This hardware isn't totally ancient, about equal to a mxge(4) or mlx4en(4),
but the company was sold to Exar which then promptly exited the Ethernet
business so the card was commercially available for under 2 years. On deep
search, the only usage of these cards I found was by the importing of the
driver. There are code quality issues identified by Brooks and Hiren and
no visible use nor maintainership that warrant removal from FreeBSD 12.0.
Submitted by: kbowling
Reviewed by: gnn brooks
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15363
- Use Fx when referring to FreeBSD.
- Use Ql instead of Cm for command invocations.
- Remove some redundant Pp macros.
- Use a literal indented Bd instead of a series of Dl macros.
Submitted by: 0mp@
Reviewed by: eadler@
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15126
As of r333461 we require ifunc support to link a working amd64 kernel.
The default in-tree bootstrap linker is lld and it has the required
support, as does any modern out-of-tree binutils linker. The in-tree
GNU ld is from binutils 2.17.50 and it does not have ifunc support,
so produce an error rather than a broken kernel.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15378
The existing patterns for 'cc --version' output do not work for GCC
built from the base/gcc port.
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15357
The goal is to avoid using install directly so we can make changes the affect
how the entire system is installed, without having to touch many places.
This is part of the packaging base work.
Reviewed by: will
Approved by: bapt (mentor), allanjude (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1513
This is part of packaging base work.
Reviewed by: will
Approved by: bapt (mentor), allanjude (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15130
Rtld is not compatible with SSP, and since we link libc_pic.a to rtld
to have the basic support like memory and string copy functions, we
have to both carefully limit libc use, and to provide the ssp support
shims. This change makes the libc use in rtld more straighforward but
still limited, and allows to remove the shims, to be done in the next
commit.
Submitted by: Luis Pires
Reviewed by: bdrewery, brooks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15283
The original Berkeley Software Distributions were made in the 1980's
and 1990's. At that time, the Buenos Ares Convention of 1910 was in
force in most of the countries in the Americas. It required an
affirmative statement of rights reservation, typically using 'All
Rights Reserved.' The Regents included this phrase in their copyright
notices to invoke this treaty to ensure maximal copyright protection.
In the 1990's, Latin America coutries ratifeid the Berne Convention on
copyrights which prohibited them from requiring an affirmative
statement to reserve the rights. When Nicaragua ratified in 2000, the
Buenos Ares Convention of 1910 was effectively repealed. This made all
the 'All Rights Reserved' phrases obsolete and legal deadweight most
of the time, and certainly in the cases removed here.
Since it's no longer required, and is in fact meaningless, core has
decided to dropped it from the project's collection copyright and
sample templates. It encourages other rights holders to do the same
after consultation with their legal department.
More see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buenos_Aires_Convention for
more information.
Approved by: core@ (emaste@, jhb@)
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15264
Currently when net.inet.carp.allow=0 CARP state remains as MASTER, which is
not very useful (if there are other masters -- it can lead to split brain,
if there are none -- it makes no sense). Having it as INIT makes it clear
that carp packets are disabled.
Submitted by: wg
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14477
This is a component of a system which lets the kernel dump core to
a remote host after a panic, rather than to a local storage device.
The server component is available in the ports tree. netdump is
particularly useful on diskless systems.
The netdump(4) man page contains some details describing the protocol.
Support for configuring netdump will be added to dumpon(8) in a future
commit. To use netdump, the kernel must have been compiled with the
NETDUMP option.
The initial revision of netdump was written by Darrell Anderson and
was integrated into Sandvine's OS, from which this version was derived.
Reviewed by: bdrewery, cem (earlier versions), julian, sbruno
MFC after: 1 month
X-MFC note: use a spare field in struct ifnet
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15253
warning:
make[3]: "/usr/src/share/mk/bsd.prog.mk" line 274: warning: duplicate
script for target "_scriptsinstall" ignored
make[3]: "/usr/src/share/mk/bsd.prog.mk" line 274: warning: using
previous script for "_scriptsinstall" defined here
Reviewed by: kevans
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.
The rsu firmware license check has been disabled since r292756. Changes
rsu(4) since the license ack is no longer required.
While here, add `device rsufw` hint to the kernel configuration lines and
add/update paths to the installed license file in both rsu(4) and rsufw(4).
Submitted by: Mateusz Piotrowski (0mp)
Reviewed by: bcr (manpages)
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14966
Currently 'man -k iflib' would find you the right pages for iflib
documentation, namely iflibdd(9) and iflibdi(9) but 'man iflib' would leave
you in the dark. This allows both approaches to find the relevant
documentation.
Reviewed by: kmacy, shurd
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15219
Prior to this change the manual page documented ifdi_queues_alloc which has
been replaced by separate methods for tx and rx queues.
Reviewed by: kmacy, shurd
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15218
As with Clang, build our toolchain components by default when the host
compiler is capable of doing so, to make them available for testing and
experimentation.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
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
This is a prequisite before we remove the driver from -current.
Reviewed by: emaste kbowling imp
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15244
Previously it was possible to connect a socket (which had the
CAP_CONNECT right) by calling "connectat(AT_FDCWD, ...)" even in
capabilties mode. This combination should be treated the same as a call
to connect (i.e. forbidden in capabilities mode). Similarly for bindat.
Disable connectat/bindat with AT_FDCWD in capabilities mode, fix up the
documentation and add tests.
PR: 222632
Submitted by: Jan Kokemüller <jan.kokemueller@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: Domagoj Stolfa
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: Yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15221
Add a driver that match on 'rockchip,gpio-bank', this compatible
string is found on almost all RockChip SoC so this driver is compatible
with almost all of the RockChip SoCs.
The only features missing for this driver are :
- Interrupts support
- Debouncing
Add pinctrl driver for RockChip SoCs. This device manage which function
to set on which pin and some other properties like pull up/down, drive
strength etc ...
For now the driver only support RK3328 but it is versatile enough to
add support for other RockChip SoC in the future.
RockChip GRF (General Register Files) is present on almost all RockChip
SoC and is used to control some area of the system like iomuxing, gpio
or usb phy.
We need it to be probed and attached early in the boot process so
subclass syscon_generic and set the pass to BUS_PASS_BUS + BUS_PASS_ORDER_MIDDLE.
- Microsemi SCSI driver for PQI controllers.
- Found on newer model HP servers.
- Restrict to AMD64 only as per developer request.
The driver provides support for the new generation of PQI controllers
from Microsemi. This driver is the first SCSI driver to implement the PQI
queuing model and it will replace the aacraid driver for Adaptec Series 9
controllers. HARDWARE Controllers supported by the driver include:
HPE Gen10 Smart Array Controller Family
OEM Controllers based on the Microsemi Chipset.
Submitted by: deepak.ukey@microsemi.com
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Microsemi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14514
> Description of fields to fill in above: 76 columns --|
> PR: If and which Problem Report is related.
> Submitted by: If someone else sent in the change.
> Reported by: If someone else reported the issue.
> Reviewed by: If someone else reviewed your modification.
> Approved by: If you needed approval for this commit.
> Obtained from: If the change is from a third party.
> MFC after: N [day[s]|week[s]|month[s]]. Request a reminder email.
> MFH: Ports tree branch name. Request approval for merge.
> Relnotes: Set to 'yes' for mention in release notes.
> Security: Vulnerability reference (one per line) or description.
> Sponsored by: If the change was sponsored by an organization.
> Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/### (*full* GitHub URL needed).
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D### (*full* phabric URL needed).
> Empty fields above will be automatically removed.
M share/man/man4/Makefile
AM share/man/man4/smartpqi.4
M sys/amd64/conf/GENERIC
M sys/conf/NOTES
M sys/conf/files.amd64
A sys/dev/smartpqi
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_cam.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_cmd.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_defines.h
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_discovery.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_event.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_helper.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_includes.h
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_init.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_intr.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_ioctl.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_ioctl.h
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_main.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_mem.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_misc.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_prototypes.h
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_queue.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_request.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_response.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_sis.c
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_structures.h
AM sys/dev/smartpqi/smartpqi_tag.c
M sys/modules/Makefile
A sys/modules/smartpqi
AM sys/modules/smartpqi/Makefile
device-side (and only device-side) "virtual USB serial adapters" - the
ones you can get with an OTG-capable board - as consoles. It boils down
to adding the device name to kern.console sysctl, although doing that
requires jumping through some hoops. It doesn't change the actual
operation of those virtual devices. The point is to make it possible
for init(8) to recognize them as console devices and to launch getty(8)
for them, when configured as "onifconsole" in ttys(5). The point of
that, in turn, is to add such entries to the default ttys(5), so that
init(8) will launch gettys for device-side "virtual serial adapters",
but not for actual USB serial dongles.
Reviewed by: hselasky@
No objections: imp@
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
We intend to remove support before FreeBSD 12 is branched. These are
available only as 32-bit PCI devices. The driver has an ambiguous
license and I have not been successful in contacting the driver's author
in order to address this.
The planned deprecation has been announced on -current and -stable; if
we receive feedback that the driver is still useful and we are able to
resolve the license issue this deprecation notice can be reverted.
Reviewed by: bapt, brooks, imp, rgrimes
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15182
I have changed my given name from Bruce to Rebecca, and my FreeBSD account
from brucec to bcran.
Update committers-src.dot and calendar.freebsd to show these changes.
Reviewed by: rrs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15125
r332090 added a LINKER_TYPE test to add the --no-rosegment flag when
linking the i386 loader components with lld. Instead, introduce a
general mechanism for setting LDFLAGS for a specific linker type,
and use it for --no-rosegment.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14998
__riscv_float_abi_double macro will be defined by compiler.
The options are:
o lp64 __riscv_float_abi_soft
o lp64f __riscv_float_abi_single
o lp64d __riscv_float_abi_double
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Half of implementations always failed (returned (-1)) and they were
previously used in only one place.
Reviewed by: kib, andrew
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15102
Also remove the commented out documentation. The documentation arrived
with the import of the copy.9 manpage. I suspect the implementations
came from NetBSD while bootstrapping the Arm and MIPS ports.
Reviewed by: andrew, jmallett
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15108
While Arcnet has some continued deployment in industrial controls, the
lack of drivers for any of the PCI, USB, or PCIe NICs on the market
suggests such users aren't running FreeBSD.
Evidence in the PR database suggests that the cm(4) driver (our sole
Arcnet NIC) was broken in 5.0 and has not worked since.
PR: 182297
Reviewed by: jhibbits, vangyzen
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15057
A few glyphs were converted incorrectly:
U+00A6 broken bar - center
U+2022 bullet - center
U+2026 horizontal ellipsis - move to bottom of character cell
This was inadvertently overriding the first found SYSDIR with the last
of /usr/src which could result in the wrong headers being used if not
building from /usr/src.
SYSDIR?= is not used here to avoid evaluating the exists() when unneeded.
Reported by: rgrimes, sjg, Mark Millard
Pointyhat to: bdrewery
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Defines in net/if_media.h remain in case code copied from ifconfig is in
use elsewere (supporting non-existant media type is harmless).
Reviewed by: kib, jhb
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15017
It's had a good life, but it's not really configurable and not really used.
Obtained from: opBSD (with some changes)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14991
and VMware legal:
- Add a dual BSD-2 Clause/GPLv2 LICENSE file in the VMCI directory
- Remove the use of "All Rights Reserved"
- Per best practice, remove copyright/license info from Makefile
Reviewed by: imp, emaste, jhb, Vishnu Dasa <vdasa@vmware.com>
Approved by: VMware legal via Mark Peek <markpeek@vmware.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14979
These have become unsorted from everything else. This is desync'd from
stable/11 due to some hand-merging that was done there, so the MFC of this
will look slightly different.
MFC after: 3 days
OpenCSD is an ARM CoreSight(tm) trace packets decoder.
- Connect libopencsd to the arm64 build.
- Install opencsd headers to /usr/include/opencsd/
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
We intend to remove support before FreeBSD 12 is branched.
Reviewed by: imp, emaste
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14890
The ocs_fc(4) driver supports the following hardware:
Emulex 16/8G FC GEN 5 HBAS
LPe15004 FC Host Bus Adapters
LPe160XX FC Host Bus Adapters
Emulex 32/16G FC GEN 6 HBAS
LPe3100X FC Host Bus Adapters
LPe3200X FC Host Bus Adapters
The driver supports target and initiator mode, and also supports FC-Tape.
Note that the driver only currently works on little endian platforms. It
is only included in the module build for amd64 and i386, and in GENERIC
on amd64 only.
Submitted by: Ram Kishore Vegesna <ram.vegesna@broadcom.com>
Reviewed by: mav
MFC after: 5 days
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Broadcom
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11423
Add a new "interleave" allocation policy which stripes pages across
domains with a stride or width keeping contiguity within a multi-page
region.
Move the kernel to the dedicated numbered cpuset #2 making it possible
to assign kernel threads and memory policy separately from user. This
also eliminates the need for the complicated interrupt binding code.
Add a sysctl API for viewing and manipulating domainsets. Refactor some
of the cpuset_t manipulation code using the generic bitset type so that
it can be used for both. This probably belongs in a dedicated subr file.
Attempt to improve the include situation.
Reviewed by: kib
Discussed with: jhb (cpuset parts)
Tested by: pho (before review feedback)
Sponsored by: Netflix, Dell/EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14839
For some reason, the other link - https://lists.FreeBSD.org/ - needs
the trailing slash, otherwise man(8) renders it in a weird way. No
idea why's that. At least try to be consistent. Revert it when the
other link gets fixed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
In a virtual machine, VMCI is exposed as a regular PCI device. The primary
communication mechanisms supported are a point-to-point bidirectional
transport based on a pair of memory-mapped queues, and asynchronous
notifications in the form of datagrams and doorbells. These features are
available to kernel level components such as vSockets through the VMCI
kernel API. In addition to this, the VMCI kernel API provides support for
receiving events related to the state of the VMCI communication channels,
and the virtual machine itself.
Submitted by: Vishnu Dasa <vdasa@vmware.com>
Reviewed by: bcr, imp
Obtained from: VMware
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14289
DTB Overlays are useful to change/add nodes to a dtb without the need to
modify it.
Add support for building dtbo during buildkernel.
The goal of DTBO present in the FreeBSD source tree is to fill a gap in
time when we submit changes upstream (Linux). Instead of waiting 2 to 4 months
we can add a DTBO in tree in the meantime.
This is not for adding DTBO for capes/hat/addon boards, those will be
better to put in a ports.
This is also not for enabling a i2c/spi/pwm controller on certain pins,
each user have a different use case for those (which pins to use etc ...)
and we cannot have all possible configuration.
Add a dtbo for sun8i-h3-sid which add the SID node missing in upstream dts.
Reviewed by: kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14782
Forwarded packets passed through PFIL_OUT, which made it difficult for
firewalls to figure out if they were forwarding or producing packets. This in
turn is an issue for pf for IPv6 fragment handling: it needs to call
ip6_output() or ip6_forward() to handle the fragments. Figuring out which was
difficult (and until now, incorrect).
Having pfil distinguish the two removes an ugly piece of code from pf.
Introduce a new variant of the netpfil callbacks with a flags variable, which
has PFIL_FWD set for forwarded packets. This allows pf to reliably work out if
a packet is forwarded.
Reviewed by: ae, kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13715
from jailed process. These might get implemented in jails in the
future, but for now they are not supported.
Discussed on: freebsd-security@
Reviewed by: brueffer@
MFC after: 2 weeks
altq(4) to match altq(9). This makes preserving the history section as the
author of ALTQ easier in the history section, rather than calling it a framework
in the description & a system in the history.
Add a history section to altq(4) and extend the history section in altq(9)
Approved by: bcr (mentor)
MFC after: 5 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14774
This is originally based on a patch from David Chisnall for soft-float
N64 but has since been updated to support O32, N32, and hard-float ABIs.
The soft-float O32, N32, and N64 support has been committed upstream.
The hard-float changes are still in review upstream.
Enable LLVM_LIBUNWIND on mips when building with a suitable (C+11-capable)
toolchain. This has been tested with external GCC for all ABIs and
O32 and N64 with clang.
Reviewed by: emaste
Obtained from: CheriBSD (original N64 patch)
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14701
ECN (ABE)" proposal to the New Reno congestion control algorithm module.
ABE reduces the amount of congestion window reduction in response to
ECN-signalled congestion relative to the loss-inferred congestion response.
More details about ABE can be found in the Internet-Draft:
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tcpm-alternativebackoff-ecn
The implementation introduces four new sysctls:
- net.inet.tcp.cc.abe defaults to 0 (disabled) and can be set to non-zero to
enable ABE for ECN-enabled TCP connections.
- net.inet.tcp.cc.newreno.beta and net.inet.tcp.cc.newreno.beta_ecn set the
multiplicative window decrease factor, specified as a percentage, applied to
the congestion window in response to a loss-based or ECN-based congestion
signal respectively. They default to the values specified in the draft i.e.
beta=50 and beta_ecn=80.
- net.inet.tcp.cc.abe_frlossreduce defaults to 0 (disabled) and can be set to
non-zero to enable the use of standard beta (50% by default) when repairing
loss during an ECN-signalled congestion recovery episode. It enables a more
conservative congestion response and is provided for the purposes of
experimentation as a result of some discussion at IETF 100 in Singapore.
The values of beta and beta_ecn can also be set per-connection by way of the
TCP_CCALGOOPT TCP-level socket option and the new CC_NEWRENO_BETA or
CC_NEWRENO_BETA_ECN CC algo sub-options.
Submitted by: Tom Jones <tj@enoti.me>
Tested by: Tom Jones <tj@enoti.me>, Grenville Armitage <garmitage@swin.edu.au>
Relnotes: Yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11616
no longer relevant (read: most of what was there) and adds some
quick links to point newcomers in the right direction.
Reviewed by: imp@
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14680
Or else disable the device. Note that the detection can be bypassed by
setting the hw.atrtc.enable option in the loader configuration file.
More information can be found on atrtc(4).
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: ian
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14399
Remove how to format K&R stuff. The project hasn't been using it in
new code for a long time. It's so obsolete, we don't need a statement
to never use it. Add a statement requesting that comments about
parameters be preserved when converting to ASNI style, per Kirk.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14051
ConnectX-4/5 devices in mlx5core.
The dump is obtained by reading a predefined register map from the
non-destructive crspace, accessible by the vendor-specific PCIe
capability (VSC). The dump is stored in preallocated kernel memory and
managed by the mlx5tool(8), which communicates with the driver using a
character device node.
The utility allows to store the dump in format
<address> <value>
into a file, to reset the dump content, and to manually initiate the
dump.
A call to mlx5_fwdump() should be added at the places where a dump
must be fetched automatically. The most likely place is right before a
firmware reset request.
Submitted by: kib@
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
LLD is a cross toolchain component. It shouldn't be built when
requesting a build without building a cross compiler.
(CROSS_COMPILER is somewhat unfortunately named; in any case, lld
should be treated as GNU binutils here.)
Submitted by: Dan McGregor <dan.mcgregor at usask.ca>
MFC after: 1 week
According with /etc/rc.initdiskless the default mfs allocation
is now 5Mb (10240 x 512 bytes sectors)
Submitted by: rodrigo
Reviewed by: bcr
Approved by: manpages (bcr)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14592
A sub-make, such as in 'make buildworld', may want to override MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX
but is unable to do so if src-env.conf is forcing it to another value. Without
using '?=' the sub-make may use the wrong .OBJDIR.
Reported by: eadler
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
- Add fdt_pinctrl(4) with general information for the driver
- Add fdt_pinctrl(9) with fdt_pinctrl KPI description
Reviewed by: ian, manu, wblock
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14235
imcsmb(4) provides smbus(4) support for the SMBus controller functionality
in the integrated Memory Controllers (iMCs) embedded in Intel Sandybridge-
Xeon, Ivybridge-Xeon, Haswell-Xeon, and Broadwell-Xeon CPUs. Each CPU
implements one or more iMCs, depending on the number of cores; each iMC
implements two SMBus controllers (iMC-SMBs).
*** IMPORTANT NOTE ***
Because motherboard firmware or the BMC might try to use the iMC-SMBs for
monitoring DIMM temperatures and/or managing an NVDIMM, the driver might
need to temporarily disable those functions, or take a hardware interlock,
before using the iMC-SMBs. Details on how to do this may vary from board to
board, and the procedure may be proprietary. It is strongly suggested that
anyone wishing to use this driver contact their motherboard vendor, and
modify the driver as described in the manual page and in the driver itself.
(For what it's worth, the driver as-is has been tested on various SuperMicro
motherboards.)
Reviewed by: avg, jhb
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Panasas
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14447
Discussed with: avg, ian, jhb
Tested by: allanjude (previous version), Panasas
Makefile.${MACHINE_ARCH} and remove the now-empty files. Generate the
*32 directories on the necessary architectures (well, currently only
amd64) on the fly. Remove LOADER_EFI variable and co-locate it with
EFI.
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14546
camelCase tends to be preferred for function identifiers, while
internal_underscores are preferred for variable identifiers. This convention
makes it a little bit easier to eyeball whether variable/function usage is
correct.
The optional commas for final table values are preferred to reduce chances
for error.
It was originally written by Sun as part of the STF (Solaris test framework).
They open sourced it in OpenSolaris, then HighCloud partially ported it to
FreeBSD, and Spectra Logic finished the port. We also added many testcases,
fixed many broken ones, and converted them all to the ATF framework. We've had
help along the way from avg, araujo, smh, and brd.
By default most of the tests are disabled. Set the disks Kyua variable to
enable them.
Submitted by: asomers, will, justing, ken, brd, avg, araujo, smh
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp, HighCloud
Added the ability to:
* Create virtual interfaces
* Create vlan interfaces
* Get interface fib
* Get interface groups
* Get interface status
* Get nd6 info
* Get media status
* Get additional ifaddr info in a convenient struct
* Get vhids
* Get carp info
* Get lagg and laggport status
* Iterate over all interfaces and ifaddrs
And add more examples, too.
Note that this is a backwards-incompatible change. But that's ok, because it's
a private library.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14463
A super-set of the functionality of jedec_ts(4). jedec_dimm(4) reports asset
information (Part Number, Serial Number) encoded in the "Serial Presence
Detect" (SPD) data on JEDEC DDR3 and DDR4 DIMMs. It also calculates and
reports the memory capacity of the DIMM, in megabytes. If the DIMM includes
a "Thermal Sensor On DIMM" (TSOD), the temperature is also reported.
Reviewed by: cem
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Panasas
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14392
Discussed with: avg, cem
Tested by: avg, cem (previous version, no semantic changes)
Add chvgpio(4) driver for Intel Z8xxx SoC family. This product
was formerly known as Cherry Trail but Linux and OpenBSD drivers
refer to it as Cherry View. This driver is derived from OpenBSD
one so the name is kept for alignment with another BSD system.
Submitted by: Tom Jones <tj@enoti.me>
Reviewed by: gonzo, wblock(man page)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13086
This code, which is basically `svnversion || svnliteversion`, generates
2 fstatat(2) for every directory in PATH for every Makefile parsed that
includes bsd.own.mk. This can add up for things like generating a Ports
index (Poudriere) or building a dependency graph for base.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
MFC after: 2 weeks
The intent of this guideline is to avoid creating global variables in module
scope. Its main purpose is to serve as a reminder that variables at module
scope also need to be declared.
We want to avoid global variables in general, but this is easier to mess up
when designing things in the module scope.
VirtIO V1 provides configuration in multiple VENDOR capabilities so this
allows all of the configuration to be discovered.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14325
This covers the lua style guidelines we've generally agreed on so far. It
will be revised as work continues and we run into more scenarios that need
specified.
Discussed with: cem, jilles
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14423
OK. We don't really need a bsd.stand.mk, and it was causing a -fPIC
for the toolchain to be added (bogusly) when building on amd64. Pull
all relevant defs back into defs.mk and delete bsd.stand.mk.
This saves about 15-20k on i386 loader and zfsloader which when
combined with Lua give us a lot more stack space in those constrained
environments.
A few ISP filter PADI requests based on such tag,
to force the use of their own routers.
The custom Host-Uniq tag is passed in the NGM_PPPOE_CONNECT
control message, so it can be used with FreeBSD ppp(8)
and mpd without any other change.
Add support to send and receive PADM messages,
HURL and MOTM, often used by service providers to provide
ACS information and other configuration settings
to the user CPE.
Submitted by: ale
Approved by: mav (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9270
This works similarly to the existing gzip compression support, but
zstd is typically faster and gives better compression ratios.
Support for this functionality must be configured by adding ZSTDIO to
one's kernel configuration file. dumpon(8)'s new -Z option is used to
configure zstd compression for kernel dumps. savecore(8) now recognizes
and saves zstd-compressed kernel dumps with a .zst extension.
Submitted by: cem (original version)
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13101,
https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13633
liblua glues the lua run time into the boot loader. It implements all
the runtime routines that lua expects. In addition, it has a few
standard 'C' headers that nueter various aspects of the LUA build that
are too specific to lua to be in libsa. Many refinements from the
original code to improve implementation and the number of included lua
libraries. Use int64_t for lua_Number. Have "/boot/lua" be the default
module path. Numerous cleanups from the original GSoC project,
including hacking libsa to allow lua to be built with only one change
outside luaconf.h.
Add the final bit of lua glue to bring in liblua and plug into the
multiple interpreter framework, previously committed.
Add LOADER_LUA option, currently off by default.
Presently, this is an experimental option. One must opt-in to using
this by defining WITH_LOADER_LUA and WITHOUT_FORTH. It's been
lightly tested, so keep a backup copy of your old loader handy.
The menu code, coming in the next commit, hasn't been exhaustively
tested. A LUA boot loader is 60k larger than a FORTH one, which is
80k larger than a no-interpreter one. Subtle changes in size
may tip things past some subtle limit (the binary is ~430k now
when built with LUA). A future version may offer coexistance.
Bump FreeBSD version to 1200058 to mark the milestone.
Pedro Souza's 2014 Summer of Code project. Rui Paulo, Pedro Arthur,
Zakary Nafziger and Wojciech A. Koszek also contributed. Warner Losh
reworked it extensively into its current form.
Obtained from: https://wiki.freebsd.org/SummerOfCode2014/LuaLoader
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code
Relnotes: Yes
MFC After: 1 month
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14295
Using args[2]->tcps_state as-documented results in error:
operator -> cannot be applied to pointer to type "void"
This error is accurate as the synopsis for tcp:::state-change is:
tcp:::state-change(void *, csinfo_t *, void *, tcpsinfo_t *, void *,
tcplsinfo_t *);
args[2] refers to the third argument which is always NULL (as-
documented). The to-state for the TCP connection state transition is
actually in the fourth argument, args[3]->tcps_state.
Introduce WITH_/WITHOUT_LLVM_COV to match GCC's WITH_/WITHOUT_GCOV.
It is intended to provide a superset of the interface and functionality
of gcov.
It is enabled by default when building Clang, similarly to gcov and GCC.
This change moves one file in libllvm to be compiled unconditionally.
Previously it was included only when WITH_CLANG_EXTRAS was set, but the
complexity of a new special case for (CLANG_EXTRAS | LLVM_COV) is not
worth avoiding a tiny increase in build time.
Reviewed by: dim, imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D142645
These features indicate that the compiler and linker support the
retpoline speculative execution vulnerability (CVE-2017-5715)
mitigation.
Reviewed by: dim, imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14228
find -s was introduced to make the metalog more
deterministic. However, find -s is not portable. find | sort is
portable and accomplishes the same goals, even if it isn't
pedantically the same. TZS is the same before / after the change so
any fussy differences between the two are moot and there won't be
METALOG churn across this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14231
has been switched to libedit long ago, libreadline was built as an
internallib for a while and kept only for gdbtui which was broken using
libreadline.
Since gdb has been mostly deorbitted in all arches, gdbtui was only installed
on arm and sparc64, given it has been removed, gdb has been switched to use
libedit, no consumers are left for libreadline. Thus this removal
- Remove the shim interface that allowed bwn(4) to use either siba_bwn or
bhnd(4), replacing all siba_bwn calls with their bhnd(4) bus equivalents.
- Drop the legay, now-unused siba_bwn bus driver.
- Clean up bhnd(4) board flag defines referenced by bwn(4).
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13518