return value when it could return 1 (indicating we should stop).
Fix a few instances of pager_open() / pager_close() not being called.
Actually use these routines for the environment variable printing code
I just committed.
Coverity reports an uninitialized "len" in case the switch defaults
without hitting any case. Respect the original intent and quell the
false positive with the relatively new __unreachable() builtin.
CID: 1347796
Don't crash if the user has more than 31 of them. A follow-up to
r298230.
Reviewed by: allanjude
Relnotes: maybe
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6212
The new bcache code does not know the size of the disk, and therefore may attempt to read past the end of the disk while trying to fill its read-ahead cache.
This is usually not an issue, it fails gracefully on all of my machines, but some BIOSes seem to retry the reads for up to 30 seconds each, resulting in a long stall during boot
Submitted by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Reviewed by: jhb, np
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6109
The block cache implementation in loader has proven to be almost useless, and in worst case even slowing down the disk reads due to insufficient cache size and extra memory copy.
Also the current cache implementation does not cache reads from CDs, or work with zfs built on top of multiple disks.
Instead of an LRU, this code uses a simple hash (O(1) read from cache), and instead of a single global cache, a separate cache per block device.
The cache also implements limited read-ahead to increase performance.
To simplify read ahead management, the read ahead will not wrap over bcache end, so in worst case, single block physical read will be performed to fill the last block in bcache.
Booting from a virtual CD over IPMI:
0ms latency, before: 27 second, after: 7 seconds
60ms latency, before: over 12 minutes, after: under 5 minutes.
Submitted by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Reviewed by: delphij (previous version), emaste (previous version)
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4713
to open the device in exclusive mode as, without this, the firmware may
also be reading packets off the interface leading to a race.
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4132
boot1 to pass in files with newlines in them. Now that the EFI loader
groks foo=bar on the command line, this can allow a more general setup
than traditional boot loader args will allow.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5038
This builds on the modular EFI loader support added r294060 adding a
module to provide ZFS boot support on EFI systems.
It should be noted that EFI uses a fixed size memory block for all
allocations performed by the loader so it may be necessary to tune this
size.
For example when building an image which uses mfs_root e.g. mfsbsd, adding
the following to /etc/make.conf would be needed to prevent EFI from running
out of memory when loading the mfs_root image.
EFI_STAGING_SIZE=128
Submitted by: Eric McCorkle
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC-With: r293268
Sponsored by: Multiplay
Disable some compiler warnings for GCC (non-standard compiler) fixing
build failures introduced by r293724, which enabled WARNS in the EFI boot
code, when compiling with none standard compiler (GCC).
Raised by: ian
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC-With: r293268
Sponsored by: Multiplay
Set WARNS if not set for EFI boot code and fix the issues highlighted by
setting it.
Most components are set to WARNS level 6 with few being left at lower
levels due to the amount of changes needed to fix at higher levels.
Error types fixed:
* Missing / invalid casts
* Missing inner structs
* Unused vars
* Missing static for internal only funcs
* Missing prototypes
* Alignment changes
* Use of uninitialised vars
* Unknown pragma (intrinsic)
* Missing types etc due to missing includes
* printf formatting types
Reviewed by: emaste (in part)
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC-With: r293268
Sponsored by: Multiplay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4839
This is based on the vidconsole implementation.
Submitted by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Reviewed by: adrian
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: Yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4797
i386 is the only current FreeBSD architecture that ever used a.out
format.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4687
The UEFI loader on the 10.1 release install disk (disc1) modifies an
existing EFI_DEVICE_PATH_PROTOCOL instance in an apparent attempt to
truncate the device path. In doing so it creates an invalid device
path.
Perform the equivalent action without modification of structures
allocated by firmware.
PR: 197641
MFC After: 1 week
Submitted by: Chris Ruffin <chris.ruffin@intel.com>
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
- Add bzipfs to the list of supported filesystems in the EFI loader.
- Increase the heap size allocated for the EFI loader from 2MB to 3MB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2053
Reviewed by: benno, emaste, imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Cisco Systems, Inc.
redzone below the stack pointer for scratch space and requires
interrupt and signal frames to avoid overwriting it. However, EFI uses
the Windows ABI which does not support this. As a result, interrupt
handlers in EFI push their interrupt frames directly on top of the
stack pointer. If the compiler used the red zone in a function in the
EFI loader, then a device interrupt that occurred while that function
was running could trash its local variables. In practice this happens
fairly reliable when using gzipfs as an interrupt during decompression
can trash the local variables in the inflate_table() function
resulting in corrupted output or hangs.
Fix this by disabling the redzone for amd64 EFI binaries. This
requires building not only the loader but any libraries used by the
loader without redzone support.
Thanks to Jilles for pointing me at the redzone once I found the stack
corruption.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2054
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Cisco Systems, Inc.
In UEFI it appears all available NICS are present to pass network traffic.
This gives the capability to load the loader.efi from disk then set
currdev="net3:" and then all I/O will over over the 2nd NIC. On this
machine is appears the first handle is the first NIC in IPv4 mode and
then the 2nd handle is the first NIC in IPv6 mode. The 3rd handle is
the 2nd NIC in IPv4 mode. The fix is to index into the handle based
on the unit cached from boot device passed into the loader.
Some testing info from a test boot via kenv:
currdev="net3:"
loaddev="net3:"
boot.netif.name="igb1"
__attribute__((format(...))), and the -fformat-extensions flag was
removed, introduce a new macro in bsd.sys.mk to choose the right variant
of compile flag for the used compiler, and use it.
Also add something similar to kern.mk, since including bsd.sys.mk from
that file will anger Warner. :-)
Note that bsd.sys.mk does not support the MK_FORMAT_EXTENSIONS knob used
in kern.mk, since that knob is only available in kern.opts.mk, not in
src.opts.mk. We might want to add it later, to more easily support
external compilers for building world (in particular, sys/boot).
The loader previously failed to display on MacBooks and other systems
where the UEFI firmware remained in graphics mode.
Submitted by: Rafael Espíndola
r247216:
Add the ability for a device to have an "alias" handle.
r247379:
Fix network device registration.
r247380:
Adjust our load device when we boot from CD under UEFI.
The process for booting from a CD under UEFI involves adding a FAT
filesystem containing your loader code as an El Torito boot image.
When UEFI detects this, it provides a block IO instance that points
at the FAT filesystem as a child of the device that represents the CD
itself. The problem being that the CD device is flagged as a "raw
device" while the boot image is flagged as a "logical partition".
The existing EFI partition code only looks for logical partitions and
so the CD filesystem was rendered invisible.
To fix this, check the type of each block IO device. If it's found to
be a CD, and thus an El Torito boot image, look up its parent device
and add that instead so that the loader will then load the kernel from
the CD filesystem. This is done by using the handle for the boot
filesystem as an alias.
Something similar to this will be required for booting from other media
as well as the loader will live in the EFI system partition, not on the
partition containing the kernel.
r247381:
Remove a scatalogical debug printf that crept in.
Add support for Pre-Boot Virtual Memory (PBVM) to the loader.
PBVM allows us to link the kernel at a fixed virtual address without
having to make any assumptions about the physical memory layout. On
the SGI Altix 350 for example, there's no usuable physical memory
below 192GB. Also, the PBVM allows us to control better where we're
going to physically load the kernel and its modules so that we can
make sure we load the kernel in memory that's close to the BSP.
The PBVM is managed by a simple page table. The minimum size of the
page table is 4KB (EFI page size) and the maximum is currently set
to 1MB. A page in the PBVM is 64KB, as that's the maximum alignment
one can specify in a linker script. The bottom line is that PBVM is
between 64KB and 8GB in size.
The loader maps the PBVM page table at a fixed virtual address and
using a single translations. The PBVM itself is also mapped using a
single translation for a maximum of 32MB.
While here, increase the heap in the EFI loader from 512KB to 2MB
and set the stage for supporting relocatable modules.