Remove mse and all support for bus and inport devices from the tree.
Data from nycbug's dmesg database shows the last sighting of this
driver was in 4.10 on only one machine.
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17628
This driver was marked as gone in 12. We're at 13 now. Remove it.
Data from nycbug's dmesg cache shows only one potential user,
suggesting it never was used much.
RelNotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17629
WITHOUT_LOADER_LUA is only needed since we turned it off by default on
powerpc and sparc64 in r338203. Same with
WITHOUT_LOADER_GEIL. WITH_NVME, WITHOUT_NVME, WITH_LOADER_FORCE_LE
have been needed since they were added.
it appropriately when building share/ctypedef and share/colldef.
This makes the resulting locale data in EL->EB (amd64->powerpc64) cross
build and in the native EB build match. Revert the changes done to libc
in r308170 as they are no longer needed.
PR: 231965
Reviewed by: bapt, emaste, sbruno, 0mp
Approved by: kib (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17603
data, namely 0xE000-0xF8FF private use area, and 0xFF00-0xFFF half- and
fullwidth punctuation.
While here, update tools/tools/locale/README based on my experience
rebuilding the locale data.
PR: 225692
Reviewed by: bapt, cem (previous version)
Approved by: re (gjb), kib (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17471
Without this we get spurious output during boot as we try to run
nonexistant HyperV scripts on non-x86 models.
Reviewed by: kib
Approved by: re (gjb)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17211
Since r326030 strings is installed unconditionally so should not be
removed when WITHOUT_TOOLCHAIN is set.
Reported by: Dan McGregor
Approved by: re (kib)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Make the building of drm dependent on MK_MODULE_DRM and the building
of module drm2 on MK_MODULE_DRM2. The defaults are unchanged.
Approved by: re@ (gjb)
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16894
hostapd requires libpcap, which links against libmlx5 and libibverbs when
building WITH_OFED. These were not pulled in to bsdbox and most bsdbox
builds were WITHOUT_OFED up until recently, so it was not noticed.
Approved by: re (gjb)
given in random(4).
This includes updating of the relevant man pages, and no-longer-used
harvesting parameters.
Ensure that the pseudo-unit-test still does something useful, now also
with the "other" algorithm instead of Yarrow.
PR: 230870
Reviewed by: cem
Approved by: so(delphij,gtetlow)
Approved by: re(marius)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16898
vermaden (maintainer of beadm) points out the following inconsistencies:
- "missing command" is not printed prior to usage if the error is simply a
missing command; this should be obvious from the context
- "bectl rename" isn't using the "don't unmount" flag (zfs rename -u), so
the active BE can't be renamed. It doesn't make sense in our context to
*not* use -u, so use it.
Documentation updates reflect the above and note an inconsistency with the
'destroy' command that is consistent with other parts of the base system.
A fix for libbe(3) not properly being installed to /lib is included.
SHLIBDIR should have been added when it was moved in r337995.
Approved by: re (kib)
Revert r338177, r338176, r338175, r338174, r338172
After long consultations with re@, core members and mmacy, revert
these changes. Followup changes will be made to mark them as
deprecated and prent a message about where to find the up-to-date
driver. Followup commits will be made to make this clear in the
installer. Followup commits to reduce POLA in ways we're still
exploring.
It's anticipated that after the freeze, this will be removed in
13-current (with the residual of the drm2 code copied to
sys/arm/dev/drm2 for the TEGRA port's use w/o the intel or
radeon drivers).
Due to the impending freeze, there was no formal core vote for
this. I've been talking to different core members all day, as well as
Matt Macey and Glen Barber. Nobody is completely happy, all are
grudgingly going along with this. Work is in progress to mitigate
the negative effects as much as possible.
Requested by: re@ (gjb, rgrimes)
Checking for any include below ${SRCTOP}/sys is too strict and breaks
e.g. mkimg which includes sys/sys/disk. ABI issues will only be caused
by including headers in sys/sys since they might not match the host.
Approved By: jhb (mentor)
Suggested By: imp
to fit in only direct blocks whose size is exactly a multiple of the
filesystem block size.
Reported by: Peter Holm
Tested by: Peter Holm
Sponsored by: Netflix
This has two advantages:
1) We no longer create lots of empty directories that are not needed
2) This is a requirement for building on non-FreeBSD hosts since mtree will
only exist after the bootstrap-tools phase there.
Aproved By: jhb (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16773
This can cause surprising errors if the build tools is built against
headers that don't match the host system. It is also required in order
to allow building on non-FreeBSD systems where the headers in
/usr/include/sys are usually completely incompatible with those in the
source tree.
I added an error to Makefile.boot if this is done and found this was
only the case in libnv. With this error in the Makefile ABI breakages
such as r336019 should no longer be possible.
Reviewed By: bdrewery, kevans
Approved By: jhb (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16186
BPF (eBPF) is an independent instruction set architecture which is
introduced in Linux a few years ago. Originally, eBPF execute
environment was only inside Linux kernel. However, recent years there
are some user space implementation (https://github.com/iovisor/ubpf,
https://doc.dpdk.org/guides/prog_guide/bpf_lib.html) and kernel space
implementation for FreeBSD is going on
(https://github.com/YutaroHayakawa/generic-ebpf).
The BPF target support can be enabled using WITH_LLVM_TARGET_BPF, as it
is not built by default.
Submitted by: Yutaro Hayakawa <yhayakawa3720@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: dim, bdrewery
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16033
The timespecadd(3) family of macros were imported from NetBSD back in
r35029. However, they were initially guarded by #ifdef _KERNEL. In the
meantime, we have grown at least 28 syscalls that use timespecs in some
way, leading many programs both inside and outside of the base system to
redefine those macros. It's better just to make the definitions public.
Our kernel currently defines two-argument versions of timespecadd and
timespecsub. NetBSD, OpenBSD, and FreeDesktop.org's libbsd, however, define
three-argument versions. Solaris also defines a three-argument version, but
only in its kernel. This revision changes our definition to match the
common three-argument version.
Bump _FreeBSD_version due to the breaking KPI change.
Discussed with: cem, jilles, ian, bde
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14725
Since all post-installkernel steps are assumed to operate in the updated
installation, it's necessary to chroot all of the followup steps in the new
boot environment. Set up and mount the source and object directories at the
same paths inside the BE root, and clean up to the extent changes were made.
This commit fixes upgrading using beinstall past the new ntpd user change.
Improve testability of changes to this script while I'm here.
Reported by: rpokala (earlier patch)
This corrects a mistake introduced to the cryptocheck tool in r331418.
Our CRYPTO_BLAKE2B and CRYPTO_BLAKE2S algorithms refer to either the plain,
unkeyed hashes (specified with cri_klen = 0), or a Blake2-specific keyed MAC
(when a cri_key is provided).
In contrast, OpenSSL's Blake2 algorithms only provide the plain hash.
Cryptocheck's T_HMAC corresponds to OpenSSL's HMAC() routine, which is the
ordinary HMAC construction applied to any plain, unkeyed hash. We don't
have any HMAC-Blake2 cipher modes in OCF, so fix the test to only test
Blake2 as a plain hash.
(Ideally we would test keyed Blake2 as well, but that is left as future
work.)
PR: 229795
Since r336126 we depend on explicit_bzero() for the libmd
bootstrap. Add it to -legacy if it is not found in /usr/include/strings.h.
Reviewed By: ian
Approved By: brooks (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16245
Use tools/build/Makefile to install the headers into ${WORLDTMP}/legacy
instead. Compared to r336026 this has the minor advantage that it avoids
unncessary header installation when building the non-bootstrap libnv.
Reviewed By: bdrewery, kevans
Approved By: brooks (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16187
A quick test of this shows multiple problems. Rather than fix the
problems, just retire this board's support. It's for a 12 year old
board that's been out of production for at least 7 years and generally
lacks the memory to run even a stripped down NanoBSD image well. It's
not really relevant anymore.
In part, to support OpenSSL's use of cryptodev, which puts the HMAC pieces
in software and only offloads the raw hash primitive.
The following cryptodev identifiers are added:
* CRYPTO_RIPEMD160 (not hooked up)
* CRYPTO_SHA2_224
* CRYPTO_SHA2_256
* CRYPTO_SHA2_384
* CRYPTO_SHA2_512
The plain SHA1 and 2 hashes are plumbed through cryptodev (feels like there
is a lot of redundancy here...) and cryptosoft.
This adds new auth_hash implementations for the plain hashes, as well as
SHA1 (which had a cryptodev.h identifier, but no implementation).
Add plain SHA 1 and 2 hash tests to the cryptocheck tool.
Motivation stems from John Baldwin's earlier OCF email,
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2018-January/018835.html .
Add src.conf knob to disable the installation of /var/db/services.db
Default to leaving services.db in place, but allow the removal of the
file and its creation with a src.conf knob.
This file ends up being 2MB in size. For small systems this is a waste
of space but its a tradeoff.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9655
This is purely to make it easier to tweak them locally; the machine I have
for testing takes forever to do 50,000 pw strengthening iterations, and
we're not testing the strength of geli's anti-pw-guessing logic here
(especially given that our test passphrase is "passphrase", except that
I tend to tweak that also, to 'x', because typing is hard).
Some day these should be settable as cmdline args. But then, some day this
whole script should probably get a rewrite. :)
This will disable the new LLVM_TARGET_ALL option which will only
enable the required target.
This only impacts the bootstrap compiler in WORLDTMP, not the target compiler
that will be installed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: sbruno, dim (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16021
LLVM_TARGET_* will auto be set based on LLVM_TARGET_ALL and MK_CLANG.
If LLVM_TARGET_ALL is disabled, during a cross-build, then SYSTEM_COMPILER
and SYSTEM_LINKER are auto disabled.
This option should be used by users rather than the per-arch LLVM_TARGET
options as it is simpler to maintain for them should the supported
target list change.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: sbruno, dim
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16020
This makes it possible, through src.conf(5) settings, to select which
LLVM targets you want to build during buildworld. The current list is:
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_AARCH64
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_ARM
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_MIPS
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_POWERPC
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_SPARC
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_X86
To not influence anything right now, all of these are on by default, in
situations where clang is enabled.
Selectively turning a few targets off manually should work. Turning on
only one target should work too, even if that target does not correspond
to the build architecture. (In that case, LLVM_NATIVE_ARCH will not be
defined, and you can only use the resulting clang executable for
cross-compiling.)
I performed a few measurements on one of the FreeBSD.org reference
machines, building clang from scratch, with all targets enabled, and
with only the x86 target enabled. The latter was ~12% faster in real
time (on a 32-core box), and ~14% faster in user time. For a full
buildworld the difference will probably be less pronounced, though.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11077
The new stand/ structure installs loader.conf(5) and defaults/loader.conf
regardless of interpreter. The only thing gating installation now is
MK_BOOT.
Reported by: eadler
This works similar to WITH_SYSTEM_COMPILER added in r300354. It only
supports lld via WITH_LLD_BOOTSTRAP.
When both SYSTEM_COMPILER and SYSTEM_LINKER logic passes then libclang
will not build in cross-tools. If either check fails though then
libclang is built.
The .info is reworked to notify when libclang will be built since if
either clang or lld needs to be rebuilt, but not the other, the
notification can lead to confusion on why "clang is building".
-fuse-ld= is not used with this method so some combinations of compiler
and linker are expected to fail.
A new 'make test-system-linker' target is added to see the logic results.
Makefile.inc1:
CROSS_BINUTILS_PREFIX support had to be moved higher up so that XLD
could be set and MK_LLD_BOOTSTRAP disabled before checking SYSTEM_LINKER
logic as done with SYSTEM_COMPILER. This also required moving where
bsd.linker.mk was read since XLD needs to be set before parsing it. This
creates a situation where src.opts.mk can not test LINKER_FEATURES or
add LLD_BOOTSTAP to BROKEN_OPTIONS.
Reviewed by: emaste (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15894
try to build them if MK_OPENSSL is unset.
Reviewed by: emaste imp kevans
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15211
changes for different branches. It's a bit rough right now,
but should be good enough for most people to try to use. It's
definitely 'tools' tree quality.
Cope for the fact that laoder.efi, not being boot1, doesn't read
/boot.config by setting boot_serial and force the serial console.
Also add sysctl so we can display the boot method.
Provide a variable, do_boot1_efi, if you want to use boot1 for
testing. But since it's transient, it's just a variable and not
available on the command line.
This extends the test suite to generate images for every combination of:
amd64: mbr/gpt geli/nogeli ufs/zfs legacy/uefi/both
Except for mbr+geli, which is not currently possible.
Reviewed by: imp (previous version)
Sponsored by: Klara Systems
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15846
128MiB still works for Legacy booting, however. Go ahead and do 256MiB
for all amd64 boxes, since the number of such boxes < 256MiB is
vanishingly small.
We want to use the versions of the bootcode we just built, rather than
ones from whatever happens to be in /boot on the test machine
These were incorrectly added by me in r334888
As of r306649 objcopy is always ELF Tool Chain's elfcopy; binutils
objcopy is never used.
PR: 229046
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
GNU grep as in actually in base does not have any translations support
compiled in, so no functionnality loss.
We do support 193 locales in base, we will never catch up on that number of
translation with bsd grep.
Removing NLS support make bsd grep consistent with the other binaries in base
which are not translated, and also reduce a little bit the code.
Reviewed by: kevans
Approved by: kevans
Discussed with: kevans @BSDCan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15682
makefs disallows duplicate entries unless the -D option is specified.
Previously makeroot.sh enabled -D unless a filelist was provided via
the -f options. The filelist logic creates an mtree manifest from the
METALOG and the provided filelist by passing them through `sort -u`,
so duplicates were not expected. However, duplicates can still occur
when a directory appears in multiple packages -- for example,
./etc/pam.d type=dir uname=root gname=wheel mode=0755
./etc/pam.d type=dir mode=0755 tags=package=runtime
./etc/pam.d type=dir mode=0755 tags=package=at
./etc/pam.d type=dir mode=0755 tags=package=ftp
./etc/pam.d type=dir mode=0755 tags=package=telnet
For the purposes of makefs these directory entries are identical, but
are of course not identical for sort -u.
For now just leave the allow duplicates -D flag enabled.
PR: 228606
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
When large SPDs are used, we face two problems:
- too many CPU cycles are spent during the linear searches in the SPD
for each packet
- too much contention on multi socket systems, since we use a single
shared lock.
Main changes:
- added the sysctl tree 'net.key.spdcache' to control the SPD cache
(disabled by default).
- cache the sp indexes that are used to perform SP lookups.
- use a range of dedicated mutexes to protect the cache lines.
Submitted by: Emeric Poupon <emeric.poupon@stormshield.eu>
Reviewed by: ae
Sponsored by: Stormshield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15050
This driver was merged to HEAD one week prior to Exar publicly announcing they
had left the Ethernet market. It is not known to be used and has various code
quality issues spotted by Brooks and Hiren. Retire it in preparation for
FreeBSD 12.0.
Submitted by: kbowling
Reviewed by: brooks imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15442
The Intel CPU "Platform Id" is a 3-bit integer reported by a given MSR.
Intel microcode updates have an 8-bit field to indicate Platform Id
compatibility - one bit in the mask for each of the possible Platform Id
values. To simplify interpretation, report the Platform Id mask also as
a list.
Intel now releases microcode updates in files named after
<family>-<model>-<stepping>. In some cases a single file may include
microcode for multiple Platform Ids for the same family, model, and
stepping. Our current microcode update tooling (/usr/sbin/cpucontrol)
only processes the first microcode update in the file.
This tool splits combined files into individual files with one microcode
update each, named as
<family>-<model>-<stepping>.<platform_id_mask>.
Adding this to tools/ for experimentation and testing. In the future
we'll want to have cpucontrol or other tooling work directly with the
Intel-provided microcode files.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15433
It was an old TRE that had plenty of bugs and no performance gain over
regex(3). I disabled it by default in r323615, and there was some confusion
about what the knob does- likely due to poor naming on my part- to the tune
of "well, it sounds like it should speed things up" (mentioned by multiple
people).
To compound this, I have no intention of maintaining a second regex
implementation. If someone would like to step up and volunteer to maintain a
lean-and-mean implementation for grep, this is OK, but we have very few
volunteers to maintain even our primary regex implementation.
This driver was for an early and uncommon legacy PCI 10GbE for a single
ASIC, Intel 82597EX. Intel quickly shifted to the long lived ixgbe family.
Submitted by: kbowling
Reviewed by: brooks imp jeffrey.e.pieper@intel.com
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15234
This driver supports legacy, 32-bit PCI devices, and had an ambiguous
license. Supported devices were already reported to be rare in 2003
(when an earlier version of the driver was removed in r123201).
Reviewed by: rgrimes
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15245
Import the wrapper script from zstdgrep (written by wiz@netbsd.org)
Modify it to support more than just zstd (adding support for gzip,
lzma, xz and bzip2)
Write a simple manpage dedicated for it.
Only use that new wrapper both for gnu grep and bsd grep
Next step will be removing code related to compression format from bsdgrep
Reviewed by: kevans
Approved by: kevans
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15193
block followed by a discontiguous fragment.
Add checks for unallocated inodes and inodes with unknown mode
types.
Cleanup variable declarations by changing from type `int' to types
like ufs_lbn_t, ufs2_daddr_t, etc.
Reported by: bde
This is a set of benchmarks of qsort, mergesort, heapsort, and
optionally wikisort and a script to run them.
Submitted by: Miles Fertel <milesfertel@college.harvard.edu>
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code 2017
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12677
prtblknos filesystem_device inode ...
add an additional argument format:
prtblknos file
which is more convenient than figuring out the filesystem
and inode number for "file".
When given a list of multiple inodes, rather than exiting
the program on an error with one of them, skip over it and
continue with the next one.
Submitted by: bde
regular files, directories, and symbolic links that require
external storage.
Correct the handling of files with holes and files that have
one or more large blocks and end with a fragment.
Reported by: bde
main.c - opens disk and processes the argument list
of inodes to be printed
prtblknos.c - prints out the list of blocks used by an inode
This change allows the fsdb program to import prtblknos() to use when
printing out the set of blocks used by an inode.
This program was switched to using the libufs library to ease its
integration with fsdb and any other filesystem utility that might
want to use it in the future.