sounds like some kind of horrific theme park. "Hey kids, want to go to
User Land?" "No! We'll be good!"
The obvious replacement is "userland", a compound word replete with
term-of-art meaning and just a hint of cautionary tale. The alternate
terms "flugelhorn" and "bullfrog", while also good, are less well-known
and were voted down in committee.
MFC after: 1 week
This overrides the cross-compiler's default sysroot to use the WORLD32's
sysroot for building the lib32 libraries. Previously the cross-compiler
would default the sysroot to the 64bit WORLDTMP and -B/-L/-isystem flags
were used to build using the lib32 files. This leads to multiple issues
discussed later. Some extra headers are now needed to be staged since the
64bit WORLDTMP is not referenced at all for headers. The 64bit WORLDTMP
is still used via PATH for build tools. Overriding the default
target/arch is retained in the CC/CXX overrides.
This allows reverting the LDSCRIPT rewriting in installworld from r296921 and
r235122, thus allowing read-only objdirs to work for installing again.
This removes the need for _LDSCRIPTROOT.
This allows progressing the change to always use --sysroot for the build
rather than only relying on the cross-compiler's default sysroot. The
work for that is in D3970 and needed to resolve WITHOUT_CROSS_COMPILER
not using a --sysroot [1].
PR: 196193 [1]
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Skip the log entry as there is nothing good to write out. Don't fail
the syscall though since it already succeeded. There's no reason
filemon's tracing failure should fail the already-succeeded syscall.
Record the error for later to return from close(2) on the filemon devfs
file descriptor.
Discussed with: markj, sjg, kib (briefly with kib)
Reported by: mjg
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The mbuf provider is made up of a set of Statically Defined Tracepoints
which help us look into mbufs as they are allocated and freed. This can be
used to inspect the buffers or for a simplified mbuf leak detector.
New tracepoints are:
mbuf:::m-init
mbuf:::m-gethdr
mbuf:::m-get
mbuf:::m-getcl
mbuf:::m-clget
mbuf:::m-cljget
mbuf:::m-cljset
mbuf:::m-free
mbuf:::m-freem
There is also a translator for mbufs which gives some visibility into the structure,
see mbuf.d for more details.
Reviewed by: bz, markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications (Netgate)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5682
None of lstat(2), fstat(2), fstatat(2) were tracked either.
The other filemon implementations also do not track stat(2), nor
does bmake utilize it. The act of opening a file for read should
be enough to decide that a file is a dependency. There could be
rare cases where just having a file would cause a dependency but it
is unlikely.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Also noted by: sjg
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- proc.p_filemon is added which is protected by PROC_LOCK. This improves
performance and avoids double-fork issues, taking allproc_lock
while in syscalls, and walking the process tree in syscalls. A
particular proc.p_filemon can only be changed to NULL or another
filemon, or the filemon inherited, while the filemon->lock is held.
- Filemon are reference counted. On the last reference the log will be closed.
- When closing the devfs file handle, the filemon will be detached from all
processes and inheritance prevented.
- Disallow attaching to a process already being traced since filemon is
typically intended to be used on children only. This is allowed for
curproc as bmake relies on this behavior for rare cases when combining
.MAKE with .META.
- Detach any previously tracked process on ioctl(FILEMON_SET_PID).
- Handle error from devfs_set_cdevpriv() in filemon_open().
- The global filemon lock and lists are removed.
- A free list is no longer kept. Previously this list was
forever-expanding and never garbage cleaned.
- No longer loses track of double-forks. If the process holding the filemon
handle closes it will close the log rather than wait on a daemonized process,
but it will log all activity until it closes its handle. The filemon
will be removed from the process and not inherited.
- A separate process count is kept only as an optimization for
forced detachment to avoid taking allproc_lock and walking the entire
process tree.
- struct filemon access is protected by sx(9) filemon->lock as it was before.
- Add more comments and KASSERTS.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: kib, mjg, markj (all on previous versions)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5520
Archive member handling works again
meta mode, treat missing reads as for writes.
Update dirdeps.mk - much improved startup time.
Update meta.stage.mk - avoid ln when chmod required.
SYSCTL_COUNTER_U64_ARRAY() macro.
- Add proper asserts to the SYSCTL_COUNTER_U64_ARRAY() macro that checks
the size of the first element of the array.
- Add an example to the counter(9) manual page how to use the
SYSCTL_COUNTER_U64_ARRAY() macro.
- Add some missing symbolic links for counter(9) while at it.
This is several year's worth of fail point upgrades done at EMC Isilon. They
are interdependent enough that it makes sense to put a single diff up for them.
Primarily, we added:
- Changing all mainline execution paths to be lockless, which lets us use fail
points in more sleep-sensitive areas, and allows more parallel execution
- A number of additional commands, including 'pause' that lets us do some
interesting deterministic repros of race conditions
- The ability to dump the stacks of all threads sleeping on a fail point
- A number of other API changes to allow marking up the fail point's context in
the code, and firing callbacks before and after execution
- A man page update
Submitted by: Matthew Bryan <matthew.bryan@isilon.com>
Reviewed by: cem (earlier version), jhb, kib, pho
With feedback from: bdrewery
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5427
Specifically this fixes /usr/lib/libc.so stripping the paths to the
libraries. The reason for this in r266227 was both likely because ld(1) did
not fully respect --sysroot until r291226 and because of the lib32
build. The lib32 build does not use --sysroot into the /usr/lib32 path,
rather it only uses -L and -B into the /usr/lib32 path and --sysroot
into the normal (64bit) /usr/lib. The _LDSCRIPTROOT was added with
the ldscript support in bsd.lib.mk so that it builds a 32-bit-sysrooted pathed
ldscript in the object directory and then installs a normal unprefixed
version in installworld. This commit also fixes the rebuild during
install which was broken in r266227. This commit would break DIRDEPS_BUILD
build of lib32 but it does not currently have a way to build it anyhow.
For example, before this change we had in /usr/lib/libc.so:
GROUP ( libc.so.7 libc_nonshared.a libssp_nonshared.a )
Now it is restored to pre-r266227:
GROUP ( /lib/libc.so.7 /usr/lib/libc_nonshared.a /usr/lib/libssp_nonshared.a )
The motivation for this is in testing of lld.
From emaste:
lld does not have built-in search paths (e.g. /lib, /usr/lib) and relies on
-L arguments passed by the caller. As the linker is nearly always invoked
from the clang driver this is fine other than the fact that /usr/lib/libc.so
is an ldscript that refers to libc.so.7 which is in /lib, not /usr/lib.
PR: 207980
Reported by: emaste
Submitted by: emaste (based on)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5637
No functional change.
This prevents adding empty targets to the main called target which is
confusing for debugging.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This also fixes META MODE rebuilding these because the 'number of build commands'
changed from the previous build.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Extend it to other cases of meta mode cookies so they get the proper rm
cookie behavior when a .meta file detects it needs to rebuild and fails.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This obsoletes the _SKIP_BUILD check but keeps it for now until it
proves to be enough.
In the dirdeps build the first 'make all' or 'make' ran would invoke
'make dirdeps' which builds dependencies and then builds the current
directory in a sub-make (when BUILD_AT_LEVEL0 is no, which for us it
is). This behavior causes things attached to 'all:' to build in the
dirdeps phase AND the sub-make phase which creates all kinds of problems
for staging, meta file tracking, and races.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This also fixes meta tracking for the beforeinstall since it had been
marked .PHONY before (in bsd.sys.mk).
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This is a follow-up to r291561 which reworked the bootstrap tool PATH
handling.
An example of this is when building lib/clang/libclangedit. At first
clang-tblgen will not be staged in the host tree so it will have
CLANG_TBLGEN=clang-tblgen set and exported. During the build though it
will stage clang-tblgen and then find it via the PATH. On the next
build it finds clang-tblgen in the stage directory and would set
CLANG_TBLGEN=<stagedir/usr/bin>/clang-tblgen thus causing the build
command to change. In both cases the same exact tool was used though so
there is no need to rebuild. If the tool did change the normal
meta/filemon handling would pick that up via timestamp comparisons and
rebuild.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
An example of where this is needed is in share/examples which for
'etc-examples' runs 'make -C SRCTOP/etc etc-examples' which installs
to the default DESTDIR otherwise.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This came in r239572 for META_MODE handling but it doesn't make sense
since the staging is always done in make(all); make(buildincludes)
is never actually ran in the META_MODE build.
Reported by: bapt
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The meta file may decide the target is out of date but nothing
ensures that the *next* build will build this target if it
fails this time for some reason; it is still out-of-date
until it succeeds.
Convert the include/ cookie usage to the global versions.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The inclusion of .MAKE.DEPENDFILE (.depend) has special logic in make
to ignore stale/missing dependencies. bmake 20160220 added a '.dinclude'
directive that uses the special logic for .depend when including the file.
This fixes a build error when a file is moved or deleted that exists in a
.depend.OBJ file. This happened in r292782 when sha512c.c "moved" and an
incremental build of lib/libmd would fail with:
make: don't know how to make /usr/src/lib/libcrypt/../libmd/sha512c.c. Stop
Now this will just be seen as a stale dependency and cause a rebuild:
make: /usr/obj/usr/src/lib/libmd/.depend.sha512c.o, 13: ignoring stale .depend for /usr/src/lib/libcrypt/../libmd/sha512c.c
--- sha512c.o ---
...
This rebuild will only be done once since the .depend.sha512c.o will
be updated on the build with the -MF flags.
This also removes -MP being passed for the .depend.OBJ generation (which
would create fake targets for system headers) since the logic is no
longer needed to protect from missing files.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
One example is in cddl/usr.sbin/dtrace/tests/common/aggs. It could be
fixed but other uses of this would break, especially in the
DIRDEPS_BUILD which uses the group names for stage cookies.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This will allow Makefile.depend to properly capture all dependencies.
It is not 100% optimal but works. Other options would be to use *.meta
here which would include too much or to keep a Makefile.depend per PROG
and include it from the main Makefile.depend which would not be
straight forward.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Code may still be executing from the wrappers at unload time and thus is
not generally safe to unload. Converting the wrappers to use
EVENTHANDLER(9) will allow this to safely drain on active threads in
hooks. More work on EVENTHANDLER(9) is needed first.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
There is no good way to guess if any of these will be needed but
they commonly are and add no extra overhead so just stage them.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Currently the base.txz distribution does not get the BSD.debug.dist mtree
extracted into it. So if you start from that and then try to build a 3rd-party
application outside of buildworld it will by-default try installing the
debug files into a missing directory if they are being installed into /usr/lib.
Check for the existence before forcing the directory to be created rather than
the older way of running a shell command with test -d || mkdir -p always.
Reported by: HardenedBSD (https://github.com/HardenedBSD/secadm/issues/23)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5411
This was a regression in r295985.
bsd.dep.mk adds to SRCS for dtrace probes, yacc grammars and some
others.
The code that is moving is planned to be removed once FAST_DEPEND is
default (and the only option) though since FAST_DEPEND doesn't use this.
Pointyhat to: bdrewery
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Since m_cat() may copy data from the second mbuf chain into the last mbuf
of the first chain, it may free the first mbuf of the second chain. Thus,
the second chain is not guaranteed to be valid after m_cat() returns.
Reviewed by: glebius
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5497
This is done to prevent not having CCACHE_DIR causing meta mode with filemon to
see stat changes in the ccache dir and cause rebuilds.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
improve cancellation robustness.
Introduce a new file operation, fo_aio_queue, which is responsible for
queueing and completing an asynchronous I/O request for a given file.
The AIO subystem now exports library of routines to manipulate AIO
requests as well as the ability to run a handler function in the
"default" pool of AIO daemons to service a request.
A default implementation for file types which do not include an
fo_aio_queue method queues requests to the "default" pool invoking the
fo_read or fo_write methods as before.
The AIO subsystem permits file types to install a private "cancel"
routine when a request is queued to permit safe dequeueing and cleanup
of cancelled requests.
Sockets now use their own pool of AIO daemons and service per-socket
requests in FIFO order. Socket requests will not block indefinitely
permitting timely cancellation of all requests.
Due to the now-tight coupling of the AIO subsystem with file types,
the AIO subsystem is now a standard part of all kernels. The VFS_AIO
kernel option and aio.ko module are gone.
Many file types may block indefinitely in their fo_read or fo_write
callbacks resulting in a hung AIO daemon. This can result in hung
user processes (when processes attempt to cancel all outstanding
requests during exit) or a hung system. To protect against this, AIO
requests are only permitted for known "safe" files by default. AIO
requests for all file types can be enabled by setting the new
vfs.aio.enable_usafe sysctl to a non-zero value. The AIO tests have
been updated to skip operations on unsafe file types if the sysctl is
zero.
Currently, AIO requests on sockets and raw disks are considered safe
and are enabled by default. aio_mlock() is also enabled by default.
Reviewed by: cem, jilles
Discussed with: kib (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5289
taskqueue_enqueue() was changed to support both fast and non-fast
taskqueues 10 years ago in r154167. It has been a compat shim ever
since. It's time for the compat shim to go.
Submitted by: Howard Su <howard0su@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: sephe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5131
Freescale's QorIQ line includes a new ethernet controller, based on their
Datapath Acceleration Architecture (DPAA). This uses a combination of a Frame
manager, Buffer manager, and Queue manager to improve performance across all
interfaces by being able to pass data directly between hardware acceleration
interfaces.
As part of this import, Freescale's Netcomm Software (ncsw) driver is imported.
This was an attempt by Freescale to create an OS-agnostic sub-driver for
managing the hardware, using shims to interface to the OS-specific APIs. This
work was abandoned, and Freescale's primary work is in the Linux driver (dual
BSD/GPL license). Hence, this was imported directly to sys/contrib, rather than
going through the vendor area. Going forward, FreeBSD-specific changes may be
made to the ncsw code, diverging from the upstream in potentially incompatible
ways. An alternative could be to import the Linux driver itself, using the
linuxKPI layer, as that would maintain parity with the vendor-maintained driver.
However, the Linux driver has not been evaluated for reliability yet, and may
have issues with the import, whereas the ncsw-based driver in this commit was
completed by Semihalf 4 years ago, and is very stable.
Other SoC modules based on DPAA, which could be added in the future:
* Security and Encryption engine (SEC4.x, SEC5.x)
* RAID engine
Additional work to be done:
* Implement polling mode
* Test vlan support
* Add support for the Pattern Matching Engine, which can do regular expression
matching on packets.
This driver has been tested on the P5020 QorIQ SoC. Others listed in the
dtsec(4) manual page are expected to work as the same DPAA engine is included in
all.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing
Summary:
Many instances of bus_alloc_resource() simply use 0 and ~0 for start and end to
denote 'anywhere' with a given count. To clean this up, introduce a
bus_alloc_resource_anywhere() convenience function.
Bump __FreeBSD_version for the new API.
Reviewed By: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5370
This allows 'make analyze' or 'make OBJ.clang-analyzer' to run the
Clang static analyzer and present results on stdout.
Obtained from: NetBSD (CVS Rev. 1.3)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5449