Further to r240152 (i386) and r240178 (amd64), hide the .cerror symbol
so that it is not exported if symbol versioning is not in use. Without
this change WITHOUT_SYMVER libc contains .text relocations for .cerror,
as described in LLVM PR 26813 (http://llvm.org/pr26813).
This is a no-op for the regular build as the symbol version script
already controls .cerror visibility.
PR: 207712
Submitted by: Rafael Espíndola
Reviewed by: jilles, kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5571
Undo update of libedit 2016-02-27
Something in libedit appears to be causing breakage in lldb38.
The changes are not generally huge but they are suficient to
to justify reverting for now.
Reported by: novel, bapt
There is also a small portability crutch, also present in NetBSD,
to allow compiling on a system that doesn't define O_CLOEXEC.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
Obtained from: NetBSD (r1.17, r1.18)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5549
This mistakenly removed the SUBDIR_PARALLEL but even worse is that the install
(and build) order is not correct due to the lack of SUBDIR_DEPEND on the
most critical libraries. The only reason they build correctly now is because
buildworld's 'make libraries' orders them properly.
Pointyhat to: bdrewery
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Avoid casting gymnastics that lead to pointer aliasing by introducing an
inline function as done in NetBSD (but without #if0'd WIP code).
Obtained from: NetBSD (CVS Rev. 1.24, 1.25)
According to POSIX, The mbtowc() function shall fail if:
[EILSEQ] An invalid character sequence is detected.
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5496
Obtained from: OpenBSD (Ingo Schwarze)
MFC after: 1 month
Add missing Symbol.map entry for __aligned_alloc.
Add weak-->strong symbol binding for
{malloc_stats_print,mallctl,mallctlnametomib,mallctlbymib} -->
{__malloc_stats_print,__mallctl,__mallctlnametomib,__mallctlbymib}. These
bindings complete the set necessary to allow applications to replace all
malloc-related symbols.
breaking the ABI. Special value is stored in the lock pointer to
indicate shared lock, and offline page in the shared memory is
allocated to store the actual lock.
Reviewed by: vangyzen (previous version)
Discussed with: deischen, emaste, jhb, rwatson,
Martin Simmons <martin@lispworks.com>
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The rest of the manpage already referenced 'dstsize' but did not rename
the variable in the prototype in r257646.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- WARNS can be inherited from lib/Makefile.inc
- CFLAGS referred to a non-existent directory and this shouldn't be needed
anyhow due to the build picking up includes from WORLDTMP.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
After calling the cap_init(3) function Casper will fork from it's original
process, using pdfork(2). Forking from a process has a lot of advantages:
1. We have the same cwd as the original process.
2. The same uid, gid and groups.
3. The same MAC labels.
4. The same descriptor table.
5. The same routing table.
6. The same umask.
7. The same cpuset(1).
From now services are also in form of libraries.
We also removed libcapsicum at all and converts existing program using Casper
to new architecture.
Discussed with: pjd, jonathan, ed, drysdale@google.com, emaste
Partially reviewed by: drysdale@google.com, bdrewery
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4277
These are no longer needed after the recent 'beforebuild: depend' changes
and hooking DIRDEPS_BUILD into a subset of FAST_DEPEND which supports
skipping 'make depend'.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This will generate dependencies rather than depending on the previous behavior
of depending on the guessed OBJS: *.h dependecies or a user running
'make depend'.
Experimentation showed that depending only on headers was not enough and
prone to .ORDER errors. Downstream users may also have added
dependencies into beforedepend or afterdepend targets. The safest way to
ensure dependencies are generated before build is to run 'make depend'
beforehand rather than just depending on DPSRCS+SRCS.
Note that the OBJS_DEPEND_GUESS mechanism (a.k.a .if !exists(.depend) then
foo.o: *.h) is still useful as it improves incremental builds with missing
.depend.* files and allows 'make foo.o' to usually work, while this
'beforebuild: depend' ensures that the build will always find all dependencies.
The 'make foo.o' case has no means of a 'beforebuild' hook.
This also removes several hacks in the DIRDEPS_BUILD:
- NO_INSTALL_INCLUDES is no longer needed as it mostly was to work around
.ORDER problems with building the needed headers early.
- DIRDEPS_BUILD: It is no longer necesarry to track "local dependencies" in
Makefile.depend.
These were only in Makefile.depend for 'clean builds' since nothing would
generate the files due to skipping 'make depend' and early dependency
bugs that have been fixed, such as adding headers into SRCS for the
OBJS_DEPEND_GUESS mechanism. Normally if a .depend file does not exist then
a dependency is added by bsd.lib.mk/bsd.prog.mk from OBJS: *.h. However,
meta.autodep.mk creates a .depend file from created meta files and inserts
that into Makefile.depend. It also only tracks *.[ch] files though which can
miss some dependencies that are hooked into 'make depend'. This .depend
that is created then breaks incremental builds due to the !exists(.depend)
checks for OBJS_DEPEND_GUESS. The goal was to skip 'make depend' yet it only
really works the first time. After that files are not generated as expected,
which r288966 tried to address but was using buildfiles: rather than
beforebuild: and was reverted in r291725. As noted previously,
depending only on headers in beforebuild: would create .ORDER errors
in some cases.
meta.autodep.mk is still used to generate Makefile.depend though via:
gendirdeps: Makefile.depend
.END: gendirdeps
This commit allows removing all of the "local dependencies" in
Makefile.depend which cuts down on churn and removes some of the
arch-dependent Makefile.depend files.
The "local dependencies" were also problematic for bootstrapping.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Add two new functions, sysdecode_abi_to_freebsd_errno() and
sysdecode_freebsd_to_abi_errno(), which convert errno values between
the native FreeBSD ABI and other supported ABIs. Note that the
mappings are not necessarily perfect meaning in some cases multiple
errors in one ABI might map to a single error in another ABI. In that
case, the reverse mapping will return one of the errors that maps, but
which error is non-deterministic.
Change truss to always report the raw error value to the user but
use libsysdecode to map it to a native errno value that can be used
with strerror() to generate a description. Previously truss reported
the "converted" error value. Now the user will always see the exact
error value that the application sees.
Change kdump to report the truly raw error value to the user. Previously
kdump would report the absolute value of the raw error value (so for
Linux binaries it didn't output the FreeBSD error value, but the positive
value of the Linux error). Now it reports the real (i.e. negative) error
value for Linux binaries. Also, use libsysdecode to convert the native
FreeBSD error reported in the ktrace record to the raw error used by the
ABI. This means that the Linux ABI can now be handled directly in
ktrsysret() and removes the need for linux_ktrsysret().
Reviewed by: bdrewery, kib
Helpful notes: wblock (manpage)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5314
make sure the changes are on disk. The people at pfSense noticed that
it didn't always make it to the disk soon enough with soft updates.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5186
Reviewed by: garga, vangyzen, bapt, se
MFC after: 1 week
or pte-v6.h in files which needs it.
There are quite internal definitions in pte-v4.h and pte-v6.h headers
specific for corresponding pmap implementation. These headers should be
included only in very few files and an intention is to not hide for
which implementation such files are.
Further, sys/arm/arm/elf_trampoline.c is an example of file which
uses armv4 like pmap implementation for both armv4 and armv6 platforms.
This is another reason why pte.h which includes specific header
according to __ARM_ARCH is not created.
documented and easy to miss.
At the same time, it's pretty important for anyone who is trying to use
SEEK_HOLE/SEEK_DATA in real app. Try to bridge that gap by making that
description more pronounced and also document how it affects failure codes.
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5162
In such cases return ENOMEM. This is a limitation of our
implementation, alternatively you may consider getline(3).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D442 (Partial)
Obtained from: Apple Inc. (Libc 997.90.3)
Relnotes: yes
POSIX.1-2008 requires that successful completion simply return a
non-negative integer. We have regularly returned a constant value.
Another, equally valid, implementation convention implies returning
the number of bytes written.
Adopt this last convention to be in line with what Apple's libc
does. POSIX also explicitly notes:
Note that this implementation convention cannot be adhered to for strings
longer than {INT_MAX} bytes as the value would not be representable in the
return type of the function. For backwards-compatibility, implementations
can return the number of bytes for strings of up to {INT_MAX} bytes, and
return {INT_MAX} for all longer strings.
Developers shouldn't depend specifically on either convention but
the change may help port software from Apple.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D442 (Partial)
Obtained from: Apple Inc. (Libc 997.90.3 with changes)
Relnotes: yes
Some notable improvements include:
readelf:
- Add AArch64 relocation definitions.
- Report value of unknown relocation types.
elfcopy:
- Consider symbols with STB_GNU_UNIQUE binding as global symbols.
- Fixed support for VMA adjustment for loadable sections found
in relocatable objects.
- Handle nameless global symbols.
- Improve wildcard matching for !-prefixed symbols.
- Add PE/COFF support.
elfdump:
- Improve section type reporting.
- Add MIPS-specific section types.
This update also includes a significant number of bug fixes.
PR: 207091 [exp-run]
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
to the end of the function, but did not remove a fetch_close() call which
was made redundant by the one in the shared error-handling code.
PR: 206774
Submitted by: Christian Heckendorf <heckendorfc@gmail.com>
MFC after: 3 days
do not participate in the global symbols namespace, but rtld locks are
still replaced and functions are interposed. In particular,
__pthread_map_stacks_exec is resolved to the libc version. If a
library is loaded later, which requires adjustment of the stack
protection mode, rtld calls into libc __pthread_map_stacks_exec due to
the symbols scope. The libc version might recurse into binder and
recursively acquire rtld bind lock, causing the hang.
Make libc __pthread_map_stacks_exec() interposed, which synchronizes
rtld locks and version of the stack exec hook when libthr loaded,
regardless of the symbol scope control or symbol resolution order.
The __pthread_map_stacks_exec() symbol is removed from the private
version in libthr since libc symbol now operates correctly in presence
of libthr.
Reported and tested by: markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
the constraints on what needs to be installed in a specific to
maintain consistency during upgrades.
Create a new clibs package containing libraries that are needed
as a bare minimum for consistency.
With much help and input from: kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
time ago, but for some reason it was not. Basically, without this change
dlopen(3)'ing an empty .so file would just cause application to dump core
with SIGSEGV.
Make sure the file has enough data for at least the ELF header before
mmap'ing it.
Add a test case to check that dlopen an empty file return an error.
There were a separate discussion as to whether it should be SIGBUS
instead when you try to access region mapped from an empty file,
but it's definitely SIGSEGV now, so if anyone want to check that please
be my guest.
Reviewed by: mjg, cem
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5112
wraps sendmsg(2) and recvmsg(2) into batch send and receive operation.
The goal of this implementation is only to provide API compatibility
with Linux.
The cancellation behaviour of the functions is not quite right, but
due to relative rare use of cancellation it is considered acceptable
comparing with the complexity of the correct implementation. If
functions are reimplemented as syscalls, the fix would come almost
trivial. The direct use of the syscall trampolines instead of libc
wrappers for sendmsg(2) and recvmsg(2) is to avoid data loss on
cancellation.
Submitted by: Boris Astardzhiev <boris.astardzhiev@gmail.com>
Discussed with: jilles (cancellation behaviour)
MFC after: 1 month
GCC 5.2.0 generates the following [fatal] warning:
dialog_util.c:270:23: error:
zero-length gnu_printf format string [-Werror=format-zero-length]
sprintf(dargv[n++], "");
Fix malloc argument while here, removing sprintf.
Reported by: Ruslan Bukin <ruslan.bukin at cl cam ac uk>
dialog(3)'s dlg_reallocate_gauge(), used both by dialog(3)'s dialog_gauge()
and dialog(1)'s `--gauge', will segmentation fault in strlen(3) if no title
is set for the widget. Reproducible with `dialog --gauge hi 6 20' (adding
`--title ""' is enough to prevent segmentation fault).
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC-to: stable/10
Summary:
Migrate to using the semi-opaque type rman_res_t to specify rman resources. For
now, this is still compatible with u_long.
This is step one in migrating rman to use uintmax_t for resources instead of
u_long.
Going forward, this could feasibly be used to specify architecture-specific
definitions of resource ranges, rather than baking a specific integer type into
the API.
This change has been broken out to facilitate MFC'ing drivers back to 10 without
breaking ABI.
Reviewed By: jhb
Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5075
This avoids reproducing the lex logic which had dependencies set wrong
and used an intermediate file for modifying the YY_BUF_SIZE.
This has only been possible since flex 2.5.37 was imported in r250873,
which uses #ifndef YY_BUF_SIZE.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
nslexer.o depends on nsparser.h, which is already added by bsd.lib.mk
and .depend.
This reverts r237402.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Similar to dialog(3) keep_tite option used to prevent visually disturbing
initialization or exit that could occur when run from a script using
dpv(3) by way of dpv(1) in sequence with other dialog(1) invocations.
A new sysdecode_syscallname() function accepts a system call code and
returns a string of the corresponding name (or NULL if the code is
unknown). To support different process ABIs, the new function accepts a
value from a new sysdecode_abi enum as its first argument to select the
ABI in use. Current ABIs supported include FREEBSD (native binaries),
FREEBSD32, LINUX, LINUX32, and CLOUDABI64. Note that not all ABIs are
supported by all platforms. In general, a given ABI is only supported
if a platform can execute binaries for that ABI.
To simplify the implementation, libsysdecode's build reuses the
existing pre-generated files from the kernel source tree rather than
duplicating new copies of said files during the build.
kdump(1) and truss(1) now use these functions to map system call
identifiers to names. For kdump(1), a new 'syscallname()' function
consolidates duplicated code from ktrsyscall() and ktrsyscallret().
The Linux ABI no longer requires custom handling for ktrsyscall() and
linux_ktrsyscall() has been removed as a result.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4823
intended behaviour in its man page. Simplify tty_drain() to match.
Don't call ttydevsw methods in tty_flush() if the device is gone
since we now sometimes call it then.
The flushing was supposed to be implemented by passing the FNONBLOCK
flag to VOP_CLOSE() for revoke(). The tty driver is one of the few
that can block in close and was one of the fewer that knew about this.
This almost worked in FreeBSD-1 and similarly in Net/2. These
versions only almost worked because there was and is considerable
confusion between IO_NDELAY and FNONBLOCK (aka O_NONBLOCK). IO_NDELAY
is only valid for VOP_READ() and VOP_WRITE(). For other VOPs it has
the same value as O_SHLOCK. But since vfs_subr.c and tty.c
consistently used the wrong flag and the O_SHLOCK flag is rarely set,
this mostly worked. It also gave the feature than applications could
get the non-blocking close by abusing O_SHLOCK.
This was first broken then fixed in 1995. I changed only the tty
driver to use FNONBLOCK, as a hack to get non-blocking via the normal
flag FNONBLOCK for last closes. I didn't know about revoke()'s use
of IO_NDELAY or change it to be consistent, so revoke() was broken.
Then I changed revoke() to match.
This was next broken in 1997 then fixed in 1998. Importing Lite2 made
the flags inconsistent again by undoing the fix only in vfs_subr.c.
This was next broken in 2008 by replacing everything in tty.c and not
checking any flags in last close. Other bugs in draining limited the
resulting unbounded waits to drain in some cases.
It is now possible to fix this better using the new FREVOKE flag.
Just restore flushing for revoke() for now. Don't restore or undo any
hacks for ordinary last closes yet. But remove dead code in the
1-second relative timeout (r272789). This did extra work to extend
the buggy draining for revoke() for as long as possible. The 1-second
timeout made this not very long by usually flushing after 1 second.
Submitted by: bde
MFC after: 2 weeks
by application closing its stdin (i.e. STDIN_FILENO) prior to
calling readpassphrase WITHOUT setting RPP_STDIN. What happens
then is that the readpassphrase would open /dev/tty, and since
file descriptors are reused, the call would return first unused
fd, which is 0 which is also STDIN_FILENO. Then due to the usage
of "input != STDIN_FILENO" in the code to do its logic, that
would result in noecho flags not set on that file descriptor,
which was original issue I've been trying to fix.
In addition to that, the readpassphrase() would leak file
descriptor on its way out, so fix that one as well.
This problem can be tested with:
$ ssh-add - < /tmp/myprivate.key
The password will not be hidden as it should and ktrace will
show:
53326 ssh-add CALL open(0x80142443c,0x100002<O_RDWR|O_CLOEXEC>,<unused>0x165f030)
53326 ssh-add NAMI "/dev/tty"
53326 ssh-add RET open 0
53326 ssh-add CALL sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK,0x802eb1324,0x7fffffffd5e0)
53326 ssh-add RET sigprocmask 0
53326 ssh-add CALL sigaction(SIGALRM,0x7fffffffd630,0x7fffffffd610)
Instead of:
57690 ssh-add CALL open(0x80142443c,0x100002<O_RDWR|O_CLOEXEC>,<unused>0x165f030)
57690 ssh-add NAMI "/dev/tty"
57690 ssh-add RET open 4
57690 ssh-add CALL ioctl(0x4,TIOCGETA,0x7fffffffd860)
57690 ssh-add RET ioctl 0
57690 ssh-add CALL ioctl(0x4,TIOCSETAF,0x7fffffffd680)
57690 ssh-add RET ioctl 0
57690 ssh-add CALL sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK,0x802eb1324,0x7fffffffd620)
57690 ssh-add RET sigprocmask 0
57690 ssh-add CALL sigaction(SIGALRM,0x7fffffffd670,0x7fffffffd650)
For the case when the key is read from the file.
Technically this can also be workaround'ed at the application side
by not closing the STDIN_FILENO in the first place, but readpassphrase(3)
doesn't need to make any assumptions about that. Plus the file descriptor
leak confirms that this is an oversight, rather than a deliberate behaviour.
MFC after: 1 week
This bug could be reproduced easily by calling sem_open() with O_CREAT |
O_EXCL on a semaphore that is already open in the process. The struct
sem_nameinfo would be freed while still in sem_list and later calls to
sem_open() or sem_close() could access freed memory.
PR: 206396
MFC after: 5 days
All gmon want's is a region of memory without the overhead of malloc().
Just mapping some pages with mmap is an easy way to accomplish this.
Approved by: jhb, cem, emaste
Obtained from: CheriBSD (bf33e1e70b368ababde74aa3ac70d108c8a52c69)
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5005
The PSEUDO* macros should not declare <syscall>, only _<syscall> and
__sys_<syscall>. This was causing the interposing C wrappers to be
ignored due to link order.
Reviewed by: kib
Obtained from: CheriBSD (4e8e13c90fc6a80e1520de44a6864cfd78b3b56d)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4097
First, the authfd API now uses a direct file descriptor for the control
socket instead of a more abstract AuthenticationConnection structure.
Second, the functions now consistently return an error value.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Prior to this patch, unless SSL_CA_CERT_FILE is set in the environment,
libfetch will set the CA file to "/usr/local/etc/cert.pem" if it exists,
and to "/etc/ssl/cert.pem" otherwise. This has the consequence of
masking SSL_CA_CERT_PATH, because OpenSSL will ignore the CA path if a CA
file is set but fails to load (see X509_STORE_load_locations()).
While here, fall back to OpenSSL defaults if neither SSL_CA_CERT_FILE nor
SSL_CA_CERT_PATH are set in the environment, and if neither of the
libfetch default CA files exists.
PR: 193871
Submitted by: John W. O'Brien <john@saltant.com>
Approved by: des
MFC after: 1 week
- Remove unneeded fstat()/lseek() calls.
- Return NULL and set errno to EINVAL on negative length.
- Fix small style problems and expand variable names.
After this change, it is possible to use this code for some irregular
files. For example, 'md5 /dev/md0' should now succeed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4748
Suggested by: bde
Reviewed by: bde, allanjude, delphij
linking. These are too large for a branch instruction to branch from an
earlier point in the code to somewhere later.
This will also allow these to be build with Thumb-2 when we get this
infrastructure.
Reviewed by: dim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4855
tdelete() is supposed to return the address of the parent node that has
been deleted. We already keep track of this node in the loop between
lines 94-107. The GO_LEFT()/GO_RIGHT() macros are used later on as well,
so we must make sure not to change it to something else.
terminated.
If this buffer is adjacent to an unmapped page or a version of C with
bounds checked is used this may result in a crash.
PR: 206178
Submitted by: Alexander Cherepanov <cherepan@mccme.ru>
MFC after: 1 week
terminated.
If this buffer is adjacent to an unmapped page or a version of C with
bounds checked is used this may result in a crash.
PR: 206177
Submitted by: Alexander Cherepanov <cherepan@mccme.ru>
MFC after: 1 week
stackpointer. Userland expects the kernel to pass it an aligned sp and
pass a pointer to the arguments in x0. The kernel side was updated in
r289502, 3 months ago.
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
* Fix __FreeBSD_version check.
* Update history section in man page.
An MFC of this commit to stable/10 will allow using the new system calls
instead of the fallback.
MFC after: 3 days
This fixes the potential NULL pointer dereference properly, and also fixes
memory leaks encountered in the process of iterating through `*rp`.
MFC after: 1 week
Found by: Valgrind
Reported by: Dan Roberts <dan.roberts@isilon.com>
Submitted by: Miles Ohlrich <miles.ohlrich@isilon.com>
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
__rpcbind_is_up(..) if getnetconfig(3) is partly successful in allocating
resources, but not completely successful by moving the endnetconfig(3) call
up before we return from the function if nconf == NULL.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: Coverity
Submitted by: Miles Ohlrich <miles.ohlrich@isilon.com>
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
In the event that the getconfig(3) call in svcunix_create is partly successful,
some of the netconfig(3) resources allocated might be leaked if the call returns
NULL as endnetconfig(3) wasn't called explicitly in that case. Ensure that the
resources are fully cleaned up by going to the `done` label, which will call
endnetconfig(3) for us.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: Coverity
Submitted by: Miles Ohlrich <miles.ohlrich@isilon.com>
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
generate code to branch based on an address in a register. This allows us
to have binaries larger than the 32MiB limit of a branch instruction.
The main use of this is with clang. Clang 3.8.0 has been shown to be larger
than the above limit.
up to now.
The new sendfile is the code that Netflix uses to send their multiple tens
of gigabits of data per second. The new implementation features asynchronous
I/O, when I/O operations are launched, but not awaited to be complete. An
explanation of why such behavior is beneficial compared to old one is
going to be too long for a commit message, so we will skip it here.
Additional features of new syscall are extra flags, which provide an
application more control over data sent. The SF_NOCACHE flag tells
kernel that data shouldn't be cached after it was sent. The SF_READAHEAD()
macro allows to specify readahead size in pages.
The new syscalls is a drop in replacement. No modifications are required
to applications. One can take nginx binary for stable/10 and run it
successfully on head. Although SF_NODISKIO lost its original sense, as now
sendfile doesn't block, and now means something completely different (tm),
using the new sendfile the old way is absolutely safe.
Celebrates: Netflix global launch!
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Relnotes: yes
llvm's LinkAllPasses.h. This caused some of the calls not to be
emitted, if the optimization level was -O2 or higher.
Conversely, if you used -O1 or lower, calls to e.g. RunningOnValgrind()
would be emitted, leading to link failures, because we did not include
Valgrind.cpp into libllvmsupport. Therefore, add it unconditionally.
Noticed by: ian
Although we don't use it in tree yet libstand is installed as user-
facing /usr/liblibstand.a, and some work in progress makes use of it.
Instead of conflicting with ongoing libstand Makefile deduplication,
just add it now.
Set _PATH_DEFPATH to
/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin. This is the
path in the default class in the default /etc/login.conf,
excluding ~/bin which would not be expanded properly in a string
constant.
For normal logins, _PATH_DEFPATH is overridden by /etc/login.conf,
~/.login_conf or shell startup files. _PATH_DEFPATH is still used as a
default by execlp(), execvp(), posix_spawnp() and sh if PATH is not set, and
by cron. Especially the latter is a common trap (most recently in PR
204813).
PR: 204813
Reviewed by: secteam (delphij), alfred
Just remove it completely from the test as it's initialized but unused apart
from the free(3) call
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4769 (part of larger diff)
MFC after: 5 days
Reported by: cppcheck
Reviewed by: oshogbo
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
the nvlists
Convert some of the variables from int to unsigned int to squelch -Wsign-compare
warnings when converting hardcoded values to nitems(..)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4769 (part of larger diff)
MFC after: 5 days
Reviewed by: oshogbo
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Rename the `nitems` variable to `num_items` to avoid collisions with the
macro in sys/param.h for counting elements in an array
Similarly, rename `string` to `string_arr` to avoid future collisions with
potential keywords, as well as make it clear that `string_arr` isn't a char*
value, but instead a char** value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4769 (part of larger diff)
MFC after: 5 days
Reviewed by: oshogbo
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
libstand is built in three places (lib/libstand, sys/boot/libstand32,
and sys/boot/userboot/libstand). Reduce Makefile duplication by
.including libstand/Makefile from sys/boot/libstand32/Makefile.
sys/boot/userboot/libstand/Makefile will be addressed later, as it
contains additional differences yet to be handled.
This change also switches libstand32 to use the new uuid_from_string
and uuid_to_string, which was not included in r292473.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4747
relocation fixups unsupported by the self_reloc() code, and don't optimize
memcpy/memset using floating point registers, because in a standalone
environment nothing has initialized the fpu hardware.
aligned on a int64_t boundary. However, when we allocate the array of
these structures, we use ALIGNBYTES which defaults to sizeof(int) on
arm, i386 and others. The i386 stuff can handle unaligned accesses
seemlessly. However, arm cannot. Take this into account when creating
the array of FILEs, and add some comments about why.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4708
cperciva's libmd implementation is 5-30% faster
The same was done for SHA256 previously in r263218
cperciva's implementation was lacking SHA-384 which I implemented, validated against OpenSSL and the NIST documentation
Extend sbin/md5 to create sha384(1)
Chase dependancies on sys/crypto/sha2/sha2.{c,h} and replace them with sha512{c.c,.h}
Reviewed by: cperciva, des, delphij
Approved by: secteam, bapt (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3929
(CLOCK_REALTIME case) system calls is non negative.
This commit hides a kernel panic in atrtc_settime() as the clock_ts_to_ct()
does not properly convert negative tv_sec.
ps. in my opinion clock_ts_to_ct() should be rewritten to properly handle
negative tv_sec values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4714
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Traditionally the hcreate() function creates a hash table that uses
chaining, using a fixed user-provided size. The problem with this
approach is that this often either wastes memory (table too big) or
yields bad performance (table too small). For applications it may not
always be easy to estimate the right hash table size. A fixed number
only increases performance compared to a linked list by a constant
factor.
This problem can be solved easily by dynamically resizing the hash
table. If the size of the hash table is at least doubled, this has no
negative on the running time complexity. If a dynamically sized hash
table is used, we can also switch to using open addressing instead of
chaining, which has the advantage of just using a single allocation for
the entire table, instead of allocating many small objects.
Finally, a problem with the existing implementation is that its
deterministic algorithm for hashing makes it possible to come up with
fixed patterns to trigger an excessive number of collisions. We can
easily solve this by using FNV-1a as a hashing algorithm in combination
with a randomly generated offset basis.
Measurements have shown that this implementation is about 20-25% faster
than the existing implementation (even if the existing implementation is
given an excessive number of buckets). Though it allocates more memory
through malloc() than the old implementation (between 4-8 pointers per
used entry instead of 3), process memory use is similar to the old
implementation as if the estimated size was underestimated by a factor
10. This is due to the fact that malloc() needs to perform less
bookkeeping.
Reviewed by: jilles, pfg
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4644
bugfix-only release, with no new features.
Please note that from 3.5.0 onwards, clang and llvm require C++11
support to build; see UPDATING for more information.
POSIX requires for the c99 compiler.
(In fact, our c99(1) already ignores -lxnet; but our make(1) doesn't set
${CC} correctly, and our cc(1) treats xnet like any other library.)
Reviewed by: kib
450 seconds
This is required on slower network connections, and on older releases
(stable/10 seems to be slower as far as name resolution goes.. not sure
why yet).
Remove an outdated comment in the Makefile from when I was working on
this code over a year ago on github
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
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
sysdecode_ioctlname() function. This function matches the behavior
of the truss variant in that it returns a pointer to a string description
for known ioctls. The caller is responsible for displaying unknown
ioctl requests. For kdump this meant moving the logic to handle unknown
ioctl requests out of the generated function and into an ioctlname()
function in kdump.c instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4610
The existing implementations of POSIX tsearch() and tdelete() don't
attempt to perform any balancing at all. Testing reveals that inserting
100k nodes into a tree sequentially takes approximately one minute on my
system.
Though most other BSDs also don't use any balanced tree internally, C
libraries like glibc and musl do provide better implementations. glibc
uses a red-black tree and musl uses an AVL tree.
Red-black trees have the advantage over AVL trees that they only require
O(1) rotations after insertion and deletion, but have the disadvantage
that the tree has a maximum depth of 2*log2(n) instead of 1.44*log2(n).
My take is that it's better to focus on having a lower maximum depth,
for the reason that in the case of tsearch() the invocation of the
comparator likely dominates the running time.
This change replaces the tsearch() and tdelete() functions by versions
that create an AVL tree. Compared to musl's implementation, this version
is different in two different ways:
- We don't keep track of heights; just balances. This is sufficient.
This has the advantage that it reduces the number of nodes that are
being accessed. Storing heights requires us to also access all of the
siblings along the path.
- Don't use any recursion at all. We know that the tree cannot 2^64
elements in size, so the height of the tree can never be larger than
96. Use a 128-bit bitmask to keep track of the path that is computed.
This allows us to iterate over the same path twice, meaning we can
apply rotations from top to bottom.
Inserting 100k nodes into a tree now only takes 0.015 seconds. Insertion
seems to be twice as fast as glibc, whereas deletion has about the same
performance. Unlike glibc, it uses a fixed amount of memory.
I also experimented with both recursive and iterative bottom-up
implementations of the same algorithm. This iterative top-down version
performs similar to the recursive bottom-up version in terms of speed
and code size.
For some reason, the iterative bottom-up algorithm was actually 30%
faster for deletion, but has a quadratic memory complexity to keep track
of all the parent pointers.
Reviewed by: jilles
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4412
variables in loader(8) and other libstand applications.
Sometimes a dhcp server provides incorrect information along with the IP
address. It would be useful to have a way to override this with
locally-supplied information, such as command line parameters passed from a
prior-stage bootloader. This change allows pre-existing env vars to take
precedence over values delivered by the dhcp or bootp server.
The bootp/dhcp code in libstand automatically creates environment variables
from the data provided by the server (dhcp.root-path, dhcp.domain-name,
etc). It also transcribes the values to some global variables such as
'rootpath' and 'hostname'.
This change does two things:
When adding dhcp.* vars to the environment, don't replace existing
vars/values.
When setting the global vars rootpath and hostname, use the
dhcp.root-path and dhcp.host-name env var values if they exist.
This allows the platform-specific part of loader(8) to obtain override
values in some platform-specific way and store them in the environment
before opening the network device. The set of values that can be overriden
is currently limited to just string options. The values that are delivered
as binary data are things that probably shouldn't be overridden (IP,
netmask, gateway, etc).
The original patch this evolved from was submitted by martymac@
PR: 202098
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4559
Depending on system configuration and parameters, clock_gettime() and
gettimeofday() may not be system calls. If so, passing an invalid pointer
will cause a signal and not an [EFAULT] error.
From a standards perspective, this is OK since passing an invalid pointer is
undefined behaviour.
MFC after: 1 week
normal libc versions of these functions use asprintf and sscanf, both
of which aren't available in the libstand world. It's easier to
rewrite these than to try to claw those functions into libstand.
Also include uuid_create_nil, since it's safe to include. These were
written from scratch, except for bits of comments that I got from the
libc version, which are acknowledged in the source.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4540
pxeboot in tftp loader mode (when built with LOADER_TFTP_SUPPORT) now
prefix all the path to open with the path obtained via the option 'root-path'
directive.
This allows to be able to use the traditional content /boot out of box. Meaning
it now works pretty much like all other loaders. It simplifies hosting hosting
multiple version of FreeBSD on a tftp server.
As a consequence, pxeboot does not look anymore for a pxeboot.4th (which was
never provided)
Note: that pxeboot in tftp loader mode is not built by default.
Reviewed by: rpokala
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Gandi.net
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4590
risk leaving the connection in an indeterminate state if the server fails
to send a chunk delimiter. Depending on the application and on the sizes
of the preceding chunks, the result can be anything from missing data to a
segfault. With this patch, it will be reported as a protocol error.
PR: 204771
MFC after: 1 week
into the FreeBSD test suite
There's no functional change with these testcases; they're purposely
being left in TAP format for the time being
Other testcases which crash on amd64/i386 as-is have not been
integrated yet (they need to be retested on a later version of
CURRENT, as I haven't used i386 in some time)
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
lib/libc/tests/nss
- Convert the testcases to ATF
- Do some style(9) cleanups:
-- Sort headers
-- Apply indentation fixes
-- Remove superfluous parentheses
- Explicitly print out debug printfs for use with `kyua {debug,report}`; for
items that were overly noisy, they've been put behind #ifdef DEBUG
conditionals
- Fix some format strings
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
system call information such as system call arguments. Initially this
will consist of pulling duplicated code out of truss and kdump though it
may prove useful for other utilities in the future.
This commit moves the shared utrace(2) record parser out of kdump into
the library and updates kdump and truss to use it. One difference from
the previous version is that the library version treats unknown events
that start with the "RTLD" signature as unknown events. This simplifies
the interface and allows the consumer to decide how to handle all
non-recognized events. Instead, this function only generates a string
description for known malloc() and RTLD records.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4537
In r289315, I added new fields to res_state. This broke binary
backward compatibility. It also broke some ports (and possibly
other code) by requiring the definition of time_t and struct timespec.
Fix these problems by moving the new fields into __res_state_ext.
Suggested by: ume
Reviewed by: ume
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4472
RISC-V is a new ISA designed to support computer research and education, and
is now become a standard open architecture for industry implementations.
This is a minimal set of changes required to run 'make kernel-toolchain'
using external (GNU) toolchain.
The FreeBSD/RISC-V project home: https://wiki.freebsd.org/riscv.
Reviewed by: andrew, bdrewery, emaste, imp
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Sponsored by: HEIF5
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4445
When accepting a connection on underlying tcp socket rpc vc
transporter fails to populate local address. This change rectifies
this problem by modifying rendezvous_request() to fill out the xptr
structure member with appropriate information.
Submitted by: Alex Burlyga <alex.burlyga.ietf@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4206
revision 1.13
date: 2015/12/09 11:54:12; author: tb; state: Exp; lines: +2 -2
Add a cast to silence a compiler warning by clang on FreeBSD.
From Craig Rodrigues.
ok tedu@
revision 1.12
date: 2015/12/05 13:06:52; author: claudio; state: Exp; lines: +4 -6
Do not loop on EAGAIN in imsg_read(). Better to return the error to the
caller and let him do another poll loop. This fixes spinning relayd
processes seen on busy TLS relays. OK benno@ henning@
The requirement is for a GCC-compatible compiler and not necessarily
GCC itself. However, we currently expect any compiler used for building
the whole of FreeBSD to be GCC-compatible and many things will break if
not; there's no longer a need to have an explicit test for this in csu.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
bsd.lib.mk and bsd.prog.mk already depend all objs on headers in SRCS if
there is not yet a depend file. The headers in SRCS are never built or
installed. After 'make depend' the header was already added as a proper
dependency on the objects where needed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
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 avoids the need for an afterinstall: hook and a check for LIBRARIES_ONLY.
It also now respects INCLUDEDIR.
This came in r249484.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
kyua 0.12 has fix for https://github.com/jmmv/kyua/pull/148
which eliminates invalid XML characters from being written to test reports
with "kyua report-junit".
This is not properly respecting WITHOUT or ARCH dependencies in target/.
Doing so requires a massive effort to rework targets/ to do so. A
better approach will be to either include the SUBDIR Makefiles directly
and map to DIRDEPS or just dynamically lookup the SUBDIR. These lose
the benefit of having a userland/lib, userland/libexec, etc, though and
results in a massive package. The current implementation of targets/ is
very unmaintainable.
Currently rescue/rescue and sys/modules are still not connected.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- Support more of the toolchain from TOOLSDIR.
- This also improves 'make bootstrap-tools' to pass, for example,
AS=/usr/bin/as to Makefile.inc1, which will tell cross-tools to use
external toolchain support and avoid building things we won't be using
in the build.
- Always set the PATH to contain the staged TOOLSDIR directories when
not building the bootstrap targets.
The previous version was only setting this at MAKE.LEVEL==0 and if the
TOOLSDIR existed. Both of these prevented using staged tools that were
built during the build though as DIRDEPS with .host dependencies, such
as the fix for needing usr.bin/localedef.host in r291311.
This is not a common tool so we must build and use it during the build,
and need to be prepared to change PATH as soon as it appears.
This should also fix the issue of host dependencies disappearing from
Makefile.depend and then reappearing due to the start of the fresh build not
having the directory yet, resulting in the tools that were built not actually
being used.
- Only use LEGACY_TOOLS while building in Makefile.inc1. After r291317
and r291546 there is no need to add LEGACY_TOOLS into the PATH for
the pseudo/targets/toolchain build.
- Because the pseudo/targets/toolchain will now build its own
[clang-]tblgen, the special logic in clang.build.mk is no longer needed.
- LEGACY_TOOLS is no longer used outside of targets/pseudo/bootstrap-tools
so is no longer passed into the environment in its build.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
staged.
None of usr.bin/clang/clang-tblgen or its dependencies need
lib/clang/include, so there is no cyclic dependency here to worry about.
The issue came about because of workarounds to dependencies on clang
being optional.
Without this, the clang-tblgen called during the build would change
after it was staged for the host. This would cause lib/clang/include to
rebuild due to changed build commands.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
There seems to be no cyclic dependency here. This partially reverts r283595
which had no explanation for the change.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
tested on the Broadwell-Xeon with a hacked up version of pmcstudy -T. I still need
to circle back and add in to pmcstudy all the new tests from the Broadwell Vtune
guide (for the hacked up version I just made it so I could run the -T option). The
Skylake CPU is not yet available (even though Intel is advertising it .. imagine that).
The Skylake PMC's will need to be tested once we can get a sample skylake CPU :-)
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
routines to interface with net80211.
This is all from the ifconfig program; the duplicate code from ifconfig
will be removed when it starts using this API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4290
- Add a kvaddr_type to represent kernel virtual addresses instead of
unsigned long.
- Add a struct kvm_nlist which is a stripped down version of struct nlist
that uses kvaddr_t for n_value.
- Add a kvm_native() routine that returns true if an open kvm descriptor
is for a native kernel and memory image.
- Add a kvm_open2() function similar to kvm_openfiles(). It drops the
unused 'swapfile' argument and adds a new function pointer argument for
a symbol resolving function. Native kernels still use _fdnlist() from
libc to resolve symbols if a resolver function is not supplied, but cross
kernels require a resolver.
- Add a kvm_nlist2() function similar to kvm_nlist() except that it uses
struct kvm_nlist instead of struct nlist.
- Add a kvm_read2() function similar to kvm_read() except that it uses
kvaddr_t instead of unsigned long for the kernel virtual address.
- Add a new kvm_arch switch of routines needed by a vmcore backend.
Each backend is responsible for implementing kvm_read2() for a given
vmcore format.
- Use libelf to read headers from ELF kernels and cores (except for
powerpc cores).
- Add internal helper routines for the common page offset hash table used
by the minidump backends.
- Port all of the existing kvm backends to implement a kvm_arch switch and
to be cross-friendly by using private constants instead of ones that
vary by platform (e.g. PAGE_SIZE). Static assertions are present when
a given backend is compiled natively to ensure the private constants
match the real ones.
- Enable all of the existing vmcore backends on all platforms. This means
that libkvm on any platform should be able to perform KVA translation
and read data from a vmcore of any platform.
Tested on: amd64, i386, sparc64 (marius)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3341
The dependency for ypldap is only with WITH_NIS, but libevent is small
enough to not warrant the extra logic and maintenance cost here so just
always build it.
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
This avoids using the staged headers for sys/crypto/sha2/*.h, such as sha256.h,
which added an unneeded pre-build dependency on libmd to libcrypt. This
header is an INCS in lib/libmd, but found via .PATH in sys/crypto/sha2.
Since the libcrypt build was already using the in-src libmd headers
directly, just teach it how to find the sha256.h header as well.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The main problem was bitrot after elftoolchain being swapped in for the
GNU toolchain.
This also reworks how the list of 'host allowed' libraries is determined
to only allow INTERNALLIBs, which is needed for libelftc to come in.
For usr.bin/readelf use the same hack, as libelf and libdward, to bring in
the needed sys/ headers for host builds. This has not yet been a problem due
to readelf not being built as a host tool in buildworld. This is possible
in the meta build though when building the toolchain.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
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
librtld_db only needs libutil.h to build, not the libproc library. So
it can safely use its header and allow libproc to depend on librtld_rb
to be built first to link. This is required after fixing ld --sysroot
in r291226.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This both avoids some dependencies on xinstall.host and allows
bootstrapping on older releases to work due to lack of at least 'install -l'
support.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
It included libutil.h for setproctitle(3), which was moved from libutil to libc
in r65353 in 2000.
Reviewed by: gshapiro [sendmail change]
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4261
(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
They are emitting characters which are triggering
a kyua bug which causes kyua to emit invalid XML.
This invalid XML is causing false failures in Jenkins.
On a separate note, kyua needs to be fixed with this:
https://github.com/jmmv/kyua/pull/148
or something similar.
When pmcstat exits after some samples were dropped, give the user an
idea of how many were lost. (Granted, these are global numbers, but
they may still help quantify the scope of the loss.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4123
Approved by: gnn (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
- 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
libopenbsd is an internal library which
to bring in compatibility stuff from OpenBSD.
This will allow us to bring in more
OpenBSD utilities into the FreeBSD base system.
We similarly use libnetbsd for bringing in stuff from NetBSD.
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4078
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
Libedit's vi mode provides a v command to edit the current line in vi(1)
(hard-coded to vi, in fact).
When Unicode/wide character mode was added, this command started truncating
and/or corrupting the edited text.
This commit fixes v if the text fits into the buffer. If the text is longer,
it is truncated.
PR: 203743
Obtained from: NetBSD (originally submitted by me)
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