For endian.h to work instead of sys/endian.h, some software needs
byteswap.h available. It must define {__,}byteswap_{16,32,64}.
Included sys/_endian.h to get an appropriate __byteswap16, etc
and defines the new macros in terms of them. Enhance _endian.h
to allow it to be included from here too.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32051
Add endian.h. This includes sys/endian.h and then adds extra defines
that glibc defines with double underscores for our
_{BIG,BYTE,LITTLE,PDP}_ENDIAN macros. We also define __FLOAT_WORD_ORDER
to be the same as _BYTE_ENDIAN since FreeBSD doesn't currently define
this, and the default with glibc is exactly this for our platforms.
Move common parts of endian.h and sys/endian.h into sys/_endian.h
to limit namespace pollution from endian.h
All this gives us good compatibility with Linux. There may be one or two
upstreams that haven't integrated the patches I tried to send up.
There are some minor differences:
o The extra glibc macros are not defined. These are all
controlled with either __ at the start, or only defined
when glibc is being built. We also don't define macros
that are used internally in glibc that would pollute
the namespace.
o For complete compatibility, this change must also be
paired with providing a glibc-compatible byteswap.h.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Reviewed by: mhorne, markj, jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31962
GCC 12 (unlike GCC 9) does not match a function argument passed to the
old qsort_r() API (as is used in the qsort_r_compat test) to a
function pointer type via __generic. It treats the function type as a
distinct type from a function pointer. As a workaround, add a second
definition of qsort_r for GCC 12 which uses the bare function type.
Reviewed by: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37410
The includes build is kind of funky, as we support either copying or
symlinking files into /usr/include. For `copies`, we were supplying
the include/ ${TAG_ARGS}, which puts packages into `FreeBSD-runtime`,
without any consideration to the fact that we're installing headers.
Let's copy the approach that the `symlinks` target uses for now, and
add ",dev" to the TAG_ARGS so that headers at least end up in
FreeBSD-runtime-dev, which is more appropriate. Some of these includes
are actually technically supposed to be in *other* packages and their
INCSGROUP's PACKAGE setting is actually correct, but this is less
trivial to solve. This is a bandaid to fix the immediate problem of
some headers ending up in two different packages.
PR: 267526
Reviewed by: dfr, manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37256
Rework getaddrinfo(3) to return different error values for unresolvable
names (same as before, EAI_NONAME) and those without a requested addr
(EAI_ADDRFAMILY) when using DNS. This is implemented via an added
error in the nsswitch layer, NS_ADDRFAMILY, which is used only by
getaddrinfo(). The error is passed through nsdispatch(3), but that
routine has no changes to handle this error. The error originates in
the getaddrinfo DNS layer called via nsdispatch(), and is processed
by the search layer that calls nsdispatch().
While here, add a little style to returns near those that were
modified.
Reviewed in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37139 with related changes.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 1 month
EAI_ADDRFAMILY and EAI_NODATA are not in RFC 3493, but are available
and used in many other systems. It is desirable to have at least one
of them in order to distinguish between names that do not resolve and
those that do not have the requested address type. A change to
getaddrinfo() will use EAI_ADDRFAMILY. Both were "#if 0"; re-enable,
conditioned on __BSD_VISIBLE, and update comments. Also add comments
and __BSD_VISIBLE conditional for the last three EAI errors, which
are not in the RFC or POSIX. Note, all of these are available in
NetBSD and OpenBSD, and EAI_ADDRFAMILY and EAI_NODATA are available
in Linux (glibc).
Reviewed in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37139 with related changes.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 1 month
This commit brings back the driver from FreeBSD commit
f187d6dfbf plus subsequent fixes from
upstream.
Relative to upstream this commit includes a few other small fixes such
as additional INET and INET6 #ifdef's, #include cleanups, and updates
for recent API changes in main.
Reviewed by: pauamma, gbe, kevans, emaste
Obtained from: git@git.zx2c4.com:wireguard-freebsd @ 3cc22b2
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36909
glibc-based interface.
Unfortunately, the glibc maintainers, despite knowing the existence
of the FreeBSD qsort_r(3) interface in 2004 and refused to add the
same interface to glibc based on grounds of the lack of standardization
and portability concerns, has decided it was a good idea to introduce
their own qsort_r(3) interface in 2007 as a GNU extension with a
slightly different and incompatible interface.
With the adoption of their interface as POSIX standard, let's switch
to the same prototype, there is no need to remain incompatible.
C++ and C applications written for the historical FreeBSD interface
get source level compatibility when building in C++ mode, or when
building with a C compiler with C11 generics support, provided that
the caller passes a fifth parameter of qsort_r() that exactly matches
the historical FreeBSD comparator function pointer type and does not
redefine the historical qsort_r(3) prototype in their source code.
Symbol versioning is used to keep old binaries working.
MFC: never
Relnotes: yes
Reviewed by: cem, imp, hps, pauamma
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17083
Various RPC functions used a bare pointer in function prototypes to
describe fixed-length buffer arguments but used a fixed-length array
in the function definition. The manual page for these functions
describes the parameters as being fixed-length buffers, so update
the prototypes to match the definitions.
Reviewed by: imp, emaste
Reported by: GCC -Warray-parameter
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36757
Add a strverscmp(3) function to libc, a GNU extension I implemented by
reading its glibc manual page. It orders strings following a much more
natural ordering (e.g. "ent1 < ent2 < ent10" as opposed to
"ent1 < ent10 < ent2" with strcmp(3)'s lexicographic ordering).
Also add versionsort(3) for use as scandir(3)'s compar argument.
Update manual page for scandir(3) and add one for strverscmp(3).
Reviewed by: pstef, gbe, kib
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35807
Add a target to ensure the presence of /usr/include/i386
before we try to install files. In the buildworld/installworld path
it gets created different ways, but for distribute (used in releases)
we need it in the subdir.
(Creating of this the x86, pc, powerpc directories is far too complex.
We should look for ways to simplify it.)
Reported by: lwhsu
Fixes: a09ea2bbc3
Addition to D31491 in order to actually resolve the top root cause.
Currently rpcbind gets contact address from connectionless xprt->xp_p2
member of a transport and will fail to get it when working over
connection oriented transport, leading to a guess game in terms of
contact address on rpcinfo requests like RPCBPROC_GETVERSADDR or
RPCBPROC_GETADDRLIST and poor returns which may influence a user
of a call and specifically reported on OSX clients, which tend to
not provide address hint from rpcinfo request to a server.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35220
Install the i386 md_var.h under /usr/include/i386 on amd64 and include
when targeting i386.
This is a mostly kernel-only header required by procstat's ZFS support.
It is pulled in by the i386 machine/counter.h.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp
Install the i386 counter.h under /usr/include/i386 on amd64 and include
when targeting i386.
This is a kernel-only header required by procstat's ZFS support.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp
Install the i386 pcpu_aux.h under /usr/include/i386 on amd64 and include
when targeting i386.
This is a kernel-only header that is required by procstat's ZFS support.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp
Install the i386 pcpu.h under /usr/include/i386 on amd64 and include
when targeting i386.
This is a kernel-only header and should not be required, but
procstat's zfs support includes this with _KERNEL defined.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp
This directory will hold i386-specific headers that are needed for
-m32 support on amd64 and where the amd64 and i386 cases have too
little in common for combining them to make sense. Files to be
installed will come in later commits.
With the currently required set of files, this could be done with
another INCGROUP in include/Makefile, but at least one file that
might want -m32 support (ieeefp.h) conflicts with a files installed
in /usr/include.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp
The gunion(8) utility is used to track changes to a read-only disk on
a writable disk. Logically, a writable disk is placed over a read-only
disk. Write requests are intercepted and stored on the writable
disk. Read requests are first checked to see if they have been
written on the top (writable disk) and if found are returned. If
they have not been written on the top disk, then they are read from
the lower disk.
The gunion(8) utility can be especially useful if you have a large
disk with a corrupted filesystem that you are unsure of how to
repair. You can use gunion(8) to place another disk over the corrupted
disk and then attempt to repair the filesystem. If the repair fails,
you can revert all the changes in the upper disk and be back to the
unchanged state of the lower disk thus allowing you to try another
approach to repairing it. If the repair is successful you can commit
all the writes recorded on the top disk to the lower disk.
Another use of the gunion(8) utility is to try out upgrades to your
system. Place the upper disk over the disk holding your filesystem
that is to be upgraded and then run the upgrade on it. If it works,
commit it; if it fails, revert the upgrade.
Further details can be found in the gunion(8) manual page.
Reviewed by: Chuck Silvers, kib (earlier version)
tested by: Peter Holm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32697
Install headers from LLVM's libunwind in place of the headers from
libcxxrt and allow C applications to use the library.
As part of this, remove include/unwind.h and switch libthr over to
using the installed unwind.h.
Reviewed by: dim, emaste
MFC after: 10 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D34065
I tested the original commit as part of a series that culminates in
removing this header and installing LLVM libunwind's unwind.h in its
place so missed updating this header as was done in b84693501a.
Pointy hat to: jhb
Reported by: kevans
Fixes: 3a502289d3 Use uintptr_t for return type of _Unwind_GetCFA.
This matches the type in other unwind headers (LLVM libunwind,
libcxxrt, glibc).
NB: include/unwind.h is not installed but is only used by libthr
Reviewed by: imp, dim, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D34049
Through fixes and improvements our ipfilter sources have diverged
enough to warrant move from contrib into sys/netpil. Now that I'm
planning on implementing MSS clamping as in iptables it makes more
sense to move ipfilter to netpfil.
This is the first of three commits the ipfilter move.
Suggested by glebius on two occaions.
Suggested by and discussed with: glebius
Reviewed by: glebius, kp (for #network)
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33510
Add two underscore characters "__" to names of BIT_* and BITSET_*
macros to move them to the implementation name space and to prevent
a name space pollution due to BIT_* macros in 3rd party programs with
conflicting parameter signatures.
These prefixed macro names are used in kernel header files to define
macros in e.g. sched.h, sys/cpuset.h and sys/domainset.h.
If C programs are built with either -D_KERNEL (automatically passed
when building a kernel or kernel modules) or -D_WANT_FREENBSD_BITSET
(or this macros is defined in the source code before including the
bitset macros), then all macros are made visible with their previous
names, too. E.g., both __BIT_SET() and BIT_SET() are visible with
either of _KERNEL or _WANT_FREEBSD_BITSET defined.
The main reason for this change is that some 3rd party sources
including sched.h have been found to contain conflicting BIT_*
macros.
As a work-around, parts of shed.h have been made conditional and
depend on _WITH_CPU_SET_T being set when sched.h is included.
Ports that expect the full functionality provided by sched.h need
to be built with -D_WITH_CPU_SET_T. But this leads to conflicts if
BIT_* macros are defined in that program, too.
This patch set makes all of sched.h visible again without this
parameter being passed and without any name space pollution due
to BIT_* macros becoming visible when sched.h is included.
This patch set will be backported to the STABLE branches, but ports
will need to use -D_WITH_CPU_SET_T as long as there are supported
releases that do not contain these patches.
Reviewed by: kib, markj
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33235
Namely posix_spawn_file_actions_addclosefrom_np, in the form it is
provided by glibc.
Reviewed by: kevans, ngie (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33143
Instead of only hiding cpu_set_t compat typedef itself.
Too many software packages assume that sched_getaffinity() presence
implies full source compatibility with glibc. We can (and should)
handle missing CPU_* macros, but then there are incompatible BIT_* uses
which cannot be fixed in src/.
So hide everything under _WITH_CPU_SET_T, in particular, do not expose
sched_getcpu(), sched_get/setaffinity(), as well as CPU_* and BIT_*
macros. Consumers that want sched* functions must opt-in.
Reported by: portmgr (antoine)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
for compatibility with Linux.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32901
for compatibility with Linux.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32901
It is required by IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 AKA POSIX.
Put some Linux compatibility stuff under BSD_VISIBLE namespace, in
particular, sys/cpuset.h definitions. Also, if user really want
Linux compatibility, she can request cpu_set_t typedef with
_WITH_CPU_SET_T define.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32901
The clearenv(3) function allows us to clear all environment
variable in one shot. This may be useful for security programs that
want to control the environment or what variables are passed to new
spawned programs.
Reviewed by: scf, markj (secteam), 0mp (manpages)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28223
The change implements cexpl() for both ld80 and ld128 architectures.
Testing was done on x86_64 and aarch64 systems.
Along the way sincos[fl]() use an optimization that reduces the argument
to being done one rather than twice. This optimization actually pointed
to a bug in the ld128 version of sincosl(), which is now fixed. In
addition, the minmax polynomial coefficients for sincosl() have been
updated.
A concise log of the file-by-file changes follows.
* include/complex.h:
. Add a prototype for cexpl().
* lib/msun/Makefile:
. Add s_cexpl.c to the build.
. Setup a link for cexpl.3 to cexp.3.
* lib/msun/Symbol.map:
. Expose cexpl symbol in libm shared library.
* lib/msun/ld128/s_cexpl.c:
* Implementation of cexpl() for 128-bit long double architectures.
Tested on an aarch64 system.
* lib/msun/ld80/s_cexpl.c:
* Implementation of cexpl() for Intel 80-bit long double.
* lib/msun/man/cexp.3:
. Document cexpl().
* lib/msun/man/complex.3:
. Add a BUGS section about cpow[fl].
* lib/msun/src/s_cexp.c:
. Include float.h for weak references on 53-bit long double targets.
. Use sincos() to reduce argument reduction cost.
* lib/msun/src/s_cexpf.c:
. Use sincosf() to reduce argument reduction cost.
* lib/msun/src/k_sincosl.h:
. Catch up with the new minmax polynomial coefficients for the kernel for
the 128-bit cosl() implementation.
. BUG FIX: *cs was used where *sn should have been. This means that sinl()
was no computed correctly when iy != 0.
* lib/msun/src/s_cosl.c:
. Include fpmath.h to get access to IEEEl2bits.
. Replace M_PI_4 with pio4, a 64-bit or 113-bit approximation for pi / 4.
PR: 216862
MFC after: 1 week
Current POSIX standard requires fork() to be async-signal safe. Neither
our implementation, nor implementations in other operating systems are,
and practically it is impossible to make fork() async-signal safe without
too much efforts. Also, that would put undue requirement that all atfork
handlers should be async-signal safe as well, which contradicts its main
use.
As result, Austin Group dropped the requirement, and added a new function
_Fork() that should be async-signal safe, but it does not call atfork
handlers. Basically, _Fork() can be implemented as a raw syscall.
Release of glibc 2.34 added _Fork(), do the same for FreeBSD.
Clarify threading behavior for fork() in the manpage.
Reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31378
Attempt to comply with the strict namespace pollution requirements of
_POSIX_C_SOURCE. Add guards to limit visitbility of CLOCK_ and TIMER_
defines as appropriate. Only define the CLOCK_ variables relevant to the
specific standards. Move all the sharing to sys/_clock_id.h and make
time.h and sys/time.h both include that rather than copy due to the
now large number of clocks and compat defines.
Please note: The old time.h previously used these newer dates:
CLOCK_REALTIME 199506
CLOCK_MONOTONIC 200112
CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID 200112
CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID 200112
but glibc defines all of these for 199309. glibc uses this date for all
these values, however, only CLOCK_REALTIME was in IEEE 1003.1b. Add a
comment about this to document it. A large number of programs and
libraries assume that these will be defined for _POSIX_C_SOURCE =
199309.
In addition, leak CLOCK_UPTIME_FAST for the pocl package until it can be
updated to use a simple CLOCK_MONOTONIC.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31056