clock_gettime(2) on ARMv7 and ARMv8 systems which have architectural
generic timer hardware. It is similar how the RDTSC timer is used in
userspace on x86.
Fix a permission problem where generic timer access from EL0 (or
userspace on v7) was not properly initialized on APs.
For ARMv7, mark the stack non-executable. The shared page is added for
all arms (including ARMv8 64bit), and the signal trampoline code is
moved to the page.
Reviewed by: andrew
Discussed with: emaste, mmel
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4209
The normal LIBADD is ssp_nonshared. This also had a DPADD on LIBSSP which
does not actually exist, it is blank.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- Create automatically generated include header for split.c
main.c:
- Use function definitions from debug.ih and split.ih instead of externs
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This is so that 'make depend' is not a required build step in these
files.
DPSRCS is overall unneeded. DPSRCS already contains SRCS, so anything
which can safely be in SRCS should be. DPSRCS is mostly just a way to
generate files that should not be linked into the final PROG/LIB. For
headers and grammars it is safe for them to be in SRCS since they will
be excluded during linking and installation.
The only remaining uses of DPSRCS are for generating .c or .o files that
must be built before 'make depend' can run 'mkdep' on the SRCS c files
list. A semi-proper example is in tests/sys/kern/acct/Makefile where a
checked-in .c file has an #include on a generated .c file. The
generated .c file should not be linked into the final PROG though since
it is #include'd. The more proper way here is just to build/link it in
though without DPSRCS. Another example is in sys/modules/linux/Makefile
where a shell script runs to parse a DPSRCS .o file that should not be
linked into the module. Beyond those, the need for DPSRCS is largely
unneeded, redundant, and forces 'make depend' to be ran. Generally,
these Makefiles should avoid the need for DPSRCS and define proper
dependencies for their files as well.
An example of an improper usage and why this matters is in usr.bin/netstat.
nl_defs.h was only in DPSRCS and so was not generated during 'make all',
but only during 'make depend'. The files including it lacked proper
depenencies on it, which forced running 'make depend' to workaround that
bug. The 'make depend' target should mostly be used for incremental build
help, not to produce a working build. This specific example was broken in
the meta build until r287905 since it does not run 'make depend'.
The gnu/lib/libreadline/readline case is fine since bsd.lib.mk has 'OBJS:
SRCS:M*.h' when there is no .depend file.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after: 1 week
Tracking these leads to situations where meta mode will consider the
file to be out of date if /bin/sh or /bin/ln are newer than the source
file. There's no reason for meta mode to do this as make is already
handling the rebuild dependency fine.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
(HOST_SHELL is used in NetBSD)
This fixes permission denied issues when gen_ether_subr is not executable
MFC after: 3 days
Reported by: José Pérez <fbl@aoek.com>
Suggested by: bdrewery, sjg
Move fdopen() up near other resource allocation like malloc(); do proper
deallocation on failure later on in the function.
Submitted by: Ramachandra Topannavar <rtopannavar@panasas.com>
Reviewed by: jilles
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Panasas, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4126
M lib/libc/gen/popen.c
1024 specified on YPMAXRECORD the ypmatch can get in an infinite retry
loop when is requesting the information from the NIS server.
The ypmatch(1) will return an error until the command receives an
kill(1).
To avoid this problem, we check the MAX_RETRIES that is by default set
to 20 and avoid get in infinet loop at the client side.
NOTE: FreeBSD nis(8) server doesn't present this issue.
Submitted by: Ravi Pokala <rpokala@panasas.com>,
Lakshmi N. Sundararajan <lakshmi.n@msystechnologies.com>,
Lewis, Fred <flewis@panasas.com>,
Pushkar Kothavade <pushkar.kothavade@msystechnologies.com>
Approved by: bapt (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: D4095
- Split up the testcases into C locale and ja_JP.eucJP testcases.
- Avoid a segfault in the event that setlocale fails, similar to r290843
- Replace `sizeof(x) / sizeof(*x)` pattern with `nitems(x)`
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC with: r290532
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Provide more meaningful diagnostic messages if LC_CTYPE can't be set properly
instead of segfaulting, because setlocale returns NULL and strcmp(NULL, b) will
always segfault
Split up the testcases so one failing (in this case en_US.ISO8859-15) won't
cause the rest of the testcases to be skipped
Remove some unused variables
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC with: r290532
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
immediatelly as old code does, now for append modes too.
Real use case for such fallback is impossible (unless specially crafted).
2) Remove now unneded include I forgot to remove in prev. commits.
MFC after: 1 week
The NONE:US-ASCII case isn't necessary. The "NONE:" case will handle
US-ASCII, so let's remove the redundant handling.
Submitted by: marino
Obtained from: DragonflyBSD
The US-ASCII format was getting treated identically to POSIX. It is
supposed to throw an ILSEQ errno if a value of 0x80 or greater is
encountered, so let's bring back the "ASCII" handling.
While here, change nl_codeset to return US-ASCII only when the encoding
really is "US-ASCII". Before "C" and "POSIX" encoding returned this
string, so now they return "POSIX".
Discussed with: ache
Submitted by: marino
Obtained from: DragonflyBSD
as lib/libc/tests/gen
The code in test-fnmatch that was used for generating:
- bin/sh/tests/builtins/case2.0
- bin/sh/tests/builtins/case3.0
has been left undisturbed. The target `make sh-tests` has been moved over
from tools/regression/lib/libc/gen/Makefile to
lib/libc/tests/gen/Makefile and made into a PHONY target
case2.0 and case3.0 test input generation isn't being done automatically.
This needs additional discussion.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- Remove a leftover printf from when this was a TAP based testcase
- Catch mmap failures properly
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
as lib/libc/tests/net
Also, fix eui64_aton_test:test_str(..). The test was comparing the result
of eui64_aton to a pointer of the expected result.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
provided on amd64, but not i386. Add libm to DPADD/LDADD to unbreak the i386
tinderbox
Pointyhat to: ngie
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC with: r290538
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
as lib/libc/tests/stdlib
- Make the code a bit more style(9) compliant
- Convert a sizeof(x)/sizeof(x[0]) to nitems
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Sorting eucJP text with "sort" resulted in an illegal sequence while
"gsort" worked. This was traced back to mbrtowc handling which was
broken for eucJP (probably eucCN, eucKR, and eucTW as well). This
small fix took hours to figure out. The OR operation to build the
wide character requires an unsigned character to work correctly. The
euc wcrtowc conversion is probably broken upstream in Illumos as well.
Triggered by: misc/freebsd-doc-ja in ports (encoded in eucJP)
Submitted by: marino
Obtained from: DragonflyBSD
The output of "locale charmap" is identical to the result of
nl_langinfo (CODESET) for any given locale. The logic for returning the
codeset was very simplistic. It just returned portion of the locale name
after the period (e.g. en_FR.ISO8859-1 returned "ISO8859-1").
When softlinks were added to locales, this broke. e.g.:
en_US returned ""
en_FR.UTF8 returned "UTF8"
en_FR.UTF-8 returned "UTF-8"
zh_Hant_HK.Big5HKSCS returned "Big5HKSCS"
zh_Hant_TW.Big5 returned "Big5"
es_ES@euro returned ""
In order to fix this properly, the named locale cannot be used to
determine the encoding. This information was almost available in the
rune data. Unfortunately, all the single byte encodings were listed
as "NONE" encoding.
So I adjusted localedef tool to provide more information about the
encoding. For example, instead of "NONE", the LC_CTYPE used by
fr_FR.ISO8859-15 is now encoded as "NONE:ISO8859-15". The locale
handlers now check if the first four characters of the encoding is
"NONE" and if so, treats it as a single-byte encoding.
The nl_langinfo handling of CODESET was adjusting accordingly. Now the
following is returned:
en_US returns "ISO8859-1"
fr_FR.UTF8 returns "UTF-8"
fr_FR.UTF-8 returns "UTF-8"
zh_Hant_HK.Big5HKSCS returns "Big5"
zh_Hant_TW.Big5 returns "Big5"
es_ES@euro returns "ISO8859-15"
as before, "C" and "POSIX" locales return "US-ASCII". This is a big
improvement. The result of nl_langinfo can never be a zero-length
string and it will always exclusively one of the values of the
character maps of /usr/src/tools/tools/locale/etc/final-maps.
Submitted by: marino
Obtained from: DragonflyBSD
Only enable h_raw on x86 targets for today so that a buildworld runs to
completion for clang enabled targets that are not x86. This should be
removed when validation of the sanitizer has occured for all targets
supported by FreeBSD and clang.
as lib/libc/rpc
This testcase requires rpcbind be up in running; otherwise the testcases
will time out and be skipped
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- Both curitem and curitem (via the names list) was always leaked.
- malloc(3) failures lead to some leaks.
- __bsd___iconv_get_list() failure lead to a crash since its error was not
handles and __bsd___iconv_free_list() is not NULL-safe.
I have slightly refactored this to avoid extra malloc and free logic in cases
of malloc(3) failing.
There are still bad assumptions here that I did not deal with. One of which is
that the data will always have a '/' so the strchr(3) will not return NULL.
Coverity CID: 1130055 1130054 1130053
MK_NIS == no by converting `i` back to an int, and instead cast the loop
comparison to `int`
The loop comparison is iterating the len(ns_dtab)-1, because
the last element is the sentinel tuple { NULL, NULL, NULL, }, so when
both HESOID and NIS are off, len(ns_dtab)-1 == 1 - 1 == 0, and the loop
is skipped because the expression is tautologically false
While here, convert `(sizeof(x) / sizeof(x[0]))` to `nitems(x)`
Tested with: clang 3.7.0, gcc 4.2.1, and gcc 4.9.4 [*] with MK_NIS={no,yes}
and by running bash -lc 'id -u && id -g && id'
* gcc 4.9.4 needs another patch in order for the compile to succeed
with -Werror with lib/libc/gen/getgrent.c
Reported by: jhibbits
Through testing, the user noted that some Cyrillic characters were not
sorting correctly, and this was confirmed.
After extensive testing and review, the localedef tool was eliminated
as the culprit. The sustitutions were encoded correctly in LC_COLLATE.
The error was mainly in wcscoll where character expansions were
mishandled. The main directive pass routines had to be written to
go back for a new collation value when the "state" variable was set.
Before pointers were being advanced, the second lookup was gettting
applied to the wrong character, etc.
The "eat expansion codes" section on collate.c also had a bug. Later
own, the "state" variable logic was changed to only set if next
code was greater than zero (rather than >= 0).
Some additional cleanups got captured from previous work:
1) The previous commit moved the binary search comment from the
correct location to a wrong location because it's wrong upstream
in Illumos. The comment has little value so I just removed it.
2) Don't check if pointers are null before freeing, this is
redundant as free() handles null pointers.
3) The two binary search trees were standardized wrt initialization
4) On the binary search trees, a negative "high" exits rather than
checking the table count again.
Submitted by: marino
Obtained from: DragonflyBSD
In the past, _res was a global variable. Now, it's multiple function calls.
Several functions in the resolver use _res multiple times and therefore
call the function(s) far more than necessary.
Fix those callers to store the result of _res in a local variable.
Add __noinline to the definition of res_init() to avoid the code bloat
that these changes would have otherwise incurred. Thanks to jilles
for noticing this.
Reviewed by: jilles
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3887
The main "fix" here is properly setting a collate loading error for each
early return. Tweaks include removing unnecessary null checks, adding
assertions (from Illumos) and a couple of variables to reduces code
differences and improve readability. For normal use, there are no
functional changes here.
Obtained from: DragonflyBSD, Illumos
On each resolver query, use stat(2) to see if the modification time
of /etc/resolv.conf has changed. If so, reload the file and reinitialize
the resolver library. However, only call stat(2) if at least two seconds
have passed since the last call to stat(2), since calling it on every
query could kill performance.
This new behavior is enabled by default. Add a "reload-period" option
to disable it or change the period of the test.
Document this behavior and option in resolv.conf(5).
Polish the man page just enough to appease igor.
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2015-October/017342.html
Reviewed by: kp, wblock
Discussed with: jilles, imp, alfred
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3867
FreeBSD extended ctypes to include numbers (e.g. isnumber()) but never
actually implemented it. The isnumber() function was equivalent to the
isdigit() function in every case.
Now that DragonFly's ctype source files have number definitions, the
number ctype can finally be implemented. It's given a new flag _CTYPE_N.
The isalnum() and iswalnum() functions have been changed to use this
flag rather than the _CTYPE_D digit flag.
While isalnum(), isnumber(), and their wide equivalents now return
different values in locale cases, the ishexnumber() and iswhexnumber()
functions are unchanged. They are still aliases for isxdigit() and
iswxdigit().
Also change ctype.h for isdigit and isxdigit to use sbistype like the
other functions.
Obtained from: dragonfly
netbsd-tests.test.mk (r289151)
- Eliminate explicit OBJTOP/SRCTOP setting
- Convert all ad hoc NetBSD test integration over to netbsd-tests.test.mk
- Remove unnecessary TESTSDIR setting
- Use SRCTOP where possible for clarity
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Divison
This removes the need for manually changing this flag for Google Chrome
users. It also improves compatibility with Linux applications running under
Linuxulator compatibility layer, and possibly also helps in porting software
from Linux.
Generally speaking, the flag allows applications to create the shared memory
segment, attach it, remove it, and then continue to use it and to reattach it
later. This means that the kernel will automatically "clean up" after the
application exits.
It could be argued that it's against POSIX. However, SUSv3 says this
about IPC_RMID: "Remove the shared memory identifier specified by shmid from
the system and destroy the shared memory segment and shmid_ds data structure
associated with it." From my reading, we break it in any case by deferring
removal of the segment until it's detached; we won't break it any more
by also deferring removal of the identifier.
This is the behaviour exhibited by Linux since... probably always, and
also by OpenBSD since the following commit:
revision 1.54
date: 2011/10/27 07:56:28; author: robert; state: Exp; lines: +3 -8;
Allow segments to be used even after they were marked for deletion with
the IPC_RMID flag.
This is permitted as an extension beyond the standards and this is similar
to what other operating systems like linux do.
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3603
This uses the kdump(1) utrace support code directly until a common library
is created.
This allows malloc(3) tracing with MALLOC_CONF=utrace:true and rtld tracing
with LD_UTRACE=1. Unknown utrace(2) data is just printed as hex.
PR: 43819 [inspired by]
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3819
Shell syntax is too complicated to detect command substitution and unquoted
operators reliably without implementing much of sh's parser. Therefore, have
sh do this detection.
While changing sh's support anyway, also read input from a pipe instead of
arguments to avoid {ARG_MAX} limits and improve privacy, and output count
and length using 16 instead of 8 digits.
The basic concept is:
execl("/bin/sh", "sh", "-c", "freebsd_wordexp ${1:+\"$1\"} -f "$2",
"", flags & WRDE_NOCMD ? "-p" : "", <pipe with words>);
The WRDE_BADCHAR error is still implemented in libc. POSIX requires us to
fail strings containing unquoted braces with code WRDE_BADCHAR. Since this
is normally not a syntax error in sh, there is still a need for checking
code in libc, we_check().
The new we_check() is an optimistic check that all the characters
<newline> | & ; < > ( ) { }
are quoted. To avoid duplicating too much sh logic, such characters are
permitted when quoting characters are seen, even if the quoting characters
may themselves be quoted. This code reports all WRDE_BADCHAR errors; bad
characters that get past it and are a syntax error in sh return WRDE_SYNTAX.
Although many implementations of WRDE_NOCMD erroneously allow some command
substitutions (and ours even documented this), there appears to be code that
relies on its security (codesearch.debian.net shows quite a few uses).
Passing untrusted data to wordexp() still exposes a denial of service
possibility and a fairly large attack surface.
Reviewed by: wblock (man page only)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Security: fixes command execution with wordexp(untrusted, WRDE_NOCMD)
The old code was exponential in the number of asterisks in the pattern.
However, once a match has been found upto the next asterisk, the previous
asterisks are no longer relevant.
- In a PF_LOCAL address, "hostname" must begins with '/' and "servname"
is always NULL. All of ai_flags are ignored.
- PF_UNSPEC matches PF_LOCAL. EAI_SERVICE is not returned to make
AF-independent programming easier; "servname" is always ignored
in PF_LOCAL. In practice, PF_INET* and PF_LOCAL are
mutually-exclusive because a hostname which begins with '/' is invalid
in PF_INET*. No domain name resolution is performed for a PF_LOCAL address.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3634
Note that the mountlist manipulations are somewhat fragile, and not very
pretty. The reason for this is to avoid changing vfs_mountroot(), which
is (obviously) rather mission-critical, but not very well documented,
and thus hard to test properly. It might be possible to rework it to use
its own simple root mount mechanism instead of vfs_mountroot().
Reviewed by: kib@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2698
This silence a warning brought up by valgrind whenever if_nametoindex
is used. This was already discussed in PR 166483, but the code
committed in r234329 guards the initilization with #ifdef PURIFY.
Therefore, valgrind still complains. Since this code is not performance
critical, always zero out the local variable to silence valgrind.
PR: 166483
Discussed with: eadler@
MFC after: 4 weeks
the buffer. (n == hostlen) also means the buffer length was
too short.
- Use sdl->sdl_data only when (sdl->sdl_nlen > 0 && sdl->sdl_alen == 0)
to prevent redundant output.
Connect it to the build.
The code assumed that SCHED_* constants form a contiguous set of
numbers, remove the assumption by using schedulers[] array in
get_different_scheduler(). This is no-op on FreeBSD, but improves
code portability.
The selection of different priority used the min/max priority range of
the current scheduler class, instead of the priority to be changed to.
The bug caused the test failure.
Remove duplication of POSIX_SPAWN_SETSIGDEF flag and now unused
duplications of MIN/MAX definitions.
Reviewed by: jilles, pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3533
comment above, POSIX_SPAWN_SETSIGMASK and POSIX_SPAWN_SETSIGDEF
handlers used libthr interposed functions instead of syscalls.
Noted by: jilles
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 6 days
are aliases for the syscall stubs and are plt-interposed, to the
libc-private aliases of internally interposed sigprocmask() etc.
Since e.g. _sigaction is not interposed by libthr, calling signal()
removes thr_sighandler() from the handler slot etc. The result was
breaking signal semantic and rtld locking.
The added __libc_sigprocmask and other symbols are hidden, they are
not exported and cannot be called through PLT. The setjmp/longjmp
functions for x86 were changed to use direct calls, and since
PIC_PROLOGUE only needed for functional PLT indirection on i386, it is
removed as well.
The PowerPC bug of calling the syscall directly in the setjmp/longjmp
implementation is kept as is.
Reported by: Pete French <petefrench@ingresso.co.uk>
Tested by: Michiel Boland <boland37@xs4all.nl>
Reviewed by: jilles (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
- in mbrtowc() we need to disallow codepoints above 0x10ffff.
- In wcrtomb() we need to disallow codepoints between 0xd800 and 0xdfff.
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3399
having some children, the children' reaper is not reset to the parent.
This allows for the situation where reaper has children but not
descendands and the too strict asserts in the reap_status() fire.
Remove the wrong asserts, add some clarification for the situation to
the procctl(2) REAP_STATUS.
Reported and tested by: feld
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Distinguish between WRDE_BADVAL and WRDE_SYNTAX based on when the error
occurred (parsing or execution), not based on whether WRDE_UNDEF was passed.
Also, return WRDE_NOSPACE for a few more unexpected results from sh.
- Remove the redundant _PATH_RSH definition (paths.h at r96194);
- Use pid_t for PIDs
- Note that we are at the same level of OpenBSD's counterpart of
revision 1.7 (r94757).
No functional changes.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Each issue has a PR open to track. This workaround allows us to run the
tests to investigate the failures and avoid any new regressions.
PR: 202304, 202305, 202307
Reviewed by: ngie
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3378
The functionality of the wordexp builtin is easily replaced using normal
shell code, although performance is slightly worse.
This does not mean that wordexp() will remain shell-independent -- a fully
reliable implementation of WRDE_NOCMD is really only possible using
extensions to the shell, or by adding much of the shell's code to libc.
The comment in the libc/sys symbol map referenced the generated symbols
for the syscall trampolines. Such comment was out of place in the secure
symbol map so remove the stale comment and attempt to clarify the old one
to avoid risks of confusion.
Pointed out by: kib
As part of the code refactoring to support FORTIFY_SOURCE we want
a new subdirectory "secure" to keep the files related to security.
Move the stack protector functions to this new directory.
No functional change.
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3333
as well as when it was removed from POSIX specification.
Reviewed by: theraven, wblock, bapt, rodrigc
Approved by: bapt, rodrigc (mentor)
Differential Revision: D3374
Fix some phrases to make it more clear.
Differential Revision: D3378
Reported by: bde@
Reviewed by: wblock
Approved by: bapt, rodrigc (mentor)
Sponsored by: gandi.net
POSIX.1-2001 and removed from the specification in POSIX.1-2008.
New softwares shall use memcpy(3) or memmove(3).
Differential Revision: D3358
Reviewed by: wblock
Approved by: rodrigc
Sponsored by: gandi.net
In fact, it doesn't even work with single-byte codesets like ISO-8859-1.
The comparison blows up at index 128 (the range is 0 to UCHAR_MAX (255).
As a temporary workaround, all comparisons will be done in C locale
regardless of the environment setting. The regex library needs to be
updated to handle all codesets.
Obtained from: Dragonfly
packed LC_COLLATE binary formats. These were generated with the colldef
tool, but the new LC_COLLATE files are going to be generated by the new
localedef tool using CLDR POSIX files as input. The BSD-flavored
version of localedef identifies the format as "BSD 1.0". Any
LC_COLLATE file with a different version will simply not be loaded, and
all LC* categories will get set to "C" (aka "POSIX") locale.
This work is based off of Nexenta's contribution to Illumos.
The integration with xlocale is John Marino's work for Dragonfly.
The following commits will enable localedef tool, disable the colldef
tool, add generated colldef directory, and finally remove colldef from
base.
The only difference with Dragonfly are:
- a few fixes to build with clang
- And identification of the flavor as "BSD 1.0" instead of "Dragonfly 4.4"
Obtained from: Dragonfly
It looks like EVFILT_READ and EVFILT_WRITE trigger under the same
conditions as poll()'s POLLRDNORM and POLLWRNORM as described by POSIX.
The only difference is that POLLRDNORM has to be triggered on regular
files unconditionally, whereas EVFILT_READ only triggers when not EOF.
Introduce a new flag, NOTE_FILE_POLL, that can be used to make
EVFILT_READ and EVFILT_WRITE behave identically to poll(). This flag
will be used by cloudlibc's poll() function.
Reviewed by: jmg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3303
of the timehands, from the kern_tc.c implementation to vdso. Add
comments giving hints where to look for the algorithm explanation.
To compensate the removal of rmb() in userspace binuptime(), add
explicit lfence instruction before rdtsc. On i386, add usual
complications to detect SSE2 presence; assume that old CPUs which do
not implement SSE2 also execute rdtsc almost in order.
Reviewed by: alc, bde (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Summary:
Back in 2005, maxim@ attempted to fix shutdown() to return ENOTCONN in case the socket was not connected (r150152). This had to be rolled back (r150155), as it broke some of the existing programs that depend on this behavior. I reapplied this change on my system and indeed, syslogd failed to start up. I fixed this back in February (279016) and MFC'ed it to the supported stable branches. Apart from that, things seem to work out all right.
Since at least Linux and Mac OS X do the right thing, I'd like to go ahead and give this another try. To keep old copies of syslogd working, only start returning ENOTCONN for recent binaries.
I took a look at the XNU sources and they seem to test against both SS_ISCONNECTED, SS_ISCONNECTING and SS_ISDISCONNECTING, instead of just SS_ISCONNECTED. That seams reasonable, so let's do the same.
Test Plan:
This issue was uncovered while writing tests for shutdown() in CloudABI:
https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc/blob/master/src/libc/sys/socket/shutdown_test.c#L26
Reviewers: glebius, rwatson, #manpages, gnn, #network
Reviewed By: gnn, #network
Subscribers: bms, mjg, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3039
to no longer claim they are experimental.
Reviewed by: rwatson@, wblock@
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2985
SIGCHLD signal, should keep full 32 bits of the status passed to the
_exit(2).
Split the combined p_xstat of the struct proc into the separate exit
status p_xexit for normal process exit, and signalled termination
information p_xsig. Kernel-visible macro KW_EXITCODE() reconstructs
old p_xstat from p_xexit and p_xsig. p_xexit contains complete status
and copied out into si_status.
Requested by: Joerg Schilling
Reviewed by: jilles (previous version), pho
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This is based on work done by jeff@ and jhb@, as well as the numa.diff
patch that has been circulating when someone asks for first-touch NUMA
on -10 or -11.
* Introduce a simple set of VM policy and iterator types.
* tie the policy types into the vm_phys path for now, mirroring how
the initial first-touch allocation work was enabled.
* add syscalls to control changing thread and process defaults.
* add a global NUMA VM domain policy.
* implement a simple cascade policy order - if a thread policy exists, use it;
if a process policy exists, use it; use the default policy.
* processes inherit policies from their parent processes, threads inherit
policies from their parent threads.
* add a simple tool (numactl) to query and modify default thread/process
policities.
* add documentation for the new syscalls, for numa and for numactl.
* re-enable first touch NUMA again by default, as now policies can be
set in a variety of methods.
This is only relevant for very specific workloads.
This doesn't pretend to be a final NUMA solution.
The previous defaults in -HEAD (with MAXMEMDOM set) can be achieved by
'sysctl vm.default_policy=rr'.
This is only relevant if MAXMEMDOM is set to something other than 1.
Ie, if you're using GENERIC or a modified kernel with non-NUMA, then
this is a glorified no-op for you.
Thank you to Norse Corp for giving me access to rather large
(for FreeBSD!) NUMA machines in order to develop and verify this.
Thank you to Dell for providing me with dual socket sandybridge
and westmere v3 hardware to do NUMA development with.
Thank you to Scott Long at Netflix for providing me with access
to the two-socket, four-domain haswell v3 hardware.
Thank you to Peter Holm for running the stress testing suite
against the NUMA branch during various stages of development!
Tested:
* MIPS (regression testing; non-NUMA)
* i386 (regression testing; non-NUMA GENERIC)
* amd64 (regression testing; non-NUMA GENERIC)
* westmere, 2 socket (thankyou norse!)
* sandy bridge, 2 socket (thankyou dell!)
* ivy bridge, 2 socket (thankyou norse!)
* westmere-EX, 4 socket / 1TB RAM (thankyou norse!)
* haswell, 2 socket (thankyou norse!)
* haswell v3, 2 socket (thankyou dell)
* haswell v3, 2x18 core (thankyou scott long / netflix!)
* Peter Holm ran a stress test suite on this work and found one
issue, but has not been able to verify it (it doesn't look NUMA
related, and he only saw it once over many testing runs.)
* I've tested bhyve instances running in fixed NUMA domains and cpusets;
all seems to work correctly.
Verified:
* intel-pcm - pcm-numa.x and pcm-memory.x, whilst selecting different
NUMA policies for processes under test.
Review:
This was reviewed through phabricator (https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2559)
as well as privately and via emails to freebsd-arch@. The git history
with specific attributes is available at https://github.com/erikarn/freebsd/
in the NUMA branch (https://github.com/erikarn/freebsd/compare/local/adrian_numa_policy).
This has been reviewed by a number of people (stas, rpaulo, kib, ngie,
wblock) but not achieved a clear consensus. My hope is that with further
exposure and testing more functionality can be implemented and evaluated.
Notes:
* The VM doesn't handle unbalanced domains very well, and if you have an overly
unbalanced memory setup whilst under high memory pressure, VM page allocation
may fail leading to a kernel panic. This was a problem in the past, but it's
much more easily triggered now with these tools.
* This work only controls the path through vm_phys; it doesn't yet strongly/predictably
affect contigmalloc, KVA placement, UMA, etc. So, driver placement of memory
isn't really guaranteed in any way. That's next on my plate.
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.; Dell
the 'user' sysctl tree, which have all been coming back 0 or empty
since r240176.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2945
Reviewed by: sbruno
Approved by: jmallett (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
This function is equivalent to fclose(3) function except that it
does not close the underlying file descriptor.
fdclose(3) is step forward to make FILE structure private.
Reviewed by: wblock, jilles, jhb, pjd
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2697
to be before the lavel, otherwise an extra word may be added between the
label and the data.
Obtained from: ABT Systems Ltd
Sponsored by: The FReeBSD Foundation
Since METAMODE has been added, sys.mk loads bsd.mkopt.mk which ends load loading
bsd.own.mk which then defines SHLIBDIR before all the Makefile.inc everywhere.
This makes /lib being populated again.
Reported by: many
Use a constant array for the MIB. Newer LLVM decided that mib[] warranted
stack protections, with the obvious crash after the setup was done.
As a positive side effect, code size shrinks a bit.
I'm not sure why this hasn't bitten us yes, but it is certainly possible and
there are no real drawbacks to this change anyway.
Submitted by: pfg
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 1 week
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