early built libraries. This should be sufficient for most cases and
has eliminated the issues I've seen with high -j builds. Races likely
still remain, but this knocks the problem down a notch.
all the SUBDIR entries in parallel, instead of serially. Apply this
option to a selected number of Makefiles, which can greatly speed up the
build on multi-core machines, when using make -j.
This can be extended to more Makefiles later on, whenever they are
verified to work correctly with parallel building.
I tested this on a 24-core machine, with make -j48 buildworld (N = 6):
before stddev after stddev
======= ====== ======= ======
real time 1741.1 16.5 959.8 2.7
user time 12468.7 16.4 14393.0 16.8
sys time 1825.0 54.8 2110.6 22.8
(user+sys)/real 8.2 17.1
E.g. the build was approximately 45% faster in real time. On machines
with less cores, or with lower -j settings, the speedup will not be as
impressive. But at least you can now almost max out a machine with
buildworld!
Submitted by: jilles
MFC after: 2 weeks
IPX was a network transport protocol in Novell's NetWare network operating
system from late 80s and then 90s. The NetWare itself switched to TCP/IP
as default transport in 1998. Later, in this century the Novell Open
Enterprise Server became successor of Novell NetWare. The last release
that claimed to still support IPX was OES 2 in 2007. Routing equipment
vendors (e.g. Cisco) discontinued support for IPX in 2011.
Thus, IPX won't be supported in FreeBSD 11.0-RELEASE.
giving access to functionality that is not available in capability mode
sandbox. The functionality can be precisely restricted.
Start with the following services:
- system.dns - provides API compatible to:
- gethostbyname(3),
- gethostbyname2(3),
- gethostbyaddr(3),
- getaddrinfo(3),
- getnameinfo(3),
- system.grp - provides getgrent(3)-compatible API,
- system.pwd - provides getpwent(3)-compatible API,
- system.random - allows to obtain entropy from /dev/random,
- system.sysctl - provides sysctlbyname(3-compatible API.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
by hastctl(8), hastd(8) and auditdistd(8) and will soon be also used
by casperd(8) and its services. There is no documentation and pjdlog.h
header file is not installed in /usr/include/ to keep it private.
Unfortunately we don't have /lib/private/ at this point, only
/usr/lib/private/, so the library is installed in /lib/.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
FreeBSD systems usually implemented this as a third party module and
our implementation hasn't played as nicely with the old way as it could
have.
To that end:
* Rename the iconv* symbols in libc.so.7 to have a __bsd_ prefix.
* Provide .symver compatability with existing 10.x+ binaries that
referenced the iconv symbols. All existing binaries should work.
* Like on Linux/glibc systems, add a libc_nonshared.a to the ldscript
at /usr/lib/libc.so.
* Move the "iconv*" wrapper symbols to libc_nonshared.a
This should solve the runtime ambiguity about which symbols resolve
to where. If you compile against the iconv in libc, your runtime
dependencies will be unambiguous.
Old 9.x libraries and binaries will always resolve against their
libiconv.so.3 like they did on 9.x. They won't resolve against libc.
Old 10.x binaries will be satisified by the .symver helpers.
This should allow ports to selectively compile against the libiconv
port if needed and it should behave without ambiguity now.
Discussed with: kib
Move the installation of /usr/tests/lib/Kyuafile from src/tests/lib/
to src/lib/. This is to keep the src/tests/ hierarchy unaware of the
rest of the tree, which makes things clearer in general. In particular:
1) Everything related to the construction of /usr/tests/lib/ is kept
in src/lib/. There is no need to think about different directories
and how they relate to each other. (The same applies for libexec,
usr.bin, etc. but these are not yet handled.)
2) src/tests becomes the place to keep cross-functional test programs
and nothing else, which also helps in simplifying things.
Reviewed by: freebsd-testing
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
There is no reason to keep the two knobs separate: if tests are
enabled, the ATF libraries are required; and if tests are disabled,
the ATF libraries are not necessary. Keeping the two just serves
to complicate the build.
Reviewed by: freebsd-testing
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
good. This caused libc to spoof the ports libiconv namespace and
provide a colliding libiconv.so.3 to fool rtld. This should have
been removed some time ago.
extensions and also tried to be link time compatible with ports libiconv.
This splits that functionality and enables the parts that shouldn't
interfere with the port by default.
WITH_ICONV (now on by default) - adds iconv.h, iconv_open(3) etc.
WITH_LIBICONV_COMPAT (off by default) adds the libiconv_open etc API, linker
symbols and even a stub libiconv.so.3 that are good enough to be able
to 'pkg delete -f libiconv' on a running system and reasonably expect it
to work.
I have tortured many machines over the last few days to try and reduce
the possibilities of foot-shooting as much as I can. I've successfully
recompiled to enable and disable the libiconv_compat modes, ports that use
libiconv alongside system iconv etc. If you don't enable the
WITH_LIBICONV_COMPAT switch, they don't share symbol space.
This is an extension of behavior on other system. iconv(3) is a standard
libc interface and libiconv port expects to be able to run alongside it on
systems that have it.
Bumped osreldate.
- Reconnect with some minor modifications, in particular now selsocket()
internals are adapted to use sbintime units after recent'ish calloutng
switch.
!defined(LIBRARIES_ONLY) so it is only created once on architectures
with 32-bit compat support.
Replace ln -fhs with ${INSTALL_SYMLINK} to the link is logged in the
METALOG.
/usr/lib/include ==> /usr/include
This fixes -print-file-name=include in clang (and is
arguably a better way to fix the same issue in GCC than
the change I made in r231336).
MFC after: 1 week
LibYAML is a YAML 1.1 parser and emitter under MIT license which will
soon be used by the pkg boostrap (usr.bin/pkg) and bhyve
Reviewed by: roberto, antoine
set of NetBSD software to compile as part of the FreeBSD build with
little or no modifiction. It is built as a static library and not
installed for general use. Likewise, its header files are not
installed.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
There is one known issue: Some probes will display an error message along the
lines of: "Invalid address (0)"
I tested this with both a simple dtrace probe and dtruss on a few different
binaries on 32-bit. I only compiled 64-bit, did not run it, but I don't expect
problems without the modules loaded. Volunteers are welcome.
MFC after: 1 month
but committing it helps to get everyone on the same page and makes
sure we make progress.
Tinderbox breakages that are the result of this commit are entirely
the committer's fault -- in other words: buildworld testing on amd64
only.
Credits follow:
Submitted by: Garrett Cooper <yanegomi@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems
Based on work by: keramida@
Thanks to: gnn@, mdf@, mlaier@, sjg@
Special thanks to: keramida@
GIANT from VFS. In addition, disconnect also netsmb, which is a base
requirement for SMBFS.
In the while SMBFS regular users can use FUSE interface and smbnetfs
port to work with their SMBFS partitions.
Also, there are ongoing efforts by vendor to support in-kernel smbfs,
so there are good chances that it will get relinked once properly locked.
This is not targeted for MFC.
GIANT from VFS. In addition, disconnect also netncp, which is a base
requirement for NWFS.
In the possibility of a future maintenance of the code and later
readd to the FreeBSD base, maybe we should think about a better location
for netncp. I'm not entirely sure the / top location is actually right,
however I will let network people to comment on that more specifically.
This is not targeted for MFC.
The NAND Flash environment consists of several distinct components:
- NAND framework (drivers harness for NAND controllers and NAND chips)
- NAND simulator (NANDsim)
- NAND file system (NAND FS)
- Companion tools and utilities
- Documentation (manual pages)
This work is still experimental. Please use with caution.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Supported by: FreeBSD Foundation, Juniper Networks
This tool changes the default buffering behaviour of standard
stdio streams.
It only works on dynamic binaries. To make it work for static
ones it would require cluttering stdio because there no single
entry point.
PR: 166660
Reviewed by: current@, jhb
Approved by: kib (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
This library implements the C11 threads interface on top of the pthreads
library. As discussed on the lists, the preferred way to implement
this, is as a separate library.
It is unlikely that these functions will be used a lot in the future. It
would have been easier if the C11 working group standardized (a subset
of) pthreads and clock_nanosleep(). Having it as a separate library
allows the embedded people to omit it from their system.
Discussed on: arch@, threads@
not disabled in the usual way (by adding it to __DEFAULT_NO_OPTIONS in
share/mk/bsd.own.mk), and because the test for MK_LIBCPLUSPLUS in
Makefile.inc1 was incorrect.
Pointy hat to: dim
MK_LIBCPLUSPLUS=yes to enable). This is a work-in-progress. It works for
me, but is not guaranteed to work for anyone else and may eat your dog.
To build C++ using libc++, add -stdlib=libc++ to your CXX and LD flags.
Bug reports welcome, bug fixes even more welcome...
Approved by: dim (mentor)