This takes longer but should reliably produce working binaries.
The old version linked against system libraries and headers
which would be a problem if building a native-xtools against
a newer source than the host system. With a proper sysroot made
first this is not a problem.
This also allows:
- NXBDIRS to be built in parallel
- NXBDIRS to be installed to NXBDESTDIR in parallel
- SYSTEM_COMPILER logic to work again. Note that because this change
is adding a sysroot phase the compiler may be built up to twice now.
The first is the "cross-compiler" even though it is for the native
architecture, but it is still built to ensure the latest compiler
is used to generate the binaries, unless SYSTEM_COMPILER allows
/usr/bin/cc to be used. Then the target compiler is built
which is actually a cross-compiler since it runs on native host
but generates TARGET.TARGET_ARCH binaries.
Note this also changes the path used for the OBJDIR. It used to use
/usr/obj/target.target_arch/nxb/<srcdir> for objects and
/usr/obj/target.target_arch/nxb-bin for installed files, but now uses
/usr/obj/nxb/target.target_arch/<srcdir> for objects and
/usr/obj/nxb/target.target_arch/<srcdir>/nxb-bin for installed files.
- NXBDESTDIR can be specified for where to install or queried with
`make -f Makefile.inc1 TARGET=... TARGET_ARCH=... -V NXBDESTDIR`
This could potentially be improved to reuse an existing sysroot. The
problem is with building the SUBDIR_OVERRIDE list it needs to use a
different OBJDIR since it is building all statically. We don't want to
pollute the existing 'buildworld' OBJDIR and cause confusion on the next
build. Using a separate OBJDIR for the 'everything' phase mostly works
except for some things like linking in INTERNALLIBS that exist in the
other OBJDIR.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
The new native-xtools uses 'make toolchain' so overriding DESTDIR
as a make argument may interfere with WORLDTMP handling.
The target also does a 'mkdir -p ${NXBDESTDIR}/usr', so we should
be modifying that rather than DESTDIR.
Note this causes the native-xtools binaries to be installed in
NANO_WORLDDIR/usr NANO_WORLDDIR/bin rather than NANO_WORLDDIR/nxb-bin/usr
and NANO_WORLDDIR/nxb-bin/bin. This was the case before this change
as well.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12782
The Makefile.inc1 TARGET_TRIPLE is for specifying which -target is used
during the build of world.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: dim, imp
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12792
Defer the packet size check until after the firewall has had a look at it. This
means that the firewall now has the opportunity to (re-)fragment an oversized
packet.
This mirrors what the slow path does.
Reviewed by: ae
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12779
Move framebuffer.{c,h} to sys/boot/efi/loader and add the efifb
related metadata and pass it to the kernel
Reviewed by: imp, andrew
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12757
Previously, zpool_read_all_labels was trying to do 256KB reads, which are
greater than the default MAXPHYS and therefore must go through the slow,
unsafe AIO path. Shrink these reads to 112KB so they can use the safe, fast
AIO path instead.
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC-With: 324568
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Some BMCs support power cycling the chassis via the chassis control
command 2 subcommand 2 (ipmitool called it 'chassis power cycle'). If
the BMC supports the chassis device, register a shutdown_final handler
that sends the power cycle command if request and waits up to 10s for
it to take effect. To minimize stack strain, we preallocate a ipmi
request in the softc. At the moment, we're verbose about what we're
doing.
Sponsored by: Netflix
When -c is specified, the system will be power cycled if the
underlying hardware supports it. Otherwise the system will be halted
or rebooted depending on which command was used.
Sponsored by: Netflix
RB_POWERCYCLE instructs the platform to power off and then power back
on a short time later, if that's possible. Otherwise, degrade to the
RB_POWEROFF behavior.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Remove at91 bootloader. It only worked on AT91RM9200, and only
specific boards that were all EOLd 10 years ago.
Remove ixp425. It doesn't build anymore and is for boards that were
EOLd 8 years ago.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Printing the entire log page is causing confusion over available
slots. Report only those slots that are valid. In the case where the
firmware download isn't supported, assume that only the first slot is
valid (I have no hardware to test this assumption though)
Sponsored by: Netflix
handle.
Keep both pagesize and the new swap_maxpages in the static variables
to save sysctl calls.
Submitted by: ota@j.email.ne.jp
PR: 223149
MFC after: 2 weeks
When using a kernel built with the GZIO config option, dumpon -z can be
used to configure gzip compression using the in-kernel copy of zlib.
This is useful on systems with large amounts of RAM, which require a
correspondingly large dump device. Recovery of compressed dumps is also
faster since fewer bytes need to be copied from the dump device.
Because we have no way of knowing the final size of a compressed dump
until it is written, the kernel will always attempt to dump when
compression is configured, regardless of the dump device size. If the
dump is aborted because we run out of space, an error is reported on
the console.
savecore(8) is modified to handle compressed dumps and save them to
vmcore.<index>.gz, as it does when given the -z option.
A new rc.conf variable, dumpon_flags, is added. Its value is added to
the boot-time dumpon(8) invocation that occurs when a dump device is
configured in rc.conf.
Reviewed by: cem (earlier version)
Discussed with: def, rgrimes
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11723
A fictitious page is always wired, so there is no point in trying to
remove one from the page queues.
Completely remove one inaccurate comment from vm_page_free_prep() and
correct another.
Reviewed by: kib, markj
MFC after: 1 week
library -- libpmcstat.
This includes PMC logging module, symbols lookup functions,
ELF parsing, process management, PMC attachment, etc.
This allows to reuse code while building new hwpmc(4)-based applications.
Also add pmcstat_symbol_search_by_name() function that allows to find
mapped IP range for a given function name.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12718
This removes the need to call munmap(2) afterwards.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12767
different from hardware defaults. The congestion channel map, which is
still fixed, needs to be tracked separately now. Change the congestion
setting for TOE rx queues to match the drivers on other OSes while here.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
When limiting I/O, a value of 0 makes no sense as a limit. No progress
can be made. Trade the possibility that someone might be doing
something clever to achieve ultra-low I/O limits vs the damage of not
ever making progress on an I/O in favor of making progress. Now the
machine won't be useless if this accidentally gets requested.
Sponsored by: Netflix
In r322258 I made p1003_1b.aio_listio_max a tunable. However, further
investigation shows that there was never any good reason for that limit to
exist in the first place. It's used in two completely different ways:
* To size a UMA zone, which globally limits the number of concurrent
aio_suspend calls.
* To artifically limit the number of operations in a single lio_listio call.
There doesn't seem to be any memory allocation associated with this limit.
This change does two things:
* Properly names aio_suspend's UMA zone, and sizes it based on a new constant.
* Eliminates the artifical restriction on lio_listio. Instead, lio_listio
calls will now be limited by the more generous max_aio_queue_per_proc. The
old p1003_1b.aio_listio_max is now an alias for
vfs.aio.max_aio_queue_per_proc, so sysconf(3) will still work with
_SC_AIO_LISTIO_MAX.
Reported by: bde
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12120
Don't check for SPA_MINDEVSIZE in vdev_geom_attach when opening by path.
It's redundant with the check in vdev_open, and failing to attach here
results in the wrong error message being printed. However, still check for
it in some other situations:
* When opening by guids, so we don't get bogged down reading from slow
devices like floppy drives.
* In vdev_geom_read_pool_label for the same reason, because we iterate over
all providers.
* If the caller requests that we verify the guid, because then we'll have to
read from the device before vdev_open verifies the size.
PR: 222227
Reported by: Marie Helene Kvello-Aune <marieheleneka@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: avg, mav
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12531