctl's and add cmd line options
to specify a device to use for tests
These changes will also enable much future work on improving the core
crypto subsystem; including proper load balancing and interposing code
between the core and drivers to dispatch small operations to the s/w
driver as appropriate.
These changes were instigated by the work of Michael Richardson.
Reviewed by: pjd
Approved by: re
uuencoded format along with their respective LICENSE files.
- Add new share/doc/legal directory to BSD.usr.dist mtree file. This is the
place we install LICENSE files for restricted firmwares.
- Teach firmware(9) and kmod.mk about licensed firmwares. Restricted firmwares
won't load properly unless legal.<name>.license_ack is set to 1, either
via kenv(1) or /boot/loader.conf.
Reviewed by: mlaier, sam
Permitted by: Intel (via Andrew Wilson)
MFC after: 1 month