This allows use of the standard src.conf configuration for controlling
whether the tree is cleaned before build or not. The default is still
to clean.
Setting either NOCLEAN or NO_CLEAN will mention the new src.conf option.
NOCLEAN remains a .warning, while for now NO_CLEAN is .info.
Reviewed by: bdrewery (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22762
For historical reasons, defining MALLOC_PRODUCTION in /etc/make.conf has
been used to turn off potentially expensive debug checks and statistics
gathering in the implementation of malloc(3).
It seems more consistent to turn this into a regular src.conf(5) option,
e.g. WITH_MALLOC_PRODUCTION / WITHOUT_MALLOC_PRODUCTION. This can then
be toggled similar to any other source build option, and turned on or
off by default for e.g. stable branches.
Reviewed by: imp, #manpages
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26337
These tools require a bootstrap llvm-tblgen/clang-tblgen and that cannot
be built with the current make infrastructure: the config header is not
correct for Linux/macOS and we don't include the CMakeLists.txt in contrib
so we can't generate one that would be correct.
Reviewed By: emaste, imp, dim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14245
This implementation doesn't have any major deviations from the other EFI
ports. I've copied the boilerplate from arm and arm64.
I've tested this with the following boot flows:
OpenSBI (M-mode) -> u-boot (S-mode) -> loader.efi -> FreeBSD
OpenSBI (M-mode) -> u-boot (S-mode) -> boot1.efi -> loader.efi -> FreeBSD
Due to the way that u-boot handles secondary CPUs, OpenSBI >= v0.7 is required,
as the HSM extension is needed to bring them up explicitly. Because of this,
using BBL as the SBI implementation will not be possible. Additionally, there
are a few recent u-boot changes that are required as well, all of which will be
present in the upcoming v2020.07 release.
Looks good: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25135
These implementations of the bc and dc programs offer a number of advantages
compared to the current implementations in the FreeBSD base system:
- They do not depend on external large number functions (i.e. no dependency
on OpenSSL or any other large number library)
- They implements all features found in GNU bc/dc (with the exception of
the forking of sub-processes, which the author of this version considers
as a security issue).
- They are significantly faster than the current code in base (more than
2 orders of magnitude in some of my tests, e.g. for 12345^100000).
- They should be fully compatible with all features and the behavior of the
current implementations in FreeBSD (not formally verified).
- They support POSIX message catalogs and come with localized messages in
Chinese, Dutch, English, French, German, Japanese, Polish, Portugueze,
and Russian.
- They offer very detailed man-pages that provide far more information than
the current ones.
The upstream sources contain a large number of tests, which are not
imported with this commit. They could be integrated into our test
framework at a latter time.
Installation of this version is controlled by the option "MK_GH_BC=yes".
This option will be set to yes by default in 13-CURRENT, but will be off
by default in 12-STABLE.
Approved by: imp
Obtained from: https://git.yzena.com/gavin/bc
MFC after: 4 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19982
clang-format is enabled conditional on either WITH_CLANG_EXTRAS or
WITH_CLANG_FORMAT. Some sources in libclang are build conditional on
either rule, and obviously the clang-format binary itself depends on the
rule.
clang-format could still use a manual page.
Reviewed by: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25427
As of r361857 all BINUTILS options are disabled by default - ports
have been changed to depend on binutils if they require GNU as, and
all base system assembly files have been switched to use Clang's
integrated assembler.
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The retirement of obsolete binutils 2.17.50 has been in progress for
quite some time. All tools other than GNU as were removed prior to this
commit, and it was built only on amd64 - installed as /usr/bin/as, and
used as a bootstrap tool.
The amd64 exp-run has completed and failures have now been addressed in
the individual ports, so disable it by default.
PR: 233611, 205250 [exp-run]
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The retirement of obsolete binutils 2.17.50 has been in progress for
quite some time. All tools other than GNU as were removed prior to this
commit, and it was built only on two archs:
i386, installed as /usr/bin/as
amd64, installed as /usr/bin/as and as a bootstrap tool
The i386 exp-run has completed and failures have been addressed in the
individual ports, so disable it there.
PR: 233611, 205250 [exp-run]
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
BINUTILS is needed only for ports, and will be disabled once the failing
ports are addressed (likely by growing a binutils dependency).
BINUTILS_BOOTSTRAP is needed only on amd64, for skein_block_asm.s. There
is no need to enable it on i386.
This will all be removed before FreeBSD 13.0.
Save and restore (also known as suspend and resume) permits a snapshot
to be taken of a guest's state that can later be resumed. In the
current implementation, bhyve(8) creates a UNIX domain socket that is
used by bhyvectl(8) to send a request to save a snapshot (and
optionally exit after the snapshot has been taken). A snapshot
currently consists of two files: the first holds a copy of guest RAM,
and the second file holds other guest state such as vCPU register
values and device model state.
To resume a guest, bhyve(8) must be started with a matching pair of
command line arguments to instantiate the same set of device models as
well as a pointer to the saved snapshot.
While the current implementation is useful for several uses cases, it
has a few limitations. The file format for saving the guest state is
tied to the ABI of internal bhyve structures and is not
self-describing (in that it does not communicate the set of device
models present in the system). In addition, the state saved for some
device models closely matches the internal data structures which might
prove a challenge for compatibility of snapshot files across a range
of bhyve versions. The file format also does not currently support
versioning of individual chunks of state. As a result, the current
file format is not a fixed binary format and future revisions to save
and restore will break binary compatiblity of snapshot files. The
goal is to move to a more flexible format that adds versioning,
etc. and at that point to commit to providing a reasonable level of
compatibility. As a result, the current implementation is not enabled
by default. It can be enabled via the WITH_BHYVE_SNAPSHOT=yes option
for userland builds, and the kernel option BHYVE_SHAPSHOT.
Submitted by: Mihai Tiganus, Flavius Anton, Darius Mihai
Submitted by: Elena Mihailescu, Mihai Carabas, Sergiu Weisz
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: University Politehnica of Bucharest
Sponsored by: Matthew Grooms (student scholarships)
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19495
A number of components require OpenSSL and fail to build if it is not
enabled. As a first phase force these off under WITHOUT_OPENSSL. A
second phase should make these more fine-grained, allowing the component
to build but without OpenSSL.
PR: 245931
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
instead of MK_KERBEROS. The reason for this change is some users
prefer to build FreeBSD WITHOUT_KERBEROS, wanting to retain the
Kerberos rc scripts to start/stop MIT Kerberos or Heimdal from ports.
PR: 197337
Reported by: Adam McDougall <ebay at looksharp.net>
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24252
on all major Linux distributions as well as NetBSD and OpenBSD.
Remove the undocumented ZONEINFO_OLD_TIMEZONES_SUPPORT and the deprecated
OLDTIMEZONES knobs as they are now the default.
Reviewed by: ngie, rgrimes
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24306
For head/, this will remain eternally default-on to maintain the status quo.
For stable/ branches, it should be flipped to default-off to maintain the
status quo.
There's value in being able to flip it one way or the other easily on head
or stable branches, whether you want to gain some performance back on head/
(for machines there's little chance you'll actually hit an assertion) or
potentially diagnose a problem with the version of llvm on an older branch.
Currently, stable branches get the CFLAGS+= -ndebug line uncommented; going
forward, they will instead have the default of LLVM_ASSERTIONS flipped.
Reviewed by: dim, emaste, re (gjb)
MFC after: 1 week
MFC note: flip the default of LLVM_ASSERTIONS
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24264
In-tree gdb is essentially obsolete. We kept it for sparc64 (because
gdb in ports lacked sparc64 support) and as a fallback for crashinfo.
gdb was installed to /libexec on all archs other than sparc64, where the
WITHOUT_GDB_LIBEXEC option was default, with gdb installed to /usr/bin.
With sparc64's retirement WITH_GDB_LIBEXEC became the default for all
architectures, but it was still possible to set it off and install gdb
into /usr/bin.
As the next step in gdb's retirement, remove the option and install gdb
only into /libexec as the crashinfo fallback. We expect users to install
the gdb port or package for debugging. The in-tree gdb lacks support for
a number of supported architectures and does not support contemporary
DWARF debug info.
Reviewed by: jhb (earlier)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24227
Now that LLD 10 is out, and required patches have landed, we are now ready
to finally switch away from the ancient in-tree ld.bfd.
Special thanks to Fangrui Song for many hours of work on getting the
32-bit powerpc lld ready for prime-time.
Reviewed by: emaste (earlier revision), jhibbits
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24111
Now that we have updated the in-tree version of LLVM to 10.0, we have all the
necessary LLVM changes to use Clang+LLD as the default toolchain for MIPS.
Relnotes: yes
Reviewed By: emaste, jhb, brooks, kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23204
Use TARGET_ARCH and/or MACHINE_ARCH exclusively. Change all __TT uses to __T
with appropriate translations. MACHINE/TARGET is to be used only for kernel
things, and this fixes the last few stragglers.
Use TARGET_ARCH and/or MACHINE_ARCH exclusively. Change all __TT uses to __T
with appropriate translations. MACHINE/TARGET is to be used only for kernel
things.
Delete the conditions that forcibly disabled GOOGLETEST and LLDB for
pre-C++11 C++ compilers, since we no longer support such compilers.
Also delete the complicated method of defaulting LIBCPLUSPLUS to YES.
Prodded by: kevans
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
We no longer support older C++ compilers, so do not need to explicitly
test for C++11 support.
After r339946 we stopped running `cc --version` during cleandir/obj
stages, so stopped setting COMPILER_FEATURES. This in turn meant
lib/libomp was excluded from the clean stage in a normal buildworld
(i.e., one without -DNO_CLEAN), and this is what caused recent build
failures with errors about missing ittnotify_static.c.
This commit should obviate the need for the workaround committed in
r359083. Thanks to bdrewery for the insight and for pushing for a
correct fix. There are more cleanups to be done, but this change is
a simplification and an improvement over r359083.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The vectx API, computes the hash for verifying a file as it is read.
This avoids the overhead of reading files twice - once to verify, then
again to load.
For doing an install via loader, avoiding the need to rewind
large files is critical.
This API is only used for modules, kernel and mdimage as these are the
biggest files read by the loader.
The reduction in boot time depends on how expensive the I/O is
on any given platform. On a fast VM we see 6% improvement.
For install via loader the first file to be verified is likely to be the
kernel, so some of the prep work (finding manifest etc) done by
verify_file() needs to be factored so it can be reused for
vectx_open().
For missing or unrecognized fingerprint entries, we fail
in vectx_open() unless verifying is disabled.
Otherwise fingerprint check happens in vectx_close() and
since this API is only used for files which must be verified
(VE_MUST) we panic if we get an incorrect hash.
Reviewed by: imp,tsoome
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org//D23827
Now that we no longer have GCC 4.2.1 in the tree and can assume FreeBSD
is being built with a C++11 compiler available, we can use BSDL dtc
unconditionally and retire the GPL dtc.
GPL dtc now has FreeBSD CI support via Cirrus-CI to help ensure it
continues to build/work on FreeBSD and is available in the ports tree
if needed.
The copy of (copyfree licensed) libfdt that we actually use is in
sys/contrib/libfdt so the extra copy under contrib/dtc/libfdt can be
removed along with the rest of the GPL dtc.
Reviewed by: kevans, ian, imp, manu, theraven
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23192
With the retirement of GCC 4.2.1 we can assume the host compiler supports
C++11, and can simplify the Clang and LLD defaults. Clang and lld are now
enabled by default everywhere, and are used as the bootstrap compiler and
linker for all targets except MIPS.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
LLVM's libunwind is used on all FreeBSD-supported CPU architectures and
is a required component.
Reviewed by: brooks (earlier)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23123
As described in Warner's email message[1] to the FreeBSD-arch mailing
list we have reached GCC 4.2.1's retirement date. At this time all
supported architectures either use in-tree Clang, or rely on external
toolchain (i.e., a contemporary GCC version from ports).
GCC 4.2.1 was released July 18, 2007 and was imported into FreeBSD later
that year, in r171825. GCC has served us well, but version 4.2.1 is
obsolete and not used by default on any architecture in FreeBSD. It
does not support modern C and does not support arm64 or RISC-V.
Thanks to everyone responsible for maintaining, updating, and testing
GCC in the FreeBSD base system over the years.
So long, and thanks for all the fish.
[1] https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2020-January/019823.html
PR: 228919
Reviewed by: brooks, imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23124
Binutils has already been reduced to installing ld only on powerpc32
and as only on amd64. (Also objdump on every arch supported by binutils
2.17.50.) Although BINUTILS_BOOTSTRAP serves no purpose on MIPS there
is no reason to have a special case for it.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
As explained in the comment; GOOGLETEST cannot currently be compiled on any
mips variant at the moment due to the cross toolchain seemingly using the
wrong spec and not pulling in libgcc. We'll be fine when llvm 10 lands, at
which point this should be reverted most expeditiously.
simple_httpd was granted a reprieve from the picobsd removal based on having
some reported user; it turns out this user isn't actually using the version
in base and merging their changes would be difficult at this point, so the
version in base will simply continue to rot. Retire it now, it may make a
comeback to ports with the improved version.
No notice issued because its current visibility has only been for ~3
months, and a notice has been previously issued about picobsd removal.
x86 needs bootstrap GNU as for assembling a few files, and powerpc needs
GNU ld.bfd for linking 32-bit objects. All other targets either fully
use in-tree Clang and lld, or rely on external toolchain.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
dma(8) depends on OpenSSL unconditionally.
Reported by: Michael Dexter's Build Options Survey run
MFC after: 1 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Explicitly setting WITHOUT_KERBEROS implies WITHOUT_KERBEROS_SUPPORT,
but previously other cases that forced KERBEROS off (such as
WITHOUT_CRYPT) did not also set KERBEROS_SUPPORT off. Because the
_SUPPORT dependent options (KERBEROS/KERBEROS_SUPPORT) are processed
before other dependencies (CRYPT/KERBEROS) it's not easy to make this
happen automatically. Instead just explicitly set KERBEROS_SUPPORT
off where we set KERBEROS off.
Reported by: Michael Dexter's Build Option Survey run
Only sparc64 did not enable LLVM_LIBUNWIND. After r356513 LLVM_LIBUNWIND
should at least build on sparc64. The old DWARF unwinder will be removed
along with GCC 4.2.1 in the near future, so switch sparc64 to use LLVM's
unwinder in advance of the removal. Someone with access to the obsolete
sparc64 hardware supported by FreeBSD will have to test, and investigate
any failures. I will gladly help, but I don't have any suitable hardware
myself.
PR: 233405
- Enable clang and lld as system toolchains.
- Don't use external GCC for universe by default.
- Re-enable riscv64sf since it builds fine with clang + lld.
Reviewed by: emaste, mhorne
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23089
This re-enables building the googletest suite by default on mips and instead
specifically doesn't build fusefs tests for mips+clang builds. clang will
easily spent >= 1.5 hours compiling a single file due to a bug in
optimization (see LLVM PR 43263), so turn these off for now while that's
hashed out.
GCC builds are unaffected and build the fusefs tests as-is. Clang builds
only happen by early adopters attempting to hash out the remaining issues.
The comment has been updated to reflect its new position and use less strong
wording about imposing on people.
Discussed with: ngie, asomers
Reviewed by: ngie