For scripts using dialog(1) several times, it can be visually distracting
running dpv(1) several times amidst other dialogs. The `-k' option, similar
to dialog(1) `--keep-tite', enables the same functionality to smooth ti/te.
A new sysdecode_syscallname() function accepts a system call code and
returns a string of the corresponding name (or NULL if the code is
unknown). To support different process ABIs, the new function accepts a
value from a new sysdecode_abi enum as its first argument to select the
ABI in use. Current ABIs supported include FREEBSD (native binaries),
FREEBSD32, LINUX, LINUX32, and CLOUDABI64. Note that not all ABIs are
supported by all platforms. In general, a given ABI is only supported
if a platform can execute binaries for that ABI.
To simplify the implementation, libsysdecode's build reuses the
existing pre-generated files from the kernel source tree rather than
duplicating new copies of said files during the build.
kdump(1) and truss(1) now use these functions to map system call
identifiers to names. For kdump(1), a new 'syscallname()' function
consolidates duplicated code from ktrsyscall() and ktrsyscallret().
The Linux ABI no longer requires custom handling for ktrsyscall() and
linux_ktrsyscall() has been removed as a result.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4823
STT_SPARC_REGISTER is a SPARC-specific symbol type specified by the
Sparcv9 ABI to provide some information on register use by the object.
Also rework st_info type lookup to avoid out-of-bounds array access.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Ensure the special cases trigger whether we come via a referral
or via the -c option. Match host names case-insensitively.
Use the default character set supported by .de (UTF-8) since that
is more compatible with the modern world than ISO 8859-1. Persuade
them to give us a useful answer whether an internationalized
domain name is given in UTF-8 or in punycode.
The IANA whois server has the right referral information for domain
names, IP addresses, and AS numbers, so whois does not need to be
able to choose servers itself (except for a few cases where referrals
do not work). We can delete a chunk of code, which is always fun.
This change improves the referral handling to be less sensitive to
all the various formats, and to allow multi-hop referral chains,
such as IANA -> registry -> registrar.
ARIN queries have the "+" flag added if no flags are present, so we
get full details if the query matches multiple objects. The Verisign
anti-spam logic is also now suppressed if the user provided a non-
trivial query string.
Uninformative rubric is now trimmed by default. The -S option
turns off trimming, and disables query fettling.
The -i option is back to its traditional pre-1999 hostname, since
whois.internic.net is more useful than whois.networksolutions.com.
Note that the old fallback/default server whois.crsnic.net is an
alias for whois.internic.net.
The manual is more informative about query syntax.
Look up AS numbers at ARIN.
Handle more referral formats.
Suppress spammy nameserver objects when querying the .com and .net
whois servers by explicitly querying for domain names by default.
The bad_truncate test sets the uimmutable flag to produce an error in
truncate, but that flag isn't supported by ZFS. If /tmp is on a ZFS
filesystem, the test will fail. Change it to use readonly permissions and
an unpriveleged user instead.
Reviewed by: jilles
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4862
linking. These are too large for a branch instruction to branch from an
earlier point in the code to somewhere later.
This will also allow these to be build with Thumb-2 when we get this
infrastructure.
Reviewed by: dim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4855
numactl was only modifying its own CPU affinity, which is fine
when creating a new process, but not very helpful when modifying
an existing processes.
Reviewed by: adrian
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4927
up to now.
The new sendfile is the code that Netflix uses to send their multiple tens
of gigabits of data per second. The new implementation features asynchronous
I/O, when I/O operations are launched, but not awaited to be complete. An
explanation of why such behavior is beneficial compared to old one is
going to be too long for a commit message, so we will skip it here.
Additional features of new syscall are extra flags, which provide an
application more control over data sent. The SF_NOCACHE flag tells
kernel that data shouldn't be cached after it was sent. The SF_READAHEAD()
macro allows to specify readahead size in pages.
The new syscalls is a drop in replacement. No modifications are required
to applications. One can take nginx binary for stable/10 and run it
successfully on head. Although SF_NODISKIO lost its original sense, as now
sendfile doesn't block, and now means something completely different (tm),
using the new sendfile the old way is absolutely safe.
Celebrates: Netflix global launch!
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Relnotes: yes
Similar fix was done for passwd and group operations in r285050. When a
temporary file is created and then renamed to replace official file there
are no checks to make sure data was written to disk and if a power cycle
happens at this time, system can end up with a 0 length file
Approved by: bapt
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Netgate
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2982
- Added an expression parser so that expressions from headers are now working
- Fixed missing null terminators on cross references
- Disabled exceptions / RTTI in the build for smaller binaries
- Changed phandle order generation to be identical to GPL'd dtc
This is rather pedantic, as for most architectures it holds that
sizeof(type *) == sizeof(type **)
Found by: clang static analyzer
Reviewed by: ed
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4722
sysdecode_ioctlname() function. This function matches the behavior
of the truss variant in that it returns a pointer to a string description
for known ioctls. The caller is responsible for displaying unknown
ioctl requests. For kdump this meant moving the logic to handle unknown
ioctl requests out of the generated function and into an ioctlname()
function in kdump.c instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4610
variable set rather than reading from kernel memory.
This also makes the -z (zero) flag work correctly
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4591
system call information such as system call arguments. Initially this
will consist of pulling duplicated code out of truss and kdump though it
may prove useful for other utilities in the future.
This commit moves the shared utrace(2) record parser out of kdump into
the library and updates kdump and truss to use it. One difference from
the previous version is that the library version treats unknown events
that start with the "RTLD" signature as unknown events. This simplifies
the interface and allows the consumer to decide how to handle all
non-recognized events. Instead, this function only generates a string
description for known malloc() and RTLD records.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4537
- Implement 4-digit year format listing (-y option)
- Improve detection of text files
- Use %ju for error_count as it is unsigned
Obtained from: NetBSD
Approved by: des
stop vmstat -i segfaulting
remove duplicate header from vmstat -i
do not pad the name of the interupt in encoded outputs
fix stray % and missing } in the header for vmstat -i
add outer container to vmstat -i
add missing xo_flush in vmstat -i (when run with an interval or delay)
add outer container to vmstat -m
do not pad the name of malloc areans
add outer container to vmstat -z
do not pad the name of memory zones
Reviewed by: rodrigc
Approved by: bapt (mentor)
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4263
This is not properly respecting WITHOUT or ARCH dependencies in target/.
Doing so requires a massive effort to rework targets/ to do so. A
better approach will be to either include the SUBDIR Makefiles directly
and map to DIRDEPS or just dynamically lookup the SUBDIR. These lose
the benefit of having a userland/lib, userland/libexec, etc, though and
results in a massive package. The current implementation of targets/ is
very unmaintainable.
Currently rescue/rescue and sys/modules are still not connected.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Unfortunately filemon/meta mode tracks all indirect dependencies here
since ld(1) is reading libelf when linking in libkvm. Churn would be
reduced if this was able to be limited to direct dependencies.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
are always in numeric form; don't try to resolve them by names. This
speeds up rule listing with large rulesets by about 50%.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This is so that 'make depend' is not a required build step in these
files.
DPSRCS is overall unneeded. DPSRCS already contains SRCS, so anything
which can safely be in SRCS should be. DPSRCS is mostly just a way to
generate files that should not be linked into the final PROG/LIB. For
headers and grammars it is safe for them to be in SRCS since they will
be excluded during linking and installation.
The only remaining uses of DPSRCS are for generating .c or .o files that
must be built before 'make depend' can run 'mkdep' on the SRCS c files
list. A semi-proper example is in tests/sys/kern/acct/Makefile where a
checked-in .c file has an #include on a generated .c file. The
generated .c file should not be linked into the final PROG though since
it is #include'd. The more proper way here is just to build/link it in
though without DPSRCS. Another example is in sys/modules/linux/Makefile
where a shell script runs to parse a DPSRCS .o file that should not be
linked into the module. Beyond those, the need for DPSRCS is largely
unneeded, redundant, and forces 'make depend' to be ran. Generally,
these Makefiles should avoid the need for DPSRCS and define proper
dependencies for their files as well.
An example of an improper usage and why this matters is in usr.bin/netstat.
nl_defs.h was only in DPSRCS and so was not generated during 'make all',
but only during 'make depend'. The files including it lacked proper
depenencies on it, which forced running 'make depend' to workaround that
bug. The 'make depend' target should mostly be used for incremental build
help, not to produce a working build. This specific example was broken in
the meta build until r287905 since it does not run 'make depend'.
The gnu/lib/libreadline/readline case is fine since bsd.lib.mk has 'OBJS:
SRCS:M*.h' when there is no .depend file.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after: 1 week
The main problem was bitrot after elftoolchain being swapped in for the
GNU toolchain.
This also reworks how the list of 'host allowed' libraries is determined
to only allow INTERNALLIBs, which is needed for libelftc to come in.
For usr.bin/readelf use the same hack, as libelf and libdward, to bring in
the needed sys/ headers for host builds. This has not yet been a problem due
to readelf not being built as a host tool in buildworld. This is possible
in the meta build though when building the toolchain.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Tracking these leads to situations where meta mode will consider the
file to be out of date if /bin/sh or /bin/ln are newer than the source
file. There's no reason for meta mode to do this as make is already
handling the rebuild dependency fine.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division