r284708 addressed this slightly but seems to have put the make(showconfig)
guard in the wrong place. Rather than guard setting the default obj directory,
guard inclusion of auto.obj.mk. This avoids creating SRCTOP/obj and
SRCTOP/release/obj when running makeman.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This avoids easily colliding multiple src trees with the same objects. Having
multiple checkouts in dir/ dir2/ dir3/ would all use obj/ without any unique
identifier inside of obj/. This pattern is more likely to be used due
to the non-META_MODE behavior working with it fine.
In environments where ../obj/ is wanted as the obj directory the value of
OBJROOT can be set to ${SRCTOP:H}/obj/ instead via src-env.conf (set by
SRC_ENV_CONF) or environment. For environment it must be single quoted or
escaped. This will be more likely for vendors who are building images or using
NFS for builds. In those cases MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX may already be utilized and
is supported.
Discussed with: imp
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The preferred way to modify the object directory root is to use OBJROOT.
However, setting OBJROOT to ${MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX}/${SRCTOP}/ effectively behaves
as expected.
The problem with this before was that setting OBJROOT to contain SRCTOP
resulted in a recursive replacement (/usr/obj/usr/obj/usr/src/). Anchoring to
the start of the path for replacing SRCCTOP in CURDIR resolves this by
avoiding replacing SRCTOP when CURDIR is within the OBJDIR.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This would lead to the 2nd build (after the first with a missing OBJROOT) to
always rebuild everything as the 'command' would have changed due to the path
changing from having // to only /.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MAKEOBJDIR is based on OBJTOP so cannot be expanded until OBJTOP is set.
Reported by: Nikolai Lifanov <lifanov@mail.lifanov.com>
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
branch.
This function is used to drain a callout via a callback instead of
blocking the caller until the drain is complete. Refer to the
callout_drain_async() manual page for a detailed description.
Limitation: If a lock is used with the callout, the callout can only
be drained asynchronously one time unless the callout_init_mtx()
function is called again. This limitation is not present in
projects/hps_head and will require more invasive changes to the
timeout code, which was not in the scope of this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3521
Reviewed by: wblock
MFC after: 1 month
to provide the TCPDEBUG functionality with pure DTrace.
Reviewed by: rwatson
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: D3530
If MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX is set, use it for default OBJROOT.
If MAKEOBJDIR is empty or not a suitable value (no '/')
set a default that works.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Coredump notes depend on being able to invoke dump routines twice; once
in a dry-run mode to get the size of the note, and another to actually
emit the note to the corefile.
When a note helper emits a different length section the second time
around than the length it requested the first time, the kernel produces
a corrupt coredump.
NT_PROCSTAT_FILES output length, when packing kinfo structs, is tied to
the length of filenames corresponding to vnodes in the process' fd table
via vn_fullpath. As vnodes may move around during dump, this is racy.
So:
- Detect badly behaved notes in putnote() and pad underfilled notes.
- Add a fail point, debug.fail_point.fill_kinfo_vnode__random_path to
exercise the NT_PROCSTAT_FILES corruption. It simply picks random
lengths to expand or truncate paths to in fo_fill_kinfo_vnode().
- Add a sysctl, kern.coredump_pack_fileinfo, to allow users to
disable kinfo packing for PROCSTAT_FILES notes. This should avoid
both FILES note corruption and truncation, even if filenames change,
at the cost of about 1 kiB in padding bloat per open fd. Document
the new sysctl in core.5.
- Fix note_procstat_files to self-limit in the 2nd pass. Since
sometimes this will result in a short write, pad up to our advertised
size. This addresses note corruption, at the risk of sometimes
truncating the last several fd info entries.
- Fix NT_PROCSTAT_FILES consumers libutil and libprocstat to grok the
zero padding.
With suggestions from: bjk, jhb, kib, wblock
Approved by: markj (mentor)
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3548
go asking what debug flags to set for GEOM to make it work. Advice
them to use gpart(8) instead.
Something similar should probably done with disklabel,
but I need to rewrite the disklabel examples first.
Reviewed by: wblock@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3315
Go ahead and defined -D_STANDALONE for all targets (only strictly
needed for some architecture, but harmless on those it isn't required
for). Also add -msoft-float to all architectures uniformly rather
that higgley piggley like it is today.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3496
only gpiobus configured via FDT is supported. Bus enumeration is
supported. Devices are created for each device found. 1-Wire
temperature controllers are supported, but other drivers could be
written. Temperatures are polled and reported via a sysctl. Errors
are reported via sysctl counters. Mis-wired bus detection is included
for more trouble shooting. See ow(4), owc(4) and ow_temp(4) for
details of what's supported and known issues.
This has been tested on Raspberry Pi-B, Pi2 and Beagle Bone Black
with up to 7 devices.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2956
Relnotes: yes
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: loos@ (with many insightful comments)
The crop/drop-ovl fragment scrub modes are not very useful and likely to confuse
users into making poor choices.
It's also a fairly large amount of complex code, so just remove the support
altogether.
Users who have 'scrub fragment crop|drop-ovl' in their pf configuration will be
implicitly converted to 'scrub fragment reassemble'.
Reviewed by: gnn, eri
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3466
To make it easier to understand how Capsicum interacts with linkat() and
renameat(), rename the rights to CAP_{LINK,RENAME}AT_{SOURCE,TARGET}.
This also addresses a shortcoming in Capsicum, where it isn't possible
to disable linking to files stored in a directory. Creating hardlinks
essentially makes it possible to access files with additional rights.
Reviewed by: rwatson, wblock
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3411
remove duplicates. We cannot sort SUBDIR because many Makefiles
have .WAIT in the list which is strongly ordering. Rather than
try to second guess when to sort and when to not sort depending
on .WAIT being in the list, just remove duplicates.
armv6. It's too ambiguous. We do use the softfp ABI for the moment on
armv6, but we allow floating point register use (and the compilers
will generate it). This is too ambiguous to use it as a decider for
which algorithms to use on the platform. Err on the side of caution
and not define it.
Submitted by: ian@
Reviewed by: andrew@