function checks that the mutex lock is owned.
This fixes 'devctl disable re0' operation.
Sponsored by: Innovate DSbD
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26904
PCPU_GET(curpmap) expands to multiple instructions on arm64, and if the
current thread is migrated in between execution of those instructions, a
stale value may be used in the assertion condition.
Diagnosed by: mmel
Reported by: mmel, Bob Prohaska <fbsd@www.zefox.net>
Submitted by: alc
MFC after: 1 week
- remove setting of register value which is not used until the next value is
set
- Use the L2_SHIFT constant when setting up L2 superpages
Submitted by: Antonin Houska <ah AT melesmeles DOT cz>
Instead, leave the fomat as unspecified (if it hasn't been) and use the
-p flag as a hint to 'context' if no other formatting option is specified.
This fixes `diff -purw`, used frequently by emaste, and matches the behavior
of its GNU counterpart.
PR: 250015
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Literal references to /usr/local exist in a large number of files in
the FreeBSD base system. Many are in contributed software, in configuration
files, or in the documentation, but 19 uses have been identified in C
source files or headers outside the contrib and sys/contrib directories.
This commit makes it possible to set _PATH_LOCALBASE in paths.h to use
a different prefix for locally installed software.
In order to avoid changes to openssh source files, LOCALBASE is passed to
the build via Makefiles under src/secure. While _PATH_LOCALBASE could have
been used here, there is precedent in the construction of the path used to
a xauth program which depends on the LOCALBASE value passed on the compiler
command line to select a non-default directory.
This could be changed in a later commit to make the openssh build
consistently use _PATH_LOCALBASE. It is considered out-of-scope for this
commit.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26942
- Sort flags
- Stylize incr|+ and decr|- properly
- Add a missing period at the end of the description
- Use the standard layout for the EXAMPLES section (remove the list macro
and add indentation to the code block)
It turns out that without /dev/null beinstall is not able to complete and
instead exits with messages similar to these:
--------------------------------------------------------------
>>> Installing kernel GENERIC completed on Sun Oct 25 17:47:37 CET 2020
--------------------------------------------------------------
/tmp/beinstall.JleGoP/mnt: Inspecting dirs /usr/src /usr/obj/usr/src/amd64.amd64
--- installworld ---
make[1]: "/usr/obj/usr/src/amd64.amd64/toolchain-metadata.mk" line 1: Using cached toolchain metadata from build at t480 on Sun Oct 25 15:53:28 CET 2020
make[2]: "/dev/null" line 2: Need an operator
make[2]: Fatal errors encountered -- cannot continuemake[1]: "/usr/src/Makefile.inc1" line 593: CPUTYPE global should be set with ?=.
Cleaning up ...
umount -f /tmp/beinstall.JleGoP/mnt/usr/src /tmp/beinstall.JleGoP/mnt/usr/obj/usr/src/amd64.amd64 /tmp/beinstall.JleGoP/mnt
Destroyed successfully
error: Installworld failed!
Upon a bit of debugging, it turns out that /dev/null inside the chroot
environment is full random bytes, which cause "make -f /dev/null" to
misbehave. Mounting a proper devfs inside the chroot seems to be the most
appropriate way to fix it.
will@ also noted that this change requires that whatever is needed in devfs
must exist in the old kernel.
Approved by: will
MFC after: 2 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26944
Nothing implements this in the tree. Remove the ioctl and the
conversion to the geom atttribute stuff.
This was introduced in r94287 in 2002 and was retired in r113390
2003. It appeared in FreeBSD 5.0, but no other releases. This is a
vestige that was missed at the time and overlooked until now. No
compat is provided for this reason. And there's no implementation of
it today. And it was never part of a release from a stable branch.
Reviewed by: phk@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26967
Version 0.2 of the SBI specification [1] marked the existing SBI
functions as "legacy" in order to move to a newer calling convention. It
also introduced a set of replacement extensions for some of the legacy
functionality. In particular, the TIME, IPI, and RFENCE extensions
implement and extend the semantics of their legacy counterparts, while
conforming to the newer version of the spec.
Update our SBI code to use the new replacement extensions when
available, and fall back to the legacy ones. These will eventually be
dropped, when support for version 0.2 is ubiquitous.
[1] https://github.com/riscv/riscv-sbi-doc/blob/master/riscv-sbi.adoc
Submitted by: Danjel Q. <danq1222@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: kp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26953
S-mode software has write access to the SIP.SSIP bit, so instead of
making a second round-trip through the SBI we can clear it ourselves.
The SBI spec has deprecated this function for this exactly this reason.
Submitted by: Danjel Q. <danq1222@gmail.com
Reviewed by: kp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26952
__FreeBSD__ is defined by the compiler derived from the triple. When
building FreeBSD 11 on a FreeBSD 12 with a CROSS_TOOLCHAIN=llvm10,
__FreeBSD__ was set to 12 when building lib32 (for some reason no triple
is being passed which seems to mean that we're taking default values
from the build system). This in turn meant we end up with a double
decleration of union semun which is a build error.
Reviewed by: gshapiro, dim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26902
Linux execve() gets audited as AUE_EXECVE as well, we should also interpret
the return from this correctly for the same reasoning as in r367002.
MFC with: r367002
The kernel will never map the first page, so any symbols in that
range cannot refer to addresses. Some third-party assembly files
define internal constants which appear in their symbol table.
Avoiding the lookup for those symbols avoids replacing small offsets
with those symbols during disassembly.
Reported by: Anton Rang <rang%acm.org>
Reviewed by: Anton Rang <rang%acm.org>, markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26895
Without the 'car limit' enabled (before this), running sequential ZFS scrub
on HDD without command queuing support, I've measured latency on concurrent
random reads reaching 4 seconds (surprised that not more). Enabling this
reduced the latency to 65 milliseconds, while scrub still doing ~180MB/s.
For disks with command queuing this does not make much difference (if any),
since most time all the requests are queued down to the disk or HBA, leaving
nothing in the queue to sort. And even if something does not fit, staying on
the queue, it is likely not for long. To not limit sorting in such bursty
scenarios I've added batched counter zeroing when the queue is getting empty.
The internal scheduler of the SAS HDD I was testing seems to be even more
loyal to random I/O, reducing the scrub speed to ~120MB/s. So in case
somebody worried this is limit is too strict -- it actually looks relaxed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Move all the data files for the calendar(1) program, except
calendar.freebsd to the calendar-data package. When a file
can't be found, and /usr/local/share/calendar doesn't exist
provide a helpful hint to install this package.
Reviewed by: se@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26926
in the Pass 5 checks. The manifestation was fsck_ffs exiting with this error:
** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
fsck_ffs: inoinfo: inumber 18446744071562087424 out of range
The error only manifests itself for filesystems bigger than about 100Tb.
Reported by: Nikita Grechikhin <ngrechikhin at yandex.ru>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix
SAM-3 specification introduced concept of Task Priority, that was renamed
to Command Priority in SAM-4, and supported by all modern SCSI transports.
It provides 15 levels of relative priorities: 1 - highest, 15 - lowest and
0 - default. SAT specification for SATA devices translates priorities 1-3
into NCQ high priority.
This change adds new "priority" field into empty spots of struct ccb_scsiio
and struct ccb_accept_tio of CAM and struct ctl_scsiio of CTL. Respective
support is added into iscsi(4), isp(4), mpr(4), mps(4) and ocs_fc(4) drivers
for both initiator and where applicable target roles. Minimal support was
added to CTL to receive the priority value from different frontends, pass it
between HA controllers and report in few places.
This patch does not add consumers of this functionality, so nothing should
really change yet, since the field is still set to 0 (default) on initiator
and not actively used on target. Those are to be implemented separately.
I've confirmed priority working on WD Red SATA disks connected via mpr(4)
and properly transferred to CTL target via iscsi(4), isp(4) and ocs_fc(4).
While there, added missing tag_action support to ocs_fc(4) initiator role.
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Describe "diff installed new" as "Displaying differences between
installed and new." Previously mergemaster described them in the
opposite order.
PR: 249214
Reported by: Yuri Victorovich
MFC after: 2 weeks
ocs_scsi_recv_cmd() receives the flags after ocs_get_flags_fcp_cmd(),
which translates them from FCP_TASK_ATTR_* to OCS_SCSI_CMD_*. As result
non-SIMPLE requests turned into HEAD or ORDERED depending on direction.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Correct misuse of commas/parentheses in an enumeration that makes the
number of actual parameters more important than expected.
PR: 250526
Submitted by: Samy Mahmoudi <samy.mahmoudi__gmail_com>
MFC after: 1 week
and fsirand(8)) should check the filesystem status and require that
fsck(8) be run if it is unclean. This requirement is not imposed on
fsdb(8) or clri(8) since they may be used to clean up a filesystem.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix
over various major releases. Superblock check hashes were added for
the 12 release and cylinder-group and inode check hashes will appear
in the 13 release.
When a disk with a UFS filesystem is writably mounted, the kernel
clears the feature flags for anything that it does not support. For
example, if a UFS disk from a 12-stable kernel is mounted on an
11-stable system, the 11-stable kernel will clear the flag in the
filesystem superblock that indicates that superblock check-hashs
are being maintained. Thus if the disk is later moved back to a
12-stable system, the 12-stable system will know to ignore its
incorrect check-hash.
If the only filesystem modification done on the earlier kernel is
to run a utility such as growfs(8) that modifies the superblock but
neither updates the check-hash nor clears the feature flag indicating
that it does not support the check-hash, the disk will fail to mount
if it is moved back to its original newer kernel.
This patch moves the code that clears the filesystem feature flags
from the mount code (ffs_mountfs()) to the code that reads the
superblock (ffs_sbget()). As ffs_sbget() is used by the kernel mount
code and is imported into libufs(3), all the filesystem utilities
will now also clear these flags when they make modifications to the
filesystem.
As suggested by John Baldwin, fsck_ffs(8) has been changed to accept
and repair bad superblock check-hashes rather than refusing to run.
This change allows fsck to recover filesystems that have been impacted
by utilities older than those created after this change and is a
sensible thing to do in any event.
Reported by: John Baldwin (jhb@)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix
The age of the intel compiler support is so old as to be
uninteresting. No recent recports of intel compiler support have been
received. Remove all the special case workarounds for the Intel
compiler. Should there be interest in supporting the compiler, contact
me and I'll work with people to make it happen, though I suspect these
instances are more likely to be in the way than to be helpful.
Reviewed by: cem, emaste, vangyzen, dim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26817
We no longer support building the kernel with the old intel
compiler. Remove support for it from in_cksum. Should there be
interest in reviving it, this is as likely to get in the way as to
help anyway.
The intel compiler support has badly decayed over the years. Stop
pretending that we support it. Note, I've stopped short of requiring
gcc builtin support with this commit since other compilers may be used
to build non-base software and we need to support those so more
investigation is needed before simplifying further.
We don't support building the kernel from such old compilers, nor with
the Intel Compiler specifically. Remove support for this old construct
that was copied from stdbool.h and not relevant here.
We no longer support old versions of GCC. Remove this check by
assuming it's false. That will make the entire expression false. Also
remove support for Intel compiler, it's badly bitrotted. Technically,
this removes support for C89 and K&R from compilers that don't define
_Bool in those compilation environments as well. I'm unaware of any
working compiler today for which that would be relevant (pcc has it
and tcc sadly isn't working for other reasons), though if one
pops up in ports, I'll work to resolve the issue.
rpcbind is now considered a security risk for some sites.
Since an NFSv4 only NFS server does not need rpcbind,
it makes sense to have an option that implements this.
This patch adds a "-R" option that disables the Mount
protocol (not used by NFSv4) and does not register
with rpcbind.
Changes are required to /etc/rc.d/mountd and /etc/rc.d/nfsd.
Those will be in a separate commit.
Reviewed by: freqlabs, asomers
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26746
Mak the Ethernet PCP codepoint configurable
for L2 local traffic, to allow lower latency for
iSCSI block IO. This addresses the target
side only.
Reviewed by: mav, trasz, bcr
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26740
Make the Ethernet PCP codepoint configurable
for L2 local traffic, to allow lower latency for
iSCSI block IO. This addresses the initiator
side only.
Reviewed by: mav, trasz, bcr
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26739
Before this GEOM passed bio pointer to transaction start, but not end.
It was irrelevant until devstat(9) got DTrace hooks, that appeared to
provide bio pointer on I/O completion, but not on submission.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.