Fix for pr24346: arm asm label calculation error in sub
Some ARM instructions encode 32-bit immediates as a 8-bit integer
(0-255) and a 4-bit rotation (0-30, even) in its least significant 12
bits. The original fixup, FK_Data_4, patches the instruction by the
value bit-to-bit, regardless of the encoding. For example, assuming
the label L1 and L2 are 0x0 and 0x104 respectively, the following
instruction:
add r0, r0, #(L2 - L1) ; expects 0x104, i.e., 260
would be assembled to the following, which adds 1 to r0, instead of
260:
e2800104 add r0, r0, #4, 2 ; equivalently 1
The new fixup kind fixup_arm_mod_imm takes care of the encoding:
e2800f41 add r0, r0, #260
Patch by Ting-Yuan Huang!
This fixes label calculation for ARM assembly, and is needed to enable
ARM assembly sources for OpenSSL.
Requested by: jkim
MFC after: 3 days
- Avoid double use of "request" in a single sentence. Instead, describe
aio_sigevent as being used to request notification of the associated
operation's completion. This matches the language used to describe
aio_sigevent in aio(4).
- Simplify the prohibition on modifying buffers while requests are in
flight.
- Fix case mismatch.
- Drop note about not using stack variables. C programmers should be able
to figure out if a stack variable is safe based on the later warning
about the life cycle requirements of control blocks.
- Remove prohibition on modifying the I/O buffer for aio_fsync() since
it does not use an I/O buffer. For aio_mlock(), prohibit modifications
to the mapping (e.g. due to mprotect, munmap, mmap, etc.) but do not
prohibit modifications to the memory backing the buffer (stores into
the pages backing the buffer).
Requested by: wblock (1,2), kib (4)
Reviewed by: kib, rpokala, wblock
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7462
[X86] AMD Bobcat CPU (btver1) doesn't support XSAVE
btver1 is a SSSE3/SSE4a only CPU - it doesn't have AVX and doesn't
support XSAVE.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17682
Pull in r262782 from upstream llvm trunk (by Simon Pilgrim):
[X86] AMD Bobcat CPU (btver1) doesn't support XSAVE
btver1 is a SSSE3/SSE4a only CPU - it doesn't have AVX and doesn't
support XSAVE.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17683
This ensures clang does not emit AVX instructions for CPUTYPE=btver1.
Reported by: Michel Depeige <demik+freebsd@lostwave.net>
PR: 211864
MFC after: 3 days
Right now, userspace (fast) gettimeofday(2) on x86 only works for
RDTSC. For older machines, like Core2, where RDTSC is not C2/C3
invariant, and which fall to HPET hardware, this means that the call
has both the penalty of the syscall and of the uncached hw behind the
QPI or PCIe connection to the sought bridge. Nothing can me done
against the access latency, but the syscall overhead can be removed.
System already provides mappable /dev/hpetX devices, which gives
straight access to the HPET registers page.
Add yet another algorithm to the x86 'vdso' timehands. Libc is updated
to handle both RDTSC and HPET. For HPET, the index of the hpet device
to mmap is passed from kernel to userspace, index might be changed and
libc invalidates its mapping as needed.
Remove cpu_fill_vdso_timehands() KPI, instead require that
timecounters which can be used from userspace, to provide
tc_fill_vdso_timehands{,32}() methods. Merge i386 and amd64
libc/<arch>/sys/__vdso_gettc.c into one source file in the new
libc/x86/sys location. __vdso_gettc() internal interface is changed
to move timecounter algorithm detection into the MD code.
Measurements show that RDTSC even with the syscall overhead is faster
than userspace HPET access. But still, userspace HPET is three-four
times faster than syscall HPET on several Core2 and SandyBridge
machines.
Tested by: Howard Su <howard0su@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 month
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7473
The syscall is a trivial wrapper around new VOP_FDATASYNC(), sharing
code with fsync(2). For all filesystems, this commit provides the
implementation which delegates the work of VOP_FDATASYNC() to
VOP_FSYNC(). This is functionally correct but not efficient.
This is not yet POSIX-compliant implementation, because it does not
ensure that queued AIO requests are completed before returning.
Reviewed by: mckusick
Discussed with: avg (ZFS), jhb (AIO part)
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7471
Later gcc and clang have deprecated =v (which maps to a specific temp
register) and instead we should just use =r to have the assembler
(hopefully!) save/restore things appropriately after choosing
a register.
Tested:
* AR9344 SoC, with userreg support
* AR9331 SoC, with no userreg support
Sponsored by: Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL (MIPS TLS user register work)
Sync libarchive with vendor including three security fixes
Vendor issues fixed:
Issue #744: Very long pathnames evade symlink checks
Issue #748: libarchive can compress, but cannot decompress zip some files
PR #750: ustar: fix out of bounds read on empty string ("") filename
PR #755: fix use of acl_get_flagset_np() on FreeBSD
MFC after: 3 days
Depending on the address family and ai_flags containing AI_V4MAPPED,
it might not do a proper DNS lookup on the provided DNS address
Convert some `ai` boolean true/false checks to NULL/non-NULL while here.
MFC after: 1 week
PR: 211790
Reported by: Herbie.Robinson@stratus.com
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
On particular slow networks, it can (on average) take longer to
resolve hosts to IP* addresses. 20 minutes seemed reasonable for
my work network
This will be solved in a more meaningful way (if possible) using
concurrency in the near future
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- Some of the lib/libc and lib/thr tests fail
- lib/msun/exp_test:exp2_values now passes with clang 3.8.0
The Makefiles in contrib/netbsd-tests were pruned as they have no value
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Suppose that ktrace is performed on 32bit binary running on 64bit
host. In this case, the kernel records are 64bit, while utrace
records from rtld and malloc are 32bit. Make kdump useful to see
decoded utrace data in that case.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Now that we've updated the prototypes of the basename(3) and dirname(3)
functions to conform to POSIX, let's go ahead and reimplement dirname(3)
in such a way that it's thread-safe, but also guaranteed to succeed. C
libraries like glibc, musl and the one that's part of Solaris already
follow such an approach.
Move the existing implementation to another source file,
freebsd11_dirname.c to keep existing users of the API that pass in a
constant string happy, using symbol versioning.
Put a new version of the function in dirname.c, obtained from CloudABI's
C library. This version scans through the pathname string from left to
right, normalizing it, while discarding the last pathname component.
Reviewed by: emaste, jilles
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7355
glibc has a pretty nice function called crypt_r(3), which is nothing
more than crypt(3), but thread-safe. It accomplishes this by introducing
a 'struct crypt_data' structure that contains a buffer that is large
enough to hold the resulting string.
Let's go ahead and also add this function. It would be a shame if a
useful function like this wouldn't be usable in multithreaded apps.
Refactor crypt.c and all of the backends to no longer declare static
arrays, but write their output in a provided buffer.
There is no need to do any buffer length computation here, as we'll just
need to ensure that 'struct crypt_data' is large enough, which it is.
_PASSWORD_LEN is defined to 128 bytes, but in this case I'm picking 256,
as this is going to be part of the actual ABI.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7306
Uses of commas instead of a semicolons can easily go undetected. The comma
can serve as a statement separator but this shouldn't be abused when
statements are meant to be standalone.
Detected with devel/coccinelle following a hint from DragonFlyBSD.
MFC after: 1 month
Uses of commas instead of a semicolons can easily go undetected. The comma
can serve as a statement separator but this shouldn't be abused when
statements are meant to be standalone.
Detected with devel/coccinelle following a hint from DragonFlyBSD.
MFC after: 1 month
This work, originally from Stacey Son, uses the MIPS UserReg for
reading the TLS data, and will fall back to the normal syscall path
when it isn't supported.
This code dynamically patches cpu_switch() to bypass the UserReg
instruction so to avoid generating a machine exception.
Thanks to sson for the original work, and to Dan Nelson for
bringing it to date and testing it on MIPS32 with me.
Tested:
* mips64 (sson)
* mips74k (dnelson_1901@yahoo.com) - AR9344 SoC, UserReg support
* mips24k (adrian) - AR9331 SoC, no UserReg support
Obtained from: sson, dnelson_1901@yahoo.com
This is the backing feature to implement C++11 thread storage duration
specified by the thread_local keyword. A destructor for given
thread-local object is registered to be executed at the thread
termination time using __cxa_thread_atexit(). Libc calls the
__cxa_thread_calls_dtors() during exit(3), before finalizers and
atexit functions, and libthr calls the function at the thread
termination time, after the stack unwinding and thread-specific key
destruction.
There are several uncertainties in the API which lacks a formal
specification. Among them:
- is it allowed to register destructors during destructing;
we allow, but limiting the nesting level. If too many iterations
detected, a diagnostic is issued to stderr and thread forcibly
terminates for now.
- how to handle destructors which belong to an unloading dso;
for now, we ignore destructor calls for such entries, and
issue a diagnostic. Linux does prevent dso unload until all
threads with destructors from the dso terminated.
It is supposed that the diagnostics allow to detect real-world
applications relying on the above details and possibly adjust
our implementation. Right now the choices were to provide the slim
API (but that rarely stands the practice test).
Tests are added to check generic functionality and to specify some of
the above implementation choices.
Submitted by: Mahdi Mokhtari <mokhi64_gmail.com>
Reviewed by: theraven
Discussed with: dim (detection of -std=c++11 supoort for tests)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation (my involvement)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revisions: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7224,
https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7427
two sepatate functions to make glob(3) code less obscure and more simple.
There is no needs to make them inline since it is error path which supposed
to not happes often.
Our mprotect() function seems to take a "const void *" address to the
pages whose permissions need to be adjusted. POSIX uses "void *". Simply
stick to the POSIX one to prevent us from writing unportable code.
PR: 211423 (exp-run)
Tested by: antoine@ (Thanks!)
In the normal case and correct failure cases, the 'phdl' pointer is passed to
callers to use or clean up as needed. However, some failure cases returned
early, failing to export the phdl pointer.
This was introduced in the restructuring of r303533.
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1361070
Reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Just like with freelocale(3), I haven't been able to find any piece of
code that actually makes use of this function's return value, both in
base and in ports. The reason for this is that FreeBSD seems to be the
only operating system to have such a prototype. This is why I'm deciding
to not use symbol versioning for this.
It does seem that the pw(8) utility depends on the function's typing and
already had a switch in place to toggle between the FreeBSD and POSIX
variant of this function. Clean this up by always expecting the POSIX
variant.
There is also a single port that has a couple of local declarations of
setgrent(3) that need to be patched up. This is in the process of being
fixed.
PR: 211394 (exp-run)
to 0. Breaking this rule in 2001 NetBSD hack was imported which attempts
to workaround very limited glob() return codes amount. Use POSIX-compatible
workaround now with E2BIG which can't comes from other functions used
instead of prohibited 0.
This is used by libdtrace to determine the data model of target processes.
This allows for the creation of pid provider probes in 32-bit processes on
amd64.
MFC after: 1 month
Previously, librtld_db just hardcoded /libexec/ld-elf.so, which isn't
correct for processes that aren't using the native ABI. With this change,
librtld_db can be used to inspect non-native processes; in particular,
dtrace -c now works for 32-bit executables on amd64.
MFC after: 1 month
When adding getline(3) and dprintf(3) into libc, those guards were added
to prevent breaking too many ports.
7 years later the ports tree have been fixed, it is time to remove this
FreeBSDism
While here remove the extra parenthesis surrounding dprintf(3)
Our version of this function currently returns an integer indicating
failure or success, whereas POSIX specifies that this function has no
return value. It returns void. Patch up the header, sources and man page
to use the right type. While there, use the opportunity to simplify the
body of this function.
Theoretically speaking, this change breaks the ABI of this function.
That said, I have yet to find any code that makes use of freelocale()'s
return value. I couldn't find any of it in the base system, nor did an
exp-run reveal any breakage caused by this change.
PR: 211394 (exp-run)
Update the existing manual pages for basename(3) and dirname(3) to
mention that in future versions of FreeBSD, these functions will no
longer use internal buffers for storing the results.
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7356
POSIX allows these functions to be implemented in a way that the
resulting string is stored in the input buffer. Though some may find
this annoying, this has the advantage that it makes it possible to
implement this function in a thread-safe way. It also means that they
can be implemented in a way that they work for paths of arbitrary
length, as the output string of these functions is never longer than
max(1, len(input)).
Portable code already needs to be written with this in mind, so in my
opinion it makes very little sense to allow the existing behaviour.
Prevent the base system from falling back to this by switching over to
POSIX prototypes.
I'm not going to bump the __FreeBSD_version for this. The reason is that
it's possible to account for this change in a portable way, without
depending on a specific version of FreeBSD. An exp-run was done some
time ago. As far as I know, all regressions as a result of this have
already been fixed.
I'll give this change some time to settle. In the long run I want to
replace our copies by ones that are thread-safe and don't depend on
PATH_MAX/MAXPATHLEN.
It looks like the msgrcv() system call is already written in such a way
that the size is internally computed as a size_t and written into all of
td_retval[0]. This means that it is effectively already returning
ssize_t. It's just that the userspace prototype doesn't match up.
POSIX also declares NI_NUMERICSCOPE, which makes getnameinfo() return a
numerical scope identifier. The interesting thing is that support for
this is already present in code, but #ifdef disabled. Expose this
functionality by placing a definition for it in <netdb.h>.
While there, remove references to NI_WITHSCOPEID, as that got removed 11
years ago.
POSIX requires that these functions have an unsigned int for their first
argument; not an unsigned long.
My reasoning is that we can safely change these functions without
breaking the ABI. As far as I know, our supported architectures either
use registers for passing function arguments that are at least as big as
long (e.g., amd64), or int and long are of the same size (e.g., i386).
Reviewed by: ache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6644
case it fully constructed, but for half-constructed too, so have no
other choice to pass original pattern from glob() down to globextend()
instead of attempt to reconstruct I implement previously.
2) Instead of copy&paste the same big enough code, make function for it:
globfinal().
The asynchronous I/O changes made previously result in different
behavior out of the box. Previously all AIO requests failed with
ENOSYS / SIGSYS unless aio.ko was explicitly loaded. Now, some AIO
requests complete and others ("unsafe" requests) fail with EOPNOTSUPP.
Reword the introductory paragraph in aio(4) to add a general
description of AIO before describing the vfs.aio.enable_unsafe sysctl.
Remove the ENOSYS error description from aio_fsync(2), aio_read(2),
and aio_write(2) and replace it with a description of EOPNOTSUPP.
Remove the ENOSYS error description from aio_mlock(2).
Log a message to the system log the first time a process requests an
"unsafe" AIO request that fails with EOPNOTSUPP. This is modeled on
the log message used for processes using the legacy pty devices.
Reviewed by: kib (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7151
Old versions of gas produce an invalid section index. That is ignored by
old versions of ld, but prevents a link with lld.
Submitted by: Rafael Ávila de Espíndola (earlier version)
Reviewed by: allanjude
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6789
globexp1() recursive calls, but glob0() was not supposed to be called
repeatedly in the original code. It finalize results by possible adding
original pattern for no match case, may return GLOB_NOMATCH error and
by sorting all things. Original pattern adding or GLOB_NOMATCH error
can happens each time glob0() called repeatedly, and sorting happens
for one item only, all things are never sorted. Second, f.e. "a{a"
pattern does not match "a{a" file but match "a" file instead
(just one example, there are many). Third, some errors (f.e. for limits
or overflow) can be ignored by GLOB_BRACE code because it forces return (0).
Add non-finalizing flag to glob0() and make globexp0() wrapper around
recursively called globexp1() to finalize things like glob0() does.
Reorganize braces code to work correctly.
2) Don't allow MB_CUR_MAX * strlen overallocation hits GLOB_LIMIT_STRING
(ARG_MAX) limit, use final string length, not malloced space for it.
3) Revive DEBUG-ifdefed section.
unmodified, if no matches found. But our original code strips all '\'
returning it. Rewrite the code to allow to reconstruct exact the
original pattern with backslashes for this case.
2) Prevent to use truncated pattern if MAXPATHLEN exceeded, return
GLOB_NOMATCH instead.
3) Fix few end loop conditions filling Char arrays with mbrtowc(),
MB_CUR_MAX is unneeded in two places and condition is less by one
in other place.
4) Prevent to use truncated filenames match if MAXPATHLEN exceeded,
skip such directory entries.
5) Don't end *pathend with L'/' in glob3() if limit is reached, this
change will be not visible since error is returned.
6) If error happens in (*readdirfunc)(), do the same GLOB_ABORTED
processing as for g_opendir() as POSIX requires.
in any case and needed for further processing. For ~ expansion too.
2) Don't terminate *pathend with / when GLOB_LIMIT_STAT is reached, it will
be not visible outside in any case since error is returned.
3) Cosmetic: change if expression to better reflect its semantic.
since whole conversion needs a room for (len >= MB_CUR_MAX). It is no
difference when MB_CUR_MAX == 1, but for multi-byte locales last few chars
('\0' and before) may need just one byte, and the rest of MB_CUR_MAX - 1
space becomes unavailable in the MAXPATHLEN-sized buffer, which cause
conversion error on near MAXPATHLEN long pathes.
Increase g_Ctoc() conversion buffers to MB_LEN_MAX - 1.
as pattern meta chars.
2) GLOB_ERR and gl_errfunc are supposed to work only for real directories
per POSIX, so don't act on missing or plain files, for ENOENT or ENOTDIR
(as TODO in the code suggested).
3) Remove the hack in the manpage describing how to skip ENOENT and ENOTDIR
in gl_errfunc, it is unneeded now.
4) Set errno to ENAMETOOLONG if g_Ctoc() expansion fails in g_opendir(),
as in other places in the code which are wrappers around system functions.
open/read errors and with GLOB_ERR and gl_errfunc processing), so we can't
blindly return it on any MAXPATHLEN overflow. Even our manpage disagrees
with such GLOB_ABORTED usage. Use GLOB_NOSPACE for that now with errno is
set to 0 as for limits.
2) Return GLOB_NOSPACE when valid ~ expansion can't happens due to
MAXPATHLEN overflow too.
3) POSIX (and our manpage) says, if GLOB_ERR is set, GLOB_ABORTED should
be returned immediatelly, without using gl_errfunc. Implement it now.
First, PL_FLAG_FORKED events now also set a PL_FLAG_VFORKED flag when
the new child was created via vfork() rather than fork(). Second, a
new PL_FLAG_VFORK_DONE event can now be enabled via the PTRACE_VFORK
event mask. This new stop is reported after the vfork parent resumes
due to the child calling exit or exec. Debuggers can use this stop to
reinsert breakpoints in the vfork parent process before it resumes.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7045
Instead of using a hash table to convert physical page addresses to offsets
in the sparse page array, cache the number of bits set for each 4MB chunk of
physical pages. Upon lookup, find the nearest cached population count, then
add/subtract the number of bits from that point to the page's PTE bit.
Then multiply by page size and add to the sparse page map's base offset.
This replaces O(n) worst-case lookup with O(1) (plus a small number of bits
to scan in the bitmap). Also, for a 128GB system, a typical kernel core of
about 8GB will now only require ~4.5MB of RAM for this approach instead of
~48MB as with the hash table.
More concretely, /usr/sbin/crashinfo against the same core improves from a
max RSS of 188MB and wall time of 43.72s (33.25 user 2.94 sys) to 135MB and
9.43s (2.58 user 1.47 sys). Running "thread apply all bt" in kgdb has a
similar RSS improvement, and wall time drops from 4.44s to 1.93s.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: Backtrace I/O
them down. This hack still remains:
* 2. Illegal byte sequences in filenames are handled by treating them as
* single-byte characters with a values of such bytes of the sequence
* cast to wchar_t.
2) Reword the comment in the hack above to reflect implementation.
3) Protect signed wchar_t from sign extension when a signed char is assigned
to it in the hack above.
3) Corresponding backward hack in g_Ctoc() was not implemented, so all
pathes with illegal byte sequences are skipped as result, implement it now.
4) globtilde() forget to convert expanded user home dir from multibyte to
wchar.
5) Protect globtilde() from long expansion truncation.
6) Results was not sorted according to collate as POSIX requires.
when importing collation support from Dragonfly/Illumos amdmi3@ tested the
collation branch and reported an issue with Russian collation. John Marino fixed
the issue in Dragonfly and I merged it back to FreeBSD.
Now that Illumos is working on merging our fixes they (Lauri Tirkkonen) found
issues with the commit that fixes the russian collation in UTF-8 that resulted
in a crash with strxfrm(3) and the ISO-8859-5 locale (fixed in FreeBSD r302916).
This small test was written to ensure we do not bring back the old issue with
russian collation while fixing the other issue.
ptrace() now stores a mask of optional events in p_ptevents. Currently
this mask is a single integer, but it can be expanded into an array of
integers in the future.
Two new ptrace requests can be used to manipulate the event mask:
PT_GET_EVENT_MASK fetches the current event mask and PT_SET_EVENT_MASK
sets the current event mask.
The current set of events include:
- PTRACE_EXEC: trace calls to execve().
- PTRACE_SCE: trace system call entries.
- PTRACE_SCX: trace syscam call exits.
- PTRACE_FORK: trace forks and auto-attach to new child processes.
- PTRACE_LWP: trace LWP events.
The S_PT_SCX and S_PT_SCE events in the procfs p_stops flags have
been replaced by PTRACE_SCE and PTRACE_SCX. PTRACE_FORK replaces
P_FOLLOW_FORK and PTRACE_LWP replaces P2_LWP_EVENTS.
The PT_FOLLOW_FORK and PT_LWP_EVENTS ptrace requests remain for
compatibility but now simply toggle corresponding flags in the
event mask.
While here, document that PT_SYSCALL, PT_TO_SCE, and PT_TO_SCX both
modify the event mask and continue the traced process.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7044
- Add a sigevent(3) manpage to give a general overview of the sigevent
structure and the available notification mechanisms.
- Document that AIO requests contain a nested sigevent structure that can
be used to request completion notification.
- Expand the sigevent details in other manuals to note details such as
the extra values stored in a queued signal's information or in a posted
kevent.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7122
- Update aio_return/waitcomplete wrappers for the ssize_t return type.
- Fix the aio_return() wrapper to fail with EINVAL on a pending job.
This matches the semantics of the in-kernel system call. Also,
aio_return() returns errors via errno, not via the return value.
Reviewed by: kib (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7120
locale (which cause core dump) by removing whole 'table' argument
by which it passed.
2) Restore __collate_range_cmp() in __sccl().
3) Collating [a-z] range in regcomp() only for single bytes locales
(we can't do it now for other ones). In previous state only first 256
wchars are considered and all others are just silently dropped from the
range.
Instead of changing whole course to another POSIX-permitted way
for consistency and uniformity I decide to completely ignore missing
regex fucntionality and concentrace on fixing bugs in what we have now,
too many small obstacles instead, counting ports.
Only first 256 wide chars are considered currently, all other are just
dropped from the range. Proper implementation require reverse tables
database lookup, since objects are really big as max UTF-8 (1114112
code points), so just the same scanning as it was for 256 chars will
slow things down.
POSIX does not require collation for [a-z] type ranges and does not
prohibit it for non-POSIX locales. POSIX require collation for ranges
only for POSIX (or C) locale which is equal to ASCII and binary for
other chars, so we already have it.
No other *BSD implements collation for [a-z] type ranges.
Restore ABI compatibility with unused now __collate_range_cmp() which
is visible from outside (will be removed later).
Since r302216, thread suspension causes advisory file locks to restart
(instead of continuing to wait) and for a long time SA_RESTART has
affected advisory file locks. These are both not compliant to POSIX.1.
To clarify that restarting means something, add a paragraph about fair
queuing. Note that the network lock manager does not implement fair
queuing.
Reviewed by: kib (previous version)
Approved by: re (gjb)
r260553 added missing C++ typinfos to libcxxrt's version script.
It appears that a number of duplicate mangled symbols were added due to
a cut and paste error. Switch the second instances to _ZTS*,
typeinfo name for *.
Found by lld, which produces an error or warning for duplicate symbols.
Reviewed by: dim
Approved by: re (gjb)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7011
This fixes the build when DESTDIR may be blank or not yet populated.
It also fixes reproducibility.
Submitted by: brooks
Approved by: re (gjb)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6455
(WITH_SYSTEM_COMPILER: Enable by default) and it's prerequisite: r300354,
caused i386 builds to fail when cross-built on an amd64 host.
Reviewed by: bdrewery, delphij, gjb
Approved by: re (gjb)
the return value, in particular console-kit-daemon.
Reported by: Ivan Klymenko <fidaj@ukr.net>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Approved by: re (gjb)
adaptive mutex, return EDEADLK as required by POSIX. The
pthread_mutex_lock() is already compliant.
Tested by: Guy Yur <guyyur@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Approved by: re (gjb)
value.
This eliminates the need for machine dependant assembly wrappers for
pipe(2).
It also make passing an invalid address to pipe(2) return EFAULT rather
than triggering a segfault. Document this behavior (which was already
true for pipe2(2), but undocumented).
Reviewed by: andrew
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6815
libusb_hotplug_deregister_callback() for the LibUSB v1.0 API and
update the libusb(3) manual page.
Approved by: re (kib)
Requested by: swills
MFC after: 1 week
Update libarchive to 3.2.1 (bugfix and security fix release)
List of vendor fixes:
- fix exploitable heap overflow vulnerability in Rar decompression
(vendor issue 719, CVE-2016-4302, TALOS-2016-0154)
- fix exploitable stack based buffer overflow vulnebarility in mtree
parse_device functionality (vendor PR 715, CVE-2016-4301, TALOS-2016-0153)
- fix exploitable heap overflow vulnerability in 7-zip read_SubStreamsInfo
(vendor issue 718, CVE-2016-4300, TALOS-2016-152)
- fix integer overflow when computing location of volume descriptor
(vendor issue 717)
- fix buffer overflow when reading a crafred rar archive (vendor issue 521)
- fix possible buffer overflow when reading ISO9660 archives on machines
where sizeof(int) < sizeof(size_t) (vendor issue 711)
- tar and cpio should fail if an input file named on the command line is
missing (vendor issue 708)
- fix incorrect writing of gnutar filenames that are exactly 512 bytes
long (vendor issue 682)
- allow tests to be run from paths that are equal or longer than 128
characters (vendor issue 657)
- add memory allocation errors in archive_entry_xattr.c (vendor PR 603)
- remove dead code in archive_entry_xattr_add_entry() (vendor PR 716)
- fix broken decryption of ZIP files (vendor issue 553)
- manpage style, typo and description fixes
Post-3.2.1 vendor fixes:
- fix typo in cpio version reporting (Vendor PR 725, 726)
- fix argument range of ctype functions in libarchive_fe/passphrase.c
- fix ctype use and avoid empty loop bodies in WARC reader
MFC after: 1 week
Security: CVE-2016-4300, CVE-2016-4301, CVE-2016-4302
Approved by: re (kib)
reset command, alternate setting command or set configuration
command. Else LibUSB v1.0 will not re-open the endpoints which the
kernel closes and the USB application might wait infinitely for
transfers to complete.
Approved by: re (hrs)
MFC after: 3 days
The fix to the __collate_range_cmp() ABI breakage missed some replacements
in libc's vfscanf(). Replace them with __wcollate_range_cmp() which
does what is expected.
This was breaking applications like xterm and pidgin when using wide
characters.
Reported by: Vitalij Satanivskij
Approved by: re
xdr_rpcproc, xdr_rpcprog and xdr_rpcvers were broken in older
versions of FreeBSD but fixed in r296394. Give them some use
hoping they help make the code somewhat more readable.
Setting time by seconds or microseconds may cause unexpected effects
especially if sysctl vfs.timestamp_precision=3 (not default).
Calling the obsolete functions with NULL timestamps is acceptable.
xdr_rpcprog and xdr_rpcvers were broken in older versions of FreeBSD
but were fixed in r296394. Give them some use hoping they help make
the code somewhat more readable.
This support appears to have been documented in nsswitch.conf(5) for some
time. The implementation adds two NSS netgroup providers to libc. The
default, compat, provides the behaviour documented in netgroup(5), so this
change does not make any user-visible behaviour changes. A files provider
is also implemented.
innetgr(3) is implemented as an optional NSS method so that providers such
as NIS which are able to implement efficient reverse lookup can do so.
A fallback implementation is used otherwise. getnetgrent_r(3) is added for
convenience and to provide compatibility with glibc and Solaris.
With a small patch to net/nss_ldap, it's possible to specify an ldap
netgroup provider, allowing one to query nisNetgroupTriple entries.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Handle an empty result from yp_match() by returning NULL, which is
consistent with the handling of an empty netgroup in /etc/netgroup.
setnetgrent(3) has no return value, so there is no particular need to
distinguish this case from an error.
PR: 26486
MFC after: 2 weeks
getnetent_p doesn't return NULL like getnetent does. coccinelle got confused and
I didn't verify that it worked before committing the change
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC with: r301707
Pointyhat to: ngie
This adds stravis() and some new encoding flags VIS_SHELL, VIS_META,
and VIS_NOLOCALE.
Assorted cleanups and fixes includeing a manpage typo[0].
PR: 210013 [0]
Submitted by: pi [0]
If malloc() fails to allocate linep, then free olinep (if it exists)
before returning to avoid a memory leak.
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1016716
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6755
If the ai->ai_addrlen <= minsiz test fails, then freeaddrinfo()
does not get called to free the memory just allocated by getaddrinfo().
Fix by moving ai->ai_addrlen <= minsiz to a separate nested if
block, and keep freeaddrinfo() in the outer block so that freeaddrinfo()
will be called whenever getaddrinfo() succeeds.
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1273652
Reviewed by: ume
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6756
CASPER_SERVICE_STDIO - Casper will not close the first three descriptors (stdin,
stdout and stderr) this can be helpful for debugging.
CASPER_SERVICE_FD - Capser will not close all other descriptors, this can
be useful for a filesystem service.
This fixes build failures on older releases that lack various
definitions such as EM_AARCH64 (which was unfixed before this).
Revert all of the recent compatibility changes that worked around this
problem.
This uses the same method of using the in-tree header as lib/libelf,
lib/libdwarf and usr.bin/readelf.
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6734
When collation support was brought in, the second and third
arguments in __collate_range_cmp() were changed from int to
wchar_t, breaking the ABI. Change them to a "char" type which
makes more sense and keeps the ABI compatible.
Also introduce __wcollate_range_cmp() which does work with wide
characters. This function is used only internally in libc so
we don't export it. Use the new function in glob(3), fnmatch(3),
and regexec(3).
PR: 179721
Suggested by: ache. jilles
MFC after: 3 weeks (perhaps partial only)
file, lib/clang/freebsd_cc_version.h, instead of reusing Version.inc.
The header is only included from one .cpp file in the clang tree.
This minimizes the number of .cpp files that need to be rebuilt if the
version is bumped.
Discussed with: bdrewery
Add some missing errno values to thr_new(2) and pthread_create(3).
In particular, EDEADLK was not documented in the latter.
While I'm here, improve some English and cross-references.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6663
Only attempt to detect AVG if SSE2 is available
Summary:
In PR29973 Sanjay Patel reported an assertion failure when a certain
loop was optimized, for a target without SSE2 support. It turned out
this was because of the AVG pattern detection introduced in rL253952.
Prevent the assertion failure by bailing out early in
`detectAVGPattern()`, if the target does not support SSE2.
Also add a minimized test case.
Reviewers: congh, eli.friedman, spatel
Subscribers: emaste, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20905
This should fix assertion failures ("Requires at least SSE2!") when
building the games/0ad port with CPUTYPE=pentium3.
Reported by: madpilot
It appears "sorted" may have not been implemented. Sorted or not,
we always follow the same action so simplify the code.
Leave a note for future generations.
CID: 1347084
Add text to thr_exit(2) and thr_new(2) discouraging their use in
applications since calling these in a process with libthr loaded will
confuse libthr and is likely to cause hangs or crashes.
The thr_kill2(2) call is not used by libthr and may be useful in special
applications.
The other calls can be used in applications but it should not be necessary.