Commit Graph

505 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
lidl
cb2fd85b37 Separate BLACKLIST vs BLACKLIST_SUPPORT properly
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2016-06-07 16:31:03 +00:00
lidl
6f31a383cc Add basic blacklist build support
Reviewed by:	rpaulo
Approved by:	rpaulo
Relnotes:	YES
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5913
2016-06-02 19:06:04 +00:00
ken
7eeed3c838 Add support for managing Shingled Magnetic Recording (SMR) drives.
This change includes support for SCSI SMR drives (which conform to the
Zoned Block Commands or ZBC spec) and ATA SMR drives (which conform to
the Zoned ATA Command Set or ZAC spec) behind SAS expanders.

This includes full management support through the GEOM BIO interface, and
through a new userland utility, zonectl(8), and through camcontrol(8).

This is now ready for filesystems to use to detect and manage zoned drives.
(There is no work in progress that I know of to use this for ZFS or UFS, if
anyone is interested, let me know and I may have some suggestions.)

Also, improve ATA command passthrough and dispatch support, both via ATA
and ATA passthrough over SCSI.

Also, add support to camcontrol(8) for the ATA Extended Power Conditions
feature set.  You can now manage ATA device power states, and set various
idle time thresholds for a drive to enter lower power states.

Note that this change cannot be MFCed in full, because it depends on
changes to the struct bio API that break compatilibity.  In order to
avoid breaking the stable API, only changes that don't touch or depend on
the struct bio changes can be merged.  For example, the camcontrol(8)
changes don't depend on the new bio API, but zonectl(8) and the probe
changes to the da(4) and ada(4) drivers do depend on it.

Also note that the SMR changes have not yet been tested with an actual
SCSI ZBC device, or a SCSI to ATA translation layer (SAT) that supports
ZBC to ZAC translation.  I have not yet gotten a suitable drive or SAT
layer, so any testing help would be appreciated.  These changes have been
tested with Seagate Host Aware SATA drives attached to both SAS and SATA
controllers.  Also, I do not have any SATA Host Managed devices, and I
suspect that it may take additional (hopefully minor) changes to support
them.

Thanks to Seagate for supplying the test hardware and answering questions.

sbin/camcontrol/Makefile:
	Add epc.c and zone.c.

sbin/camcontrol/camcontrol.8:
	Document the zone and epc subcommands.

sbin/camcontrol/camcontrol.c:
	Add the zone and epc subcommands.

	Add auxiliary register support to build_ata_cmd().  Make sure to
	set the CAM_ATAIO_NEEDRESULT, CAM_ATAIO_DMA, and CAM_ATAIO_FPDMA
	flags as appropriate for ATA commands.

	Add a new get_ata_status() function to parse ATA result from SCSI
	sense descriptors (for ATA passthrough over SCSI) and ATA I/O
	requests.

sbin/camcontrol/camcontrol.h:
	Update the build_ata_cmd() prototype

	Add get_ata_status(), zone(), and epc().

sbin/camcontrol/epc.c:
	Support for ATA Extended Power Conditions features.  This includes
	support for all features documented in the ACS-4 Revision 12
	specification from t13.org (dated February 18, 2016).

	The EPC feature set allows putting a drive into a power power mode
	immediately, or setting timeouts so that the drive will
	automatically enter progressively lower power states after various
	idle times.

sbin/camcontrol/fwdownload.c:
	Update the firmware download code for the new build_ata_cmd()
	arguments.

sbin/camcontrol/zone.c:
	Implement support for Shingled Magnetic Recording (SMR) drives
	via SCSI Zoned Block Commands (ZBC) and ATA Zoned Device ATA
	Command Set (ZAC).

	These specs were developed in concert, and are functionally
	identical.  The primary differences are due to SCSI and ATA
	differences.  (SCSI is big endian, ATA is little endian, for
	example.)

	This includes support for all commands defined in the ZBC and
	ZAC specs.

sys/cam/ata/ata_all.c:
	Decode a number of additional ATA command names in ata_op_string().

	Add a new CCB building function, ata_read_log().

	Add ata_zac_mgmt_in() and ata_zac_mgmt_out() CCB building
	functions.  These support both DMA and NCQ encapsulation.

sys/cam/ata/ata_all.h:
	Add prototypes for ata_read_log(), ata_zac_mgmt_out(), and
	ata_zac_mgmt_in().

sys/cam/ata/ata_da.c:
	Revamp the ada(4) driver to support zoned devices.

	Add four new probe states to gather information needed for zone
	support.

	Add a new adasetflags() function to avoid duplication of large
	blocks of flag setting between the async handler and register
	functions.

	Add new sysctl variables that describe zone support and paramters.

	Add support for the new BIO_ZONE bio, and all of its subcommands:
	DISK_ZONE_OPEN, DISK_ZONE_CLOSE, DISK_ZONE_FINISH, DISK_ZONE_RWP,
	DISK_ZONE_REPORT_ZONES, and DISK_ZONE_GET_PARAMS.

sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.c:
	Add command descriptions for the ZBC IN/OUT commands.

	Add descriptions for ZBC Host Managed devices.

	Add a new function, scsi_ata_pass() to do ATA passthrough over
	SCSI.  This will eventually replace scsi_ata_pass_16() -- it
	can create the 12, 16, and 32-byte variants of the ATA
	PASS-THROUGH command, and supports setting all of the
	registers defined as of SAT-4, Revision 5 (March 11, 2016).

	Change scsi_ata_identify() to use scsi_ata_pass() instead of
	scsi_ata_pass_16().

	Add a new scsi_ata_read_log() function to facilitate reading
	ATA logs via SCSI.

sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h:
	Add the new ATA PASS-THROUGH(32) command CDB.  Add extended and
	variable CDB opcodes.

	Add Zoned Block Device Characteristics VPD page.

	Add ATA Return SCSI sense descriptor.

	Add prototypes for scsi_ata_read_log() and scsi_ata_pass().

sys/cam/scsi/scsi_da.c:
	Revamp the da(4) driver to support zoned devices.

	Add five new probe states, four of which are needed for ATA
	devices.

	Add five new sysctl variables that describe zone support and
	parameters.

	The da(4) driver supports SCSI ZBC devices, as well as ATA ZAC
	devices when they are attached via a SCSI to ATA Translation (SAT)
	layer.  Since ZBC -> ZAC translation is a new feature in the T10
	SAT-4 spec, most SATA drives will be supported via ATA commands
	sent via the SCSI ATA PASS-THROUGH command.  The da(4) driver will
	prefer the ZBC interface, if it is available, for performance
	reasons, but will use the ATA PASS-THROUGH interface to the ZAC
	command set if the SAT layer doesn't support translation yet.
	As I mentioned above, ZBC command support is untested.

	Add support for the new BIO_ZONE bio, and all of its subcommands:
	DISK_ZONE_OPEN, DISK_ZONE_CLOSE, DISK_ZONE_FINISH, DISK_ZONE_RWP,
	DISK_ZONE_REPORT_ZONES, and DISK_ZONE_GET_PARAMS.

	Add scsi_zbc_in() and scsi_zbc_out() CCB building functions.

	Add scsi_ata_zac_mgmt_out() and scsi_ata_zac_mgmt_in() CCB/CDB
	building functions.  Note that these have return values, unlike
	almost all other CCB building functions in CAM.  The reason is
	that they can fail, depending upon the particular combination
	of input parameters.  The primary failure case is if the user
	wants NCQ, but fails to specify additional CDB storage.  NCQ
	requires using the 32-byte version of the SCSI ATA PASS-THROUGH
	command, and the current CAM CDB size is 16 bytes.

sys/cam/scsi/scsi_da.h:
	Add ZBC IN and ZBC OUT CDBs and opcodes.

	Add SCSI Report Zones data structures.

	Add scsi_zbc_in(), scsi_zbc_out(), scsi_ata_zac_mgmt_out(), and
	scsi_ata_zac_mgmt_in() prototypes.

sys/dev/ahci/ahci.c:
	Fix SEND / RECEIVE FPDMA QUEUED in the ahci(4) driver.

	ahci_setup_fis() previously set the top bits of the sector count
	register in the FIS to 0 for FPDMA commands.  This is okay for
	read and write, because the PRIO field is in the only thing in
	those bits, and we don't implement that further up the stack.

	But, for SEND and RECEIVE FPDMA QUEUED, the subcommand is in that
	byte, so it needs to be transmitted to the drive.

	In ahci_setup_fis(), always set the the top 8 bits of the
	sector count register.  We need it in both the standard
	and NCQ / FPDMA cases.

sys/geom/eli/g_eli.c:
	Pass BIO_ZONE commands through the GELI class.

sys/geom/geom.h:
	Add g_io_zonecmd() prototype.

sys/geom/geom_dev.c:
	Add new DIOCZONECMD ioctl, which allows sending zone commands to
	disks.

sys/geom/geom_disk.c:
	Add support for BIO_ZONE commands.

sys/geom/geom_disk.h:
	Add a new flag, DISKFLAG_CANZONE, that indicates that a given
	GEOM disk client can handle BIO_ZONE commands.

sys/geom/geom_io.c:
	Add a new function, g_io_zonecmd(), that handles execution of
	BIO_ZONE commands.

	Add permissions check for BIO_ZONE commands.

	Add command decoding for BIO_ZONE commands.

sys/geom/geom_subr.c:
	Add DDB command decoding for BIO_ZONE commands.

sys/kern/subr_devstat.c:
	Record statistics for REPORT ZONES commands.  Note that the
	number of bytes transferred for REPORT ZONES won't quite match
	what is received from the harware.  This is because we're
	necessarily counting bytes coming from the da(4) / ada(4) drivers,
	which are using the disk_zone.h interface to communicate up
	the stack.  The structure sizes it uses are slightly different
	than the SCSI and ATA structure sizes.

sys/sys/ata.h:
	Add many bit and structure definitions for ZAC, NCQ, and EPC
	command support.

sys/sys/bio.h:
	Convert the bio_cmd field to a straight enumeration.  This will
	yield more space for additional commands in the future.  After
	change r297955 and other related changes, this is now possible.
	Converting to an enumeration will also prevent use as a bitmask
	in the future.

sys/sys/disk.h:
	Define the DIOCZONECMD ioctl.

sys/sys/disk_zone.h:
	Add a new API for managing zoned disks.  This is very close to
	the SCSI ZBC and ATA ZAC standards, but uses integers in native
	byte order instead of big endian (SCSI) or little endian (ATA)
	byte arrays.

	This is intended to offer to the complete feature set of the ZBC
	and ZAC disk management without requiring the application developer
	to include SCSI or ATA headers.  We also use one set of headers
	for ioctl consumers and kernel bio-level consumers.

sys/sys/param.h:
	Bump __FreeBSD_version for sys/bio.h command changes, and inclusion
	of SMR support.

usr.sbin/Makefile:
	Add the zonectl utility.

usr.sbin/diskinfo/diskinfo.c
	Add disk zoning capability to the 'diskinfo -v' output.

usr.sbin/zonectl/Makefile:
	Add zonectl makefile.

usr.sbin/zonectl/zonectl.8
	zonectl(8) man page.

usr.sbin/zonectl/zonectl.c
	The zonectl(8) utility.  This allows managing SCSI or ATA zoned
	disks via the disk_zone.h API.  You can report zones, reset write
	pointers, get parameters, etc.

Sponsored by:	Spectra Logic
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6147
Reviewed by:	wblock (documentation)
2016-05-19 14:08:36 +00:00
imp
96cf53da35 Just install ar5523.bin into /usr/share/firmware and stop compiling it
in.

Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5639
2016-03-15 04:42:37 +00:00
br
541ea0041e Remove uathload from build due to issue with GCC 5.2.0:
"ld: --relax and -r may not be used together."
Requires fixing ld command line arguments and testing.
2016-01-26 14:34:40 +00:00
ian
68574adad6 Make the building of libsmb and mount_smbfs unconditional, now that r292552
has eliminated alignment and endian problems that were making it fail on
some platforms.

PR:        180438
PR:        189415
2015-12-21 17:41:08 +00:00
ken
d0f081c521 Add asynchronous command support to the pass(4) driver, and the new
camdd(8) utility.

CCBs may be queued to the driver via the new CAMIOQUEUE ioctl, and
completed CCBs may be retrieved via the CAMIOGET ioctl.  User
processes can use poll(2) or kevent(2) to get notification when
I/O has completed.

While the existing CAMIOCOMMAND blocking ioctl interface only
supports user virtual data pointers in a CCB (generally only
one per CCB), the new CAMIOQUEUE ioctl supports user virtual and
physical address pointers, as well as user virtual and physical
scatter/gather lists.  This allows user applications to have more
flexibility in their data handling operations.

Kernel memory for data transferred via the queued interface is
allocated from the zone allocator in MAXPHYS sized chunks, and user
data is copied in and out.  This is likely faster than the
vmapbuf()/vunmapbuf() method used by the CAMIOCOMMAND ioctl in
configurations with many processors (there are more TLB shootdowns
caused by the mapping/unmapping operation) but may not be as fast
as running with unmapped I/O.

The new memory handling model for user requests also allows
applications to send CCBs with request sizes that are larger than
MAXPHYS.  The pass(4) driver now limits queued requests to the I/O
size listed by the SIM driver in the maxio field in the Path
Inquiry (XPT_PATH_INQ) CCB.

There are some things things would be good to add:

1. Come up with a way to do unmapped I/O on multiple buffers.
   Currently the unmapped I/O interface operates on a struct bio,
   which includes only one address and length.  It would be nice
   to be able to send an unmapped scatter/gather list down to
   busdma.  This would allow eliminating the copy we currently do
   for data.

2. Add an ioctl to list currently outstanding CCBs in the various
   queues.

3. Add an ioctl to cancel a request, or use the XPT_ABORT CCB to do
   that.

4. Test physical address support.  Virtual pointers and scatter
   gather lists have been tested, but I have not yet tested
   physical addresses or scatter/gather lists.

5. Investigate multiple queue support.  At the moment there is one
   queue of commands per pass(4) device.  If multiple processes
   open the device, they will submit I/O into the same queue and
   get events for the same completions.  This is probably the right
   model for most applications, but it is something that could be
   changed later on.

Also, add a new utility, camdd(8) that uses the asynchronous pass(4)
driver interface.

This utility is intended to be a basic data transfer/copy utility,
a simple benchmark utility, and an example of how to use the
asynchronous pass(4) interface.

It can copy data to and from pass(4) devices using any target queue
depth, starting offset and blocksize for the input and ouptut devices.
It currently only supports SCSI devices, but could be easily extended
to support ATA devices.

It can also copy data to and from regular files, block devices, tape
devices, pipes, stdin, and stdout.  It does not support queueing
multiple commands to any of those targets, since it uses the standard
read(2)/write(2)/writev(2)/readv(2) system calls.

The I/O is done by two threads, one for the reader and one for the
writer.  The reader thread sends completed read requests to the
writer thread in strictly sequential order, even if they complete
out of order.  That could be modified later on for random I/O patterns
or slightly out of order I/O.

camdd(8) uses kqueue(2)/kevent(2) to get I/O completion events from
the pass(4) driver and also to send request notifications internally.

For pass(4) devcies, camdd(8) uses a single buffer (CAM_DATA_VADDR)
per CAM CCB on the reading side, and a scatter/gather list
(CAM_DATA_SG) on the writing side.  In addition to testing both
interfaces, this makes any potential reblocking of I/O easier.  No
data is copied between the reader and the writer, but rather the
reader's buffers are split into multiple I/O requests or combined
into a single I/O request depending on the input and output blocksize.

For the file I/O path, camdd(8) also uses a single buffer (read(2),
write(2), pread(2) or pwrite(2)) on reads, and a scatter/gather list
(readv(2), writev(2), preadv(2), pwritev(2)) on writes.

Things that would be nice to do for camdd(8) eventually:

1.  Add support for I/O pattern generation.  Patterns like all
    zeros, all ones, LBA-based patterns, random patterns, etc. Right
    Now you can always use /dev/zero, /dev/random, etc.

2.  Add support for a "sink" mode, so we do only reads with no
    writes.  Right now, you can use /dev/null.

3.  Add support for automatic queue depth probing, so that we can
    figure out the right queue depth on the input and output side
    for maximum throughput.  At the moment it defaults to 6.

4.  Add support for SATA device passthrough I/O.

5.  Add support for random LBAs and/or lengths on the input and
    output sides.

6.  Track average per-I/O latency and busy time.  The busy time
    and latency could also feed in to the automatic queue depth
    determination.

sys/cam/scsi/scsi_pass.h:
	Define two new ioctls, CAMIOQUEUE and CAMIOGET, that queue
	and fetch asynchronous CAM CCBs respectively.

	Although these ioctls do not have a declared argument, they
	both take a union ccb pointer.  If we declare a size here,
	the ioctl code in sys/kern/sys_generic.c will malloc and free
	a buffer for either the CCB or the CCB pointer (depending on
	how it is declared).  Since we have to keep a copy of the
	CCB (which is fairly large) anyway, having the ioctl malloc
	and free a CCB for each call is wasteful.

sys/cam/scsi/scsi_pass.c:
	Add asynchronous CCB support.

	Add two new ioctls, CAMIOQUEUE and CAMIOGET.

	CAMIOQUEUE adds a CCB to the incoming queue.  The CCB is
	executed immediately (and moved to the active queue) if it
	is an immediate CCB, but otherwise it will be executed
	in passstart() when a CCB is available from the transport layer.

	When CCBs are completed (because they are immediate or
	passdone() if they are queued), they are put on the done
	queue.

	If we get the final close on the device before all pending
	I/O is complete, all active I/O is moved to the abandoned
	queue and we increment the peripheral reference count so
	that the peripheral driver instance doesn't go away before
	all pending I/O is done.

	The new passcreatezone() function is called on the first
	call to the CAMIOQUEUE ioctl on a given device to allocate
	the UMA zones for I/O requests and S/G list buffers.  This
	may be good to move off to a taskqueue at some point.
	The new passmemsetup() function allocates memory and
	scatter/gather lists to hold the user's data, and copies
	in any data that needs to be written.  For virtual pointers
	(CAM_DATA_VADDR), the kernel buffer is malloced from the
	new pass(4) driver malloc bucket.  For virtual
	scatter/gather lists (CAM_DATA_SG), buffers are allocated
	from a new per-pass(9) UMA zone in MAXPHYS-sized chunks.
	Physical pointers are passed in unchanged.  We have support
	for up to 16 scatter/gather segments (for the user and
	kernel S/G lists) in the default struct pass_io_req, so
	requests with longer S/G lists require an extra kernel malloc.

	The new passcopysglist() function copies a user scatter/gather
	list to a kernel scatter/gather list.  The number of elements
	in each list may be different, but (obviously) the amount of data
	stored has to be identical.

	The new passmemdone() function copies data out for the
	CAM_DATA_VADDR and CAM_DATA_SG cases.

	The new passiocleanup() function restores data pointers in
	user CCBs and frees memory.

	Add new functions to support kqueue(2)/kevent(2):

	passreadfilt() tells kevent whether or not the done
	queue is empty.

	passkqfilter() adds a knote to our list.

	passreadfiltdetach() removes a knote from our list.

	Add a new function, passpoll(), for poll(2)/select(2)
	to use.

	Add devstat(9) support for the queued CCB path.

sys/cam/ata/ata_da.c:
	Add support for the BIO_VLIST bio type.

sys/cam/cam_ccb.h:
	Add a new enumeration for the xflags field in the CCB header.
	(This doesn't change the CCB header, just adds an enumeration to
	use.)

sys/cam/cam_xpt.c:
	Add a new function, xpt_setup_ccb_flags(), that allows specifying
	CCB flags.

sys/cam/cam_xpt.h:
	Add a prototype for xpt_setup_ccb_flags().

sys/cam/scsi/scsi_da.c:
	Add support for BIO_VLIST.

sys/dev/md/md.c:
	Add BIO_VLIST support to md(4).

sys/geom/geom_disk.c:
	Add BIO_VLIST support to the GEOM disk class.  Re-factor the I/O size
	limiting code in g_disk_start() a bit.

sys/kern/subr_bus_dma.c:
	Change _bus_dmamap_load_vlist() to take a starting offset and
	length.

	Add a new function, _bus_dmamap_load_pages(), that will load a list
	of physical pages starting at an offset.

	Update _bus_dmamap_load_bio() to allow loading BIO_VLIST bios.
	Allow unmapped I/O to start at an offset.

sys/kern/subr_uio.c:
	Add two new functions, physcopyin_vlist() and physcopyout_vlist().

sys/pc98/include/bus.h:
	Guard kernel-only parts of the pc98 machine/bus.h header with
	#ifdef _KERNEL.

	This allows userland programs to include <machine/bus.h> to get the
	definition of bus_addr_t and bus_size_t.

sys/sys/bio.h:
	Add a new bio flag, BIO_VLIST.

sys/sys/uio.h:
	Add prototypes for physcopyin_vlist() and physcopyout_vlist().

share/man/man4/pass.4:
	Document the CAMIOQUEUE and CAMIOGET ioctls.

usr.sbin/Makefile:
	Add camdd.

usr.sbin/camdd/Makefile:
	Add a makefile for camdd(8).

usr.sbin/camdd/camdd.8:
	Man page for camdd(8).

usr.sbin/camdd/camdd.c:
	The new camdd(8) utility.

Sponsored by:	Spectra Logic
MFC after:	1 week
2015-12-03 20:54:55 +00:00
araujo
ba54012c27 Connect ypldap(8) to the build.
Approved by:	bapt (mentor)
2015-11-24 02:27:59 +00:00
bdrewery
3211f5ec16 Convert to SUBDIR.yes format.
Reviewed by:	imp
Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4182
2015-11-18 17:52:38 +00:00
bdrewery
889c33ba79 Rename usr.sbin/mtree to usr.sbin/fmtree since it is not what /usr/sbin/mtree
actually is (which is usr.sbin/nmtree).

This has tricked me numerous times.
2015-11-09 23:19:36 +00:00
bapt
51c57514a7 Connect mpsutil(8) to the build
Sponsored by:	Gandi.net
2015-10-28 12:31:29 +00:00
bdrewery
2079a2c894 Revert r288268. Wrong change committed. 2015-09-26 14:27:21 +00:00
bdrewery
e0518d17d1 Hookup mkcsmapper_static and mkesdb_static for all but install.
These are only handled as 'build-tools' in Makefile.inc1.  This causes
'make clean' from the top of the tree to not clean the directories.  It also
effectively has kept them disconnected and risks them bitrotting.  The
buildworld process never cleans them either.

Connect them so they will always be built, cleaned, etc, but never installed.

Discussed with:	imp (briefly)
Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon Storage Division
2015-09-26 14:26:08 +00:00
bapt
eaf711e5bd Add a new sesutil(8) utility
This is an utility for managing SCSI Enclosure Services (SES) device.

For now only one command is supported "locate" which will change the test of the
external LED associated to a given disk.

Usage if the following:
sesutil locate disk [on|off]

Disk can be a device name: "da12" or a special keyword: "all".

Reviewed by:	mav
MFC after:	1 month
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	gandi.net
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3544
2015-09-05 00:06:01 +00:00
rstone
6a58272d00 Add main() for iovctl and hook iovctl into build
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D87
Reviewed by:		jhb
MFC after: 		1 month
Sponsored by:		Sandvine Inc.
2015-03-01 00:52:41 +00:00
rstone
766473f660 Revert r279454. The new directory didn't get added to svn properly.
Pointy hat to: rstone
2015-03-01 00:44:15 +00:00
rstone
20680bc877 Add main() for iovctl and hook iovctl into build
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D87
Reviewed by:		jhb
MFC after: 		1 month
Sponsored by:		Sandvine Inc.
2015-03-01 00:41:17 +00:00
trasz
7e48e69660 Add uefisign(8), UEFI Secure Boot signing utility.
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2015-02-26 09:15:24 +00:00
glebius
39824ae151 Now that IGMP and MLD sysctls provide a clean API structures that do not
leak kernel internal stuff, reconnect ifmcstat(1) back to build.  However,
disable kvm(3) support in it, since it requires uncovering tons of _KERNEL
defined declarations, which can be achieved either uncovering them globally
or providing dirty hacks such as _WANT_IFADDR.  If anyone demands an
ifmcstat-like kvm-based tool, please take the code out of usr.sbin/ifmstat
and create a tool in src/tools/tools.
2015-02-19 22:42:33 +00:00
ngie
0e84909e40 Unbreak freshly installed worlds by properly "commenting" out ifmcstat
Pointyhat to: glebius
2015-02-19 11:17:36 +00:00
glebius
cf7d64c8cf Temporarily disconnect ifmcstat(8) from build, to make world buildable
ifmcstat(8) noses in kernel memory too much, and thus is very tentative
to any changes in kernel.

I will rewrite it to use some API instead of libkvm(3) and connect back
to build.
2015-02-19 06:27:14 +00:00
jhb
571edab7e4 Add a new device control utility for new-bus devices called devctl. This
allows the user to request administrative changes to individual devices
such as attach or detaching drivers or disabling and re-enabling devices.
- Add a new /dev/devctl2 character device which uses ioctls for device
  requests.  The ioctls use a common 'struct devreq' which is somewhat
  similar to 'struct ifreq'.
- The ioctls identify the device to operate on via a string.  This
  string can either by the device's name, or it can be a bus-specific
  address.  (For unattached devices, a bus address is the only way to
  locate a device.)  Bus drivers register an eventhandler to claim
  unrecognized device names that the driver recognizes as a valid address.
  Two buses currently support addresses: ACPI recognizes any device
  in the ACPI namespace via its full path starting with "\" and
  the PCI bus driver recognizes an address specification of
  'pci[<domain>:]<bus>:<slot>:<func>' (identical to the PCI selector
  strings supported by pciconf).
- To make it easier to cut and paste, change the PnP location string
  in the PCI bus driver to output a full PCI selector string rather
  than 'slot=<slot> function=<func>'.
- Add a devctl(3) interface in libdevctl which provides a wrapper around
  the ioctls and is the preferred interface for other userland code.
- Add a devctl(8) program which is a simple wrapper around the requests
  supported by devctl(3).
- Add a device_is_suspended() function to check DF_SUSPENDED.
- Add a resource_unset_value() function that can be used to remove a
  hint from the kernel environment.  This is used to clear a
  hint.<driver>.<unit>.disabled hint when re-enabling a boot-time
  disabled device.

Reviewed by:	imp (parts)
Requested by:	imp (changing PCI location string)
Relnotes:	yes
2015-02-06 16:09:01 +00:00
ngie
06520f16dd Add the following options to enable/disable several features in the base system
WITHOUT_BOOTPARAMD - bootparamd
WITHOUT_BOOTPD - bootpd
WITHOUT_FINGER - finger, fingerd
WITHOUT_FTP - ftp, ftpd
WITHOUT_INETD - inetd
WITHOUT_RBOOTD - rbootd
WITHOUT_TCP_WRAPPERS - tcpd, et al
WITHOUT_TFTP - tftp, tftp-server
WITHOUT_TIMED - timed

MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
2015-02-04 10:19:32 +00:00
ngie
66090fa9a3 Add MK_AUTOFS knob for building and installing autofs(4), et al
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
2015-01-26 07:15:49 +00:00
ngie
b7d970adae Add MK_BSDINSTALL knob for building and installing bsdinstall
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
2015-01-25 04:43:13 +00:00
ngie
29002c447a Add MK_ISCSI knob for building the iscsi initiator, iscsi daemon, kernel
modules, etc

MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
2015-01-25 04:20:11 +00:00
rrs
8bf38c1934 Update the hwpmc driver to have the new type HASWELL_XEON. Also
go back through HASWELL, IVY_BRIDGE, IVY_BRIDGE_XEON and SANDY_BRIDGE
to straighten out all the missing PMCs. We also add a new pmc tool
pmcstudy, this allows one to run the various formulas from
the documents "Using Intel Vtune Amplifier XE on XXX Generation platforms" for
IB/SB and Haswell. The tool also allows one to postulate your own
formulas with any of the various PMC's. At some point I will enahance
this to work with Brendan Gregg's flame-graphs so we can flamegraph
various PMC interactions. Note the manual page also needs some
work (lots of work) but gnn has committed to help me with that ;-)
Reviewed by: gnn
MFC after:1 month
Sponsored by:	Netflix Inc.
2015-01-14 12:46:58 +00:00
des
4cebeff30c Add a vigr(8) utility which does for /etc/group what vipw(8) does for
/etc/master.passwd.
2014-12-14 16:40:46 +00:00
trasz
3e3c248f83 Add fstyp(8). This utility, named after its SVR4 counterpart, detects
filesystems.  It differs from file(1) in that it gives machine-parseable
output, it outputs filesystem labels, doesn't get confused by other
formats metadata, and runs in Capsicum sandbox.

Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1255
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2014-12-10 14:14:16 +00:00
melifaro
b5d711d3a6 Renove faith(4) and faithd(8) from base. It looks like industry
have chosen different (and more traditional) stateless/statuful
NAT64 as translation mechanism. Last non-trivial commits to both
faith(4) and faithd(8) happened more than 12 years ago, so I assume
it is time to drop RFC3142 in FreeBSD.

No objections from:	net@
2014-11-09 21:33:01 +00:00
asomers
aebc4f8d52 Conditionalize build of etcupdate(8) on MK_RCS. Since etcupdate calls
merge(1), which is part of the RCS package, it must not be installed if
WITHOUT_RCS update is set. Otherwise, it will produce confusing errors.

CR:		https://reviews.freebsd.org/D691
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Spectra Logic
2014-09-10 19:00:17 +00:00
trasz
cac9beab7d Bring in the new automounter, similar to what's provided in most other
UNIX systems, eg. MacOS X and Solaris.  It uses Sun-compatible map format,
has proper kernel support, and LDAP integration.

There are still a few outstanding problems; they will be fixed shortly.

Reviewed by:	allanjude@, emaste@, kib@, wblock@ (earlier versions)
Phabric:	D523
MFC after:	2 weeks
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2014-08-17 09:44:42 +00:00
imp
2118f42afd Use src.opts.mk in preference to bsd.own.mk except where we need stuff
from the latter.
2014-05-06 04:22:01 +00:00
sbruno
168c6df708 Add Stacey Son's binary activation patches that allow remapping of
execution to a emumation program via parsing of ELF header information.

With this kernel module and userland tool, poudriere is able to build
ports packages via the QEMU userland tools (or another emulator program)
in a different architecture chroot, e.g. TARGET=mips TARGET_ARCH=mips

I'm not connecting this to GENERIC for obvious reasons, but this should
allow the kernel module to be built by default and enable the building
of the userland tool (which automatically loads the kernel module).

Submitted by:	sson@
Reviewed by:	jhb@
2014-04-08 20:10:22 +00:00
dim
905ed8bc75 Add a SUBDIR_PARALLEL option to bsd.subdir.mk, to allow make to process
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
2014-03-26 22:30:38 +00:00
jmmv
b2e51e38a8 Migrate tools/regression/{usr.bin/lastcomm,usr.sbin}/ to the new tests layout.
This change was originally going to only migrate the usr.sbin tests but, as
it turns out, the usr.sbin/sa/ tests require files from usr.bin/lastcomm/
so it's better to just also migrate the latter at the same time.  The other
usr.bin tests will be moved separately.

To make these tests work within the test suite, some of them have required
changes to prevent modifying the source directory and instead just rely on
the current directory for file manipulation.
2014-03-16 04:09:22 +00:00
glebius
d494babace Remove IPX support.
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.
2014-03-14 02:58:48 +00:00
brooks
1c3cc9d2e5 Merge from CheriBSD:
commit 2d581e8caf79d7a0f5a24590eccd06da90cccb74
Author: Brooks Davis <brooks@one-eyed-alien.net>
Date:   Mon Jan 27 22:57:51 2014 +0000

    Add WITHOUT_FMTREE to disable building fmtree.

MFC after:	4 weeks
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
2014-01-30 21:37:43 +00:00
bapt
4d11df94bd After around 20 years of duty it is time for pkg_install to retire 2013-10-31 13:00:35 +00:00
brooks
f918613d2a Remove the isf(4) driver. It was created by accident and is subset of
the cfi(4) driver.  It remained in the tree longer than would be ideal
due to the time required to bring cfi(4) to feature parity.

Sponsored by:	DARPA/AFRL
MFC after:	3 days
2013-10-21 22:43:38 +00:00
des
aa2e4b623c Remove BIND.
Approved by:	re (gjb)
2013-09-30 17:23:45 +00:00
des
ea05e625ec Build and install the Unbound caching DNS resolver daemon.
Approved by:	re (blanket)
2013-09-15 14:51:23 +00:00
trasz
a992abf041 Bring in the new iSCSI target and initiator.
Reviewed by:	ken (parts)
Approved by:	re (delphij)
Sponsored by:	FreeBSD Foundation
2013-09-14 15:29:06 +00:00
erwin
6a288ef517 Update Bind to 9.9.3-P2
Notable new features:

*  Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm keys and signatures in
   DNSSEC are now supported per RFC 6605. [RT #21918]

*  Introduces a new tool "dnssec-verify" that validates a signed zone,
   checking for the correctness of signatures and NSEC/NSEC3 chains.
   [RT #23673]

*  BIND now recognizes the TLSA resource record type, created to
   support IETF DANE (DNS-based Authentication of Named Entities)
   [RT #28989]

*  The new "inline-signing" option, in combination with the
   "auto-dnssec" option that was introduced in BIND 9.7, allows
   named to sign zones completely transparently.

Approved by:	delphij (mentor)
MFC after:	3 days
Sponsored by:	DK Hostmaster A/S
2013-08-22 08:15:03 +00:00
dteske
f7464e7e04 Take the training-wheels off, after nearly 30 months of development. MFC to
stable/9 planned after MFC 3-day period. The MFC to stable/9 is desired for
the next release to get some much-needed time:
+ Living side-by-side with sysinstall for compare/contrast/transition
+ Living side-by-side with bsdinstall for integration/transition
+ Additional feedback/testing before eventual 10.0-R to make it even better

MFC after:	3 days
2013-07-06 04:13:47 +00:00
mav
923243633a Remove usr.sbin/burncd, useless after legacy ATA stack removal. 2013-04-04 09:21:24 +00:00
brooks
5221267b06 manctl is conditionally added to SUBDIRS later on. Don't unconditionally
include in the main list.
2013-01-23 23:51:44 +00:00
eadler
b42e95f726 Add option to make pc-sysinstall optional
Approved by:	cperciva
2013-01-18 15:57:09 +00:00
brooks
c93a4f7a86 Add NetBSD's mtree to the tree and install it as nmtree as the first step
towards replacing our mtree.

Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Thanks to:	cristos@NetBSD for reviewing and committing my patches
		wiz@NetBSD for fixing typos in my patches
2012-12-21 21:00:00 +00:00
rwatson
991e942bf2 Merge a number of changes required to hook up OpenBSM 1.2-alpha2's
auditdistd (distributed audit daemon) to the build:

- Manual cross references
- Makefile for auditdistd
- rc.d script, rc.conf entrie
- New group and user for auditdistd; associated aliases, etc.

The audit trail distribution daemon provides reliable,
cryptographically protected (and sandboxed) delivery of audit tails
from live clients to audit server hosts in order to both allow
centralised analysis, and improve resilience in the event of client
compromises: clients are not permitted to change trail contents
after submission.

Submitted by:	pjd
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation (auditdistd)
2012-12-01 15:11:46 +00:00