Add EXAMPLES section showing the use of -a and -s flags and how which(1)
treates duplicates.
Approved by: manpages (gbe@)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26182
We have (two versions) of MS() and SM() macros which we use throughout
the wireless code. Change all but three places (ath_hal, rtwn, and rsu)
to the newly provided _IEEE80211_MASKSHIFT() and _IEEE80211_SHIFTMASK()
macros. Also change one internal case using both _S and _M instead of
just _S away from _M (one of the reasons rtwn and rsu were not changed).
This was done semi-mechanically. No functional changes intended.
Requested by: gnn (D26091)
Reviewed by: adrian (pre line wrap)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (d/b/a "Netgate")
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26539
- We can exit the loop as soon as the filter check passes.
- The alignment check has already passed so there is no need to also run
it here.
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
We need to use a bounce buffer when the memory we are operating on is not
aligned to a cacheline, and not aligned to the maps alignment.
The former is to stop other threads from dirtying the cacheline while we
are performing DMA operations with it. The latter is to check memory
passed in by a driver is correctly aligned for the device.
Reviewed by: mmel
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26496
This will ensure nothing modifies the cacheline while DMA is in progress
so we won't need to bounce the data.
Reviewed by: mmel
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26495
_STANDALONE is only for the bootloader, not kernel modules. Remove it
from the build. This was harmless before, but sys/malloc.h now does
different things for the standalone environment, triggering the issue.
Use it to decide if we can skip cache management.
While here remove the DMAMAP_COULD_BOUNCE flag as it's unneeded.
Reviewed by: mmel
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26494
Add helper functions to the arm64 busdma for common cases of checking if
we may need to bounce, and if we must bounce for a given address.
These will be expanded later as we handle cache-misaligned memory.
Reported by: mmel
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26493
The ZSTD support for the boot loader will need to include files that
use the kernel's malloc interface. Create a standalone stub version
that's functional enough to allow this to work. There's some
limitations in this interface, and it's not quite a perfect
match. Specifically, M_WAITOK allocations can fail because there's
nothing that can be done we no memory is available.
It is only ever called for negative entries and for those it is
just a wrapper around cache_zap_negative_locked_vnode_kl which
always succeeds.
This also fixes a bug where cache_lookup_fallback should have been
calling cache_zap_locked_bucket instead. Note that in order to trigger
the bug NOCACHE must not be set, which currently only happens when
creating a new coredump (and then the coredump-to-be has to have a
negative entry).
received.
The default system log rotation mechanism (newsyslog(8)) requires ability to send
signal to a daemon in order to properly complete rotation of the logs in an "atomic"
manner without having to making a copy and truncating original file. Unfortunately
our built-in mechanism to convert "dumb" programs into daemons has no way to handle
this rotation properly. This change adds this ability, to be enabled by supplying -H
option in addition to the -o option.
Reviewed by: markj, rpokala (manpages)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26526
memfd_create is implemented on top of posixshm, so this is a logically
correct place for them to be. Moreover, this reduces the number of places to
look to run tests when working in this part of the tree.
Discussed with: kib (to some extent, a while ago)
The NOTES files have a bunch of hint lines that are removed when
generating LINT. However, we can achieve the same effect by prepending
each of the lines with 'envvar' so the NOTES files become standard
config(8) files. No functional changes as the sed script to generate
the LINT files filters these either way.
Suggested by: kevans
and current address space is already destroyed, so kern_execve()
terminates the process.
While there, clean up some internals of post_execve() inlined in init_main.
Reported by: Peter <pmc@citylink.dinoex.sub.org>
Reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26525
Fix unquoted test for an empty value, which broke nextboot(8) on non-ZFS /boot
systems after r365938.
Discussed with: allanjude, tsoome
X-MFC-With: r365938
We left these in the clean rule to avoid having stale files remain in
working trees, but enough time has now passed that it's no longer
relevant.
Discussed with: imp
I've submitted this patch upstream, so apply this to contrib/ until a new
version containing this change has been released.
Reviewed By: jkim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26505
This builds the kernel-toolchain target and an amd64 GENERIC kernel on
Ubuntu 18.04, 20.04 and the latest macOS to ensure that new changes
don't regress building on non-FreeBSD hosts.
Reviewed By: emaste, lwhsu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26512
The entire cache scan was a leftover from the old implementation.
It is incredibly wasteful in presence of several mount points and does not
win much even for single ones.
During devswitch probe, we pick boot pool based on boot disk, if the boot
disk happens to have multiple pools in freebsd-zfs partitions, the current
code does pick last pool from boot disk as boot pool. While there is no
way at that stage to test, the more logical approach would be to pick
first matching pool.
This patch is assuming we do pass pool guid pointer with guid value 0,
this will help us to determine, if the guid value is already set or not.
The general suggestion would be not to share disk between different pools.
Reported by: Alexander Leidinger
The purpose of checksize() is to verify that the referenced cluster
chain size matches the recorded file size (up to 2^32 - 1) in the
directory entry. We follow the cluster chain, then multiple the
cluster count by bytes per cluster to get the physical size, then
check it against the recorded size.
When a file is close to 4 GiB (between 4GiB - cluster size and 4GiB,
both non-inclusive), the product of cluster count and bytes per
cluster would be exactly 4 GiB. On 32-bit systems, because size_t
is 32-bit, this would wrap back to 0, which will cause the file be
truncated to 0.
Fix this by using 64-bit physicalSize instead.
This fix is inspired by an Android change request at
https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/external/fsck_msdos/+/1428461
PR: 249533
Reviewed by: kevlo
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26524
Similar to OPAL calls, switch to big endian to do calls to RTAS.
(Missed this one when I was doing the bulk commit of PowerPC64LE support.)
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
Document the new powerpc64le arch's initial specifications.
Certain things are subject to change while this is experimental. The most
likely change is that long double may switch to quad, dependent on POWER8
emulation assistance for __float128 being set up in the compiler (as
POWER8 does not have IEEE-compatible 128-bit hardware float, unlike POWER9.)
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
There are some tests available in the NetBSD test suite, but we don't
currently pass all of those; further investigation will go into that. For
now, just add a basic test as well as a test that copies from /dev/null to a
file.
The /dev/null test confirms that the file gets created if it's empty, then
that it truncates the file if it's non-empty. This matches some usage that
was previously employed in the build and was replaced in r366042 by a
simpler shell construct.
I will also plan on coming back to expand these in due time.
MFC after: 1 week
* powerpc time_t is 64 bit, not 32 bit.
* Add definition for powerpc64le.
With this, powerpc64le ntpd and ntpdate operate correctly instead of
corrupting the clock and exiting.
Tested on powerpc64, powerpc64le, and powerpc.
No feedback from cy@.
I am a bit confused as to how SIZEOF_TIME_T being wrong ever worked on
powerpc, it being big endian and all.
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26379
Due to enter_idle_powerx fabricating a MSR from scratch, it is necessary
for it to care about the endianness, so we don't accidentally switch
endian the first time we idle a thread.
Took about five seconds to spot after seeing an unmangled backtrace.
The hard bit was needing to temporarily set up a mutex to sort out the
logjam that happens when every thread simultaneously wakes up in the wrong
endian due to the panic IPI and panics, leaving what I can best describe as
"alphabet soup" on the console.
Luckily, I already had a patch sitting around to do that.
This brings POWER8 up to equivilence with POWER9 on PPC64LE.
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
Due to the sqlite3 endian detection code preferring to check platform defines
instead of checking endian defines, it is necessary to manually set
the endianness on PowerPC64LE.
Unlike other bi-endian platforms, PowerPC64LE relies entirely on the
generic endianness macros like __BYTE_ORDER__ and has no platform-specific
define to denote little endian.
Add -DSQLITE_BYTEORDER=1234 to the CFLAGS when building libsqlite3 on
powerpc64le.
Fixes runtime operation of sqlite on PowerPC64LE.
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
gdtoa wins the award for "most outdated endianness naming convention"
with its IEEE_8087 vs IEEE_MC68k defines. I had a good chuckle.
Update softfloat and arith.h to adjust to BE or LE automatically
based on the low level preprocessor defines.
Fixes printf/scanf on PowerPC64LE, although there is still a problem
lurking regarding Signalling NaNs...
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.