Rather than hard coding ada0 everywhere, use ${dev}. Also, set
dev=vtbd0 since both qemu and bhyve support this. More work
should be done to use labels instead for fstab.
qemu scripts likely need adjustment. And we should also
likely generate byhve scripts too.
The primary benefit is maintaining a completely shared
code base with the community allowing FreeBSD to receive
new features sooner and with less effort.
I would advise against doing 'zpool upgrade'
or creating indispensable pools using new
features until this change has had a month+
to soak.
Work on merging FreeBSD support in to what was
at the time "ZFS on Linux" began in August 2018.
I first publicly proposed transitioning FreeBSD
to (new) OpenZFS on December 18th, 2018. FreeBSD
support in OpenZFS was finally completed in December
2019. A CFT for downstreaming OpenZFS support in
to FreeBSD was first issued on July 8th. All issues
that were reported have been addressed or, for
a couple of less critical matters there are
pull requests in progress with OpenZFS. iXsystems
has tested and dogfooded extensively internally.
The TrueNAS 12 release is based on OpenZFS with
some additional features that have not yet made
it upstream.
Improvements include:
project quotas, encrypted datasets,
allocation classes, vectorized raidz,
vectorized checksums, various command line
improvements, zstd compression.
Thanks to those who have helped along the way:
Ryan Moeller, Allan Jude, Zack Welch, and many
others.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25872
ufs partition as p2, and put the zfs partition at p3, to test the ability
of the zfs probe code to find a zfs pool on something other than the first
partition.
tools/boot/install-boot.sh was assuming that if a device was passed in,
it should operate on the current system and run efibootmgr etc. to
update the boot manager. However, rootgen.sh passes a md(4) device and
not a fixed disk.
Add a -u option to install-boot.sh to tell it to update the system
in-place and run efibootmgr etc.
Also, source install-boot.sh in rootgen.sh to allow it to find and
call make_esp_file etc. And pass the loader file to make_esp_file instead
of a directory name.
Reported by: ian
Reviewed by: ian,imp,tsoome
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19992
Currently, the installer uses pre-created 800KB FAT12 filesystems that
it dd's onto the ESP partition.
This changeset improves that by having the installer generate a FAT32
filesystem directly onto the ESP using newfs_msdos and then copying
loader.efi into /EFI/freebsd.
For live installs it then runs efibootmgr to add a FreeBSD boot entry
in the BIOS.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17947
This is purely to make it easier to tweak them locally; the machine I have
for testing takes forever to do 50,000 pw strengthening iterations, and
we're not testing the strength of geli's anti-pw-guessing logic here
(especially given that our test passphrase is "passphrase", except that
I tend to tweak that also, to 'x', because typing is hard).
Some day these should be settable as cmdline args. But then, some day this
whole script should probably get a rewrite. :)
Cope for the fact that laoder.efi, not being boot1, doesn't read
/boot.config by setting boot_serial and force the serial console.
Also add sysctl so we can display the boot method.
Provide a variable, do_boot1_efi, if you want to use boot1 for
testing. But since it's transient, it's just a variable and not
available on the command line.
This extends the test suite to generate images for every combination of:
amd64: mbr/gpt geli/nogeli ufs/zfs legacy/uefi/both
Except for mbr+geli, which is not currently possible.
Reviewed by: imp (previous version)
Sponsored by: Klara Systems
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15846
128MiB still works for Legacy booting, however. Go ahead and do 256MiB
for all amd64 boxes, since the number of such boxes < 256MiB is
vanishingly small.
We want to use the versions of the bootcode we just built, rather than
ones from whatever happens to be in /boot on the test machine
These were incorrectly added by me in r334888
Print a qemu line to a shell script to ease testing each image
Start to support multiple architectures (still very green)
Create /etc/rc that echos success and halts the system for better
automation (also include halt)
Create /etc/fstab on a per-boot type to test loader's passing root
to kernel.
This lets me run a test, connect to it with telnet and get either a
timeout, or a report of success.
Sponsored by: Netflix
interactive console rather than the video port. qemu has issues with X
on my mac at the moment and this is the easiest path forward.
Sponsored by: Netflix
boot images for x86. This will be enhanced to generate all the other
images (u-boot, powerpc CHRP, etc).
At the moment, it's only generating three of them. zfs+gpt+legacy
works with qemu:
qemu-system-x86_64 --drive file=${file},format=raw -serial telnet::4444,server
but the ufs ones still have issues I'm tracking down.
These images are the boot blocks, /boot/loader, a kernel, maybe a
couple of modules, /sbin/init, /bin/sh, /libexec/ld-elf.so, libc.so,
libedit and libncursesw. This is just enough to get to single user. At
the moment, these come from the host system, but should come from
OBJTOP.
At the moment, this requires root to build since the zfs tools require
it (and GELI will too when we add support for that).
Sponsored by: Netflix