the subst utility no longer supports a '-g'
flag, but this was left behind in commit;
this means that the lines listing modified
files were not correctly commented in the
commit header.
This is mostly harmless, but when using an
editor like sam to edit the commit message,
the modified lines would have to be removed
manually.
was testing out the git/import tweaks and accidentally
pushed this commit. No comment on whether we want it,
but it definitely wasn't ready for merge.
Oops.
Often, people (including myself) will write emails that
can almost be applied with git/import. This changes
git/diff and git/import so that things will generally
work even when assembling diffs by hand:
1. git/import becomes slightly more lax:
^diff ...
^--- ...
will both be detected as the start of a patch.
2. git/diff produces the same format of diff
as git/export, starting with paths:
--- a/path/to/file
+++ b/path/to/file
which means that the 'ape/patch -p1' used
within git/import will just work.
So with this, if you send an email to the mailing list,
write up a committable description, and append the
output of git/diff to the end of the email, git/import
should just work.
[this patch was send through the mailing list using the
above procedure, and will be committed with git/import
to verify that it works as advertised]
exportfs -d logs 9p traffic to /tmp/exportdb.
-f allows writing to a different file.
exportfs silently continues if it doesn't have
permissions to create or write to /tmp/exportdb.
These are poor behaviors.
A better default is to write to stderr, since it
is 9P debug info that is better immediately printed,
and not user info that is better handled by syslog().
As a result, -f is obsolete and thus removed.
Redirect responsibility is now on rc.
As a side effect, rc will fail if it doesn't
have permissions to write.
exportfs(4) is updated to reflect all changes
and with a better Synopsis.
oexportfs is changed to match exportfs.
oexportfs(4) is updated to reflect all changes.
The Synopsis is not changed due to the number of flags.
Removed -f from iostats.
iostats(4) is updated to reflect all changes.
---
http://fqa.9front.org/fqa1.html#1.2 states the supported archs.
However, clean and nuke also remove build files for 0 (spim) and q
(power). 'mk all' using those archs fails; 'mk kernels' also tries to
build all the kernels, even those which are not supported. For
example, I tried to build the power arch (qc, qa, ql) and without
surprise it failed (when building dtracy): ...
mk dtracy
qc -FTVw dtracy.c
yacc -v -d -D1 parse.y
qc -FTVw cgen.c
qc -FTVw act.c
qc -FTVw type.c
== regfree ==
REGISTER R0 <11> STRUCT DTAct cgen.c:302
== regfree ==
REGISTER R0 <11> STRUCT DTAct act.c:266
== regfree ==
qc -FTVw agg.c
cgen.c:299 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
cgen.c:299 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
cgen.c:302 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
cgen.c:302 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
cgen.c:302 error in regfree: 0 [0]
REGISTERmk: qc -FTVw cgen.c : exit status=rc 387386: qc 387392: error R0
<11> STRUCT DTAct act.c:269
act.c:250 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
act.c:250 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
act.c:266 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
act.c:266 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
act.c:266 error in regfree: 0 [0]
act.c:269 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
act.c:269 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
act.c:269 error in regfree: 0 [0]
act.c:274 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
act.c:274 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
act.c:274 error in regfree: 0 [0]
too many errors
mk: for(i in cc ... : exit status=rc 382748: rc 387379: mk 387381: error
mk: date for (i ... : exit status=rc 373781: rc 382226: mk 382227: error
cpu%
The patch below skips over non-supported architectures. Is that
something we want? This way, 'mk kernels' should work without a
problem (tested on amd64). Then if someone works on getting those
architectures supported again in the future, they can be added back
in.
snoopy shares ndb/dns's dns parser code, but has its own
copy of rralloc() function, which is responsible to allocating
auxiolary data structures on an RR depending on the type.
ndb/dns gained some support for some new types, but snoopy's
copy of rralloc() was not updated, resulting the auxiolary
structures to be nil, and the shared parsing routines crashes
when trying to dereference them.
this just syncs the copies, we might consider moving rralloc()
into its own file so it can be completely shared.
Git currently gets a bit confused if you try to
manipulate files by absolute path. There were also a
number of places where user-controlled file paths ended
up getting passed to regex interpretation, which could
confuse things.
This change mainly does 2 things:
- Adds a 'drop' function which drops
a non-regex prefix from a string, and uses
that to manipulate paths, simplifies 'subst',
and removes 'subst -g', which was only used
with fixed regexes; sed does this job fine.
- When getting a path from a user, we
make it absolute and then strip out the head
Along the way it cleans up a couple of stupids:
- 'for(f in $list) if(! ~ $#f 0) use $f:
$f can't be a nil list because of
list flattening.
- removes a useless substitution here:
all=`$nl{{git/query -c $1 $2; git/query -c $2 $3} | sed 's/^..//' | \
gsubst '^('$ourbr'|'$basebr'|'$theirbr')/*' | sort | uniq}
where git/query -c doesn't produce
paths prefixed with the query.
exportfs -d logs 9p traffic to /tmp/exportdb.
-f allows writing to a different file.
exportfs silently continues if it doesn't have
permissions to create or write to /tmp/exportdb.
These are poor behaviors.
A better default is to write to stderr, since it
is 9P debug info that is better immediately printed,
and not user info that is better handled by syslog().
As a result, -f is obsolete and thus removed.
Redirect responsibility is now on rc.
As a side effect, rc will fail if it doesn't
have permissions to write.
exportfs(4) is updated to reflect all changes
and with a better Synopsis.
Update tinc(8) man page to:
1. state the implementation aligns with 1.0.36 of tinc.org;
2. use same hostname as mentioned in usage line.
Fix typos in tinc.c.
The '-m' flag was added to date largely
to support git scripts. It predates the
tmdate code, which is why it exists, but
it's a recent enough addition that nothing
I'm aware of uses it, other than git.
As a result, it would be good to remove
it, so let's do that.
As part of the transition to 64 bit userspace
APIs, we need to make our libc functions which
take arrays all accept and deal with large sizes.
This does the work for qsort.
According to the ASN.1 BER spec, we should be encoding
all sequences (including empty ones) as constructed:
8.9.1 The encoding of a sequence value shall be constructed.
8.10.1 The encoding of a sequence-of value shall be constructed.
8.11.1 The encoding of a set value shall be constructed.
8.12.1 The encoding of a set-of value shall be constructed.
However, we were only setting them as constructed when the
list was non-empty.
This changes it, and makes letsencrypt happy with the CSRs that
we generate.
when running 'mk clean', we get a stray
libpanel.$O.a, because our 'mk clean'
rule expects libpanel.a$O.
This causes build failures after mk clean
on a symbol change.
> After some tinkering I managed to get igfx working on this device.
> hw cursor works.
> The only caveat is that I can only get video over hdmi...
> will revisit displayport later
- avoid print() format routines (saves alot of code)
- avoid useless opens of /dev/cons (already done by initcode)
- avoid useless binds of /env and /dev (already done by initcode)
- do bind of /shr in bootrc, it is not needed by us
- we'r pid 1 so kernel will print the exit message for us
currently, git/fetch prints the refs
to update before it fully fetches the
pack files; this can lead to updates
to the refs before we're 100% certain
that the objects are present.
This change prints the updates after
the packfile has been successfully
indexed.
We used to use performance cycle counter for cycles(),
but it is kind of useless in userspace as each core
has its own counter and hence not comparable between
cores. Also, the cycle counter stops counting when
the cores are idle.
Most callers expect cycles() to return a high resolution
timestamp instead, so do the best we can do here
and enable the userspace generic timer virtual counter.
sbrk(0) returns the current end address of the BSS segment,
not the base. This might have been confused with the behaviour
of segbrk(), which when given a zero address returns the base.
> String becomes stringbg so we have guaranteed max contrast in case the
> user changes the picture. (If you don't change the picture, it's
> white-on-black-on-black (sic) and you would never notice the change.)
When pulling into a git repository that is group
writable as a non-owner, the pack file is left
in place because we do not have permission to
remove it.
We also leave it behind if we bail out early due
to an error, or due to only listing the changes.
This pushes down the creation of the file, and
cleans it up on error.
thanks to Anthony Martin for spotting the bug.
git/fetch: ensure we clean packfiles on failure
When pulling into a git repository that is group
writable as a non-owner, the pack file is left
in place because we do not have permission to
remove it.
We also leave it behind if we bail out early due
to an error, or due to only listing the changes.
This pushes down the creation of the file, and
cleans it up on error.
Also, while we're here, clean up index caching,
and ensure we close the fd in all cases.
thanks to Anthony Martin for spotting the bug.
we have to protect the temporary buffer allocated by rwfield()
as rwreg() calls amlmapio() which might cause further aml code
execution causing gc() which frees it under us (as it is not
referenced from the interpreter state).
this fixes a panic on boot of a
Lenovo Thinkpad P17 Gen1 Professional Mobile Workstation
when a virtio device gets reset, we have to also reset the device
shadow indices: availableidx and usedidx. for extra safetly,
we also reset the buffer descriptor table addresses.
this is accomplished by adding a vioqreset(VIOQueue*) function
that brings the queue to its initial reset state.
this fixes non functional ethernet after reboot(8).
The new interface uses pci capability structures to locate the
registers in a rather fine granular way making it more complicated
as they can be located anywhere in any pci bar at any offset.
As far as i can see, qemu (6.0.50) never uses i/o bars in
non-legacy mode, so only mmio is implemented for now.
The previous virtio drivers implemented the legacy interface only
which uses i/o ports for all register accesses. This is still
the preferred method (and also qemu default) as it is easier to
emulate and most likely faster.
However, some vps providers like vultr force the legacy interface
to disabled with qemu -device option "disable-legacy=on" resulting
on a system without a disk and ethernet.
This used to be a internal function, but virtio
uses multiple structures with the same cap type
to indicate the location of various register
blocks in the pci bars so export it.
fn foo @{bar} is now equivalent to
fn foo {@{bar}}. As a side effect,
this disallows creating functions
named after keywords without first
quoting them.
We need a way to parse a rsa certificate request and return the public
key and subject names. The new function X509reqtoRSApub() works the
same way as X509toRSApub() but on a certificate request.
We also need to support certificates that are valid for multiple domain
names (as tlshand does not support certificate selection). For this
reason, a comma separated list is returned as the certificate subject,
making it symmetric to X509rsareq() handling.
A little helper is provided with this change (auth/x5092pub) that takes
a certificate (or a certificate request when -r flag is provided) and
outputs the RSA public key in plan 9 format appended with the subject
attribute.
git/export *almost* produces output that can be
emailed with upas using
git/export $commit | mail maintainer@site.com
but, the
From: commit-id date
line that git generates trips it up. Luckily,
'git am' doesn't seem to care much if that line
is missing, so we can simply omit it with no issue.
There are a number of alphabets in common use for base32
and base64 encoding, such as url-safe encodings.
This adds support for passing a function to encode into
arbitary alphabets.
Authsrv(6) used to be called auth(6) before
the fourth edition and was preprocessed by
eqn(6) before the third edition. The mkfile
was never updated to reflect the changes.
All other files are accounted for:
% cd /sys/man
% for(i in TS EQ PS G1) echo $i `{grep -l '^\.'$i ?/[0-9a-z]*}
TS 1/tbl
EQ 1/eqn 3/usb
PS 1/pic
G1 1/grap
%
When resizing windows, vt would signal ssh by updating
the window size and sending an interrupt. Ssh reacted
by forwarding both the winch and an interrupt.
This change adds a WINCH generation counter so that
ssh can differentiate between resizes and interrupts.
If an interrupt comes in, and the WINCH generation
changes, then the interrupt is taken as signalling a
WINCH.
The change to "assignment not used" breaks symmetry with
"used and not set" and removes the reference to the
specific warning mentioned in /sys/doc/comp.ms.
Also, the patch was half-assed as that it left some typos
in like "used an not set", which this change also fixed.
We weren't correctly skipping the location operators
in codefree. This would mostly be work, but sometimes
you'd get unlucky and have one of the argmuents mismatch,
and that would lead to an invalid free.
This correctly skips the args in codefree.
Since we now store /dist/plan9front in git, the
initial assumption that the owner of the repo
is the person touching it is not always true.
This change gives us a better heuristic for the
file permissions we should have in the files we
copy around, basing it off of the permissions of
the .git directory.
When loading a file using ".", we could
end up with our line numbers thrown off
due to the mutation of lexline. Putting
lexline into the runq beside the file
that we're reading from causes it to get
pushed and popped correctly, so that we
no longer lose track of our location.