General update of the driver description and mention some important credits.
Add a symlink for ext4fs as it is of special interest nowadays.
Fic some `mandoc -Tlint` issues while here.
MFC after: 15 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18445
Add an example of how to format examples in EXAMPLES sections. The
suggested format is heavily based on zfs.8.
While here, capitalize subsection titles.
Reviewed by: bcr
Approved by: bcr (doc),
Approved by: krion (mentor, implicit), mat (mentor, implicit)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18681
The aim of this manual page is to act as a style and formatting guide for
mdoc(7) manual pages. Currently, mdoc(7) does not provide much guidance
when it comes to the usage of macros making it difficult to format manual
pages in a consistent way.
Reviewed by: bcr
Approved by: bcr (doc), krion (mentor, implicit), mat (mentor, implicit)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18394
iBCS2 was disconnected from the build in 2015 (see r291419)
bsdconfig parts submitted by dteske.
Reviewed by: kib (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The removal (and creation of a port) has been pre-announced in UPDATING
1 month ago. Packages are available for all supported FreeBSD vesions.
I did not think that another entry in UPDATING is required to note the
actual removal.
No MFC is planned - CTM shall be kept in base for all releases up to 12.x.
Reviewed by: rgrimes
Approved by: imp, bcr (manpages)
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17935
The d_off field has been added to the dirent structure recently.
Currently filesystems don't support this feature. Support has been
added and tested for zfs, ufs, ext2fs, fdescfs, msdosfs and unionfs.
A stub implementation is available for cd9660, nandfs, udf and
pseudofs but hasn't been tested.
Motivation for this feature: our usecase is for a userspace nfs server
(nfs-ganesha) with zfs. At the moment we cache direntry offsets by
calling lseek once per entry, with this patch we can get the offset
directly from getdirentries(2) calls which provides a significant
speedup.
Submitted by: Jack Halford <jack@gandi.net>
Reviewed by: mckusick, pfg, rmacklem (previous versions)
Sponsored by: Gandi.net
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17917
and dependent functions (eg getpwname(3)) get called. This can
improve performance of binaries that perform a lot of name
lookups, such as gssd(8). It also matches documented behaviour
of Linux and Solaris.
The old code is left in place, should anyone need it, guarded
by #ifdef NS_REREAD_CONF.
Reviewed by: imp, bcr
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17934
You should not be using DES. You should not have been using DES for the
past 30 years.
The ed DES-CBC scheme lacked several desirable properties of a sealed
document system, even ignoring DES itself. In particular, it did not
provide the "integrity" cryptographic property (detection of tampering), and
it treated ASCII passwords as 64-bit keys (instead of using a KDF like
scrypt or PBKDF2).
Some general approaches ed(1) users might consider to replace the removed
DES mode:
1. Full disk encryption with something like AES-XTS. This is easy to
conceptualize, design, and implement, and it provides confidentiality for
data at rest. Like CBC, it lacks tampering protection. Examples include
GELI, LUKS, FileVault2.
2. Encrypted overlay ("stackable") filesystems (EncFS, PEFS?, CryptoFS,
others).
3. Native encryption at the filesystem layer. Ext4/F2FS, ZFS, APFS, and
NTFS all have some flavor of this.
4. Storing your files unencrypted. It's not like DES was doing you much
good.
If you have DES-CBC scrambled files produced by ed(1) prior to this change,
you may decrypt them with:
openssl des-cbc -d -iv 0 -K <key in hex> -in <inputfile> -out <plaintext>
Reviewed by: allanjude, bapt, emaste
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17829
Based on the comments in /etc/nsmb.conf.
Reviewed by: bcr
Approved by: krion (mentor, implicit), mat (mentor, implicit)
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17810
This adds new keywords to rc/service to enable/disable a service's
rc.conf(5) variable and "delete" to remove the variable.
When the "service_delete_empty" variable in rc.conf(5) is set to "YES"
(default is "NO") an rc.conf.d file (in /etc/ or /usr/local/etc) is
deleted if empty after modification using "service $foo delete".
Submitted by: lme (modified)
Reviewed by: 0mp (previous version), lme, bcr
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Smule, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17113
In the last decade(s) we have seen both short term or long term projects
committed to the tree which were considered or even marked "experimental".
While out-of-tree development has become easier than it used to be in
CVS times, there still is a need to have the code shipping with HEAD but
not enabled by default.
While people may think about VIMAGE as one of the recent larger, long term
projects, early protocol implementations (before they are standardised)
are others. (Free)BSD historically was one of the operating systems
which would have running code at early stages and help develop and
influence standardisation and the industry.
Give developers an opportunity to be more pro-active for early adoption
or running large scale code changes stumbling over each others but not
the user's feet. I have not added the option to NOTES in order to avoid
breaking supported option builds, which require constant compile testing.
Discussed with: people in the corridor
When users mark an interface to not use aliases they likely also don't
want to use the link-local v6 address there.
PR: 201695
Submitted by: Russell Yount <Russell.Yount AT gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17633
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
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.
A similar note is already present in the description of the
ntpd_sync_on_start variable.
This patch adds a note to the description of the ntpdate_enable variable.
This way it would be easier to spot. Otherwise a user might skip the part
of the manual describing ntpd_sync_on_start if they stop reading after
learning about ntpdate_enable.
Reviewed by: bcr
Approved by: mat (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16519
The Makefile part in the PR is solved already differently, so this
part is skipped form the PR The man page change change is slightly
changed to adapt to the way the Makefile works and to the spirit
of what is intended here.
Submitted by: Juan Ramón Molina Menor <info@juanmolina.eu>
PR: 194910
Sponsored by: Essen Hackathon
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
linux(4) explicitly states that it is not an emulator.
While here, pet mandoc and igor.
Reviewed by: mat (mentor), rpokala
Approved by: manpages (rpokala), mat (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16375
The larger is the removal of arm/armeb architecture. Also noted is
the addition of WITHOUT_SERVICESDB and default change for WITH_CXX.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Some section-4 manpages are architecture-specific, and the build process
currently generates only the pages for the MACHINE_CPUARCH being built.
man(1) supports a '-m' option to find manpages belonging to an arbitrary
architecture other than the MACHINE_[CPU]ARCH, but we have no way to
generate and install alternate-arch pages right now.
This change adds a new make.conf variable, MAN_ARCH, which can be a list of
one or more MACHINE_ARCH or MACHINE_CPUARCH values. All arch-specific
manpages that exist for the named arches will be installed. If unset, it
continues the behavior of installing just the MACHINE_CPUARCH being built.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16198
Allow attaching of multiple geli providers at once if they use same
passphrase and keyfiles.
This is helpful when the providers being attached are not used for boot,
and therefore the existing code to first try the cached password when
tasting the providers during boot does not apply.
Multiple providers with the same passphrase and keyfiles can be attached
at the same time during system start-up by adding the following to
rc.conf:
geli_groups="storage backup"
geli_storage_flags="-k /etc/geli/storage.keys"
geli_storage_devices="ada0 ada1"
geli_backup_flags="-j /etc/geli/backup.passfile -k /etc/geli/backup.keys"
geli_backup_devices="ada2 ada3"
Reviewed by: wblock, delphij, jilles
Approved by: sobomax (src), bcr (doc)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12644
Normally pf rules are expected to do one of two things: pass the traffic or
block it. Blocking can be silent - "drop", or loud - "return", "return-rst",
"return-icmp". Yet there is a 3rd category of traffic passing through pf:
Packets matching a "pass" rule but when applying the rule fails. This happens
when redirection table is empty or when src node or state creation fails. Such
rules always fail silently without notifying the sender.
Allow users to configure this behaviour too, so that pf returns an error packet
in these cases.
PR: 226850
Submitted by: Kajetan Staszkiewicz <vegeta tuxpowered.net>
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: InnoGames GmbH
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