Commit Graph

727 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mike Frysinger 96bc16f6b2 newlib: libc: merge build up a directory
Convert all the libc/ subdir makes into the top-level Makefile.  This
allows us to build all of libc from the top Makefile without using any
recursive make calls.  This is faster and avoids the funky lib.a logic
where we unpack subdir archives to repack into a single libc.a.  The
machine override logic is maintained though by way of Makefile include
ordering, and source file accumulation in libc_a_SOURCES.

There's a few dummy.c files that are no longer necessary since we aren't
doing the lib.a accumulating, so punt them.

The winsup code has been pulling the internal newlib ssp library out,
but that doesn't exist anymore, so change that to pull the objects.
2022-03-16 21:18:25 -04:00
Mike Frysinger 8343db918f newlib: libc: move configure into top-level
This kills off the last configure script under libc/ and folds it
into the top newlib configure script.  The a lot of the logic was
already in the top configure script, so move what's left into a
libc/acinclude.m4 file.
2022-02-25 13:52:48 -05:00
Matt Joyce 44b60f0c4b Make __sdidinit unused
Remove dependency on __sdidinit member of struct _reent to check
object initialization. Like __sdidinit, the __cleanup member of
struct _reent is initialized in the __sinit() function. Checking
initialization against __cleanup serves the same purpose and will
reduce overhead in the __sfp() function in a follow up patch.
2022-02-22 12:38:46 +01:00
Mike Frysinger 416792d59a newlib: libc: delete crt0.o duplication
The crt0.o was handled in a subdir-by-subdir basis: it would be compiled
in one (e.g. libc/sys/$arch/), then copied up one level (libc/sys/), then
copied up another (libc/) before finally being copied & installed in the
top newlib dir.  The libc/sys/ copy was cleaned up, and then the top dir
was changed to copy it directly out of the libc/sys/$arch/ dir.  But the
libc/sys/ copy to libc/ was left behind.  Clean that up now too.
2022-02-18 21:25:32 -05:00
Mike Frysinger c75bb30fc1 newlib: libc: reshuffle include order for the manual
When migrating the manual to the top-level, the include order was
sorted by name of the subdir.  But this changed the chapter order
of the manual in the process.  Change the sorting back to match
existing chapters and update the comments to explain.
2022-02-17 20:43:51 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 2a83e65fc2 newlib: rtems: drop redundant header install
The top-level newlib dir already takes care of recursing into the
sys/xxx/include/ subdirs and installing any headers found, so the
rtems subdir doesn't need to do this itself.
2022-02-16 20:03:57 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 907764ebec newlib/libgloss: drop unused $(CROSS_CFLAGS)
This is used in a bunch of places, but nowhere is it ever set, and
nowhere can I find any documentation, nor can I find any other project
using it.  So delete the flags to simplify.
2022-02-15 20:02:51 -05:00
Mike Frysinger df5808b771 newlib: drop support for decstation & sunos systems
These targets don't actually cross-compile -- they try to pull some
objects out of the host's /lib/libc.a, /lib/libm.a, and /lib/crt0.o
directly and merge them into newlib's own libraries.  This is hard
to keep working and impossible to test.  Considering the vintage of
such targets, and gcc dropping them many many years ago, drop them
from newlib too.  This will make cleaning up the build a lot easier.
2022-02-15 20:00:58 -05:00
Mike Frysinger ac90a6590b newlib: phoenix: merge configure up to top-level
Merge sys/phoenix/ configure logic into libc/ itself.  This kills
off the last lingering script in this tree (other than libc itself).
2022-02-15 19:59:08 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 86432e55b4 newlib: phoenix: merge machine/ configure scripts up a level
The machine configure scripts are all effectively stub scripts that
pass the higher level options to its own makefile.
2022-02-15 19:59:08 -05:00
Mike Frysinger d470ef6463 newlib: phoenix: merge machine/ trampoline up a level
The machine/{configure,Makefile} files exist only to fan out to the
specific machine/$arch/ subdir.  We already have all that same info
in the phoenix/ dir itself, so by moving the recursive configure and
make calls into it, we can cut off this logic entirely and save the
overhead.
2022-02-15 19:59:08 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 16c12761fd newlib: phoenix: drop missing machine subdirs
These were never added to the tree, and as we transition from autoconf
to automake, it really wants the latter subdirs to always exist.  These
don't, so delete the logic.
2022-02-15 19:59:08 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 5a6bf1749f newlib: phoenix: move some logic from configure to the Makefile
These configure scripts hardcode some settings, so move them to the
Makefile to simplify so we can drop the configure scripts entirely.
2022-02-15 19:59:08 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 1aec525a44 newlib: delete unused autotool regen scripts
These don't work at all now that we've completely upgraded autotools.
2022-02-10 01:39:08 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 5b9c4cf23e newlib: drop support for $oext
This was needed only to support libtool in case objects ended in .lo
instead of .o, but we dropped libtool, so drop this too.
2022-02-09 23:35:23 -05:00
Mike Frysinger f034d8ad19 newlib: drop support for $aext
This was needed only to support libtool in case the library ended in
.la instead of .a, but we dropped libtool, so drop this too.
2022-02-09 23:34:17 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 006da84337 newlib: drop libtool support
This was only ever used for i?86-pc-linux-gnu targets, but that's been
broken for years, and has since been dropped.  So clean this up too.

This also deletes the funky objectlist logic since it only existed for
the libtool libraries.  Since it was the only thing left in the small
Makefile.shared file, we can punt that too.
2022-02-09 20:27:37 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 5a0ab4454b newlib: punt sys/linux support
This was only used by the i?86-pc-linux-gnu target which we've removed,
and even though it's using a "sys/linux/" dir to make it sound like it
only depends on the Linux kernel, it's actually tied to glibc APIs built
on top of Linux.  Since the code relies on internal glibc APIs and has
been broken for some time, punt it all.  If someone wants to bring it
back, they can try and actually keep the Linux-vs-glibc APIs separate.
2022-02-09 20:27:37 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 985c8f3592 newlib: drop autoconf-2.13 hack
We require autoconf-2.69 now, so we don't need this old install hack.
2022-02-08 22:18:06 -05:00
Mike Frysinger b63a4bb49a newlib: drop cygnus EXEEXT hack
Now that we rely on AC_NO_EXECUTABLES to disable link tests, we don't
need this hack to disable exeext probing.
2022-02-08 22:18:05 -05:00
Mike Frysinger e7ad3f5aa8 newlib: switch to AM_PROG_AR
Now that we require automake-1.15, we can use this macro rather than
do the tool search ourselves.
2022-02-08 21:24:59 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 34af195290 newlib: switch to standard AM_PROG_AS
Now that we require a recent automake version, rely on it to provide AS
and CCAS and CCASFLAGS for us.
2022-02-08 20:19:18 -05:00
Mike Frysinger b9346cee1a newlib: switch to standard AC_PROG_CC
Now that we use AC_NO_EXECUTABLES, and we require a recent version of
autoconf, we don't need to define our own copies of these macros.  So
switch to the standard AC_PROG_CC.
2022-02-08 19:09:26 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 9b50254377 newlib: move AC_NO_EXECUTABLES logic up to common code
This logic was added to libc & libm to get it working again after some
reworks in the CPP handling, but now that that's settled, let's move
this to the common newlib configure logic.  This will make it easier
to consolidate all the configure calls into the top-level newlib dir.

This does create a lot of noise in the generate scripts, but that's
because of the ordering of the calls, not because of correctness. We
will try to draw that back down in follow up commits as we modernize
the toolchain calls in here.
2022-02-08 19:09:26 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 24b1e4b942 newlib: drop shared documentation rules
Now that the top-level makefile handles these, don't need to copy
these into every single subdir.
2022-02-05 00:18:01 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 44f6310bf9 newlib: libc: include all chapters all the time in the manual
THe stdio subdir is actually required by the documentation.  The
stdio/def is handled dynamically, but libc.texi always expects it
to be included, and fails if it isn't.  So making it required when
building docs is safe.

The xdr subdir is handled dynamically, but it doesn't include any
docs, so the dynamic logic isn't (currently) adding any value.  So
making it required when building docs is safe.

That leaves: iconv, stdio64, posix, and signal subdirs.  The chapters
have a little disclaimer saying they are system-dependent, but even
then, imo having stable manuals regardless of the target is preferable,
and we can add more disclaimer language to these chapters if we want.

This doesn't touch the man page codepaths, just the info/pdf.
2022-02-04 19:39:09 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 4574c60378 newlib: arm & v850: simplify build rules
Let automake manage whether the objects are included in lib.a.  This
fixes failures after to commit 71086e8b2d
("newlib: delete (most) redundant lib_a_CCASFLAGS=$(AM_CCASFLAGS)") due
to automake generating different set of implicit rules, and the code in
here assuming the names of the generated objects.
2022-02-03 20:45:47 -05:00
Mike Frysinger fc0bd2eb03 newlib: use abs_newlib_basedir for -I paths
When we had configure scripts in subdirs, the newlib_basedir value
was computed relative to that, and it'd be the same when used in the
Makefile in the same dir.  With many subdir configure scripts removed,
the top-level configure & Makefile can't use the same relative path.
So switch the subdir Makefiles over to abs_newlib_basedir when they
use -I to find source headers.

Do this for all subdirs, even ones with configure scripts and where
newlib_basedir works.  This makes the code consistent, and avoids
surprises if the configure script is ever removed in the future as
part of merging to the higher level.

Some of the subdirs were using -I$(newlib_basedir)/../newlib/ for
some reason.  Collapse those too since newlib_basedir points to the
newlib source tree already.
2022-01-29 01:35:30 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 6444f108d9 newlib: export abs_newlib_basedir for all subdirs
When using the top-level configure script but subdir Makefiles, the
newlib_basedir value gets a bit out of sync: it's relative to where
configure lives, not where the Makefile lives.  Move the abs setting
from the top-level configure script into acinclude.m4 so we can rely
on it being available everywhere.  Although this commit doesn't use
it anywhere, just lays the groundwork.
2022-01-29 01:35:30 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 08a55a233d newlib: libc: merge machine/ configure scripts up a level
The machine configure scripts are all effectively stub scripts that
pass the higher level options to its own makefile.  There were only
three doing custom tests.  The rest were all effectively the same as
the libc/ configure script.

So instead of recursively running configure in all of these subdirs,
generate their makefiles from the top-level configure.  For the few
unique ones, deploy a pattern of including subdir logic via m4:
	m4_include([machine/nds32/acinclude.m4])

Some of the generated machine makefiles have a bunch of extra stuff
added to them, but that's because they were inconsistent in their
configure libtool calls.  The top-level has it, so it exports some
new vars to the ones that weren't already.
2022-01-26 03:11:21 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 8bee45444f newlib: libc: merge most sys/ configure scripts up a level
The sys configure scripts are almost all effectively stub scripts that
pass the higher level options to its own makefile.  The phoenix & linux
ones are a bit more complicated with nested subdirs, so those have been
left alone for now.  Plus, I don't really have a way of testing them.
2022-01-26 03:11:21 -05:00
Mike Frysinger dd23de27c8 newlib: libc: install CRT0 straight out of subdir
There's no need to have a sys/ subdir just to copy the sys/$arch/crt0.o
up to sys/crt0.o, and then have libc/ copy sys/crt0.o up again.  Just
have libc/ refer to sys/$arch/crt0.o directly and drop the intermediate
makefile entirely.
2022-01-26 03:11:21 -05:00
Mike Frysinger fbfeebc221 newlib: libc: merge sys/ trampoline up a level
The sys/{configure,Makefile} files exist to fan out to the specific
sys/$arch/ subdir, and to possibly generate a crt0.  We already have
all that same info in the libc/ dir itself, so by moving the recursive
configure and make calls into it, we can cut off some of this logic
entirely and save the overhead.

For arches that don't have a sys subdir, it means they can skip the
logic entirely.

The sys subdir itself is kept for the crt0 logic, for now.  We'll try
and clean that up next.
2022-01-26 03:11:20 -05:00
Mike Frysinger f159663b08 newlib: stop clobbering LDFLAGS with non-standard $ldflags
It's unclear why this was added originally, but assuming it was needed
20 years ago, it shouldn't be explicitly required nowadays.  Current
versions of autotools already take care of exporting LDFLAGS to the
Makefile as needed (things are actually getting linked).  That's why
the configure diffs show LDFLAGS still here, but shifted to a diff
place in the output list.  A few dirs stop exporting LDFLAGS, but
that's because they don't do any linking, only compiling, so it's
correct.

As for the use of $ldflags instead of the standard $LDFLAGS, I can't
really explain that at all.  Just use the right name so users don't
have to dig into why their setting isn't respected, and then use a
non-standard name instead.  Adjust the testsuite to match.
2022-01-21 17:10:10 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 4317e0676a newlib: stop checking --enable-multilib in subdirs
None of the subdirs actually use the multilib arg, so include the
logic only in the top-level configure.
2022-01-21 17:10:10 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 437c5c5085 newlib: internalize HAVE_INITFINI_ARRAY
This define is only used by newlib internally, so stop exporting it
as HAVE_INITFINI_ARRAY since this can conflict with defines packages
use themselves.

We don't really need to add _ to HAVE_INIT_FINI too since it isn't
exported in newlib.h, but might as well be consistent here.

We can't (easily) add this to newlib_cflags like HAVE_INIT_FINI is
because this is based on a compile-time test in the top configure,
not on plain shell code in configure.host.  We'd have to replicate
the test in every subdir in order to have it passed down.
2022-01-19 19:59:16 -05:00
Mike Frysinger a492b26065 newlib: enable automake subdir-objects in all dirs
Currently this is only enabled in the top-level as that's the only
place where it seemed to be used.  But the libc/sys/phoenix/ dir
also uses this functionality, but fails to explicitly enable it.
Automake workedaround it, but generated warnings.  Move the option
to NEWLIB_CONFIGURE so all dirs get it automatically iff they end
up using the option.  If they don't use the option, there's no
difference to the generated code.
2022-01-18 19:28:24 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 6746e06043 newlib: avoid duplicate awk checks
Since AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE calls AC_PROG_AWK, and some configure.ac
scripts call it too, we end up testing for awk multiple times.  If
we change NEWLIB_CONFIGURE to require the macro instead, then it
makes sure it's always expanded, but only once.

While we're here, do the same thing with AC_PROG_INSTALL since it
is also called by AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE, although it doesn't currently
result in duplicate configure checks.
2022-01-18 19:25:18 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 3722489f1f newlib: merge old AC_LIBTOOL_WIN32_DLL macro into LT_INIT
The AC_LIBTOOL_WIN32_DLL macro has been deprecated for a while and code
should call LT_INIT with win32-dll instead.  Update the calls to match.

The generated code is noisy not because of substantial differences, but
because the order of some macros change (i.e. instead of calling AS and
then CC, CC is called first and then AS).
2022-01-18 19:15:44 -05:00
Mike Frysinger fe591ba3f7 newlib: update libtool macro name
Replace old AM_PROG_LIBTOOL name with LT_INIT.  There's no change to
the generated files since they're aliases internally.
2022-01-18 19:15:44 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 71086e8b2d newlib: delete (most) redundant lib_a_CCASFLAGS=$(AM_CCASFLAGS)
Since automake already sets per-library CCASFLAGS to $(AM_CCASFLAGS)
by default, there's no need to explicitly set it here.

Many of these dirs don't have .S files in the first place, so the rule
doesn't even do anything.  That can easily be seen when Makefile.in has
no changes as a result.

For the dirs with .S files, the custom rules are the same as the pattern
.S.o rules, so this is a nice cleanup.

The only dir that was adding extra flags (newlib/libc/machine/mn10300/)
to the per-library setting can have it moved to the global AM_CCASFLAGS
since the subdir only has one target.  Although the setting just adds
extra debugging flags, so maybe it should be deleted in general.

There are a few dirs that we leave the redundant setting in place.  This
is to workaround an automake limitation in subdirs that support building
with & w/out libtool:
https://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/html_node/Objects-created-both-with-libtool-and-without.html
2022-01-18 19:12:02 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 20e3103471 newlib: update to automake-1.15
This matches what the other GNU toolchain projects have done already.
The generated diff in practice isn't terribly large.  This will allow
more use of subdir local.mk includes due to fixes & improvements that
came after the 1.11 release series.
2022-01-14 19:10:38 -05:00
Mike Frysinger a100e80fc9 require autoconf-2.69 exactly
The newlib & libgloss dirs are already generated using autoconf-2.69.
To avoid merging new code and/or accidental regeneration using diff
versions, leverage config/override.m4 to pin to 2.69 exactly.  This
matches what gcc/binutils/gdb are already doing.

The README file already says to use autoconf-2.69.

To accomplish this, it's just as simple as adding -I flags to the
top-level config/ dir when running aclocal.  This is because the
override.m4 file overrides AC_INIT to first require the specific
autoconf version before calling the real AC_INIT.
2022-01-14 15:24:33 -05:00
Nick Alcock 5ab7dd14e1 libtool.m4: fix nm BSD flag detection
Libtool needs to get BSD-format (or MS-format) output out of the system
nm, so that it can scan generated object files for symbol names for
-export-symbols-regex support.  Some nms need specific flags to turn on
BSD-formatted output, so libtool checks for this in its AC_PATH_NM.
Unfortunately the code to do this has a pair of interlocking flaws:

 - it runs the test by doing an nm of /dev/null.  Some platforms
   reasonably refuse to do an nm on a device file, but before now this
   has only been worked around by assuming that the error message has a
   specific textual form emitted by Tru64 nm, and that getting this
   error means this is Tru64 nm and that nm -B would work to produce
   BSD-format output, even though the test never actually got anything
   but an error message out of nm -B.  This is fixable by nm'ing *nm
   itself* (since we necessarily have a path to it).

 - the test is entirely skipped if NM is set in the environment, on the
   grounds that the user has overridden the test: but the user cannot
   reasonably be expected to know that libtool wants not only nm but
   also flags forcing BSD-format output.  Worse yet, one such "user" is
   the top-level Cygnus configure script, which neither tests for
   nor specifies any BSD-format flags.  So platforms needing BSD-format
   flags always fail to set them when run in a Cygnus tree, breaking
   -export-symbols-regex on such platforms.  Libtool also needs to
   augment $LD on some platforms, but this is done unconditionally,
   augmenting whatever the user specified: the nm check should do the
   same.

   One wrinkle: if the user has overridden $NM, a path might have been
   provided: so we use the user-specified path if there was one, and
   otherwise do the path search as usual.  (If the nm specified doesn't
   work, this might lead to a few extra pointless path searches -- but
   the test is going to fail anyway, so that's not a problem.)

(Tested with NM unset, and set to nm, /usr/bin/nm, my-nm where my-nm is a
symlink to /usr/bin/nm on the PATH, and /not-on-the-path/my-nm where
*that* is a symlink to /usr/bin/nm.)

ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	PR libctf/27967
	* libtool.m4 (LT_PATH_NM): Try BSDization flags with a user-provided
	NM, if there is one.  Run nm on itself, not on /dev/null, to avoid
	errors from nms that refuse to work on non-regular files.  Remove
	other workarounds for this problem.  Strip out blank lines from the
	nm output.
2022-01-12 08:49:10 -05:00
Nick Alcock 4fe13b8d95 libtool.m4: augment symcode for Solaris 11
This reports common symbols like GNU nm, via a type code of 'C'.

ChangeLog
2021-09-27  Nick Alcock  <nick.alcock@oracle.com>

	PR libctf/27967
	* libtool.m4 (lt_cv_sys_global_symbol_pipe): Augment symcode for
	Solaris 11.
2022-01-12 08:47:00 -05:00
Alexander von Gluck IV 8a563bfdd7 Add support for the haiku operating system. These are the os support patches we have been grooming and maintaining for quite a few years over on git.haiku-os.org. All of these architectures are working and most have been stable for quite some time. 2022-01-12 08:43:25 -05:00
H.J. Lu 88d86e5970 GCC: Check if AR works with --plugin and rc
AR from older binutils doesn't work with --plugin and rc:

[hjl@gnu-cfl-2 bin]$ touch foo.c
[hjl@gnu-cfl-2 bin]$ ar --plugin /usr/libexec/gcc/x86_64-redhat-linux/10/liblto_plugin.so rc libfoo.a foo.c
[hjl@gnu-cfl-2 bin]$ ./ar --plugin /usr/libexec/gcc/x86_64-redhat-linux/10/liblto_plugin.so rc libfoo.a foo.c
./ar: no operation specified
[hjl@gnu-cfl-2 bin]$ ./ar --version
GNU ar (Linux/GNU Binutils) 2.29.51.0.1.20180112
Copyright (C) 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program is free software; you may redistribute it under the terms of
the GNU General Public License version 3 or (at your option) any later version.
This program has absolutely no warranty.
[hjl@gnu-cfl-2 bin]$

Check if AR works with --plugin and rc before passing --plugin to AR and
RANLIB.

	PR ld/27173
	* configure: Regenerated.
	* libtool.m4 (_LT_CMD_OLD_ARCHIVE): Check if AR works with
	--plugin and rc before enabling --plugin.

config/

	PR ld/27173
	* gcc-plugin.m4 (GCC_PLUGIN_OPTION): Check if AR works with
	--plugin and rc before enabling --plugin.

libiberty/

	PR ld/27173
	* configure: Regenerated.

zlib/

	PR ld/27173
	* configure: Regenerated.
2022-01-12 08:43:14 -05:00
H.J. Lu d8d5dac0fe GCC: Pass --plugin to AR and RANLIB
Detect GCC LTO plugin.  Pass --plugin to AR and RANLIB to support LTO
build.

	* Makefile.tpl (AR): Add @AR_PLUGIN_OPTION@
	(RANLIB): Add @RANLIB_PLUGIN_OPTION@.
	* configure.ac: Include config/gcc-plugin.m4.
	AC_SUBST AR_PLUGIN_OPTION and RANLIB_PLUGIN_OPTION.
	* libtool.m4 (_LT_CMD_OLD_ARCHIVE): Pass --plugin to AR and
	RANLIB if possible.
	* Makefile.in: Regenerated.
	* configure: Likewise.

config/

	* gcc-plugin.m4 (GCC_PLUGIN_OPTION): New.

libiberty/

	* Makefile.in (AR): Add @AR_PLUGIN_OPTION@
	(RANLIB): Add @RANLIB_PLUGIN_OPTION@.
	(configure_deps): Depend on ../config/gcc-plugin.m4.
	* aclocal.m4: Include ../config/gcc-plugin.m4.
	* configure.ac: AC_SUBST AR_PLUGIN_OPTION and
	RANLIB_PLUGIN_OPTION.
	* configure: Regenerated.

zlib/

	* configure: Regenerated.
2022-01-12 08:43:05 -05:00
Samuel Thibault 4a3b4d50e3 libtool.m4: update GNU/Hurd test from upstream. In upstream libtool, 47a889a4ca20 ("Improve GNU/Hurd support.") fixed detection of shlibpath_overrides_runpath, thus avoiding unnecessary relink. This backports it.
.	* libtool.m4: Match gnu* along other GNU systems.

*/ChangeLog:

	* configure: Re-generate.
2022-01-12 07:19:46 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 8fc6b4b30e newlib: regen aclocal.m4 after autoconf update
The configure scripts were regenerated with 2.69 for the newlib-4.2.0
release in 484d2ebf8d, but the aclocal
files were not.  Do that now to avoid confusion between the two as to
which version of autoconf was used.
2022-01-12 07:01:18 -05:00
Mike Frysinger 5a94ffd57a newlib: fix silent build in a few subdirs
A few subdirs have custom compile rules.  Utilize AM_V_xxx settings
so they respect the silent build option.
2022-01-05 20:38:25 -05:00
Mike Frysinger ed20821a40 newlib: migrate from INCLUDES to AM_CPPFLAGS
Since automake deprecated the INCLUDES name in favor of AM_CPPFLAGS,
change all existing users over.  The generated code is the same since
the two variables have been used in the same exact places by design.

There are other cleanups to be done, but lets focus on just renaming
here so we can upgrade to a newer automake version w/out triggering
new warnings.
2022-01-05 20:29:53 -05:00
Jeff Johnston 484d2ebf8d Update newlib to 4.2.0 2021-12-31 12:46:13 -05:00
Jon Turney bfcabeb876
newlib: Regenerate autotools files 2021-12-29 22:45:06 +00:00
Jon Turney a4e734fcdb
newlib: Remove automake option 'cygnus'
The 'cygnus' option was removed from automake 1.13 in 2012, so the
presence of this option prevents that or a later version of automake
being used.

A check-list of the effects of '--cygnus' from the automake 1.12
documentation, and steps taken (where possible) to preserve those
effects (See also this thread [1] for discussion on that):

[1] https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-automake/2012-03/msg00048.html

1. The foreign strictness is implied.

Already present in AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE in newlib/acinclude.m4

2. The options no-installinfo, no-dependencies and no-dist are implied.

Already present in AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE in newlib/acinclude.m4

Future work: Remove no-dependencies and any explicit header dependencies,
and use automatic dependency tracking instead.  Are there explicit rules
which are now redundant to removing no-installinfo and no-dist?

3. The macro AM_MAINTAINER_MODE is required.

Already present in newlib/acinclude.m4

Note that maintainer-mode is still disabled by default.

4. Info files are always created in the build directory, and not in the
source directory.

This appears to be an error in the automake documentation describing
'--cygnus' [2]. newlib's info files are generated in the source
directory, and no special steps are needed to keep doing that.

[2] https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-automake/2012-04/msg00028.html

5. texinfo.tex is not required if a Texinfo source file is specified.
(The assumption is that the file will be supplied, but in a place that
automake cannot find.)

This effect is overriden by an explicit setting of the TEXINFO_TEX
variable (the directory part of which is fed into texi2X via the
TEXINPUTS environment variable).

6. Certain tools will be searched for in the build tree as well as in the
user's PATH. These tools are runtest, expect, makeinfo and texi2dvi.

For obscure automake reasons, this effect of '--cygnus' is not active
for makeinfo in newlib's configury.

However, there appears to be top-level configury which selects in-tree
runtest, expect and makeinfo, if present. So, if that works as it
appears, this effect is preserved. If not, this may cause problem if
anyone is building those tools in-tree.

This effect is not preserved for texi2dvi. This may cause problems if
anyone is building texinfo in-tree.

If needed, explicit checks for those tools looking in places relative to
$(top_srcdir)/../ as well as in PATH could be added.

7. The check target doesn't depend on all.

This effect is not preseved. The check target now depends on the all
target.

This concern seems somewhat academic given the current state of the
testsuite.

Also note that this doesn't touch libgloss.
2021-12-29 22:45:04 +00:00
Jon Turney 8e166351b3
newlib: Regenerate autotools files 2021-12-29 22:45:03 +00:00
Jon Turney 639cb7ec1a
newlib: Regenerate all autotools files
Regenerate all aclocal.m4, configure and Makefile.in files.
2021-12-09 21:41:35 +00:00
Mike Frysinger 59e83de0b1 libgloss/newlib: update configure.ac in Makefile.in files
The maintainer rules refer to configure.in directly, so update that
after renaming all the configure.ac files.
2021-11-06 14:14:49 -04:00
Mike Frysinger 920617998e libgloss/newlib: rename configure.in to configure.ac
The .in name has been deprecated for a long time in favor of .ac.
2021-09-13 10:14:37 -04:00
Joel Sherrill 59584ff16b libc/sys/rtems/crt0.c: Fix two warnings.
__assert_func() is marked as noreturn and stub should not.
	__tls_get_addr() needed to return a value..
2021-06-17 12:58:36 -05:00
Sebastian Huber a485393aea RTEMS: Add <poll.h> and <sys/poll.h>
Add the POSIX header file <poll.h> which is used by the GCC 11 Ada
runtime support.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2021-01-05 13:41:34 -05:00
Jeff Johnston 415fdd4279 Bump up newlib version to 4.1.0 2020-12-18 18:50:49 -05:00
Jeff Johnston 14123c991b Bump newlib release to 4.0.0 2020-12-11 14:37:12 -05:00
Joel Sherrill fcaaf40c9d libc/sys/rtems/include/machine/_types.h: Define daddr_t to be 64 bits for RTEMS
This type needs to be able to represent a position on a disk or
file system.
2020-10-28 09:45:21 -05:00
Torbjörn SVENSSON via Newlib 7ed952000c libc/time: Move internal newlib tz-structs into own header
As discussed in GCC bug 97088
(https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=97088), parameters in
prototypes of library functions should use reserved names, or no name
at all.

This patch moves the internal struct __tzrule_struct to its own
internal header sys/_tz_structs.h.  This is included from newlib's
time code as well as from Cygwin's localtime wrapper.

Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@st.com>
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
2020-10-15 16:59:51 +02:00
Keith Packard via Newlib 1f8e5847df libm: Fix 'gamma' and 'gammaf' functions. Clean up other gamma code. [v2]
The current gamma, gamma_r, gammaf and gammaf_r functions return
|gamma(x)| instead of ln(|gamma(x)|) due to a change made back in 2002
to the __ieee754_gamma_r implementation. This patch fixes that, making
all of these functions map too their lgamma equivalents.

To fix the underlying bug, the __ieee754_gamma functions have been
changed to return gamma(x), removing the _r variants as those are no
longer necessary. Their names have been changed to __ieee754_tgamma to
avoid potential confusion from users.

Now that the __ieee754_tgamma functions return the correctly signed
value, the tgamma functions have been modified to use them.

libm.a now exposes the following gamma functions:

    ln(|gamma(x)|):

	__ieee754_lgamma_r
	__ieee754_lgammaf_r

	lgamma
	lgamma_r
	gamma
	gamma_r

	lgammaf
	lgammaf_r
	gammaf
	gammaf_r

	lgammal	(on machines where long double is double)

    gamma(x):

	__ieee754_tgamma
	__ieee754_tgammaf
	tgamma
	tgammaf
	tgammal (on machines where long double is double)

Additional aliases for any of the above functions can be added if
necessary; in particular, I'm not sure if we need to include
__ieee754_gamma*_r functions (which would return ln(|(gamma(x)|).

Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>

----

v2:
	Switch commit message to ASCII
2020-09-04 21:27:11 +02:00
Sebastian Huber b37a3388cc RTEMS: Include missing header and fix stub
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2020-03-13 13:51:20 -05:00
Keith Packard 9042d0ce65 Use remove-advertising-clause script to edit BSD licenses
This edits licenses held by Berkeley and NetBSD, both of which
have removed the advertising requirement from their licenses.

Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
2020-01-29 19:03:31 +01:00
Jeff Johnston 4e78f8ea16 Bump up newlib release to 3.3.0 2020-01-21 15:17:43 -05:00
Jeff Johnston 1afb22a120 Bump up release to 3.2.0 for yearly snapshot 2020-01-02 14:56:24 -05:00
kib 7e9b1550fd Add SIOCGIFDOWNREASON.
The ioctl(2) is intended to provide more details about the cause of
the down for the link.

Eventually we might define a comprehensive list of codes for the
situations.  But interface also allows the driver to provide free-form
null-terminated ASCII string to provide arbitrary non-formalized
information.  Sample implementation exists for mlx5(4), where the
string is fetched from firmware controlling the port.

Reviewed by:	hselasky, rrs
Sponsored by:	Mellanox Technologies
MFC after:	1 week
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21527
2019-09-25 09:01:28 +02:00
jhb 1b35636119 Add kernel-side support for in-kernel TLS.
KTLS adds support for in-kernel framing and encryption of Transport
Layer Security (1.0-1.2) data on TCP sockets.  KTLS only supports
offload of TLS for transmitted data.  Key negotation must still be
performed in userland.  Once completed, transmit session keys for a
connection are provided to the kernel via a new TCP_TXTLS_ENABLE
socket option.  All subsequent data transmitted on the socket is
placed into TLS frames and encrypted using the supplied keys.

Any data written to a KTLS-enabled socket via write(2), aio_write(2),
or sendfile(2) is assumed to be application data and is encoded in TLS
frames with an application data type.  Individual records can be sent
with a custom type (e.g. handshake messages) via sendmsg(2) with a new
control message (TLS_SET_RECORD_TYPE) specifying the record type.

At present, rekeying is not supported though the in-kernel framework
should support rekeying.

KTLS makes use of the recently added unmapped mbufs to store TLS
frames in the socket buffer.  Each TLS frame is described by a single
ext_pgs mbuf.  The ext_pgs structure contains the header of the TLS
record (and trailer for encrypted records) as well as references to
the associated TLS session.

KTLS supports two primary methods of encrypting TLS frames: software
TLS and ifnet TLS.

Software TLS marks mbufs holding socket data as not ready via
M_NOTREADY similar to sendfile(2) when TLS framing information is
added to an unmapped mbuf in ktls_frame().  ktls_enqueue() is then
called to schedule TLS frames for encryption.  In the case of
sendfile_iodone() calls ktls_enqueue() instead of pru_ready() leaving
the mbufs marked M_NOTREADY until encryption is completed.  For other
writes (vn_sendfile when pages are available, write(2), etc.), the
PRUS_NOTREADY is set when invoking pru_send() along with invoking
ktls_enqueue().

A pool of worker threads (the "KTLS" kernel process) encrypts TLS
frames queued via ktls_enqueue().  Each TLS frame is temporarily
mapped using the direct map and passed to a software encryption
backend to perform the actual encryption.

(Note: The use of PHYS_TO_DMAP could be replaced with sf_bufs if
someone wished to make this work on architectures without a direct
map.)

KTLS supports pluggable software encryption backends.  Internally,
Netflix uses proprietary pure-software backends.  This commit includes
a simple backend in a new ktls_ocf.ko module that uses the kernel's
OpenCrypto framework to provide AES-GCM encryption of TLS frames.  As
a result, software TLS is now a bit of a misnomer as it can make use
of hardware crypto accelerators.

Once software encryption has finished, the TLS frame mbufs are marked
ready via pru_ready().  At this point, the encrypted data appears as
regular payload to the TCP stack stored in unmapped mbufs.

ifnet TLS permits a NIC to offload the TLS encryption and TCP
segmentation.  In this mode, a new send tag type (IF_SND_TAG_TYPE_TLS)
is allocated on the interface a socket is routed over and associated
with a TLS session.  TLS records for a TLS session using ifnet TLS are
not marked M_NOTREADY but are passed down the stack unencrypted.  The
ip_output_send() and ip6_output_send() helper functions that apply
send tags to outbound IP packets verify that the send tag of the TLS
record matches the outbound interface.  If so, the packet is tagged
with the TLS send tag and sent to the interface.  The NIC device
driver must recognize packets with the TLS send tag and schedule them
for TLS encryption and TCP segmentation.  If the the outbound
interface does not match the interface in the TLS send tag, the packet
is dropped.  In addition, a task is scheduled to refresh the TLS send
tag for the TLS session.  If a new TLS send tag cannot be allocated,
the connection is dropped.  If a new TLS send tag is allocated,
however, subsequent packets will be tagged with the correct TLS send
tag.  (This latter case has been tested by configuring both ports of a
Chelsio T6 in a lagg and failing over from one port to another.  As
the connections migrated to the new port, new TLS send tags were
allocated for the new port and connections resumed without being
dropped.)

ifnet TLS can be enabled and disabled on supported network interfaces
via new '[-]txtls[46]' options to ifconfig(8).  ifnet TLS is supported
across both vlan devices and lagg interfaces using failover, lacp with
flowid enabled, or lacp with flowid enabled.

Applications may request the current KTLS mode of a connection via a
new TCP_TXTLS_MODE socket option.  They can also use this socket
option to toggle between software and ifnet TLS modes.

In addition, a testing tool is available in tools/tools/switch_tls.
This is modeled on tcpdrop and uses similar syntax.  However, instead
of dropping connections, -s is used to force KTLS connections to
switch to software TLS and -i is used to switch to ifnet TLS.

Various sysctls and counters are available under the kern.ipc.tls
sysctl node.  The kern.ipc.tls.enable node must be set to true to
enable KTLS (it is off by default).  The use of unmapped mbufs must
also be enabled via kern.ipc.mb_use_ext_pgs to enable KTLS.

KTLS is enabled via the KERN_TLS kernel option.

This patch is the culmination of years of work by several folks
including Scott Long and Randall Stewart for the original design and
implementation; Drew Gallatin for several optimizations including the
use of ext_pgs mbufs, the M_NOTREADY mechanism for TLS records
awaiting software encryption, and pluggable software crypto backends;
and John Baldwin for modifications to support hardware TLS offload.

Reviewed by:	gallatin, hselasky, rrs
Obtained from:	Netflix
Sponsored by:	Netflix, Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21277
2019-09-25 09:01:23 +02:00
thj 28a44b1ecd Rename IPPROTO 33 from SEP to DCCP
IPPROTO 33 is DCCP in the IANA Registry:
https://www.iana.org/assignments/protocol-numbers/protocol-numbers.xhtml

IPPROTO_SEP was added about 20 years ago in r33804. The entries were added
straight from RFC1700, without regard to whether they were used.

The reference in RFC1700 for SEP is '[JC120] <mystery contact>', this is an
indication that the protocol number was probably in use in a private network.

As RFC1700 is no longer the authoritative list of internet numbers and that
IANA assinged 33 to DCCP in RFC4340, change the header to the actual
authoritative source.

Reviewed by:	Richard Scheffenegger, bz
Approved by:	bz (mentor)
MFC after:	1 week
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21178
2019-09-25 09:01:19 +02:00
rrs 693ba4025f This commit updates rack to what is basically
being used at NF as well as sets in some of the groundwork for
committing BBR. The hpts system is updated as well as some other needed
utilities for the entrance of BBR. This is actually part 1 of 3 more
needed commits which will finally complete with BBRv1 being added as a
new tcp stack.

Sponsored by:	Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20834
2019-09-25 09:01:19 +02:00
jhb 2f55e1fa06 Add an external mbuf buffer type that holds
multiple unmapped pages.

Unmapped mbufs allow sendfile to carry multiple pages of data in a
single mbuf, without mapping those pages.  It is a requirement for
Netflix's in-kernel TLS, and provides a 5-10% CPU savings on heavy web
serving workloads when used by sendfile, due to effectively
compressing socket buffers by an order of magnitude, and hence
reducing cache misses.

For this new external mbuf buffer type (EXT_PGS), the ext_buf pointer
now points to a struct mbuf_ext_pgs structure instead of a data
buffer.  This structure contains an array of physical addresses (this
reduces cache misses compared to an earlier version that stored an
array of vm_page_t pointers).  It also stores additional fields needed
for in-kernel TLS such as the TLS header and trailer data that are
currently unused.  To more easily detect these mbufs, the M_NOMAP flag
is set in m_flags in addition to M_EXT.

Various functions like m_copydata() have been updated to safely access
packet contents (using uiomove_fromphys()), to make things like BPF
safe.

NIC drivers advertise support for unmapped mbufs on transmit via a new
IFCAP_NOMAP capability.  This capability can be toggled via the new
'nomap' and '-nomap' ifconfig(8) commands.  For NIC drivers that only
transmit packet contents via DMA and use bus_dma, adding the
capability to if_capabilities and if_capenable should be all that is
required.

If a NIC does not support unmapped mbufs, they are converted to a
chain of mapped mbufs (using sf_bufs to provide the mapping) in
ip_output or ip6_output.  If an unmapped mbuf requires software
checksums, it is also converted to a chain of mapped mbufs before
computing the checksum.

Submitted by:	gallatin (earlier version)
Reviewed by:	gallatin, hselasky, rrs
Discussed with:	ae, kp (firewalls)
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20616
2019-09-25 09:01:19 +02:00
hselasky d41e144869 Convert all IPv4 and IPv6 multicast memberships
into using a STAILQ instead of a linear array.

The multicast memberships for the inpcb structure are protected by a
non-sleepable lock, INP_WLOCK(), which needs to be dropped when
calling the underlying possibly sleeping if_ioctl() method. When using
a linear array to keep track of multicast memberships, the computed
memory location of the multicast filter may suddenly change, due to
concurrent insertion or removal of elements in the linear array. This
in turn leads to various invalid memory access issues and kernel
panics.

To avoid this problem, put all multicast memberships on a STAILQ based
list. Then the memory location of the IPv4 and IPv6 multicast filters
become fixed during their lifetime and use after free and memory leak
issues are easier to track, for example by: vmstat -m | grep multi

All list manipulation has been factored into inline functions
including some macros, to easily allow for a future hash-list
implementation, if needed.

This patch has been tested by pho@ .

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20080
Reviewed by:	markj @
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Mellanox Technologies
2019-09-25 09:01:15 +02:00
brooks e94d2a0f8b Extend mmap/mprotect API to specify the max page
protections.

A new macro PROT_MAX() alters a protection value so it can be OR'd with
a regular protection value to specify the maximum permissions.  If
present, these flags specify the maximum permissions.

While these flags are non-portable, they can be used in portable code
with simple ifdefs to expand PROT_MAX() to 0.

This change allows (e.g.) a region that must be writable during run-time
linking or JIT code generation to be made permanently read+execute after
writes are complete.  This complements W^X protections allowing more
precise control by the programmer.

This change alters mprotect argument checking and returns an error when
unhandled protection flags are set.  This differs from POSIX (in that
POSIX only specifies an error), but is the documented behavior on Linux
and more closely matches historical mmap behavior.

In addition to explicit setting of the maximum permissions, an
experimental sysctl vm.imply_prot_max causes mmap to assume that the
initial permissions requested should be the maximum when the sysctl is
set to 1.  PROT_NONE mappings are excluded from this for compatibility
with rtld and other consumers that use such mappings to reserve
address space before mapping contents into part of the reservation.  A
final version this is expected to provide per-binary and per-process
opt-in/out options and this sysctl will go away in its current form.
As such it is undocumented.

Reviewed by:	emaste, kib (prior version), markj
Additional suggestions from:	alc
Obtained from:	CheriBSD
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18880
2019-09-25 09:01:10 +02:00
shurd 17baf5e390 Some devices take undesired actions when RTS and
DTR are asserted. Some development boards for example will reset on DTR,
and some radio interfaces will transmit on RTS.

This patch allows "stty -f /dev/ttyu9.init -rtsdtr" to prevent
RTS and DTR from being asserted on open(), allowing these devices
to be used without problems.

Reviewed by:    imp
Differential Revision:  https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20031
2019-09-25 09:01:07 +02:00
pfg 6bd0b9ed27 Fix mismatch from r342379. 2019-09-25 09:01:04 +02:00
pfg 84ba60e6eb gai_strerror() - Update string error messages according to RFC 3493.
Error messages in gai_strerror(3) vary largely among OSs.

For new software we largely replaced the obsoleted EAI_NONAME and
with EAI_NODATA but we never updated the corresponding message to better
match the intended use. We also have references to ai_flags and ai_family
which are not very descriptive for non-developer end users.

Bring new new error messages based on informational RFC 3493, which has
obsoleted RFC 2553, and make them consistent among the header adn
manpage.

MFC after:	1 month
Differentical Revision:	D18630
2019-09-25 08:38:27 +02:00
Alexander Fedotov bf56973edc Align libgloss/arm and libc/sys/arm sources: miscellaneous fixes
1. Trim trailing spaces
2. Align comments, function declarations and definitions
2019-08-05 13:00:53 +01:00
Alexander Fedotov bd5596f4fd Align libgloss/arm and libc/sys/arm sources: Lite exit support
Applied changes from commit 2404223:

	* arm/crt0.S (_mainCRTStartup): Weak reference to atexit and _fini
		when lite exit is enabled.
2019-08-05 13:00:53 +01:00
Alexander Fedotov dfffe68303 Align libgloss/arm and libc/sys/arm sources: HeapInfo and __heap_limit
Applied changes from commit 8d98f95:

	* arm/crt0.S: Initialise __heap_limit when ARM_RDI_MONITOR is defined.
	* arm/syscalls.c: define __heap_limit global symbol.
	* arm/syscalls.c (_sbrk): Honour __heap_limit.

Applied changes from commit 8d98f95:
	Fixed semihosting for ARM when heapinfo not provided by debugger
2019-08-05 13:00:53 +01:00
Alexander Fedotov 37e80fbb1c Align libgloss/arm and libc/sys/arm sources: Fix GetCmdLine semihosting directives
Applied changes from the commit 9b11672:

	When simulating arm code, the target program startup code (crt0) uses
	semihosting invocations to get the command line from the simulator. The
	simulator returns the command line and its size into the area passed in
	parameter. (ARM 32-bit specifications :
	http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.dui0058d/DUI0058.pdf
	chapter "5.4.19 SYS_GET_CMDLINE").

	The memory area pointed by the semihosting register argument is located
	in .text section (usually not writtable (RX)).

	If we run this code on a simulator that respects this rights properties
	(qemu user-mode for instance), the command line will not be written to
	the .text program memory, in particular the length of the string. The
	program runs with an empty command line. This problem hasn't been seen
	earlier probably because qemu user-mode is not so much used, but this can
	happen with another simulator that refuse to write in a read-only segment.

	With this modification, the command line can be correctly passed to the
	target program.

	Changes:
	- newlib/libc/sys/arm/crt0.S : Arguments passed to the
	AngelSWI_Reason_GetCmdLine semihosting invocation are placed into .data
	section instead of .text
2019-08-05 13:00:53 +01:00
Richard Earnshaw 65416cca7e [arm] remove libc/sys/arm/sys/param.h
The Arm sys/param.h does not define anything differently to the
generic sys/param.h, but fails to define some things that that file
provides.  There does not appear to be any reason to keep this version
and we should revert to using the common version.
2019-07-26 16:13:30 +01:00
Alexander Fedotov 942f60d714 Stack Pointer and Stack Limit initialization refactored.
SP initialization changes:
  1. set default value in semihosting case as well
  2. moved existing SP & SL init code for processor modes in separate routine and made it as "hook"
  3. init SP for processor modes in Thumb mode as well

Add new macro FN_RETURN, FN_EH_START and FN_EH_END.
2019-07-23 10:00:06 +02:00
Jeff Johnston 007bc1923c Add gfortran support for AMD GCN
From: Kwok Cheung Yeung <kcy@codesourcery.com>

This patch adds enough support for constructors/destructors and OS functions
to be able to link and run gfortran programs on AMD GCN.

There's no actual ability to do I/O operations on this targets, besides
"write" to stdout and stderr, so most of the functions are just stubs.
2019-06-07 13:55:43 -04:00
Alexander Fedotov a0b0a4a018 Align comments and spaces in libgloss/arm/crt0.S and newlib/libc/sys/arm/crt0.S to ease further code alignment. 2019-04-12 14:34:47 +01:00
Christophe Lyon cc430406ac Include code in trap.S for APCS only.
The code in trap.S is to support the old APCS chunked stack variant,
which dates back to the Acorn days, so put it under #ifndef
__ARM_EABI__.

	* libgloss/arm/trap.S: Use __ARM_EABI rather than PREFER_THUMB.
	* newlib/libc/sys/arm/trap.S: Use __ARM_EABI rather than
	__thumb2__.
2019-04-11 14:20:21 +00:00
Christophe Lyon 630808d2a2 Make more macro checks ARMv8-M baseline proof.
Commit 69f4c40291 improved most
macro checks to be ARMv8-M baseline proof, but missed a few
occurrences which otherwise fail to build when using a CPU setting
such as cortex-m0 or cortex-m23. This patch brings the same
changes as the ones that were committed to libgloss at that time.

	newlib:
	* libc/sys/arm/crt0.S: Use THUMB1_ONLY rather than
	__ARM_ARCH_6M__.
2019-04-11 14:20:21 +00:00
Andrew Stubbs e8b23909e4 Add missing includes.
These missing includes were causing build warnings, but also a real bug in
which the "size" parameter to "write" was being passed in 32-bit, whereas it
ought to be 64-bit.  This led to intermittent bad behaviour.
2019-03-25 16:44:10 +01:00
Andrew Stubbs 62c66a39bd AMD GCN: Implement circular buffering.
The GCN port outputs stdout and stderr via a shared-memory interface.
Previously the buffer was limited to 1000 write operations, which was enough
for testing purposes, but easy to exhaust.

This patch implements a new circular buffering system allowing a greater
amount of output.  The interface must allow hundreds of hardware threads to
output simultaneously.  The new limit is UINT32_MAX write operations.

Unfortunately, there's no way to tell if the host side has also been updated.
This code will misbehave unless the gcn-run from GCC is also updated (although
it's fine the other way around), but that patch has already been committed.

OK?

Andrew Stubbs
Mentor Graphics / CodeSourcery
2019-03-18 17:38:25 +01:00
Sebastian Huber 9d4a6534fb Move RTEMS and XMK specific type definitions
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2019-02-19 09:06:22 +01:00
Jeff Johnston 1787e9d033 AMD GCN Port contributed by Andrew Stubbs <ams@codesourcery.com>
Add support for the AMD GCN GPU architecture.  This is primarily intended for
use with OpenMP and OpenACC offloading.  It can also be used for stand-alone
programs, but this is intended mostly for testing the compiler and is not
expected to be useful in general.

The GPU architecture is highly parallel, and therefore Newlib must be
configured to use dynamic re-entrancy, and thread-safe malloc.

The only I/O available is a via a shared-memory interface provided by libgomp
and the gcn-run tool included with GCC.  At this time this is limited to
stdout, argc/argv, and the return code.
2019-01-15 10:48:08 -05:00
Jeff Johnston 5726873100 Bump release to 3.1.0 for yearly snapshot 2018-12-31 23:40:11 -05:00
Sebastian Huber dc6e94551f RTEMS: Use __uint64_t for __ino_t
FreeBSD uses a 64-bit ino_t since 2017-05-23.  We need this for the
pipe() support in libbsd.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-12-20 12:12:38 +01:00
markj 44756a36ab Plug routing sysctl leaks.
Various structures exported by sysctl_rtsock() contain padding fields
which were not being zeroed.

Reported by:	Thomas Barabosch, Fraunhofer FKIE
Reviewed by:	ae
MFC after:	3 days
Security:	kernel memory disclosure
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18333
2018-12-20 12:12:37 +01:00
Matthew Malcomson 2d6b71ee6d Builtin enable return code with SYS_EXIT_EXTENDED
A previous commit introduced the ability to use the semi-hosting
SYS_EXIT_EXTENDED operation to libgloss, this commit adds the same
ability to the sys/arm/ backend so that building newlib only will
provide the same capabilities.
2018-11-26 10:07:55 -05:00
Sebastian Huber 1471e7cd74 RTEMS: Avoid <machine/param.h> in <sys/_cpuset.h>
The <machine/param.h> header file exposes some unrelated stuff not
covered by C or POSIX.  Avoid its use in <sys/_cpuset.h> since it is
included in <rtems.h>.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-11-08 09:38:12 +01:00
Joel Sherrill 037428fae3 newlib/libc/sys/rtems/include/machine/param.h: Add _KERNEL to stop method leakage
The following FreeBSD kernel methods are not in any standard and
prototypes/definitions were leaking into application space:

  + round_page()
  + trunc_page()
  + atop()
  + ptoa()
  + pgtok()
2018-10-18 17:19:50 -05:00
Sebastian Huber 738fdc6a42 RTEMS: Add struct dirent::d_type member
This is used by the file system support of libstdc++ for example.  Use
content from latest FreeBSD <sys/dirent.h>

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-10-11 08:29:16 +02:00
Sebastian Huber da418955f5 Move common <sys/dirent.h> content to <dirent.h>
Move common content of the various <sys/dirent.h> and the latest FreeBSD
<dirent.h> to <dirent.h>.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-10-11 08:29:16 +02:00
Christophe Lyon 8a7536e91d [ARM] Make _kill() a noreturn function.
AngelSWI_Reason_ReportException does not return accoring to the ARM
documentation, so it is valid to mark _kill() as noreturn.  This way,
the compiler does not warn about _exit() returning a value despite
being noreturn.

2018-10-01  Christophe Lyon  <christophe.lyon@linaro.org>

	* libgloss/arm/_exit.c (_exit): Declare _kill() as noreturn.
	* libgloss/arm/_exit.c (_kill): Likewise. Remove the return
	statements.
	* newlib/libc/sys/arm/syscalls.c (_kill): Likewise..
2018-10-08 14:35:43 +01:00
Christophe Lyon 3878d82a2b [ARM] Cast string pointers to int to avoid compiler warnings.
2018-10-01  Christophe Lyon  <christophe.lyon@linaro.org>

    	* newlib/libc/sys/arm/syscalls.c (_unlink): Cast 'path' to int.
    	(_system): Cast 's' to int.
    	(_rename): Cast 'newpath' and 'oldpath' to int.
2018-10-05 12:00:44 +01:00
Andy Koppe 3017f23f1c Avoid ARM SWI Seek when querying file position
Issuing an ARM semi-hosting Seek command when just querying file
position with SEEK_CUR and offset zero is unnecessary, because unlike
the lseek() Unix system call the Seek command does not actually return
the file position. For that reason, syscalls.c for ARM keeps track of
file position in the 'poslog', so we can just return that.

Moreover, since the Seek command only accepts an absolute file position,
SEEK_CUR operations are implemented by adding the relative offset to the
position in the poslog. If the host implements non-binary files with
implicit carriage return characters but doesn't discount those implicit
CRs when implementing Seek (by just mapping straight to Windows file
operations), this actually ended up wrongly changing file position when
using SEEK_CUR with offset zero or functions like ftell() or fgetpos()
that are based on that.

Also, use off_t rather than int for the poslog.
2018-09-03 09:40:39 +02:00
Jon Beniston a9cfb33b6c Add --disable-newlib-fno-builtin to allow compilation without -fno-builtin for smaller and faster code. 2018-08-31 15:40:42 -04:00
Sebastian Huber d13c84eb07 RTEMS: Add kvaddr_t and ksize_t
These types were introduced by FreeBSD commit:

"Make struct xinpcb and friends word-size independent.

Replace size_t members with ksize_t (uint64_t) and pointer members
(never used as pointers in userspace, but instead as unique
idenitifiers) with kvaddr_t (uint64_t). This makes the structs
identical between 32-bit and 64-bit ABIs.

On 64-bit bit systems, the ABI is maintained. On 32-bit systems,
this is an ABI breaking change. The ABI of most of these structs
was previously broken in r315662.  This also imposes a small API
change on userspace consumers who must handle kernel pointers
becoming virtual addresses.

PR:		228301 (exp-run by antoine)
Reviewed by:	jtl, kib, rwatson (various versions)
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15386"

In RTEMS, there is no user/kernel space separation.  So, use the types
size_t and uintptr_t.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-08-24 15:07:29 +02:00
Sebastian Huber d35971f392 RTEMS: Introduce <machine/_kernel_mman.h>
This helps to avoid Newlib updates due to FreeBSD kernel space changes.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-08-24 15:04:43 +02:00
Sebastian Huber a2a8600f7d RTEMS: Introduce <machine/_kernel_socket.h>
This helps to avoid Newlib updates due to FreeBSD kernel space changes.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-08-24 15:04:43 +02:00
Sebastian Huber 764d748c9c RTEMS: Introduce <machine/_kernel_if.h>
This helps to avoid Newlib updates due to FreeBSD kernel space changes.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-08-24 15:04:43 +02:00
Sebastian Huber 0c0dd28596 RTEMS: Introduce <machine/_kernel_in.h>
This helps to avoid Newlib updates due to FreeBSD kernel space changes.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-08-24 15:04:43 +02:00
Sebastian Huber 9ce55ee716 RTEMS: Introduce <machine/_kernel_in6.h>
This helps to avoid Newlib updates due to FreeBSD kernel space changes.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-08-24 15:04:43 +02:00
Sebastian Huber c07fa084e0 RTEMS: Introduce <machine/_kernel_uio.h>
This helps to avoid Newlib updates due to FreeBSD kernel space changes.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-08-24 15:04:43 +02:00
Sebastian Huber 9bbf89dd11 RTEMS: Add __BSD_VISIBLE in <sys/_termios.h>
The __XSI_VISIBLE is not enabled by default in Newlib.  This is an
incompatiblity between FreeBSD and glibc.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-08-24 15:04:42 +02:00
Sebastian Huber 890c86d633 RTEMS: Update FreeBSD version tags
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
2018-08-24 15:04:39 +02:00
tuexen fe3e8b90dc Add SOL_SOCKET level socket option
with name SO_DOMAIN to get the domain of a socket.

This is helpful when testing and Solaris and Linux have the same
socket option using the same name.

Reviewed by:		bcr@, rrs@
Sponsored by:		Netflix, Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16791
2018-08-24 15:00:04 +02:00
jtl 823b096471 Implement a limit on on the number of IPv6 reassembly
queues per bucket.

There is a hashing algorithm which should distribute IPv6 reassembly
queues across the available buckets in a relatively even way. However,
if there is a flaw in the hashing algorithm which allows a large number
of IPv6 fragment reassembly queues to end up in a single bucket, a per-
bucket limit could help mitigate the performance impact of this flaw.

Implement such a limit, with a default of twice the maximum number of
reassembly queues divided by the number of buckets. Recalculate the
limit any time the maximum number of reassembly queues changes.
However, allow the user to override the value using a sysctl
(net.inet6.ip6.maxfragbucketsize).

Reviewed by:	jhb
Security:	FreeBSD-SA-18:10.ip
Security:	CVE-2018-6923
2018-08-24 15:00:04 +02:00
jtl 0e5c59050d Add a limit of the number of fragments per IPv6 packet.
The IPv4 fragment reassembly code supports a limit on the number of
fragments per packet. The default limit is currently 17 fragments.
Among other things, this limit serves to limit the number of fragments
the code must parse when trying to reassembly a packet.

Add a limit to the IPv6 reassembly code. By default, limit a packet
to 65 fragments (64 on the queue, plus one final fragment to complete
the packet). This allows an average fragment size of 1,008 bytes, which
should be sufficient to hold a fragment. (Recall that the IPv6 minimum
MTU is 1280 bytes. Therefore, this configuration allows a full-size
IPv6 packet to be fragmented on a link with the minimum MTU and still
carry approximately 272 bytes of headers before the fragmented portion
of the packet.)

Users can adjust this limit using the net.inet6.ip6.maxfragsperpacket
sysctl.

Reviewed by:	jhb
Security:	FreeBSD-SA-18:10.ip
Security:	CVE-2018-6923
2018-08-24 15:00:04 +02:00
rrs 215e33310b This commit brings in a new refactored TCP stack called Rack.
Rack includes the following features: - A different SACK processing
scheme (the old sack structures are not used). - RACK (Recent
acknowledgment) where counting dup-acks is no longer done instead time
is used to knwo when to retransmit. (see the I-D) - TLP (Tail Loss
Probe) where we will probe for tail-losses to attempt to try not to take
a retransmit time-out. (see the I-D) - Burst mitigation using TCPHTPS -
PRR (partial rate reduction) see the RFC.

Once built into your kernel, you can select this stack by either
socket option with the name of the stack is "rack" or by setting
the global sysctl so the default is rack.

Note that any connection that does not support SACK will be kicked
back to the "default" base  FreeBSD stack (currently known as "default").

To build this into your kernel you will need to enable in your
kernel:
   makeoptions WITH_EXTRA_TCP_STACKS=1
   options TCPHPTS

Sponsored by:	Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision:		https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15525
2018-08-24 15:00:04 +02:00
sbruno b40c48e057 Load balance sockets with new SO_REUSEPORT_LB option.
This patch adds a new socket option, SO_REUSEPORT_LB, which allow multiple
programs or threads to bind to the same port and incoming connections will be
load balanced using a hash function.

Most of the code was copied from a similar patch for DragonflyBSD.

However, in DragonflyBSD, load balancing is a global on/off setting and can not
be set per socket. This patch allows for simultaneous use of both the current
SO_REUSEPORT and the new SO_REUSEPORT_LB options on the same system.

Required changes to structures:
Globally change so_options from 16 to 32 bit value to allow for more options.
Add hashtable in pcbinfo to hold all SO_REUSEPORT_LB sockets.

Limitations:
As DragonflyBSD, a load balance group is limited to 256 pcbs (256 programs or
threads sharing the same socket).

This is a substantially different contribution as compared to its original
incarnation at svn r332894 and reverted at svn r332967.  Thanks to rwatson@
for the substantive feedback that is included in this commit.

Submitted by:	Johannes Lundberg <johalun0@gmail.com>
Obtained from:	DragonflyBSD
Relnotes:	Yes
Sponsored by:	Limelight Networks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11003
2018-08-24 15:00:04 +02:00
mmacy 44e0190a8c iflib(9): Add support for cloning pseudo interfaces
Part 3 of many ...
The VPC framework relies heavily on cloning pseudo interfaces
(vmnics, vpc switch, vcpswitch port, hostif, vxlan if, etc).

This pulls in that piece. Some ancillary changes get pulled
in as a side effect.

Reviewed by:	shurd@
Approved by:	sbruno@
Sponsored by:	Joyent, Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15347
2018-08-24 15:00:04 +02:00
sbruno 6a98562b52 Revert r332894 at the request of the submitter.
Submitted by:	Johannes Lundberg <johalun0_gmail.com>
Sponsored by:	Limelight Networks
2018-08-24 15:00:04 +02:00
sbruno 5c636abe89 Load balance sockets with new SO_REUSEPORT_LB option
This patch adds a new socket option, SO_REUSEPORT_LB, which allow multiple
programs or threads to bind to the same port and incoming connections will be
load balanced using a hash function.

Most of the code was copied from a similar patch for DragonflyBSD.

However, in DragonflyBSD, load balancing is a global on/off setting and can not
be set per socket. This patch allows for simultaneous use of both the current
SO_REUSEPORT and the new SO_REUSEPORT_LB options on the same system.

Required changes to structures
Globally change so_options from 16 to 32 bit value to allow for more options.
Add hashtable in pcbinfo to hold all SO_REUSEPORT_LB sockets.

Limitations
As DragonflyBSD, a load balance group is limited to 256 pcbs
(256 programs or threads sharing the same socket).

Submitted by:	Johannes Lundberg <johanlun0@gmail.com>
Sponsored by:	Limelight Networks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11003
2018-08-24 15:00:04 +02:00
brooks 341e131f7f Add 32-bit compat for ioctls that take struct ifgroupreq.
Use an accessor to access ifgr_group and ifgr_groups.

Use an macro CASE_IOC_IFGROUPREQ(cmd) in place of case statements such
as "case SIOCAIFGROUP:". This avoids poluting the switch statements
with large numbers of #ifdefs.

Reviewed by:	kib
Obtained from:	CheriBSD
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14960
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
brooks 79291d6123 Use an accessor function to access ifr_data.
This fixes 32-bit compat (no ioctl command defintions are required
as struct ifreq is the same size).  This is believed to be sufficent to
fully support ifconfig on 32-bit systems.

Reviewed by:	kib
Obtained from:	CheriBSD
MFC after:	1 week
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14900
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
jeff c0f64943e7 Implement several enhancements to NUMA policies.
Add a new "interleave" allocation policy which stripes pages across
domains with a stride or width keeping contiguity within a multi-page
region.

Move the kernel to the dedicated numbered cpuset #2 making it possible
to assign kernel threads and memory policy separately from user.  This
also eliminates the need for the complicated interrupt binding code.

Add a sysctl API for viewing and manipulating domainsets.  Refactor some
of the cpuset_t manipulation code using the generic bitset type so that
it can be used for both.  This probably belongs in a dedicated subr file.

Attempt to improve the include situation.

Reviewed by:	kib
Discussed with:	jhb (cpuset parts)
Tested by:	pho (before review feedback)
Sponsored by:	Netflix, Dell/EMC Isilon
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14839
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
brooks f967e60cab Fix access to ifru_buffer on freebsd32.
Make all kernel accesses to ifru_buffer go via access functions
which take the process ABI into account and use an appropriate union
to access members in the correct place in struct ifreq.

Reviewed by:	kib
Obtained from:	CheriBSD
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14846
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
kib b0250c7356 Allow to specify PCP on packets not belonging to any VLAN.
According to 802.1Q-2014, VLAN tagged packets with VLAN id 0 should be
considered as untagged, and only PCP and DEI values from the VLAN tag
are meaningful.  See for instance
https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/switches/connectedgrid/cg-switch-sw-master/software/configuration/guide/vlan0/b_vlan_0.html.

Make it possible to specify PCP value for outgoing packets on an
ethernet interface.  When PCP is supplied, the tag is appended, VLAN
id set to 0, and PCP is filled by the supplied value.  The code to do
VLAN tag encapsulation is refactored from the if_vlan.c and moved into
if_ethersubr.c.

Drivers might have issues with filtering VID 0 packets on
receive.  This bug should be fixed for each driver.

Reviewed by:	ae (previous version), hselasky, melifaro
Sponsored by:	Mellanox Technologies
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14702
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
brooks 9cea1c4489 Move uio enums to sys/_uio.h.
Include _uio.h instead of uio.h in several headers to reduce header
polution.

Fix a few places that relied on header polution to get the uio.h header.

I have not moved struct uio as many more things that use it rely on
header polution to get other definitions from uio.h.

Reviewed by:	cem, kib, markj
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14811
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
jtl 61d5f8adfa Add the "TCP Blackbox Recorder"
which we discussed at the developer summits at BSDCan and BSDCam in 2017.

The TCP Blackbox Recorder allows you to capture events on a TCP connection
in a ring buffer. It stores metadata with the event. It optionally stores
the TCP header associated with an event (if the event is associated with a
packet) and also optionally stores information on the sockets.

It supports setting a log ID on a TCP connection and using this to correlate
multiple connections that share a common log ID.

You can log connections in different modes. If you are doing a coordinated
test with a particular connection, you may tell the system to put it in
mode 4 (continuous dump). Or, if you just want to monitor for errors, you
can put it in mode 1 (ring buffer) and dump all the ring buffers associated
with the connection ID when we receive an error signal for that connection
ID. You can set a default mode that will be applied to a particular ratio
of incoming connections. You can also manually set a mode using a socket
option.

This commit includes only basic probes. rrs@ has added quite an abundance
of probes in his TCP development work. He plans to commit those soon.

There are user-space programs which we plan to commit as ports. These read
the data from the log device and output pcapng files, and then let you
analyze the data (and metadata) in the pcapng files.

Reviewed by:	gnn (previous version)
Obtained from:	Netflix, Inc.
Relnotes:	yes
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11085
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
brooks 4d144963ea Add _IOC_NEWLEN() and _IOC_NEWTYPE() macros.
These macros take an existing ioctl(2) command and replace the length
with the specified length or length of the specified type respectively.
These can be used to define commands for 32-bit compatibility with fewer
opportunities for cut-and-paste errors then a whole new definition.

Reviewed by:	cem, kib
Obtained from:	CheriBSD
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14706
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
pkelsey b4d6660d85 This is an implementation of the client side of TCP Fast Open (TFO)
[RFC7413]. It also includes a pre-shared key mode of operation in which
the server requires the client to be in possession of a shared secret in
order to successfully open TFO connections with that server.

The names of some existing fastopen sysctls have changed (e.g.,
net.inet.tcp.fastopen.enabled -> net.inet.tcp.fastopen.server_enable).

Reviewed by:	tuexen
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	Limelight Networks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14047
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
ae@FreeBSD.org b43341334e Follow the RFC6980 and silently ignore following IPv6 NDP messages
that had the IPv6 fragmentation header:
o Neighbor Solicitation
o Neighbor Advertisement
o Router Solicitation
o Router Advertisement
o Redirect

Introduce M_FRAGMENTED mbuf flag, and set it after IPv6 fragment reassembly
is completed. Then check the presence of this flag in correspondig ND6
handling routines.

PR:		224247
MFC after:	2 weeks
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
pfg ba2eaf10ad SPDX: license IDs for some ISC-related files. 2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
glebius d937538075 Garbage collect IFCAP_POLLING_NOCOUNT.
It wasn't used since very beginning of polling(4). The module always
ignored return value from driver polling handler.
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
pfg fba31eac2e sys/sys: further adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 2-Clause license, however the tool I
was using misidentified many licenses so this was mostly a manual - error
prone - task.

The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
pfg 1329e846c7 include: further adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 3-Clause license.

The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.

Special thanks to Wind River for providing access to "The Duke of
Highlander" tool: an older (2014) run over FreeBSD tree was useful as a
starting point.
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
pfg 9f0f4785e8 sys: further adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 3-Clause license.

The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.

Special thanks to Wind River for providing access to "The Duke of
Highlander" tool: an older (2014) run over FreeBSD tree was useful as a
starting point.
2018-08-24 15:00:03 +02:00
kib 91e828be4f Use hardware timestamps to report packet timestamps
for SO_TIMESTAMP and other similar socket options.

Provide new control message SCM_TIME_INFO to supply information about
timestamp.  Currently it indicates that the timestamp was
hardware-assisted and high-precision, for software timestamps the
message is not returned.  Reserved fields are added to ABI to report
additional info about it, it is expected that raw hardware clock value
might be useful for some applications.

Reviewed by:	gallatin (previous version), hselasky
Sponsored by:	Mellanox Technologies
MFC after:	2 weeks
X-Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12638
2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00
kib 7ff81234c4 Add a place for a driver to report rx timestamps
in nanoseconds from boot for the received packets.

The rcv_tstmp field overlaps the place of Ln header length indicators,
not used by received packets.  The basic pkthdr rearrangement change
in sys/mbuf.h was provided by gallatin.

There are two accompanying M_ flags: M_TSTMP means that there is the
timestamp (and it was generated by hardware).

Another flag M_TSTMP_HPREC indicates that the timestamp is
high-precision.  Practically M_TSTMP_HPREC means that hardware
provided additional precision comparing with the stamps when the flag
is not set.  E.g., for ConnectX all packets are stamped by hardware
when PCIe transaction to write out the completion descriptor is
performed, but PTP packet are stamped on port.  For Intel cards, when
PTP assist is enabled, only PTP packets are stamped in the limited
number of registers, so if Intel cards ever start support this
mechanism, they would always set M_TSTMP | M_TSTMP_HPREC if hardware
timestamp is present for the given packet.

Add IFCAP_HWRXTSTMP interface capability to indicate the support for
hardware rx timestamping, and ifconfig(8) command to toggle it.

Based on the patch by:	gallatin
Reviewed by:	gallatin (previous version), hselasky
Sponsored by:	Mellanox Technologies
MFC after:	2 weeks (? mbuf KBI issue)
X-Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12638
2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00
sephe 1182b9fe17 if: Add ioctls to get RSS key and hash type/function.
It will be needed by hn(4) to configure its RSS key and hash
type/function in the transparent VF mode in order to match VF's
RSS settings. The description of the transparent VF mode and
the RSS hash value issue are here:
https://svnweb.freebsd.org/base?view=revision&revision=322299
https://svnweb.freebsd.org/base?view=revision&revision=322485

These are generic enough to promise two independent IOCs instead
of abusing SIOCGDRVSPEC.

Setting RSS key and hash type/function is a different story,
which probably requires more discussion.

Comment about UDP_{IPV4,IPV6,IPV6_EX} were only in the patch
in the review request; these hash types are standardized now.

Reviewed by:	gallatin
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Microsoft
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12174
2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00
des b329ee9386 Correct sysctl names. 2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00
kib 471f29861e Relax visibility for some termios symbols.
They are defined by XSI or newer SUS.
This is a follow-up to r318780.

Reported by:	jbeich
Obtained from:	DragonflyBSD commit e08b3836c962
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00
kib eb82d7086c Implement address space guards.
Guard, requested by the MAP_GUARD mmap(2) flag, prevents the reuse of
the allocated address space, but does not allow instantiation of the
pages in the range.  It is useful for more explicit support for usual
two-stage reserve then commit allocators, since it prevents accidental
instantiation of the mapping, e.g. by mprotect(2).

Use guards to reimplement stack grow code.  Explicitely track stack
grow area with the guard, including the stack guard page.  On stack
grow, trivial shift of the guard map entry and stack map entry limits
makes the stack expansion.  Move the code to detect stack grow and
call vm_map_growstack(), from vm_fault() into vm_map_lookup().

As result, it is impossible to get random mapping to occur in the
stack grow area, or to overlap the stack guard page.

Enable stack guard page by default.

Reviewed by:	alc, markj
Man page update reviewed by:	alc, bjk, emaste, markj, pho
Tested by:	pho, Qualys
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11306 (man pages)
2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00
glebius 99b9b925fe Listening sockets improvements.
o Separate fields of struct socket that belong to listening from
  fields that belong to normal dataflow, and unionize them.  This
  shrinks the structure a bit.
  - Take out selinfo's from the socket buffers into the socket. The
    first reason is to support braindamaged scenario when a socket is
    added to kevent(2) and then listen(2) is cast on it. The second
    reason is that there is future plan to make socket buffers pluggable,
    so that for a dataflow socket a socket buffer can be changed, and
    in this case we also want to keep same selinfos through the lifetime
    of a socket.
  - Remove struct struct so_accf. Since now listening stuff no longer
    affects struct socket size, just move its fields into listening part
    of the union.
  - Provide sol_upcall field and enforce that so_upcall_set() may be called
    only on a dataflow socket, which has buffers, and for listening sockets
    provide solisten_upcall_set().

o Remove ACCEPT_LOCK() global.
  - Add a mutex to socket, to be used instead of socket buffer lock to lock
    fields of struct socket that don't belong to a socket buffer.
  - Allow to acquire two socket locks, but the first one must belong to a
    listening socket.
  - Make soref()/sorele() to use atomic(9).  This allows in some situations
    to do soref() without owning socket lock.  There is place for improvement
    here, it is possible to make sorele() also to lock optionally.
  - Most protocols aren't touched by this change, except UNIX local sockets.
    See below for more information.

o Reduce copy-and-paste in kernel modules that accept connections from
  listening sockets: provide function solisten_dequeue(), and use it in
  the following modules: ctl(4), iscsi(4), ng_btsocket(4), ng_ksocket(4),
  infiniband, rpc.

o UNIX local sockets.
  - Removal of ACCEPT_LOCK() global uncovered several races in the UNIX
    local sockets.  Most races exist around spawning a new socket, when we
    are connecting to a local listening socket.  To cover them, we need to
    hold locks on both PCBs when spawning a third one.  This means holding
    them across sonewconn().  This creates a LOR between pcb locks and
    unp_list_lock.
  - To fix the new LOR, abandon the global unp_list_lock in favor of global
    unp_link_lock.  Indeed, separating these two locks didn't provide us any
    extra parralelism in the UNIX sockets.
  - Now call into uipc_attach() may happen with unp_link_lock hold if, we
    are accepting, or without unp_link_lock in case if we are just creating
    a socket.
  - Another problem in UNIX sockets is that uipc_close() basicly did nothing
    for a listening socket.  The vnode remained opened for connections.  This
    is fixed by removing vnode in uipc_close().  Maybe the right way would be
    to do it for all sockets (not only listening), simply move the vnode
    teardown from uipc_detach() to uipc_close()?

Sponsored by:		Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9770
2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00
delphij ca3b7a988a Implement INHERIT_ZERO for minherit(2).
INHERIT_ZERO is an OpenBSD feature.

When a page is marked as such, it would be zeroed
upon fork().

This would be used in new arc4random(3) functions.

PR:	182610
Reviewed by:	kib (earlier version)
MFC after:	1 month
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D427
2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00
imp 16636ede3c Renumber copyright clause 4
Renumber cluase 4 to 3, per what everybody else did when BSD granted
them permission to remove clause 3. My insistance on keeping the same
numbering for legal reasons is too pedantic, so give up on that point.

Submitted by:	Jan Schaumann <jschauma@stevens.edu>
Pull Request:	https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/96
2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00
ed@FreeBSD.org 08139e557b mprotect(): Change prototype to comply to POSIX.
Our mprotect() function seems to take a "const void *" address to the
pages whose permissions need to be adjusted. POSIX uses "void *". Simply
stick to the POSIX one to prevent us from writing unportable code.

PR:		211423 (exp-run)
Tested by:	antoine@ (Thanks!)
2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00
kib c3df6d5155 Implement process-shared locks support
for libthr.so.3, without 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
2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00
jhb 7cfc736e89 Add a new file operations hook for mmap
operations. File type-specific logic is now placed in the mmap hook
implementation rather than requiring it to be placed in
sys/vm/vm_mmap.c. This hook allows new file types to support mmap() as
well as potentially allowing mmap() for existing file types that do not
currently support any mapping.

The vm_mmap() function is now split up into two functions.  A new
vm_mmap_object() function handles the "back half" of vm_mmap() and accepts
a referenced VM object to map rather than a (handle, handle_type) tuple.
vm_mmap() is now reduced to converting a (handle, handle_type) tuple to a
a VM object and then calling vm_mmap_object() to handle the actual mapping.
The vm_mmap() function remains for use by other parts of the kernel
(e.g. device drivers and exec) but now only supports mapping vnodes,
character devices, and anonymous memory.

The mmap() system call invokes vm_mmap_object() directly with a NULL object
for anonymous mappings.  For mappings using a file descriptor, the
descriptors fo_mmap() hook is invoked instead.  The fo_mmap() hook is
responsible for performing type-specific checks and adjustments to
arguments as well as possibly modifying mapping parameters such as flags
or the object offset.  The fo_mmap() hook routines then call
vm_mmap_object() to handle the actual mapping.

The fo_mmap() hook is optional.  If it is not set, then fo_mmap() will
fail with ENODEV.  A fo_mmap() hook is implemented for regular files,
character devices, and shared memory objects (created via shm_open()).

While here, consistently use the VM_PROT_* constants for the vm_prot_t
type for the 'prot' variable passed to vm_mmap() and vm_mmap_object()
as well as the vm_mmap_vnode() and vm_mmap_cdev() helper routines.
Previously some places were using the mmap()-specific PROT_* constants
instead.  While this happens to work because PROT_xx == VM_PROT_xx,
using VM_PROT_* is more correct.

Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2658
Reviewed by:	alc (glanced over), kib
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	Chelsio
2018-08-24 15:00:02 +02:00