Commit Graph

11742 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Doug Rabson
c24d228096 Add new heimdal-1.1 library. 2008-05-15 15:28:18 +00:00
Jason Evans
2e78350530 Clean up cpp logic and comments. 2008-05-14 18:33:13 +00:00
Warner Losh
13d2e92b70 Commit missing mips libthr support that I thought I'd committed earlier 2008-05-11 05:54:52 +00:00
Antoine Brodin
27522528ea Remove useless call to getdtablesize(2) in fdopen(3) and its useless
variable nofile.

PR:		123109
Submitted by:	Christoph Mallon
Approved by:	rwatson (mentor)
MFC after:	1 month
2008-05-10 18:39:20 +00:00
Christian Brueffer
2e462358ed Misc mdoc improvements and a typo fix. 2008-05-10 07:31:34 +00:00
Julian Elischer
4ba9fdc4a6 Add setfib.2 to the list of man pages to add 2008-05-09 23:09:56 +00:00
Julian Elischer
23c3fd9e62 setfib.2 got left out of the last commit 2008-05-09 23:08:40 +00:00
Julian Elischer
65cb6b6834 Add code to allow the system to handle multiple routing tables.
This particular implementation is designed to be fully backwards compatible
and to be MFC-able to 7.x (and 6.x)

Currently the only protocol that can make use of the multiple tables is IPv4
Similar functionality exists in OpenBSD and Linux.

From my notes:

-----

One thing where FreeBSD has been falling behind, and which by chance I
have some time to work on is "policy based routing", which allows
different
packet streams to be routed by more than just the destination address.

Constraints:
------------

I want to make some form of this available in the 6.x tree
(and by extension 7.x) , but FreeBSD in general needs it so I might as
well do it in -current and back port the portions I need.

One of the ways that this can be done is to have the ability to
instantiate multiple kernel routing tables (which I will now
refer to as "Forwarding Information Bases" or "FIBs" for political
correctness reasons). Which FIB a particular packet uses to make
the next hop decision can be decided by a number of mechanisms.
The policies these mechanisms implement are the "Policies" referred
to in "Policy based routing".

One of the constraints I have if I try to back port this work to
6.x is that it must be implemented as a EXTENSION to the existing
ABIs in 6.x so that third party applications do not need to be
recompiled in timespan of the branch.

This first version will not have some of the bells and whistles that
will come with later versions. It will, for example, be limited to 16
tables in the first commit.
Implementation method, Compatible version. (part 1)
-------------------------------
For this reason I have implemented a "sufficient subset" of a
multiple routing table solution in Perforce, and back-ported it
to 6.x. (also in Perforce though not  always caught up with what I
have done in -current/P4). The subset allows a number of FIBs
to be defined at compile time (8 is sufficient for my purposes in 6.x)
and implements the changes needed to allow IPV4 to use them. I have not
done the changes for ipv6 simply because I do not need it, and I do not
have enough knowledge of ipv6 (e.g. neighbor discovery) needed to do it.

Other protocol families are left untouched and should there be
users with proprietary protocol families, they should continue to work
and be oblivious to the existence of the extra FIBs.

To understand how this is done, one must know that the current FIB
code starts everything off with a single dimensional array of
pointers to FIB head structures (One per protocol family), each of
which in turn points to the trie of routes available to that family.

The basic change in the ABI compatible version of the change is to
extent that array to be a 2 dimensional array, so that
instead of protocol family X looking at rt_tables[X] for the
table it needs, it looks at rt_tables[Y][X] when for all
protocol families except ipv4 Y is always 0.
Code that is unaware of the change always just sees the first row
of the table, which of course looks just like the one dimensional
array that existed before.

The entry points rtrequest(), rtalloc(), rtalloc1(), rtalloc_ign()
are all maintained, but refer only to the first row of the array,
so that existing callers in proprietary protocols can continue to
do the "right thing".
Some new entry points are added, for the exclusive use of ipv4 code
called in_rtrequest(), in_rtalloc(), in_rtalloc1() and in_rtalloc_ign(),
which have an extra argument which refers the code to the correct row.

In addition, there are some new entry points (currently called
rtalloc_fib() and friends) that check the Address family being
looked up and call either rtalloc() (and friends) if the protocol
is not IPv4 forcing the action to row 0 or to the appropriate row
if it IS IPv4 (and that info is available). These are for calling
from code that is not specific to any particular protocol. The way
these are implemented would change in the non ABI preserving code
to be added later.

One feature of the first version of the code is that for ipv4,
the interface routes show up automatically on all the FIBs, so
that no matter what FIB you select you always have the basic
direct attached hosts available to you. (rtinit() does this
automatically).

You CAN delete an interface route from one FIB should you want
to but by default it's there. ARP information is also available
in each FIB. It's assumed that the same machine would have the
same MAC address, regardless of which FIB you are using to get
to it.

This brings us as to how the correct FIB is selected for an outgoing
IPV4 packet.

Firstly, all packets have a FIB associated with them. if nothing
has been done to change it, it will be FIB 0. The FIB is changed
in the following ways.

Packets fall into one of a number of classes.

1/ locally generated packets, coming from a socket/PCB.
   Such packets select a FIB from a number associated with the
   socket/PCB. This in turn is inherited from the process,
   but can be changed by a socket option. The process in turn
   inherits it on fork. I have written a utility call setfib
   that acts a bit like nice..

       setfib -3 ping target.example.com # will use fib 3 for ping.

   It is an obvious extension to make it a property of a jail
   but I have not done so. It can be achieved by combining the setfib and
   jail commands.

2/ packets received on an interface for forwarding.
   By default these packets would use table 0,
   (or possibly a number settable in a sysctl(not yet)).
   but prior to routing the firewall can inspect them (see below).
   (possibly in the future you may be able to associate a FIB
   with packets received on an interface..  An ifconfig arg, but not yet.)

3/ packets inspected by a packet classifier, which can arbitrarily
   associate a fib with it on a packet by packet basis.
   A fib assigned to a packet by a packet classifier
   (such as ipfw) would over-ride a fib associated by
   a more default source. (such as cases 1 or 2).

4/ a tcp listen socket associated with a fib will generate
   accept sockets that are associated with that same fib.

5/ Packets generated in response to some other packet (e.g. reset
   or icmp packets). These should use the FIB associated with the
   packet being reponded to.

6/ Packets generated during encapsulation.
   gif, tun and other tunnel interfaces will encapsulate using the FIB
   that was in effect withthe proces that set up the tunnel.
   thus setfib 1 ifconfig gif0 [tunnel instructions]
   will set the fib for the tunnel to use to be fib 1.

Routing messages would be associated with their
process, and thus select one FIB or another.
messages from the kernel would be associated with the fib they
refer to and would only be received by a routing socket associated
with that fib. (not yet implemented)

In addition Netstat has been edited to be able to cope with the
fact that the array is now 2 dimensional. (It looks in system
memory using libkvm (!)). Old versions of netstat see only the first FIB.

In addition two sysctls are added to give:
a) the number of FIBs compiled in (active)
b) the default FIB of the calling process.

Early testing experience:
-------------------------

Basically our (IronPort's) appliance does this functionality already
using ipfw fwd but that method has some drawbacks.

For example,
It can't fully simulate a routing table because it can't influence the
socket's choice of local address when a connect() is done.

Testing during the generating of these changes has been
remarkably smooth so far. Multiple tables have co-existed
with no notable side effects, and packets have been routes
accordingly.

ipfw has grown 2 new keywords:

setfib N ip from anay to any
count ip from any to any fib N

In pf there seems to be a requirement to be able to give symbolic names to the
fibs but I do not have that capacity. I am not sure if it is required.

SCTP has interestingly enough built in support for this, called VRFs
in Cisco parlance. it will be interesting to see how that handles it
when it suddenly actually does something.

Where to next:
--------------------

After committing the ABI compatible version and MFCing it, I'd
like to proceed in a forward direction in -current. this will
result in some roto-tilling in the routing code.

Firstly: the current code's idea of having a separate tree per
protocol family, all of the same format, and pointed to by the
1 dimensional array is a bit silly. Especially when one considers that
there is code that makes assumptions about every protocol having the
same internal structures there. Some protocols don't WANT that
sort of structure. (for example the whole idea of a netmask is foreign
to appletalk). This needs to be made opaque to the external code.

My suggested first change is to add routing method pointers to the
'domain' structure, along with information pointing the data.
instead of having an array of pointers to uniform structures,
there would be an array pointing to the 'domain' structures
for each protocol address domain (protocol family),
and the methods this reached would be called. The methods would have
an argument that gives FIB number, but the protocol would be free
to ignore it.

When the ABI can be changed it raises the possibilty of the
addition of a fib entry into the "struct route". Currently,
the structure contains the sockaddr of the desination, and the resulting
fib entry. To make this work fully, one could add a fib number
so that given an address and a fib, one can find the third element, the
fib entry.

Interaction with the ARP layer/ LL layer would need to be
revisited as well. Qing Li has been working on this already.

This work was sponsored by Ironport Systems/Cisco

PR:
Reviewed by:	several including rwatson, bz and mlair (parts each)
Approved by:
Obtained from:	Ironport systems/Cisco
MFC after:
Security:

PR:
Submitted by:
Reviewed by:
Approved by:
Obtained from:
MFC after:
Security:
2008-05-09 23:00:21 +00:00
Rong-En Fan
f5cf48b83e - Update for ncurses 5.6-20080509 2008-05-09 02:28:52 +00:00
John Baldwin
128b5d55e5 Don't set the _file member of the FILE when opening a FTP connection.
Nothing in libftpio uses _file, and the only consumer in the tree
(sysinstall) doesn't invoke fileno() on the FILE.

MFC after:	2 months
2008-05-08 20:05:30 +00:00
Coleman Kane
c4ca06b9b3 Update the lib/expat tree for the new v2.0.1 expat import. The bsdxml.h
header is now in two parts: bsdxml.h and bsdxml_external.h, representing
the expat.h and expat_external.h headers. Updated the info on the man
page as well. Also, fixed a type-error in a printf in
sbin/ifconfig/regdomain.c that would cause a compiler warning.

Approved by:	sam, phk
2008-05-08 14:01:42 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
5e29db42b9 Keep versions on a dependency chain to exclude even remote possiblity
of private version ever getting index 2.
2008-05-07 15:39:34 +00:00
Doug Rabson
33f1219925 Fix conflicts after heimdal-1.1 import and add build infrastructure. Import
all non-style changes made by heimdal to our own libgssapi.
2008-05-07 13:53:12 +00:00
David Xu
cf181aee60 Remove libc_r's remnant code. 2008-05-06 07:27:11 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
f3e9983ea6 Add a comment stating not to bump the FBSDprivate version.
Don't inherit the public namespace from the private namespace.
2008-05-06 01:41:55 +00:00
John Baldwin
a551ce1205 Revert back to accessing FILE internals directly.
(Sorry, forgot to commit this earlier.)
2008-05-05 19:38:25 +00:00
John Baldwin
143b946188 Retire the __fgetcookie(), __fgetpendout(), and __fsetfileno() accessors
as we aren't hiding FILE's internals anymore.
2008-05-05 16:14:02 +00:00
John Baldwin
19e03ca803 Expose FILE's internals to the world again in all their glory. Restore
all the previous inline optimizations as well.  FILE is back to using
__mbstate_t, struct pthread *, and struct pthread_mutex *.
2008-05-05 16:03:52 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
90c68c1799 Do not read away the target directory entry when encountering deleted
files after a seekdir().

The seekdir shall set the position for the next readdir operation.
When the _readdir_unlocked() encounters deleted entry, dd_loc is
already advanced. Continuing the loop leads to premature read of
the target entry.

Submitted by:	Marc Balmer <mbalmer at openbsd org>
Obtained from:	OpenBSD
MFC after:	2 weeks
2008-05-05 14:05:23 +00:00
Oleksandr Tymoshenko
228d330b1a Add MIPS support to libdisk
Approved by:	cognet (mentor)
2008-05-04 22:24:40 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
201e72e716 Add __fgetcookie(), __fgetpendout() and __fsetfileno() to the private
name space.
2008-05-04 04:11:01 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
0aca787a7b Unbreak build: gnu sort has been configured to grope inside struct
__sFILE. It's opaque now, so add a function that returns the pending
output bytes.

Pointy hat: jhb
2008-05-03 23:36:00 +00:00
Oleksandr Tymoshenko
41ea62f986 Symbol.map is handled by cpp, so use C-style comments
Approved by:	cognet (mentor)
2008-05-03 21:16:08 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
430f2c8721 Unbreak build: libftpio gropes inside struct __sFILE. Implement
accessor functions for its benefit now thaat FILE is opaque.
I'm sure there's a better way. I leave that for people to work
on in a src tree that isn't broken.

Pointy hat: jhb
2008-05-03 20:09:44 +00:00
Jason Evans
4788234366 Fix a comment. 2008-05-03 17:49:16 +00:00
Oleksandr Tymoshenko
32d7197a6d Bring C runtime bits for FreeBSD/mips from p4 mips2-jnpr branch.
Approved by:	cognet (mentor)
2008-05-03 11:16:32 +00:00
John Baldwin
c17bf9a9a5 Next round of stdio changes: Remove all inlining of stdio operations and
move the definition of the type backing FILE (struct __sFILE) into an
internal header.
- Remove macros to inline certain operations from stdio.h.  Applications
  will now always call the functions instead.
- Move the various foo_unlocked() functions from unlocked.c into foo.c.
  This lets some of the inlining macros (e.g. __sfeof()) move into
  foo.c.
- Update a few comments.
- struct __sFILE can now go back to using mbstate_t, pthread_t, and
  pthread_mutex_t instead of knowing about their private, backing types.

MFC after:	1 month
Reviewed by:	kan
2008-05-02 15:25:07 +00:00
John Baldwin
ab9306707a Include libc_private.h for the declaration of __isthreaded instead of
relying on namespace pollution in stdio.h.

MFC after:	3 days
2008-05-02 14:51:22 +00:00
Jason Evans
9007109030 Add a separate tree to track arena chunks that contain dirty pages.
This substantially improves worst case allocation performance, since
O(lg n) tree search can be used instead of O(n) tree iteration.

Use rb_wrap() instead of directly calling rb_*() macros.
2008-05-01 17:25:55 +00:00
Jason Evans
21162484ae Add rb_wrap(), which creates C function wrappers for most rb_*()
macros.

Add rb_foreach_next() and rb_foreach_reverse_prev(), which make it
possible to re-synchronize tree iteration after the tree has been
modified.

Rename rb_tree_new() to rb_new().
2008-05-01 17:24:37 +00:00
Doug Rabson
e1a0d9eff3 When receiving delegated credentials, initialise our cred's linked list.
Add a bit more sanity checking for GSS-API mechanisms that claim to have
delegated creds but don't actually return a cred handle.

MFC after: 2 weeks
2008-04-30 11:29:22 +00:00
Doug Rabson
8294c41328 Use global implementation of _gss_oid_equal.
MFC after: 2 weeks
2008-04-30 11:27:15 +00:00
Doug Rabson
733704ea52 Allow null oids in _gss_oid_equal().
MFC after: 2 weeks
2008-04-30 11:25:34 +00:00
Oleksandr Tymoshenko
dfe2d491c0 o Add MIPS to the list of architectures with defined TLS_TCB_ALIGN
o Stick with TLS Variant II for MIPS for the moment.

  Approved by:	imp
2008-04-29 23:15:23 +00:00
Oleksandr Tymoshenko
00fb5362ba Set QUANTUM_2POW_MIN and SIZEOF_PTR_2POW parameters for MIPS
Approved by: imp
2008-04-29 22:56:05 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
967f568996 _setjmp.o was missing a dependency on "machine". 2008-04-29 17:42:42 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
692411eece Don't forget to clean the "machine" symlink on amd64, otherwise bad
things may happen.

Reported by:	phk
MFC after:	3 days
2008-04-29 17:37:01 +00:00
David Xu
8d6a11a070 Use UMTX_OP_WAIT_UINT_PRIVATE and UMTX_OP_WAKE_PRIVATE to save
time in kernel(avoid VM lookup).
2008-04-29 03:58:18 +00:00
Jason Evans
e3085308be Check for integer overflow before calling sbrk(2), since it uses a
signed increment argument, but the size is an unsigned integer.
2008-04-29 01:32:42 +00:00
Robert Watson
7ee52b008a Correct minor typos in SCTP man pages.
MFC after:	3 days
2008-04-28 16:57:56 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
b0735d8073 Add support files for compiling with soft-float. This has been
copied from ARM and modified to warrant the duplication. Oh,
and to make it work for PowerPC :-)
2008-04-27 18:34:34 +00:00
Kris Kennaway
dd77f9f7f2 Increase the default MUTEX_ADAPTIVE_SPINS to 2000, after further
testing it turns out 200 was too short to give good adaptive
performance.

Reviewed by:   jeff
MFC after:     1 week
2008-04-26 13:19:07 +00:00
Warner Losh
62c97aefc5 Add mips support to libm, from mips2-jnpr perforce branch. 2008-04-26 12:20:29 +00:00
Warner Losh
416e6cfbf0 Bring in mips threads support from perforce mips2-jnpr branch. 2008-04-26 12:17:57 +00:00
Warner Losh
4ce261061f Add mips support libc from the mips2-jnpr branch of perforce. 2008-04-26 12:08:02 +00:00
Sean Farley
4bc1fa7662 Have the man page catch up with the namespace pollution cleanup that
occurred between 2001-2003.  Thanks to bde for the history lesson[1]
concerning sys/types.h and the many system calls that at one time
(pre-2001) were required by POSIX to include it.

1. http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2008-April/008126.html

MFC after:	3 days
2008-04-26 02:33:53 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
eff93c8073 Stricter check for integer overflow. 2008-04-24 07:49:00 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
236ee032b5 Add support for gpart:
o  Correct for gpart's 1-based index, versus 0-based index used by
   legacy slicers.
o  Parse and understand the xs and xt parameters.
2008-04-24 00:11:15 +00:00
Xin LI
d0aa4fd3ca Avoid various shadowed variables. libthr is now almost WARNS=4 clean except
for some const dequalifiers that needs more careful investigation.

Ok'ed by:	davidxu
2008-04-23 21:06:51 +00:00
Jason Evans
e5bf0d71c9 Implement red-black trees without using parent pointers, and store the
color bit in the least significant bit of the right child pointer, in
order to reduce red-black tree linkage overhead by ~2X as compared to
sys/tree.h.

Use the new red-black tree implementation in malloc, which drops
memory usage by ~0.5 or ~1%, for 32- and 64-bit systems, respectively.
2008-04-23 16:09:18 +00:00