Generally, access to the kernel debugger is considered to be unsafe from
a security perspective since it presents an unrestricted interface to
inspect or modify the system state, including sensitive data such as
signing keys.
However, having some access to debugger functionality on production
systems may be useful in determining the cause of a panic or hang.
Therefore, it is desirable to have an optional policy which allows
limited use of ddb(4) while disabling the functionality which could
reveal system secrets.
This loadable MAC module allows for the use of some ddb(4) commands
while preventing the execution of others. The commands have been broadly
grouped into three categories:
- Those which are 'safe' and will not emit sensitive data (e.g. trace).
Generally, these commands are deterministic and don't accept
arguments.
- Those which are definitively unsafe (e.g. examine <addr>, search
<addr> <value>)
- Commands which may be safe to execute depending on the arguments
provided (e.g. show thread <addr>).
Safe commands have been flagged as such with the DB_CMD_MEMSAFE flag.
Commands requiring extra validation can provide a function to do so.
For example, 'show thread <addr>' can be used as long as addr can be
checked against the system's list of process structures.
The policy also prevents debugger backends other than ddb(4) from
executing, for example gdb(4).
Reviewed by: markj, pauamma_gundo.com (manpages)
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35371
Add three simple hooks to the debugger allowing for a loaded MAC policy
to intervene if desired:
1. Before invoking the kdb backend
2. Before ddb command registration
3. Before ddb command execution
We extend struct db_command with a private pointer and two flag bits
reserved for policy use.
Reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35370
This flag value can be used to indicate if a command has the property of
being "memory safe". In this instance, memory safe means that the
command does not allow/enable reads or writes of arbitrary memory,
regardless of the arguments passed to it. For example, 'backtrace' is
considered a memory-safe command since its output is deterministic,
while 'show vnode' is not, since it requires a memory address as an
argument and will print the contents beginning at that location.
Apply the flag to the "show all" command macros. It is expected that
commands added to this table will always exhibit this property.
Reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35581
Eric van Gyzen [Mon, 18 Jul 2022 18:07:20 +0000 (13:07 -0500)]
bge: tell debugnet there are 2 rx rings, not 1,024
debugnet provides the network stack for netgdb and netdump. Since it
must operate under panic/debugger conditions and can't rely on dynamic
memory allocation, it preallocates mbufs during boot or network
configuration. At that time, it does not yet know which interface
will be used for debugging, so it does not know the required size and
quantity of mbufs to allocate. It takes the worst-case approach by
calculating its requirements from the largest MTU and largest number
of receive queues across all interfaces that support debugnet.
Unfortunately, the bge NIC driver told debugnet that it supports 1,024
receive queues. It actually supports only 2 queues (with 1,024 slots,
thus the error). This greatly exaggerated debugnet's preallocation,
so with an MTU of 9000 on any interface, it allocated 600 MB of memory.
A tiny fraction of this memory would be used if netgdb or netdump were
invoked; the rest is completely wasted.
Mark Johnston [Mon, 18 Jul 2022 19:50:45 +0000 (15:50 -0400)]
sched_ule: Ensure we hold the thread lock when modifying td_flags
The load balancer may force a running thread to reschedule and pick a
new CPU. To do this it sets some flags in the thread running on a
loaded CPU. But the code assumed that a running thread's lock is the
same as that of the corresponding runqueue, and there are small windows
where this is not true. In this case, we can end up with non-atomic
modifications to td_flags.
Since this load balancing is best-effort, simply give up if the thread's
lock doesn't match; in this case the thread is about to enter the
scheduler anyway.
Kornel Dulęba [Tue, 10 May 2022 13:22:55 +0000 (15:22 +0200)]
Implement shared page address randomization
It used to be mapped at the top of the UVA.
If the randomization is enabled any address above .data section will be
randomly chosen and a guard page will be inserted in the shared page
default location.
The shared page is now mapped in exec_map_stack, instead of
exec_new_vmspace. The latter function is called before image activator
has a chance to parse ASLR related flags.
The KERN_PROC_VM_LAYOUT sysctl was extended to provide shared page
address.
The feature is enabled by default for 64 bit applications on all
architectures.
It can be toggled kern.elf64.aslr.shared_page sysctl.
Kornel Dulęba [Thu, 2 Jun 2022 07:58:12 +0000 (09:58 +0200)]
Rework how shared page related data is stored
Store the shared page address in struct vmspace.
Also instead of storing absolute addresses of various shared page
segments save their offsets with respect to the shared page address.
This will be more useful when the shared page address is randomized.
Kornel Dulęba [Thu, 2 Jun 2022 08:45:54 +0000 (10:45 +0200)]
Introduce the PROC_SIGCODE() macro
Use a getter macro instead of fetching the sigcode address directly
from a sysent of a given process. It assumes that the sigcode is stored
in the shared page, which is true in all cases, except for a.out
binaries. This will be later useful when the shared page address
randomization is introduced.
No functional change intended.
Mike Karels [Sat, 16 Jul 2022 21:05:58 +0000 (16:05 -0500)]
ofed/infiniband: fix ifdefs for new INET changes, fixing LINT-NOIP
Some of the ofed/infiniband code has INET and INET6 address handling
code without using ifdefs. This failed with a recent change to INET,
in which IN_LOOPBACK() started using a VNET variable, and which is not
present if INET is not configured. Add #ifdef INET, and INET6 for good
measure, in cma_loopback_addr(), along with inclusion of the options
headers in ib_cma.c.
arm64, qoriq_therm: fix handling sites on version 1 and 2
For version 2 extend the TMUV2_TMSAR() write loop over all site_ids
registered for a particular SoC and actually use the site_id rather
than always just the first [0] (which for the LX2080 would be a
problem given there is no site0).
Later, while version 2 adds the SITEs to enable to TMSR in bits 0..<n>,
version 1 (e.g., LS1028, LS1046, LS1088) add MSITEs to TMR
bits 16..31 or rather 15..0(16-<n>). Adjust the loops to only enable
the site_ids listed for the particular SoC for monitoring. This now
also deals with sparse site_ids (not starting at 0, or not being
contiguous).
sys/dev/cxgbe/cudbg/cudbg_lib.c:2949:6: error: variable 'i' set but not used [-Werror,-Wunused-but-set-variable]
int i = 0;
^
Apparently 'i' was meant as the current retry counter, but '1' was used
in the while loop comparison instead, making the loop potentially
infinite, if 'busy' never gets reset.
MFC after: 3 days
Reviewed by: np
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35834
Mark Johnston [Sat, 16 Jul 2022 15:29:53 +0000 (11:29 -0400)]
vm_object: Remove redundant OBJ_SWAP checks
With the removal of OBJT_DEFAULT, OBJ_ANON implies OBJ_SWAP.
Note, this means that vm_object_split() is more expensive than it used
to be, as it holds busy locks until the end of the range is reached,
even if the object has no swap blocks allocated.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35789
Mark Johnston [Sat, 16 Jul 2022 15:29:19 +0000 (11:29 -0400)]
vm: Remove handling for OBJT_DEFAULT objects
Now that OBJT_DEFAULT objects can't be instantiated, we can simplify
checks of the form object->type == OBJT_DEFAULT || (object->flags &
OBJ_SWAP) != 0. No functional change intended.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35788
Mark Johnston [Sat, 16 Jul 2022 15:28:09 +0000 (11:28 -0400)]
swap_pager: Removing handling for objects with OBJ_SWAP clear
With the removal of OBJT_DEFAULT, we can assume that pager operations
provide an object with OBJ_SWAP set. Also, we do not need to convert
objects from type OBJT_DEFAULT. Thus, remove checks for OBJ_SWAP and
remove code which modifies the object type. In some places, replace the
check for OBJ_SWAP with a check for whether any swap blocks are
assigned.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35786
Mark Johnston [Sat, 16 Jul 2022 15:27:27 +0000 (11:27 -0400)]
vm_object: Modify vm_object_allocate_anon() to return OBJT_SWAP objects
With this change, OBJT_DEFAULT objects are no longer allocated.
Instead, anonymous objects are always of type OBJT_SWAP and always have
OBJ_SWAP set.
Modify the page fault handler to check the swap block radix tree in
places where it checked for objects of type OBJT_DEFAULT. In
particular, there's no need to invoke getpages for an OBJT_SWAP object
with no swap blocks assigned.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35785
sys/dev/cxgb/cxgb_sge.c:1290:21: error: variable 'txsd' set but not used [-Werror,-Wunused-but-set-variable]
struct tx_sw_desc *txsd = &txq->sdesc[txqs->pidx];
^
It appears 'txsd' is a leftover from a previous refactoring (see 3f345a5d09b6), but is no longer used for anything, and can be removed
without any functional change.
MFC after: 3 days
Reviewed by: np
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35833
Clarify when GEOM utilities exit with success or failure.
Historically, GEOM utilities (gpart(8), gstripe(8), gmirror(8),
etc) used the gctl_error() routine to report errors. If they called
gctl_error() they would exit with EXIT_FAILURE, otherwise they would
return with EXIT_SUCCESS. If they used gctl_error() to output an
informational message, for example when run with the -v (verbose)
option, they would mistakenly exit with EXIT_FAILURE. A further
limitation of the gctl_error() function was that it could only be
called once. Messages from any additional calls to gctl_error()
would be silently discarded.
To resolve these problems a new function, gctl_msg() has been added.
It can be called multiple times to output multiple messages. It
also has an additional errno argument which should be zero if it is
an informational message or an errno value (EINVAL, EBUSY, etc) if
it is an error. When done the gctl_post_messages() function should
be called to indicate that all messages have been posted. If any
of the messages had a non-zero errno, the utility will EXIT_FAILURE.
If only informational messages (with zero errno) were posted, the
utility will EXIT_SUCCESS.
Tested by: Peter Holm
PR: 265184
MFC after: 1 week
Adjust agp_find_device() definition in agp.c to avoid clang 15 warning
With clang 15, the following -Werror warning is produced:
sys/dev/agp/agp.c:910:16: error: a function declaration without a prototype is deprecated in all versions of C [-Werror,-Wstrict-prototypes]
agp_find_device()
^
void
This is because agp_find_device() is declared with a (void) argument
list, and defined with an empty argument list. Make the definition match
the declaration.
Replace struct timeval in header with struct timespec.
To differentiate header formats, add a new KTR_VERSIONED flag
set in the header type field similar to the existing KTRDROP flag.
To make it easier to extend ktrace headers in the future,
extend the existing header with a version field (version 0 is
reserved for older records without KTR_VERSIONED) as well as
new fields holding the thread ID and CPU ID.
BSD stat and GNU stat differ significantly when it comes to using a
custom format string, both in the option name and in the format string
itself. Handle both here (assuming Linux means GNU stat rather than BSD
stat).
Makefile.inc1 release bsd.own.mk: Introduce and use TAR_CMD
Our uses of tar rely on BSDisms, and so do not work in environments
where GNU tar is the default tar. Providing a TAR_CMD variable like
some other commands allows it to be overridden to use bsdtar in such
cases.
Makefile.inc1: Set LC_COLLATE in distributeworld for glibc compatibility
distributeworld relies on "foo" sorting directly before "foo type=...",
but with glibc both en_US and en_GB have "fooa" sort between "foo" and
"foo z", resulting in some files (in particular, id due to "ident"
sorting before "id type=" but after "id") not being included in the meta
files and thus not included in the dist tarballs. Forcing use of the C
locale ensures this does not occur.
FreeBSD and macOS have a test that treats == as an alias for =, but
Linux tends to use GNU coreutils (when not a builtin) which does not.
Use the standard syntax instead for compatibility.
Makefile.inc1: Honour DB_FROM_SRC for NO_ROOT distributeworld
Currently the host's database files are used, but on non-FreeBSD these
are not necessarily sufficient; in particular, Linux does not have a
wheel group. Instead, use -N to use the in-tree database files when
creating the METALOG entries, as is done for the recursive makes via
IMAKE_MTREE.
tests/sys/cddl/zfs/bin/readmmap.c:97:9: error: call to undeclared function 'time'; ISO C99 and later do not support implicit function declarations [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
Obtained from: https://github.com/CTSRD-CHERI/cheribsd/commit/1737d8397a0
MFC after: 3 days
Remove unnecessary const and volatile qualifiers from __fp_type_select()
Since https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/commit/ca75ac5f04f2, clang 15
has a new warning about _Generic selection expressions, such as used in
math.h:
lib/libc/gdtoa/_ldtoa.c:82:10: error: due to lvalue conversion of the controlling expression, association of type 'volatile float' will never be selected because it is qualified [-Werror,-Wunreachable-code-generic-assoc]
switch (fpclassify(u.e)) {
^
lib/msun/src/math.h:109:2: note: expanded from macro 'fpclassify'
__fp_type_select(x, __fpclassifyf, __fpclassifyd, __fpclassifyl)
^
lib/msun/src/math.h:85:14: note: expanded from macro '__fp_type_select'
volatile float: f(x), \
^
This is because the controlling expression always undergoes lvalue
conversion first, dropping any cv-qualifiers. The 'const', 'volatile',
and 'volatile const' associations will therefore never be used.
Warner Losh [Thu, 30 Jun 2022 18:16:46 +0000 (12:16 -0600)]
kboot: Implement mount(2)
Create a wrapper for the mount system call. To ensure a sane early boot
environment and to gather data we need for kexec, we may need to mount
some special filesystems.
Warner Losh [Thu, 30 Jun 2022 18:25:49 +0000 (12:25 -0600)]
kboot: Implement dup(2)
Early in boot, we need to create the normal stdin/out/err env for the
boot loader to run in. To do that, we need to open the console and
duplicate the file descriptors which requires dup(2). Implement a
wrapper as host_dup.
Warner Losh [Thu, 30 Jun 2022 18:22:33 +0000 (12:22 -0600)]
kboot: Implement symlink(2)
Linux's /dev/fd is implemented inside of /proc/self/fd, so we may need
to create a symlink to it early in boot. "/dev/fd" and "/dev/std*" might
not be strictly required for the boot loader, but should be present for
maximum flexibility.
Warner Losh [Fri, 15 Jul 2022 05:19:18 +0000 (23:19 -0600)]
kboot: Implement stat(2) and fstat(2) system calls
Implement stat(2) and fstat(2) in terms of newfstatat and newfstat
system calls respectively (assume we have a compat #define when
there's no newfstat and just a regular fstat and do so for ppc).
Snag struct kstat (the Linux kernel stat(2), et al interface) from musl
and attribute properly.
Warner Losh [Fri, 1 Jul 2022 17:57:02 +0000 (11:57 -0600)]
kboot: Add HOST_O_ constants for open, etc
Add the common O_ constants for the open, fcntl, etc system calls. They
are different than FreeBSD's. While they can differ based on
architecture, they are constant for architectures we care about, and
those architectures use the 'generic' version so future architectures
will also work.
Warner Losh [Thu, 14 Jul 2022 03:41:17 +0000 (21:41 -0600)]
kboot: Rework _start
Split _start into _start and _start_c (inspired by musl and the powerpc
impl is copied from there). This allows us to actually get the command
line arguments on all the platforms. We have a very simplified startup
that supports only static linking.
tcp: Undo the increase in sequence number by 1 due to the FIN flag in case of a transient error.
If an error occurs while processing a TCP segment with some data and the FIN
flag, the back out of the sequence number advance does not take into account the
increase by 1 due to the FIN flag.
Bootstrap crunchgen after removing -dc from linker invocation
In ec81497cc726 crunchgen was updated to remove -dc from the linker
invocations in its generated makefile output, as this flag is no longer
necessary, and is going to be an error with lld 15.
Update the BOOTSTRAPPING conditions for copying the crunchgen binary
from the host, or actually bootstrapping it when necessary. Since ec81497cc726 did not bump __FreeBSD_version, I have chosen the nearest
values.
Alexander Motin [Thu, 14 Jul 2022 19:38:14 +0000 (15:38 -0400)]
Delay GEOM disk_create() until CAM periph probe completes.
Before this patch CAM periph drivers called both disk_alloc() and
disk_create() same time on periph creation. But then prevented disks
from opening until the periph probe completion with cam_periph_hold().
As result, especially if disk misbehaves during the probe, GEOM event
thread, triggered to taste the disk, got blocked on open attempt,
potentially for a long time, unable to process other events.
This patch moves disk_create() call from periph creation to the end of
the probe. To allow disk_create() calls from non-sleepable CAM contexts
some of its duties requiring memory allocations are moved either back
to disk_alloc() or forward to g_disk_create(), so now disk_alloc() and
disk_add_alias() are the only disk methods that require sleeping. If
disk fails during the probe disk_create() may just be skipped, going
directly to disk_destroy(). Other method calls during that time are
just ignored. Since GEOM may now see the disks after CAM bus scan is
already completed, introduce per-periph boot hold functions. Enclosure
driver already had such mechanism, so just generalize it.
John Baldwin [Thu, 14 Jul 2022 20:14:58 +0000 (13:14 -0700)]
Reclaim unused ithread priorities for user time-sharing threads.
Leave one band of ithread priorities available below PI_SOFT for
demoted ithreads but reclaim additional ithread priorities for use by
user time-sharing threads. This is an ABI change in that PZERO moves
up so old ps and top binaries will not format priorities correctly on
newer kernels, but that is a cosmetic rather than functional change.
John Baldwin [Thu, 14 Jul 2022 20:14:33 +0000 (13:14 -0700)]
Collapse interrupt thread priorities.
Allow high priority hardware interrupts to run at PI_REALTIME via
INTR_TYPE_CLK, but collapse all other hardware interrupt threads to
the next priority level (PI_INTR). Collapse all SWI priorities to
the same priority level (PI_SOFT) just below PI_INTR.
John Baldwin [Thu, 14 Jul 2022 20:13:35 +0000 (13:13 -0700)]
ithreads: Support priority adjustment by schedulers.
Use sched_wakeup instead of sched_add when marking an ithread
runnable. This allows schedulers to reset their internal time slice
tracking state and restore the base ithread priority when an ithread
resumes from idle.
John Baldwin [Thu, 14 Jul 2022 20:03:59 +0000 (13:03 -0700)]
depend-cleanup.sh: Handle kqtest being renamed to kqueue_test.
bmake will not think that object files such as read.o are out of date
due to common.h changing since the dependency is only recorded in
.depend.kqtest.read.o in an old object directory.
Reviewed by: markj
Fixes: 68fe988a40ca kqueue tests: Simplify the test runner
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35820
Mark Johnston [Thu, 14 Jul 2022 14:43:53 +0000 (10:43 -0400)]
sched_ule: Use explicit atomic accesses for tdq fields
Different fields in the tdq have different synchronization protocols.
Some are constant, some are accessed only while holding the tdq lock,
some are modified with the lock held but accessed without the lock, some
are accessed only on the tdq's CPU, and some are not synchronized by the
lock at all.
Convert ULE to stop using volatile and instead use atomic_load_* and
atomic_store_* to provide the desired semantics for lockless accesses.
This makes the intent of the code more explicit, gives more freedom to
the compiler when accesses do not need to be qualified, and lets KCSAN
intercept unlocked accesses.
Thus:
- Introduce macros to provide unlocked accessors for certain fields.
- Use atomic_load/store for all accesses of tdq_cpu_idle, which is not
synchronized by the mutex.
- Use atomic_load/store for accesses of the switch count, which is
updated by sched_clock().
- Add some comments to fields of struct tdq describing how accesses are
synchronized.
No functional change intended.
Reviewed by: mav, kib
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35737
Mark Johnston [Thu, 14 Jul 2022 14:24:25 +0000 (10:24 -0400)]
x86: Add a required store-load barrier in cpu_idle()
ULE's tdq_notify() tries to avoid delivering IPIs to the idle thread.
In particular, it tries to detect whether the idle thread is running.
There are two mechanisms for this:
- tdq_cpu_idle, an MI flag which is set prior to calling cpu_idle(). If
tdq_cpu_idle == 0, then no IPI is needed;
- idle_state, an x86-specific state flag which is updated after
cpu_idleclock() is called.
The implementation of the second mechanism is racy; the race can cause a
CPU to go to sleep with pending work. Specifically, cpu_idle_*() set
idle_state = STATE_SLEEPING, then check for pending work by loading the
tdq_load field of the CPU's runqueue. These operations can be reordered
so that the idle thread observes tdq_load == 0, and tdq_notify()
observes idle_state == STATE_RUNNING.
Some counters indicate that the idle_state check in tdq_notify()
frequently elides an IPI. So, fix the problem by inserting a fence
after the store to idle_state, immediately before idling the CPU.
PR: 264867
Reviewed by: mav, kib, jhb
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35777
Mark Johnston [Thu, 14 Jul 2022 14:23:43 +0000 (10:23 -0400)]
sched_ule: Enable preemption of curthread in the load balancer
The load balancer executes from statclock and periodically tries to move
threads among CPUs in order to balance load. It may move a thread to
the current CPU (the loader balancer always runs on CPU 0). When it
does so, it may need to schedule preemption of the interrupted thread.
Use sched_setpreempt() to do so, same as sched_add().
PR: 264867
Reviewed by: mav, kib, jhb
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35744
Mark Johnston [Thu, 14 Jul 2022 14:21:28 +0000 (10:21 -0400)]
sched_ule: Fix racy loads of pc_curthread
Thread switching used to be atomic with respect to the current CPU's
tdq lock. Since commit 686bcb5c14ab that is no longer the case. Now
sched_switch() does this:
1. lock tdq (might already be locked)
2. maybe put the current thread in the tdq, choose a new thread to run
2a. update tdq_lowpri
3. unlock tdq
4. switch CPU context, update curthread
Some code paths in ULE will load pc_curthread from a remote CPU with
that CPU's tdq lock held, usually to inspect its priority. But, as of
the aforementioned commit this is racy.
The problem I noticed is in tdq_notify(), which optionally sends an IPI
to a remote CPU when a new thread is added to its runqueue. If the new
thread's priority is higher (lower) than the currently running thread's
priority, then we deliver an IPI. But inspecting
pc_curthread->td_priority doesn't work, since pc_curthread might be
between steps 3 and 4 above. If pc_curthread's priority is higher than
that of the newly added thread, but pc_curthread is switching to a
lower-priority thread, then tdq_notify() might fail to deliever an IPI,
leaving a high priority thread stuck on the runqueue for longer than it
should. This can cause multi-millisecond stalls in
interactive/ithread/realtime threads.
Fix this problem by modifying tdq_add() and tdq_move() to return the
value of tdq_lowpri before the addition of the new thread. This ensures
that tdq_notify() has the correct priority value to compare against.
The other two uses of pc_curthread are susceptible to the same race. To
fix the one in sched_rem()->tdq_setlowpri() we need to have an exact
value for curthread. Thus, introduce a new tdq_curthread field to the
tdq which gets updated any time a new thread is selected to run on the
CPU. Because this field is synchronized by the thread lock, its
priority reflects the correct lowpri value for the tdq.
Mike Karels [Wed, 13 Jul 2022 17:50:23 +0000 (12:50 -0500)]
inet.4 tcp.4 udp.4: Replace *CTL_* OID macro names with sysctl names
Older sysctls with constant OID macros were identified with those
in inet.4, tcp.4, and udp.4; newer sysctls with automatic numbering
were identified by sysctl names. No one remembers the OID macros,
or knows what they are; sysctls are always done by name now, usually
via sysctl(8).
Replace the OID macro names with sysctl names so that there is one
uniform identifier type; sysctl names were previously in parens.
Make the formatting a little more consistent in this area. In inet.4
and udp.4, move the "ip." or "udp." prefix from each entry into the
top-level name at the start of the section, as they are all the same.
Toomas Soome [Wed, 8 Jun 2022 12:23:05 +0000 (15:23 +0300)]
loader.efi: faults could try to print out call trace
with grab_faults, we can try to print out the trace of function calls.
Without symbol table, we can not translate addresses to function names,
but even addresses can help to track the bugs.
For loader functions, print out absolute address, so it could be
searched from objdump -d output.
Colin Percival [Wed, 13 Jul 2022 00:39:00 +0000 (17:39 -0700)]
uart: Don't check SPCR tables if !late_console
On x86 systems, the debug.late_console tunable makes it possible to set
up the console before we call pmap_bootstrap. (The tunable is turned
on by default; setting late_console=0 results in consoles being probed
early.)
Unfortunately this is not compatible with using the ACPI SPCR table to
find the console, since consulting ACPI tables requires mapping memory
addresses. As such, we skip the call to uart_cpu_acpi_spcr from
uart_cpu_x86 in the !late_console case.