makeman doesn't handle this since it would need to enable all
non-default options when checking enabling 1 option, which
then convolutes what is really affecting each other.
Fix typo made when adding the blacklistd.conf file to OptionalObsoleteFiles.inc
Submitted by: Herbert J. Skuhra ( herbert at mailbox.org )
Reviewed by: rpaulo
Approved by: rpaulo
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6715
Install the blacklistd.conf man page, missed in the original commit.
Submitted by: Herbert J. Skuhra ( herbert at mailbox.org )
Reviewed by: rpaulo
Approved by: rpaulo
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6702
This will still build the compiler for the target but will not build the
bootstrap cross-compiler in the cross-tools phase. Other toolchain
bootstrapping, such as elftoolchan and binutils, currently still occurs.
This will utilize the default CC (cc, /usr/bin/cc) as an external compiler.
This is planned to be on-by-default eventually.
This will utilize the __FreeBSD_cc_version compiler macro defined in the
source tree and compare it to CC's version. If they match then the
cross-compiler is skipped. If [X]CC is an external compiler (absolute
path) or WITHOUT_CROSS_COMPILER is already set, then this logic is skipped.
If the expected bootstrap compiler type no longer matches the found CC
compiler type (clang vs gcc), then the logic is skipped. As an extra
safety check the version number is also compared from the compiler to
the tree version.
Clang:
The macro FREEBSD_CC_VERSION is defined in:
lib/clang/include/clang/Basic/Version.inc
For clang -target will be used if TARGET_ARCH != MACHINE_ARCH. This
is from the current external toolchain logic. There is currently an
assumption that the host compiler can build the TARGET_ARCH. This
will usually be the case since we don't conditionalize target arch
support in clang, but it will break when introducing new
architectures. This problem is mitigated by incrementing the version
when adding new architectures.
GCC:
The macro FBSD_CC_VER is defined in:
gnu/usr.bin/cc/cc_tools/freebsd-native.h
For GCC there is no simple -target support when TARGET_ARCH !=
MACHINE_ARCH. In this case the opportunistic skip is not done. If we
add proper support for this case in external toolchain logic then it
will be fine to enable.
This relies on the macros being incremented whenever any change occurs
to these compilers that warrant rebuilding files. It also should never
repeat earlier values.
Reviewed by: brooks, bapt, imp
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6357
`BEFORE: netif` was already in etc/rc.d/atm1, so no additional changes
are needed in that script
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
In case ELF Tool Chain's elfcopy introduces any regressions this knob is
available as a transition aid. It will be removed once we are confident
that any regressions have been fixed.
Tools removed from the list are now provided by the ELF Tool Chain
project and are not controlled by the WITHOUT_BINUTILS_BOOTSTRAP knob.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This is needed to be able to run check-links.sh against a "sysrooted"
binary while ensuring that the ldd(1) call done on the host uses the
host libc. It is not possible to set LD_LIBRARY_PATH before calling
check-links.sh as then the "sysrooted" libc would be incorrectly used.
A LD_PRELOAD=libc.so is used to ldd(1) as it needs to use the host libc
to run. ldd(1) is a simple wrapper around execve(2) and dlopen(2) with
env LD_TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS set. Due to the dlopen(2) restriction on
shared library tracing ldd(1) is still required for this lookup.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
It is built in libgcc_s.so and libgcc_eh.a to simplify transition.
It is enabled by default on arm64 (where we previously had no other
unwinder) and may be enabled for testing on other platforms by setting
WITH_LLVM_LIBUNWIND in src.conf(5).
Also add compiler-rt's __gcc_personality_v0 implementation for use with
the LLVM unwinder.
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4787
bugfix-only release, with no new features.
Please note that from 3.5.0 onwards, clang and llvm require C++11
support to build; see UPDATING for more information.
It may only be used with WITH_AUTO_OBJ, which the WITH_DIRDEPS_BUILD does. We
could support this in the normal build as well if we forced creating the directory
and setting .OBJDIR.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This allows META_FILES option to be renamed META_MODE.
Also add META_COOKIE_TOUCH for use in targets that can benefit
from a cookie when in meta mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4153
Reviewed by: bdrewery
- Move all section 5 bluetooth manpages under MK_BLUETOOTH != no
MFC after: 3 days
PR: 193260
Reported by: Philippe Michel <philippe.michel7@sfr.fr>
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
ccache is mostly beneficial for frequent builds where -DNO_CLEAN is not
used to achieve a safe pseudo-incremental build. This is explained in
more detail upstream [1] [2]. It incurs about a 20%-28% hit to populate the
cache, but with a full cache saves 30-50% in build times. When combined with
the WITH_FAST_DEPEND feature it saves up to 65% since ccache does cache the
resulting dependency file, which it does not do when using mkdep(1)/'CC
-E'. Stats are provided at the end of this message.
This removes the need to modify /etc/make.conf with the CC:= and CXX:=
lines which conflicted with external compiler support [3] (causing the
bootstrap compiler to not be built which lead to obscure failures [4]),
incorrectly invoked ccache in various stages, required CCACHE_CPP2 to avoid
Clang errors with parenthesis, and did not work with META_MODE.
The option name was picked to match the existing option in ports. This
feature is available for both in-src and out-of-src builds that use
/usr/share/mk.
Linking, assembly compiles, and pre-processing avoid using ccache since it is
only overhead. ccache does nothing special in these modes, although there is
no harm in calling it for them.
CCACHE_COMPILERCHECK is set to 'content' when using the in-tree bootstrap
compiler to hash the content of the compiler binary to determine if it
should be a cache miss. For external compilers the 'mtime' option is used
as it is more efficient and likely to be correct. Future work may optimize the
'content' check using the same checks as whether a bootstrap compiler is needed
to be built.
The CCACHE_CPP2 pessimization is currently default in our devel/ccache
port due to Clang requiring it. Clang's -Wparentheses-equality,
-Wtautological-compare, and -Wself-assign warnings do not mix well with
compiling already-pre-processed code that may have expanded macros that
trigger the warnings. GCC has so far not had this issue so it is allowed to
disable the CCACHE_CPP2 default in our port.
Sharing a cache between multiple checkouts, or systems, is explained in
the ccache manual. Sharing a cache over NFS would likely not be worth
it, but syncing cache directories between systems may be useful for an
organization. There is also a memcached backend available [5]. Due to using
an object directory outside of the source directory though you will need to
ensure that both are in the same prefix and all users use the same layout. A
possible working layout is as follows:
Source: /some/prefix/src1
Source: /some/prefix/src2
Source: /some/prefix/src3
Objdir: /some/prefix/obj
Environment: CCACHE_BASEDIR='${SRCTOP:H}' MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX='${SRCTOP:H}/obj'
This will use src*/../obj as the MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX and tells ccache to replace
all absolute paths to be relative. Using something like this is required due
to -I and -o flags containing both SRC and OBJDIR absolute paths that ccache
adds into its hash for the object without CCACHE_BASEDIR.
distcc can be hooked into by setting CCACHE_PREFIX=/usr/local/bin/distcc.
I have not personally tested this and assume it will not mix well with
using the bootstrap compiler.
The cache from buildworld can be reused in a subdir by first running
'make buildenv' (from r290424).
Note that the cache is currently different depending on whether -j is
used or not due to ccache enabling -fdiagnostics-color automatically if
stderr is a TTY, which bmake only does if not using -j.
The system I used for testing was:
WITNESS
Build options: -j20 WITH_LLDB=yes WITH_DEBUG_FILES=yes WITH_CCACHE_BUILD=yes
DISK: ZFS 3-way mirror with very slow disks using SSD l2arc/log.
The arc was fully populated with src tree files and ccache objects.
RAM: 76GiB
CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU L5520 @2.27GHz
2 package(s) x 4 core(s) x 2 SMT threads = hw.ncpu=16
The WITH_FAST_DEPEND feature was used for comparison here as well to show
the dramatic time savings with a full cache.
buildworld:
x buildworld-before
+ buildworld-ccache-empty
* buildworld-ccache-full
% buildworld-ccache-full-fastdep
# buildworld-fastdep
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|% * # +|
|% * # +|
|% * # xxx +|
| |A |
| A|
| A |
|A |
| A |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
N Min Max Median Avg Stddev
x 3 3744.13 3794.31 3752.25 3763.5633 26.935139
+ 3 4519 4525.04 4520.73 4521.59 3.1104823
Difference at 95.0% confidence
758.027 +/- 43.4565
20.1412% +/- 1.15466%
(Student's t, pooled s = 19.1726)
* 3 1823.08 1827.2 1825.62 1825.3 2.0785572
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-1938.26 +/- 43.298
-51.5007% +/- 1.15045%
(Student's t, pooled s = 19.1026)
% 3 1266.96 1279.37 1270.47 1272.2667 6.3971113
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-2491.3 +/- 44.3704
-66.1952% +/- 1.17895%
(Student's t, pooled s = 19.5758)
# 3 3153.34 3155.16 3154.2 3154.2333 0.91045776
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-609.33 +/- 43.1943
-16.1902% +/- 1.1477%
(Student's t, pooled s = 19.0569)
buildkernel:
x buildkernel-before
+ buildkernel-ccache-empty
* buildkernel-ccache-empty-fastdep
% buildkernel-ccache-full
# buildkernel-ccache-full-fastdep
@ buildkernel-fastdep
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|# @ % * |
|# @ % * x + |
|# @ % * xx ++|
| MA |
| MA|
| A |
| A |
|A |
| A |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
N Min Max Median Avg Stddev
x 3 571.57 573.94 571.79 572.43333 1.3094401
+ 3 727.97 731.91 728.06 729.31333 2.2492295
Difference at 95.0% confidence
156.88 +/- 4.17129
27.4058% +/- 0.728695%
(Student's t, pooled s = 1.84034)
* 3 527.1 528.29 528.08 527.82333 0.63516402
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-44.61 +/- 2.33254
-7.79305% +/- 0.407478%
(Student's t, pooled s = 1.02909)
% 3 400.4 401.05 400.62 400.69 0.3306055
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-171.743 +/- 2.16453
-30.0023% +/- 0.378128%
(Student's t, pooled s = 0.954969)
# 3 201.94 203.34 202.28 202.52 0.73020545
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-369.913 +/- 2.40293
-64.6212% +/- 0.419774%
(Student's t, pooled s = 1.06015)
@ 3 369.12 370.57 369.3 369.66333 0.79033748
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-202.77 +/- 2.45131
-35.4225% +/- 0.428227%
(Student's t, pooled s = 1.0815)
[1] https://ccache.samba.org/performance.html
[2] http://www.mail-archive.com/ccache@lists.samba.org/msg00576.html
[3] https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3484
[5] https://github.com/jrosdahl/ccache/pull/30
PR: 182944 [4]
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Relnotes: yes
This speeds up buildworld by 16% on my system and buildkernel by 35%.
Rather than calling mkdep(1), which is just a wrapper around 'cc -E',
use the modern -MD -MT -MF flags to gather and generate dependencies during
compilation. This flag was introduced in GCC "a long time ago", in GCC 3.0,
and is also supported by Clang. (It appears that ICC also supports this but I
do not have access to test it). This avoids running the preprocessor *twice*
for every build, in both 'make depend' and 'make all'. This is especially
noticeable when using ccache since it does not cache preprocessor results from
mkdep(1) / 'cc -E', but still speeds up compilation with the -MD flags.
For 'make depend' a tree-walk is still done to ensure that all DPSRCS
are generated when expected, and that beforedepend/afterdepend and
_EXTRADEPEND are all still respected. In time this may change but for now
I've been conservative. The time for a tree-walk with -j combined with
SUBDIR_PARALLEL is not significant. For example, it takes about 9 seconds
with -j15 to walk all of src/ for 'make depend' now on my system.
A .depend file is still generated with the various rules that apply to
the final target, or custom rules. Otherwise there are now
per-built-object-file .depend files, such as .depend.filename.o. These
are included directly by make rather than populating .depend with a loop
and .depend lines, which only added overhead to the now almost-NOP 'make
depend' phase.
Before this I experimented with having mkdep(1) called in parallel per-file.
While this improved the kernel and lib/libc 'make depend' phase, it resulted
in slower build times overall.
The -M flags are removed from CFLAGS when linking since they have no effect.
Enabling this by default, for src or out-of-src, can be done once more testing
has been done, such as a ports exp-run, and with more compilers.
The system I used for testing was:
WITNESS
Build options: -j20 WITH_LLDB=yes WITH_DEBUG_FILES=yes WITH_FAST_DEPEND=yes
DISK: ZFS 3-way mirror with very slow disks using SSD l2arc/log.
The arc was fully populated with src tree files.
RAM: 76GiB
CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU L5520 @2.27GHz
2 package(s) x 4 core(s) x 2 SMT threads = hw.ncpu=16
buildworld:
x buildworld-before
+ buildworld-fastdep
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|+ |
|+ |
|+ xx x|
| |_MA___||
|A |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
N Min Max Median Avg Stddev
x 3 3744.13 3794.31 3752.25 3763.5633 26.935139
+ 3 3153.34 3155.16 3154.2 3154.2333 0.91045776
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-609.33 +/- 43.1943
-16.1902% +/- 1.1477%
(Student's t, pooled s = 19.0569)
buildkernel:
x buildkernel-before
+ buildkernel-fastdep
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|+ x |
|++ xx|
| A||
|A| |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
N Min Max Median Avg Stddev
x 3 571.57 573.94 571.79 572.43333 1.3094401
+ 3 369.12 370.57 369.3 369.66333 0.79033748
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-202.77 +/- 2.45131
-35.4225% +/- 0.428227%
(Student's t, pooled s = 1.0815)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after: 3 weeks
Relnotes: yes
The command was checking local/remote system uptime, so rename the script to
match its function and to avoid confusion
The controlling variable in /etc/periodic.conf has been renamed from
daily_status_rwho_enable to daily_status_uptime_enable.
MFC after: 3 days
Reported by: Peter Jeremy <peter@rulingia.com>
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MK_USB != no
Add the manpages to OptionalObsoleteFiles.inc
As a side-effect, this also fixes installworld with MK_USB == no
X-MFC with: r290128
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Extend OptionalObsoleteFiles.inc to delete all lib32 files when MK_LIB32 is
set to no on a system that previously had lib32 libraries installed.
Also, to prevent "make delete-old-dirs" from always deleting lib32 directories
after an installworld, move the lib32 subtree to its own mtree file that only
gets applied when MK_LIB32=yes.
Test: Ran "make delete-old" and "make delete-old-libs" on a system that never
had MK_LIB32 enabled, and on a system where MK_LIB32 was enabled and later
disabled. Did this both on amd64 and powerpc64.
Test: Ran "make tinderbox" without errors.
Reviewed by: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3923
Also note that these env-only vars can be specified on the command line.
This fixes the dependent options that are env-only (such as WITH_META_MODE
and WITH_AUTO_OBJ) to properly display their dependencies.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The option was added only to ease the transition from GNU Binutils to
ELF Tool Chain tools, and that process is now complete (for the viable
replacements). Noting the removal in UPDATING is sufficient as we have
not shipped a release with the option.
Reviewed by: brooks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3240
ELF Tool Chain elfcopy is nearly a drop-in replacement for GNU objcopy,
but does not currently support PE output which is needed for building
x86 UEFI bits.
Add a src.conf knob to allow installing it as objcopy and set it by
default for aarch64 only, where we don't have a native binutils.
Reviewed by: bapt
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2887
Rationale: ident(1) is useful out of RCS, lot of scripts are using ident(1) and
failing when base is built WITHOUT_RCS.
This version is:
- fully compatible with RCS 5.7 ident.
- fully compatible with RCS 5.9 ident.
- passes all ident test from GNU RCS 5.9 test suite
This version has support for: svn extension for the Keyword id (double colon and
# before last $)
Différences with GNU RCS ident:
- no long options as found in GNU RCS 5.9 (but not commented there).
- '-V' reports nothing but has been added for compatibility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3200
Reviewed by: pfg
because for no mailwrapper case we have:
/usr/sbin/sendmail -> /usr/sbin/mailwrapper
/usr/sbin/mailwrapper -> /usr/libexec/sendmail/sendmail
Add comment explaining it.
It is required for other tools in base and/or ports like dma(8) or any MTA
available in ports. It is also build and installed anyway even if world is built
WITHOUT_SENDMAIL
Off by default, build behaves normally.
WITH_META_MODE we get auto objdir creation, the ability to
start build from anywhere in the tree.
Still need to add real targets under targets/ to build packages.
Differential Revision: D2796
Reviewed by: brooks imp
This change among other things improve search capabilities over the manpages
allowing fine grain query.
A new build option WITHOUT_MANDOCDB has been added to keep the ancient version
of the database and the tools. The plan is to entirely remove this option before
11.0-RELEASE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2603
Clang uses compiler-rt for the code coverage runtime, and ports GCC
provides its own libgcov.
PR: 200203 (exp-run)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
previous releases.
Also add a stdlib.h wrapper, which declares the function, otherwise the
compiler may assume it returns int, which can cause segfaults on LP64
architectures.
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2558
Clang's OpenMP support will emit Intel OpenMP API library calls,
and will therefore require libiomp (or whatever name is settled on).
An up-to-date version of libgomp is included in ports or pkg GCC.
Thus, there is no reason to build base libgomp without base system GCC.
PR: 199979 (exp-run)
Reviewed by: pfg
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2459
- Optional components go in OptionalObsoleteFiles
- Move gperf removal to be based on MK_GCC only, not MK_CXX and MK_GCC
Reviewed by: imp, sbruno
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2421
linked libraries. Only do this for BSS symbols that have a size which avoids
__bss_start. Without this some libraries would be considered unneeded even
though they were providing a B symbol.
- Add in the symbols from crt1.o to cover a handful of common unresolved symbols.
- Consider (C) common data symbols as provided by libraries/crt1.
- Move libkey() function to more appropriate place.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Ran against /usr/local/sbin/pkg:
Before: 25.12 real 12.41 user 33.14 sys
After: 0.53 real 0.49 user 0.13 sys
- Exit with 1 if any missing or unresolved symbol is detected.
- Add option '-U' to skip looking up unresolved symbols.
- Don't consider provided weak objects as unresolved (nm V).
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
pwrite(2) syscalls are wrapped to provide compatibility with pre-7.x
kernels which required padding before the off_t parameter. The
fcntl(2) contains compatibility code to handle kernels before the
struct flock was changed during the 8.x CURRENT development. The
shims were reasonable to allow easier revert to the older kernel at
that time.
Now, two or three major releases later, shims do not serve any
purpose. Such old kernels cannot handle current libc, so revert the
compatibility code.
Make padded syscalls support conditional under the COMPAT6 config
option. For COMPAT32, the syscalls were under COMPAT6 already.
Remove WITHOUT_SYSCALL_COMPAT build option, which only purpose was to
(partially) disable the removed shims.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp (previous versions)
Discussed with: peter
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
- Fix not finding global symbols by checking for D and R.
- Follow symlinks
- Show which matching symbol was used to consider the library needed.
Discussed with: bapt
utilities.
I was originally planning on removing the phase-of-moon (pom), clock
(grdc), and caesar cipher (caesar, rot13) utilities as well, but after
I committed r278616 I received an astonishing volume of email informing
me that those are still being widely used. Much to my relief, nobody
reported continuing to use the punch card utilities in production.
The final step will be to merge src/games into src/usr.bin.
This change will not be MFCed.
update paths; and include everything in the "base" distribution.
The "games" distribution being optional made sense when there were more
games and we had small disks; but the "games-like" games were moved into
the ports tree a dozen years ago and the remaining "utility-like" games
occupy less than 0.001% of my laptop's small hard drive. Meanwhile every
new user is confronted by the question "do you want games installed" when
they they try to install FreeBSD.
The next steps will be:
2. Removing punch card (bcd, ppt), phase-of-moon (pom), clock (grdc), and
caesar cipher (caesar, rot13) utilities. I intend to keep fortune, factor,
morse, number, primes, and random, since there is evidence that those are
still being used.
3. Merging src/games into src/usr.bin.
This change will not be MFCed.
Reviewed by: jmg
Discussed at: EuroBSDCon
Approved by: gjb (release-affecting changes)
contains the libraries for Address Sanitizer (asan), Undefined Behavior
Sanitizer (ubsan) and Profile Guided Optimization.
ASan is a fast memory error detector. It can detect the following types
of bugs:
Out-of-bounds accesses to heap, stack and globals
Use-after-free
Use-after-return (to some extent)
Double-free, invalid free
Memory leaks (experimental)
Typical slowdown introduced by AddressSanitizer is 2x.
UBSan is a fast and compatible undefined behavior checker. It enables a
number of undefined behavior checks that have small runtime cost and no
impact on address space layout or ABI.
PLEASE NOTE: the sanitizers still have some rough edges on FreeBSD,
particularly on i386. These will hopefully be smoothed out in the
coming time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1505
These tools are now from the ELF Tool Chain project:
* addr2line
* elfcopy (strip)
* nm
* size
* strings
The binutils versions are available by setting in src.conf:
WITHOUT_ELFTOOLCHAIN_TOOLS=yes
Thanks to antoine@ for multiple exp-runs and diagnosing many of the
failures.
PR: 195561 (ports exp-run)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
To be able to info pages consider installing texinfo from ports print/texinfo or
via pkg: pkg install texinfo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1409
Reviewed by: emaste, imp (previous version)
Relnotes: yes
The work in r258233 hardcoded the assumption that tests was the last component
of the tests tree by pushing tests as an explicit prefix for the paths in
BSD.tests.dist and /usr was the prefix for all tests, per BSD.usr.dist and all
of the mtree calls used in Makefile.inc1. This assumption breaks if/when one
provides a custom TESTSBASE "prefix", e.g. TESTSBASE=/mytests .
One thing that r258233 did properly though was remove "/usr/tests" creation
from BSD.usr.dist -- that should have not been there in the first place. That
was an "oops" on my part for the work that was originally committed in r241823
MFC after: 2 weeks
Phabric: D1301
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division