Using a cookie with meta mode causes it to *not rerun* (as normal make
does) unless the command changes or filemon-detected files change.
After all of the work done here it turns out that skipping installation
is dangerous since the install commands use <dir>/*.h. The actual build
command is not changing but the files installed are changing by the mere
act of adding a new header into the source tree. Thus we cannot safely
use meta mode logic here. It must always rerun and install the headers.
The install -C flag at least prevents churning timestamps when
installing a header that was already present.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
intention of the POSIX IEEE Std 1003.1TM-2008/Cor 1-2013.
A robust mutex is guaranteed to be cleared by the system upon either
thread or process owner termination while the mutex is held. The next
mutex locker is then notified about inconsistent mutex state and can
execute (or abandon) corrective actions.
The patch mostly consists of small changes here and there, adding
neccessary checks for the inconsistent and abandoned conditions into
existing paths. Additionally, the thread exit handler was extended to
iterate over the userspace-maintained list of owned robust mutexes,
unlocking and marking as terminated each of them.
The list of owned robust mutexes cannot be maintained atomically
synchronous with the mutex lock state (it is possible in kernel, but
is too expensive). Instead, for the duration of lock or unlock
operation, the current mutex is remembered in a special slot that is
also checked by the kernel at thread termination.
Kernel must be aware about the per-thread location of the heads of
robust mutex lists and the current active mutex slot. When a thread
touches a robust mutex for the first time, a new umtx op syscall is
issued which informs about location of lists heads.
The umtx sleep queues for PP and PI mutexes are split between
non-robust and robust.
Somewhat unrelated changes in the patch:
1. Style.
2. The fix for proper tdfind() call use in umtxq_sleep_pi() for shared
pi mutexes.
3. Removal of the userspace struct pthread_mutex m_owner field.
4. The sysctl kern.ipc.umtx_vnode_persistent is added, which controls
the lifetime of the shared mutex associated with a vnode' page.
Reviewed by: jilles (previous version, supposedly the objection was fixed)
Discussed with: brooks, Martin Simmons <martin@lispworks.com> (some aspects)
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
I'm still not sure why only Pypy runs into the error with the function
typedefs. Fix it anyway.
Use __ssize_t instead of ssize_t for the types; it's possible for the size_t
type to not be visible if at the wrong POSIX_VISIBLE level.
A final (crossing my fingers) follow-up to r299456.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Despite the private namespace, several broken ports depend on the __off64_t
name for the type. Export it exactly the same way off_t and __off_t are
exported.
A follow-up to r299456.
Suggested by: php56
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Two new functions are provided, bit_ffs_at() and bit_ffc_at(), which allow
for efficient searching of set or cleared bits starting from any bit offset
within the bit string.
Performance is improved by operating on longs instead of bytes and using
ffsl() for searches within a long. ffsl() is a compiler builtin in both
clang and gcc for most architectures, converting what was a brute force
while loop search into a couple of instructions.
All of the bitstring(3) API continues to be contained in the header file.
Some of the functions are large enough that perhaps they should be uninlined
and moved to a library, but that is beyond the scope of this commit.
sys/sys/bitstring.h:
Convert the majority of the existing bit string implementation from
macros to inline functions.
Properly protect the implementation from inadvertant macro expansion
when included in a user's program by prefixing all private
macros/functions and local variables with '_'.
Add bit_ffs_at() and bit_ffc_at(). Implement bit_ffs() and
bit_ffc() in terms of their "at" counterparts.
Provide a kernel implementation of bit_alloc(), making the full API
usable in the kernel.
Improve code documenation.
share/man/man3/bitstring.3:
Add pre-exisiting API bit_ffc() to the synopsis.
Document new APIs.
Document the initialization state of the bit strings
allocated/declared by bit_alloc() and bit_decl().
Correct documentation for bitstr_size(). The original code comments
indicate the size is in bytes, not "elements of bitstr_t". The new
implementation follows this lead. Only hastd assumed "elements"
rather than bytes and it has been corrected.
etc/mtree/BSD.tests.dist:
tests/sys/Makefile:
tests/sys/sys/Makefile:
tests/sys/sys/bitstring.c:
Add tests for all existing and new functionality.
include/bitstring.h
Include all headers needed by sys/bitstring.h
lib/libbluetooth/bluetooth.h:
usr.sbin/bluetooth/hccontrol/le.c:
Include bitstring.h instead of sys/bitstring.h.
sbin/hastd/activemap.c:
Correct usage of bitstr_size().
sys/dev/xen/blkback/blkback.c
Use new bit_alloc.
sys/kern/subr_unit.c:
Remove hard-coded assumption that sizeof(bitstr_t) is 1. Get rid of
unrb.busy, which caches the number of bits set in unrb.map. When
INVARIANTS are disabled, nothing needs to know that information.
callapse_unr can be adapted to use bit_ffs and bit_ffc instead.
Eliminating unrb.busy saves memory, simplifies the code, and
provides a slight speedup when INVARIANTS are disabled.
sys/net/flowtable.c:
Use the new kernel implementation of bit-alloc, instead of hacking
the old libc-dependent macro.
sys/sys/param.h
Update __FreeBSD_version to indicate availability of new API
Submitted by: gibbs, asomers
Reviewed by: gibbs, ngie
MFC after: 4 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6004
This will only be done if the target is defined, so if the target is
defined after bsd.sys.mk is included then it needs to manually add
${META_DEPS} still.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
etc) in stdlib.h. These will be needed for newer versions of libc++,
which uses them for defining overloaded versions of abs() and div().
MFC after: 1 week
Extend it to other cases of meta mode cookies so they get the proper rm
cookie behavior when a .meta file detects it needs to rebuild and fails.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This file is using stage-install, so all of the .dirdep files
are properly handled. The cookie handling also properly
handles rebuilds with .meta files. DESTDIR from bsd.sys.mk is also
respected for staging. This logic came in r239572.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The meta file may decide the target is out of date but nothing
ensures that the *next* build will build this target if it
fails this time for some reason; it is still out-of-date
until it succeeds.
Convert the include/ cookie usage to the global versions.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The defines for xdr_rpc* in xdr.h are wrong. It could be
very well that Solaris did strip the '_t' from xdr_u_int32_t,
but Solaris has a xdr_u_int32 function, we don't have this.
So all of this defines will lead to an unresolved symbol.
This explains why we do not use these functions in FreeBSD
while they are used in Illumos/Solaris.
Obtained from: linux libtirpc (git 7864122e61ffe4db1aa8ace89117358a1e3a391b)
MFC after: 3 weeks
SunRPC is using xp_sock in SVCXPRT, while TI-RPC is using
xp_fd. Add a compatibility define.
Illumos has something similar for the non-kernel case.
Obtained from: linux-nfs project (git 0d94036c3a0d4c24d22bf6a8c40ac6625d972c29)
Add missing Symbol.map entry for __aligned_alloc.
Add weak-->strong symbol binding for
{malloc_stats_print,mallctl,mallctlnametomib,mallctlbymib} -->
{__malloc_stats_print,__mallctl,__mallctlnametomib,__mallctlbymib}. These
bindings complete the set necessary to allow applications to replace all
malloc-related symbols.
breaking the ABI. Special value is stored in the lock pointer to
indicate shared lock, and offline page in the shared memory is
allocated to store the actual lock.
Reviewed by: vangyzen (previous version)
Discussed with: deischen, emaste, jhb, rwatson,
Martin Simmons <martin@lispworks.com>
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
enabled in the compilation environment, i.e. for ANSI C use of
#include <signal.h>.
Requested and reviewed by: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 13 days
ucontext_t available. Our code even has XXX comment about this.
Add a bit of compliance by moving struct __ucontext definition into
sys/_ucontext.h and including it into signal.h and sys/ucontext.h.
Several machine/ucontext.h headers were changed to use namespace-safe
types (like uint64_t->__uint64_t) to not depend on sys/types.h.
struct __stack_t from sys/signal.h is made always visible in private
namespace to satisfy sys/_ucontext.h requirements.
Apparently mips _types.h pollutes global namespace with f_register_t
type definition. This commit does not try to fix the issue.
PR: 207079
Reported and tested by: Ting-Wei Lan <lantw44@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
control algorithm options. The argument is variable length and is opaque
to TCP, forwarded directly to the algorithm's ctl_output method.
Provide new includes directory netinet/cc, where algorithm specific
headers can be installed.
The new API doesn't yet have any in tree consumers.
The original code written by lstewart.
Reviewed by: rrs, emax
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D711
- Avoid namespace pollution and move definitions of _POSIX2_CHARCLASS_NAME_MAX
and _POSIX2_COLL_WEIGHTS_MAX into the .2001 section.
With input from bde.
Submitted by bde
Set _PATH_DEFPATH to
/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin. This is the
path in the default class in the default /etc/login.conf,
excluding ~/bin which would not be expanded properly in a string
constant.
For normal logins, _PATH_DEFPATH is overridden by /etc/login.conf,
~/.login_conf or shell startup files. _PATH_DEFPATH is still used as a
default by execlp(), execvp(), posix_spawnp() and sh if PATH is not set, and
by cron. Especially the latter is a common trap (most recently in PR
204813).
PR: 204813
Reviewed by: secteam (delphij), alfred
Traditionally the hcreate() function creates a hash table that uses
chaining, using a fixed user-provided size. The problem with this
approach is that this often either wastes memory (table too big) or
yields bad performance (table too small). For applications it may not
always be easy to estimate the right hash table size. A fixed number
only increases performance compared to a linked list by a constant
factor.
This problem can be solved easily by dynamically resizing the hash
table. If the size of the hash table is at least doubled, this has no
negative on the running time complexity. If a dynamically sized hash
table is used, we can also switch to using open addressing instead of
chaining, which has the advantage of just using a single allocation for
the entire table, instead of allocating many small objects.
Finally, a problem with the existing implementation is that its
deterministic algorithm for hashing makes it possible to come up with
fixed patterns to trigger an excessive number of collisions. We can
easily solve this by using FNV-1a as a hashing algorithm in combination
with a randomly generated offset basis.
Measurements have shown that this implementation is about 20-25% faster
than the existing implementation (even if the existing implementation is
given an excessive number of buckets). Though it allocates more memory
through malloc() than the old implementation (between 4-8 pointers per
used entry instead of 3), process memory use is similar to the old
implementation as if the estimated size was underestimated by a factor
10. This is due to the fact that malloc() needs to perform less
bookkeeping.
Reviewed by: jilles, pfg
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4644
The existing implementations of POSIX tsearch() and tdelete() don't
attempt to perform any balancing at all. Testing reveals that inserting
100k nodes into a tree sequentially takes approximately one minute on my
system.
Though most other BSDs also don't use any balanced tree internally, C
libraries like glibc and musl do provide better implementations. glibc
uses a red-black tree and musl uses an AVL tree.
Red-black trees have the advantage over AVL trees that they only require
O(1) rotations after insertion and deletion, but have the disadvantage
that the tree has a maximum depth of 2*log2(n) instead of 1.44*log2(n).
My take is that it's better to focus on having a lower maximum depth,
for the reason that in the case of tsearch() the invocation of the
comparator likely dominates the running time.
This change replaces the tsearch() and tdelete() functions by versions
that create an AVL tree. Compared to musl's implementation, this version
is different in two different ways:
- We don't keep track of heights; just balances. This is sufficient.
This has the advantage that it reduces the number of nodes that are
being accessed. Storing heights requires us to also access all of the
siblings along the path.
- Don't use any recursion at all. We know that the tree cannot 2^64
elements in size, so the height of the tree can never be larger than
96. Use a 128-bit bitmask to keep track of the path that is computed.
This allows us to iterate over the same path twice, meaning we can
apply rotations from top to bottom.
Inserting 100k nodes into a tree now only takes 0.015 seconds. Insertion
seems to be twice as fast as glibc, whereas deletion has about the same
performance. Unlike glibc, it uses a fixed amount of memory.
I also experimented with both recursive and iterative bottom-up
implementations of the same algorithm. This iterative top-down version
performs similar to the recursive bottom-up version in terms of speed
and code size.
For some reason, the iterative bottom-up algorithm was actually 30%
faster for deletion, but has a quadratic memory complexity to keep track
of all the parent pointers.
Reviewed by: jilles
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4412
In r289315, I added new fields to res_state. This broke binary
backward compatibility. It also broke some ports (and possibly
other code) by requiring the definition of time_t and struct timespec.
Fix these problems by moving the new fields into __res_state_ext.
Suggested by: ume
Reviewed by: ume
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4472
r289315 required time_t and struct timespec to be defined before
including <resolv.h>. This broke the build of net-mgmt/sx, at least.
Include <sys/timespec.h> in resolv.h to fix this with minimal pollution.
Reported by: Raphael Kubo da Costa <rakuco>
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
This avoids the need for an afterinstall: hook and a check for LIBRARIES_ONLY.
It also now respects INCLUDEDIR.
This came in r249484.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Because of how osreldate.h was being built with newvers.sh, which always
spat out a vers.c dependent on SVN or git, the meta mode build was
considering osreldate.h to depend on the current git or SVN index. This
would lead to entire tree rebuilds when modifying git's index. There's
no reason to be generating vers.c here so just skip it.
While here, in mk-osreldate.sh rename PARAM_H to proper PARAMFILE (which
newvers.sh already has a default for) and remove unneeded export.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The _SKIP_BUILD is used while computing DIRDEPS. If MACHINE=host is passed in
then this logic was replacing 'MACHINE' with a literal value of the host arch,
which then caused the dirdeps graph to be wrong since it no longer had the
literal 'host' for any of include's dependencies.
This is a NOP currently since include/ is not usually built with MACHINE=host.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This allows META_FILES option to be renamed META_MODE.
Also add META_COOKIE_TOUCH for use in targets that can benefit
from a cookie when in meta mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4153
Reviewed by: bdrewery
On each resolver query, use stat(2) to see if the modification time
of /etc/resolv.conf has changed. If so, reload the file and reinitialize
the resolver library. However, only call stat(2) if at least two seconds
have passed since the last call to stat(2), since calling it on every
query could kill performance.
This new behavior is enabled by default. Add a "reload-period" option
to disable it or change the period of the test.
Document this behavior and option in resolv.conf(5).
Polish the man page just enough to appease igor.
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2015-October/017342.html
Reviewed by: kp, wblock
Discussed with: jilles, imp, alfred
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3867
FreeBSD extended ctypes to include numbers (e.g. isnumber()) but never
actually implemented it. The isnumber() function was equivalent to the
isdigit() function in every case.
Now that DragonFly's ctype source files have number definitions, the
number ctype can finally be implemented. It's given a new flag _CTYPE_N.
The isalnum() and iswalnum() functions have been changed to use this
flag rather than the _CTYPE_D digit flag.
While isalnum(), isnumber(), and their wide equivalents now return
different values in locale cases, the ishexnumber() and iswhexnumber()
functions are unchanged. They are still aliases for isxdigit() and
iswxdigit().
Also change ctype.h for isdigit and isxdigit to use sbistype like the
other functions.
Obtained from: dragonfly