We do not want to support bootstrapping lua modules, so ensure that
require will fail by providing a nonexistent path.
Reviewed by: kevans
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24610
section, it would result in the following error:
"ngctl: send msg: Invalid argument"
The reason for this is the missing whitespace to
separate the arguments. When adding the whitespace,
the example works as intended.
Submitted by: lutz_donnerhacke.de
Approved by: bcr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23773
This is a temporary hack to aid with config(8) changing in r360443.
It will not work for all cases.
env PATH is used because universe-toolchain is only built when worlds
are built, and then only if clang is needed, so it may not exist.
universe-toolchain needs to be expanded to always be built, inspected to
remove non-cross-build-safe tools, used for buildworld/buildkernel,
and potentially incremental build support.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
As I noted in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22756, INTOFF should be in effect
when calling ckmalloc/ckrealloc/ckfree to avoid memory leaks and double
frees. Therefore, change the functions to check if INTOFF is in effect
instead of applying it.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24599
Currently functionality resides in rtsock.c, which is a controlling
interface, partially external to the routing subsystem.
Additionally, DDB-supporting functionality is > 100SLOC, which deserves
a separate file.
Given that, move this functionality to a newly-created net/route/ subdir.
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24561
Nexthop objects implementation, defined in r359823,
introduced sys/net/route directory intended to hold all
routing-related code. Move recently-introduced route_temporal.c and
private route_var.h header there.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24597
One of the goals of the new routing KPI defined in r359823
is to entirely hide`struct rtentry` from the consumers.
It will allow to improve routing subsystem internals and deliver
features much faster.
This is one of the last changes, effectively moving struct rtentry
definition to a net/route_var.h header, internal to the routing subsystem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24580
Bump CONFIGVERS to 600018 for this support.
Some files may purposely have debug info disabled or are *source files*
that attempt to run ctfconvert on them. Currently ctfconvert ignores
these errors but I have a change to make the errors real so we can
catch real problems like exceeding type limits.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Reviewed by: imp, cem, kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24535
This behavior is most relevant for ipfw(4) as documented in syslog.conf(5).
The recent addition of property-based regex filters in r359327 is a
fine workaround for this but the behavior was present since 1997 and
documented.
This only fixes local matching of the "kernel program". It does not
change the forwarded format at all. On the remote side it will still
be "kernel: ipfw:" and not be parsed as a kernel message. This matches
old behavior.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: markj
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24286
Otherwise, since the CV is not signalled until data is drained from the
socket, it is trivial to create an unkillable process using
sendfile(SF_SYNC) and a process-private PF_LOCAL socket pair. In
particular, the cv_wait() in sendfile() does not get interrupted until
data is drained from the receiving socket buffer.
Reported by: pho
Discussed with: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This may happen, for instance, if one happens to have an alias of diff to
diff -up and attempts to specify the amount of context on top of that.
Aliases like this may cause other problems, but if they're really not ever
generating non-unified diffs then we should at least not break that
use-case.
In addition, we'll now pick up a format mismatch if -p is specified with
!contextual && !unified && !unset.
Fix up a small trailing whitespace nit in the tests while we're here, and
add tests to make sure that we can double up all the formatting options.
Reported by: jbeich
MFC after: 3 days
A concurrent unlocked lookup can wire the page after
vm_page_release_locked() releases the last wiring, in which case
vm_page_release_locked() must not free the page. Once the xbusy lock is
acquired, that, the object lock and the fact that the page is unmapped
ensure that the wire count cannot increase, so re-check for new wirings
after the page is xbusied.
Update the comment above vm_page_wired() to reflect the new
synchronization rules.
Reported by: glebius
Reviewed by: alc, jeff, kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24592
New fib[46]_lookup() functions support multipath transparently.
Given that, switch the last rtalloc_mpath_fib() calls to
dib4_lookup() and eliminate the function itself.
Note: proper flowid generation (especially for the outbound traffic) is a
bigger topic and will be handled in a separate review.
This change leaves flowid generation intact.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24595
r360292 switched most of the remaining routing customers to a new KPI,
leaving a bunch of wrappers for old routing lookup functions unused.
Remove them from the tree as a part of routing cleanup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24569
This debugging code printing routing table data was introduced in rS25723,
22+ years ago. The last functional commit to this code was rS67534, 19 years ago.
The code has been turned off by default all this time.
Lastly, this code directly iterates radix tree and rtentries, which is not
not a proper interaction with routing system.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24554
Reported by: Hyeongseok Kim <hyeongseok kim lge com>
Reviewed by: cem, Hyeongseok Kim
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24603
While we're here, let's stylize these as functions instead of just raw text.
A future change may allow arbitrary data arguments to be passed some of
these, and the distinction is useful.
The NFS code had a bunch of Mac OS/X accessor functions named uio_XXX
left over from the port to Mac OS/X. Since that port is long forgotten,
replace the calls with the code generated by the FreeBSD macros for these
in nfskpiport.h. This allows the macros to be deleted from nfskpiport.h
and I think makes the code more readable.
This patch should not result in any semantic change.
This makes sure that config.readConfFiles doesn't see a stale
loader_conf_files from before, in case the newly loaded file doesn't set it.
MFC after: 3 days
This is a straightforward match to the command used by many in forthloader;
it uses the newly-exported config.readConfFiles() to make sure that any
loader_conf_files gets done as appropriate.
PR: 244640
Submitted by: Olivier Certner <olivier freebsd free fr>
MFC after: 3 days
In the process, change it slightly: readConfFiles will take a string like
loader_conf_files in addition to the loaded_files table that it normally
takes. This is to facilitate the addition of a read-conf CLI command, which
will just pass in the single file to read and an empty table.
MFC after: 3 days
We don't actually need to fetch loader_conf_files as much as we do; we've
already fetched it once at the beginning, we only really need to fetch it
again after each file we've processed. If it changes, then we can stash that
off into our local prefiles.
While here, drop a note about the recursion so that I stop trying to
change it. It may very well make redundant some of the work we're doing, but
that's OK.
MFC after: 3 days
This largely reuses the TLS TOE support added in r330884. However,
this uses the KTLS framework in upstream OpenSSL rather than requiring
Chelsio-specific patches to OpenSSL. As with the existing TLS TOE
support, use of RX offload requires setting the tls_rx_ports sysctl.
Reviewed by: np
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24453
Without this patch, sosend_generic() will try to use top->m_pkthdr.len,
assuming that the first mbuf has a pkthdr.
When a list of ext_pgs mbufs is passed in, the first mbuf is not a
pkthdr and cannot be post-r359919. As such, the value of top->m_pkthdr.len
is bogus (0 for my testing).
This patch fixes sosend_generic() to handle this case, calculating the
total length via m_length() for this case.
There is currently nothing that hands a list of ext_pgs mbufs to
sosend_generic(), but the nfs-over-tls kernel RPC code in
projects/nfs-over-tls will do that and was used to test this patch.
Reviewed by: gallatin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24568
This was changed in the review process for the flags sysctl. The
reasons for the change are no longer valid as the code changed after
that. Cast the one place where it might make a difference (but I don't
think it does). This restores the ability to see flags for softc in
gdb.
- Add a new TCP_RXTLS_ENABLE socket option to set the encryption and
authentication algorithms and keys as well as the initial sequence
number.
- When reading from a socket using KTLS receive, applications must use
recvmsg(). Each successful call to recvmsg() will return a single
TLS record. A new TCP control message, TLS_GET_RECORD, will contain
the TLS record header of the decrypted record. The regular message
buffer passed to recvmsg() will receive the decrypted payload. This
is similar to the interface used by Linux's KTLS RX except that
Linux does not return the full TLS header in the control message.
- Add plumbing to the TOE KTLS interface to request either transmit
or receive KTLS sessions.
- When a socket is using receive KTLS, redirect reads from
soreceive_stream() into soreceive_generic().
- Note that this interface is currently only defined for TLS 1.1 and
1.2, though I believe we will be able to reuse the same interface
and structures for 1.3.
bhyve uses cached copies of the MSI capability registers to generate
MSI interrupts for device models. Previously, these cached fields
were only set when the MSI capability control register was updated.
The Linux kernel recently adopted a change to deal with races in MSI
interrupt delivery that writes to the MSI capability address and data
registers to alter the destination of MSI interrupts without writing
to the MSI capability control register. bhyve was not updating its
cached registers for these writes and continued to send interrupts
with the old data value to the old address. Fix this by recomputing
the cached values for every write to any MSI capability register.
Reported by: Jason Tubnor, Ryan Moeller
Reported by: Marc Dionne (bisected the Linux kernel commit)
Reviewed by: grehan
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24593
This patch is intended to solve a specific problem that iavf(4)
encounters, but what it does can be extended to solve other issues.
To summarize the iavf(4) issue, if the PF driver configures VLAN
anti-spoof, then the VF driver needs to make sure no untagged traffic is
sent if a VLAN is configured, and vice-versa. This can be an issue when
a VLAN is being registered or unregistered, e.g. when a packet may be on
the ring with a VLAN in it, but the VLANs are being unregistered. This
can cause that tagged packet to go out and cause an MDD event.
To fix this, include a new interface-dependent function that drivers can
implement named IFDI_NEEDS_RESTART(). Right now, this function is called
in iflib_vlan_unregister/register() to determine whether the interface
needs to be stopped and started when a VLAN is registered or
unregistered. The default return value of IFDI_NEEDS_RESTART() is true,
so this fixes the MDD problem that iavf(4) encounters, since the
interface rings are flushed during a stop/init.
A future change to iavf(4) will implement that function just in case the
default value changes, and to make it explicit that this interface reset
is required when a VLAN is added or removed.
Reviewed by: gallatin@
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22086
Now that hw.machine_arch handles soft-float vs hard-float there is no
longer a reason for this config.
Submitted by: mhorne (kern.mk hunk)
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version), kp
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24544
FreeBSD is in the process of switching from nvd(4) to nda(4) as the disk
device front-end to NVMe. Changing the default in the kernel is tricky
since existing systems may have /dev/nvd* hard-coded e.g. in /etc/fstab;
however, there's no reason to not change the default in HEAD for *new*
systems.
At present I have no intention of MFCing this to stable branches, since
someone might reasonably expect scripts they use for launching and
configuring FreeBSD 12.1 instances to work with FreeBSD 12.2 AMIs, for
example.
Reviewed by: gjb, imp
Relnotes: NVMe disks in EC2 instances launched from 13.0 and later
now show up as nda(4) devices.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24583
Instead, copy the strings into a temporary buffer on the stack and
run strcmp on the copies.
Reviewed by: brooks, kib
Obtained from: CheriBSD
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24567
For userland, MACHINE_ARCH reflects the current ABI via preprocessor
directives. For the kernel, the hw.machine_arch sysctl uses the ELF
header flags of the current process to select the correct MACHINE_ARCH
value.
Reviewed by: imp, kp
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24543
This extends some of the changes in place to support reporting support
for 32-bit ABIs to permit reporting hard-float vs soft-float ABIs.
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24542
latest rack and bbr in from the NF repo. When those come
in the OOB data handling will be fixed where Skyzaller crashes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24575
sendto(2), sendmsg(2) and sendmmsg(2) return ENOTCONN if a destination
address is specified and the socket is not connected and the socket
protocol does not automatically connect ("implied connect"). Document
that. Also document the fact that the destination address is ignored
for connection-mode sockets if the socket is already connected.
PR: 245817
Submitted by: Erik Inge Bolsø <knan-bfo@modirum.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24530