The 9p debug server was broken as it assumed the first
tree file added would have a qid of 0 (it has a qid
of 1 as the root directory is using 0 already).
Instead, just compare File* pointers and get rid of
the table (less code).
When passing 64-bit unsigned addresses as 64-bit signed
file offsets, we have to make sure to not pass negative
offsets (filtered out by kernel and lib9p)!
This is solved by clearing and sign bit in encoding and
63-bit sign extension on decoding.
Make the mem file writable (needed for acid).
The 9p debug server provided a single directory containing
mem and regs files. This patch renames the regs file
(which is in vmx specific text format) to "xregs" and
adds "regs" and "kregs" file which use the same format
as exported by the kernels /proc filesystem.
This allows one to bind the vmx directory over a proc
directory and attach acid to a running system like:
mount -b /srv/vmx /proc/1
acid -k -lkernel 1 /sys/src/9/pc64/9pc64
If we tokenize the register file contents in a static buffer,
we can avoid having to duplicate the register names.
All callers to rpoke() provide constant register arguments
so they also do not need to be duplicated.
games/dmid uses the same sample rate as the chip for music, but other
applications do not. opl3 and its older version opl2 (not in 9front)
read an input stream of commands in basically IMF format, something
used in other id Software games and some others, which assumes a
given input sampling rate: 700 Hz for Wolfenstein 3D music, 560 Hz
for Commander Keen, 60 Hz for Ultima 6, etc.
The opl3 emulation on the other hand is not really intended to run at
a sampling rate different that the chip's 49.716 kHz sampling rate.
Previously, we assumed it runs at 44.1 kHz and just used the input
rate as a divisor to get the number of samples per delay tic.
From what I understand, the correct way to use it for accurate
emulation is to run the opl chip emulator at its intended sampling
frequency, then downsample to 44.1 kHz. This means better output
but more code. The alternative is to basically do the same as
before rev 8433, except with no buffering, but at accuracy/quality
loss. This change implements the former and just forks pcmconv to
deal with resampling.
Now that we have these new functions,
we can also make them return an error
instead of calling sysfatal() like
postmountsrv().
Remove the confusing Srv.srvfd, as it
is only temporarily used and return
it from postsrv() instead.
To use srvrease()/srvaquire() we need to have a way to spawn
new processes to handle the service loop. This functionality
was provided by the internal _forker() function which was
eigther rfork or libthread based implementation depending on
if postmountsrv() or threadpostmountsrv() where called.
For servers who want to use srv() directly, _forker would not
be initialized so srvrelease() could not be used.
To untangle this, we get rid of the global _forker handler
and put the handler in the Srv structure. Which will get
initialized (when nil) to eigther srvforker() or threadsrvforker()
depending on if the thread or non-thread entry points where used.
For symmetry, we provde new threadsrv() and threadpostsrv()
functions which handle the default initialization of Srv.forker.
This also allows a user to provide his own forker function,
maybe to conserve stack space.
To avoid dead code, we put each of these function in their
own object file. Note, this also allows a user to define its
own srvforker() symbol.
this fixes real-time applications.
-n previously specified a rate divisor rather than the rate itself,
which was used for specific applications outside of 9front. instead,
just set the rate directly, more useful and straightforward.
Remove unused fields and factor common fields into a
new PMach struct in port/portdat.h.
The fields machno, splpc and proc are not moved to
PMach as they are part of the known offsets from
assembly (l.s).
Resample is well known for taking a long time to resize an image. This
patch brings an important performance boost (in my test image, time
was reduced from ~2850ms to ~500ms). It does that by extracting FP
multiplication and division out of the innermost loop of
resamplex/resampley.
The results differ slightly from the current implementation: in my
test: ~0.3% of the bytes had a ±2 difference in their value, which I
attribute to rounding errors. I'm personally not concerned with that
deviation, given the performance gains. However, I recommend testing
it just to be sure I didn't overlook anything.
José Miguel Sánchez García
The patch does the following:
1. Adds recognition of executable script (shebang) files.
2. Returns correct MIME type for mbox files (RFC 4155).
3. Returns XML instead of HTML type in some cases.
changeset: 8411:19f6a88ea241
branch: mbp-2011
user: Romano <unobe@cpan.org>
date: Sat Apr 17 14:35:21 2021 -0700
files: sys/src/cmd/upas/fs/imap.c
description:
When an imap fetch fails, it's helpful at times to know the underlying
cause. This provides more details by providing the underlying error
message.
unlike other tools like iconv(1), a crop(1) without arguments or with
ones resulting in a no-op, like `-t 0 0', errors out. other options
like `-i 0' do not error. this breaks assumptions and results in
tedious intermediary steps or hacks like:
foo | {crop -t $1 $2 >[2]/null || cat} > baz.bit
instead, just ignore the check. subsequent code doesn't make
assumptions on that.
/sys/src/cmd/mksyslib uses `{basename $stem .$objtype}^.c to get the
source file name for *.acid files. /sys/lib/acid/thread expects
sched.$objtype.acid. This lets /sys/src/libthread/mkfile generate
that file.
This patch adds dirmodefmt from fcall.h to pretty-print file
permissions, similarly to ls -l. I didn't notice any performance
degradation.
I hope no-one relied on the old behaviour.
i have found one bug. when i put glenda in a position like this
i somehow win, but the glenda can escape from there.
in addition, i have changed the games manpage to include more info about glendy.
We can take advantage of the fact that xinit() allocates
kernel memory from conf.mem[] banks always at the beginning
of a bank, so the separate palloc.mem[] array can be eleminated
as we can calculate the amount of non-kernel memory like:
upages = cm->npage - (PGROUND(cm->klimit - cm->kbase)/BY2PG)
for the number of reserved kernel pages,
we provide the new function: ulong nkpages(Confmem*)
This eleminates the error case of running out of slots in
the array and avoids wasting memory in ports that have simple
memory configurations (compared to pc/pc64).
To reproduce the suicide try running the following in acme:
• 'Edit B <ls lib'
by select and middle clicking in a window that is in your $home.
There is a very high chance acme will commit suicide like this:
<snip>
cpu% broke
echo kill>/proc/333310/ctl # acme
cpu% acid 333310
/proc/333310/text:amd64 plan 9 executable
/sys/lib/acid/port
/sys/lib/acid/amd64
acid: lstk()
edittext(nr=0x31,q=0x0,r=0x45aa10)+0x8 /sys/src/cmd/acme/ecmd.c:135
xfidwrite(x=0x461230)+0x28a /sys/src/cmd/acme/xfid.c:479
w=0x0
qid=0x5
fc=0x461390
t=0x1
nr=0x100000031
r=0x45aa10
eval=0x3100000000
a=0x405621
nb=0x500000001
err=0x419310
q0=0x100000000
tq0=0x80
tq1=0x8000000000
buf=0x41e8d800000000
xfidctl(arg=0x461230)+0x35 /sys/src/cmd/acme/xfid.c:52
x=0x461230
launcheramd64(arg=0x461230,f=0x22357e)+0x10 /sys/src/libthread/amd64.c:11
0xfefefefefefefefe ?file?:0
</snap>
The suicide issue is caused by the following chain of events:
• /sys/src/cmd/acme/ecmd.c:/^edittext is called at
/sys/src/cmd/acme/xfid.c:479 passing nil as its first parameter:
<snip>
...
case QWeditout:
r = fullrunewrite(x, &nr);
if(w)
err = edittext(w, w->wrselrange.q1, r, nr);
else
err = edittext(nil, 0, r, nr);
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
...
</snap>
...and /sys/src/cmd/acme/ecmd.c:/^edittext dereferences the
first parameter that is *nil* at the first statement:
<snip>
char*
edittext(Window *w, int q, Rune *r, int nr)
{
File *f;
f = w->body.file;
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
This will crash if 'w' is *nil*
switch(editing){
...
</snap>
Moving the the derefernce of 'w' into the case where it is
needed (see above patch) fixes the suicude.
The memory leak is fixed in /sys/src/cmd/acme/ecmd.c:/^filelist. The
current implementation of filelist(...) breaks its contract with its
caller, thereby leading to a memory leak in /sys/src/cmd/acme/ecmd.c:/^B_cmd
and /sys/src/cmd/acme/ecmd.c:/^D_cmd.
The contract /sys/src/cmd/acme/ecmd.c:/^filelist seems to have with
its callers is that in case of success it fills up a 'collection' that
callers can then clear with a call to clearcollection(...).
The fix above honours this contract and thereby removes the leak.
After you apply the patch the following two tests should succeed:
• Execute by select and middle click in a Tag:
'Edit B lib/profile'
• Execute by select and middle click in a Tag:
'Edit B <ls lib'
The former lead to a resource leak that is now fixed.
The latter lead to a suicide that is now fixed by moving the statement
that dereferences the parameter to the location where it is needed,
which is not the path used in the case of 'Edit B <ls'.
Cheers,
Igor
The confstr was shared between readers so seprintconf() could
write concurrently to that buffer which is not safe.
This replaces the shared static confstr[Maxconf] buffer with a
pointer that is initially nil and a buffer that is alloced on
demand.
The new confstr pointer (and buffer) is now only updated while
wlock()ed from the new setconfstr() function.
This is now done by mconfig() / mdelctl() just before releasing
the wlock.
Now, rdconf() will check if confstr has been initialized, and
test for it again while wlock()ed; making sure the configuration
is read only once.
Also, rdconf() used to check for a undocumented "fsdev:\n" string
at the beginning of config data tho that was never documented.
This changes mconfig() to ignore that particular signature so
the example from the manpage will work as documented.
The sunStringUnpack() routine was miscompiled by 7c, as
pointer arithmetic is done in 64 bit but the constant -1
offset got expended to a unsigned 32 bit integer.
The expression value of the assignment operation was
returned implicitely by relying on regalloc() on the
right hand side "nod" borrowing the register from nn.
But this only works if nn is a register.
In case of 6c, it can also be a ONAME from a .safe
rathole returned by regsalloc().
This change adds explicit gmove() calls to assign the
expression value. Note that gmove() checks if source
and destination are the same register so it wont emit
redundant move operations in the common case.
The same is applied also to OPREINC and OPOSTINC operations.
Mutating lists that are being iterated is needlessly error
prone, and we were removing the wrong message in some cases
if it the dummy got inserted in the right place.
Separating deletion into a redraw/relink and zap phase
simplifies the problem.
Switching window focus used to be non deterministic
as the current window in focus (Window *input) was set
concurrently while processing window messages such as
Resized and Topped.
This implements a new approach where wcurrent() and
wuncurrent() are responsible for the synchronization
and switch of the input.
It is implemented by sending a Repaint message to the
old input window first, neccesarily waiting until that
window releases the focus and then input is updated
and then a Topped or Reshaped message is send to the
new input window.
Note, that when the whole screen is resized that no
input changes need to happening anymore.
This change makes the text window be focused on startup when using
default riostart (e.g: when using the release ISO). This little change
makes you able to immediately reach the rc shell without clicking the
window, which at the very least is more convenient, and if you have
problems to use your mouse but want to install the system, you also
can (I had to stop profile from running at boot to patch it in my VPS
KVM console because the mouse wasn't working properly. Could install
and setup it to connect through drawterm).
let pci.c deal with the special cardbus controller bar0 and
expansion roms.
handle apic interrupt routing for devices behind a cardbus slot.
do not free the pcidev on card removal, as the drivers
most certanly are not prepared to handle this yet.
instead, we provide a pcidevfree() function that just unlinks
the device from pcilist and the parent bridge.
When deleting messages that came in just
the right order, we would end up stuck in
a loop deleting and reinserting a dummy
parent, rather than the messages we wanted
to remove.
p.kosyh writes:
Hello! I finally bought rpi4 4Gb specially for 9front. It seems,
that default bpp of framebuffer is 16. I changed it to 24 (via
cmdline.txt and config.txt) and found, that rendering is much faster!
(May be due removing overheads in 16->24 conversions?)
But on rpi4 r and b channels are swapped. So, i changed BGR24 to
RGB24 in bcm/screen.c and now it works fine!
Sacrifice some of the sub-millisecond timer precision in favor of less
cpu load when the timer is about to be kicked a bit early. Result is
visible *especially* when the guest idling.
Timer proc *still* has to send to the channel (in order to kick PIT
and RTC logic), which takes time, and compensates a bit for possibly
early runs.
tftpd currently unconditionally sets its namespace via /lib/namespace
(newns("none", nil)), which stymied my attempts to pxe boot the
openbsd installer without creating a real /etc dir on 9front, which
would've been gross.
I tried working around this with -h (and -r for good measure), but
again hit issues because the namespace is rebuilt from scratch -- any
binds of /386, /amd64, /cfg/pxe, etc. into the tftp-specific directory
disappeared from tftpd's namespace and rendered my *9front* boxes
unable to boot. I could maintain copies of the needed files in the
tftp-specific directory, but that'd be kind of a drag.
The following patch adds a -n flag to allow the specification of a
namespace file in place of /lib/namespace; similar to ip/ftpd.
I thought about setting up a /lib/namespace.tftp to act as a default
rather than continuing to use /lib/namespace by default (which
security-wise is about the same as allowing 9p mounts by user none,
which I also have disabled), but I had trouble coming up with a sane
default. Maybe someone more experienced would like to try that out.
- sam-d
IndexField is supposed to increment the index value when an
access is done with a bigger size than the data field.
The index value is always a byte offset.
Now that we always calculate the offset for each field unit
access for IndexField, rename the indexv to bank (the bank
value), as it is only used for that. Also, do not compare
it with nil, as it is a integer constant which can be
encoded as nil to mean zero.
For BankField, the banking field was written using store(),
which does nothing when the destination is a Field*.
Use rwfield() to fix it in the new rwfieldunit().
Resolve all the Name*'s when IndexField, BankField and
Field are created. Now, Field.reg points to eigther
Buffer object, Region or Field (data Field of an IndexField).
PS: initial bug report by Michael Forney follows below:
In /dev/kmesg on my T14, I saw a message
amlmapio: [0xffffff18-0x100000018] overlaps usable memory
amlmapio: mapping \_SB.FRTP failed
Here is the relevant snippet from my DSDT:
Scope (_SB)
{
...
OperationRegion (ECMC, SystemIO, 0x72, 0x02)
Field (ECMC, AnyAcc, NoLock, Preserve)
{
ECMI, 8,
ECMD, 8
}
IndexField (ECMI, ECMD, ByteAcc, NoLock, Preserve)
{
Offset (0x08),
FRTB, 32
}
OperationRegion (FRTP, SystemMemory, FRTB, 0x0100)
Field (FRTP, AnyAcc, NoLock, Preserve)
{
...
}
}
With some debugging output:
amlmapio(\_SB.ECMC): Io 72 - 74
rwreg(\_SB.ECMC): Io [72+0]/1 <- 8
rwreg(\_SB.ECMC): Io [72+1]/1 -> 18
amlmapio(\_SB.FRTP): Mem ffffff18 - 100000018
amlmapio: [0xffffff18-0x100000018) overlaps usable memory
amlmapio: mapping \_SB.FRTP failed
It seems that libaml does not handle IndexField correctly and just did
a single read from ECMD after setting ECMI to 8, causing the FRTP
region to be evaluated as 0xffffff18-0x100000018. Instead, it should
be reading 4 bytes [18 c0 22 cc], evaluating it as
0xcc22c018-0xcc22118:
amlmapio(\_SB.ECMC): Io 72 - 74
rwreg(\_SB.ECMC): Io [72+0]/1 <- 8
rwreg(\_SB.ECMC): Io [72+1]/1 -> 18
rwreg(\_SB.ECMC): Io [72+0]/1 <- 9
rwreg(\_SB.ECMC): Io [72+1]/1 -> c0
rwreg(\_SB.ECMC): Io [72+0]/1 <- a
rwreg(\_SB.ECMC): Io [72+1]/1 -> 22
rwreg(\_SB.ECMC): Io [72+0]/1 <- b
rwreg(\_SB.ECMC): Io [72+1]/1 -> cc
amlmapio(\_SB.FRTP): Mem cc22c018 - cc22c118
I wrote a patch (attached) to fix this, and it seems to work. Though,
it's not clear to me when things should be dereferenced. Previously,
the data field was dereferenced at evalfield, but the region and index
field were not until rwfield. After the patch, the index field is
also dereferenced in evalfield.
For BankField, the index *is* dereferenced in evalfield. I'm pretty
sure that this means that BankField does not work currently, since
store() just returns nil for 'f' objects. The bank selector will
never get set.
Anyway, I don't know if this solves any real problems; it's just
something I noticed and thought I'd try to fix.
When the save folder did not exist, and we could not create
it, we would handle up to one Biobuf worth of message, and
then fail, due to a failed tee. The sequence of events leading
up to this was:
openfolder() -> error
tee(0, fd, -1) -> wait for read
write(0, data) ->
write(fd, data) -> ok
write(-1, data) -> error, tee terminates
write(0, attachment) -> error
This change prevents us from writing to a closed fd, and
therefore from erroring out when sending.
We also warn the user.
---
To: 9front@9front.org
Date: Sun, 07 Feb 2021 14:56:39 +0100
From: kvik@a-b.xyz
Subject: Re: [9front] transient dns errors cause smtp failure
Reply-To: 9front@9front.org
I think I found a reason for DNS failing on known good domains.
/sys/src/cmd/ndb/dns.h:156,157
/* tune; was 60*1000; keep it short */
Maxreqtm= 8*1000, /* max. ms to process a request */
So, 8 seconds is how much the resolver will bother with a request it
has been handed, before dropping it on the floor with little
explanation.
It seems quite possible that this is too short a timeout on a machine
during a spam queue run, which predictably stresses the compute and
network resources.
In turn, negative response caching might explain why a particular
unlucky domain would basically stop receiveing any mail for a while.
I'm dying to know if bumping this limit would clear up the queue of
such DNS errors.
---
[narrator: it did.]
* Add the %ll length modifier,
* Convert nil to "<nil>" under %s (not in APE),
* Cast void* to uintptr under %p,
* Use "0x" hex prefix under %p,
* Fix manual page mentions of %P to %p,
* Fix empty result for fp conversions,
* Fix zero padding of left-aligned fp conversions,
* Remove deprecated #pragma ref uses.
Most of these were introduced in APE prior to 9front.
I've omitted the %z conversion specifier since Plan 9 code
rarely uses the usize type. This may need to be added later
for the benefit of native ports of alien code.
I'm not sure if this LFSR is the same one used by the hardware or is
arbitrary, but it matches the noise sequence used by all other snes
emulators I looked at.
s1 and s2 should store the last and next to last output, but were set
in the wrong order, causing them both to be the last output. This
breaks filters 2 and 3, which both utilize s2.
despite the kernel never doing any efi runtime service calls,
overriding the runtime service regions makes some machines
lock up. so consider them reserved.
the boot service regions should also, in theory, be usable
by the os, but linux says otherwise...
fseeko returns 0 on success, not the new stream position.
This allows flacenc to update the streaminfo block when it is finished
(for example to set the number of samples and checksum).
There may be two iso endpoints with the same ID if it is asynchronous
or adaptive (one for data, one for feedback), and rw iso endpoints are
unusable (error out with "iso i/o is half-duplex").
There may be two iso endpoints with the same ID if it is asynchronous
or adaptive (one for data, one for feedback), and rw iso endpoints are
unusable (error out with "iso i/o is half-duplex").
The value of `k` in dtoa() is an estimate of
floor(log10(d)), where `d` is the number being
converted. The code was asserting that 'k' was
less than 100, but the full range of a double
goes to 10^308 or so.
This means that the majority of the range of
a double would trigger that assert.
validateattachment has no business with the mime boundary; it is not
part of the attachment itself.
Also, it causes the boundary to be dropped in the message output from
upas/vf, effectively dropping the following attachment (though the
content is still present after the last boundary of the wrapped first
attachment part).
Consider the following sequence of events:
1. upas/vf is run on a message containing two attachments.
2. The first attachment does not have a known extension, so is saved
to a temporary file *including* the following mime boundary.
3. This file is opened as p->tmpbuf, which is used for subsequent
reads until switching back to stdin.
4. The attachment fails validateattachment, so upas/vf wraps it in a
multipart with a warning message.
5. problemchild() calls passbody(p, 0), which copies from p->tmpbuf
until it hits the outer boundary line, which it excludes, seeks
back one line, then returns the outer multipart.
6. problemchild() then writes its own boundary, and then copies one
line from *stdin* to stdout, expecting the outer boundary.
However, this boundary was already read from stdin in 2, so it ends
up reading the first line of the subsequent part instead.
To fix this, pass 0 to passbody() in save() to exclude it from the
attachment file and make it available in stdin when expected.
Reading nested subparts of messages into the root
message array allows deeply nested multipart trees
of messages to show correctly in the message view.
H-blank DMA should only transfer 16 bytes per h-blank, rather than
waiting for the first h-blank and then transferring the whole size.
HDMAC should read 0xff when the transfer is finished, and 0 in the
high bit when the transfer is ongoing. Also, if 0 is written in the
high bit, the current transfer should be aborted.
Introduce two flags, DMAREADY and DMAHBLANK rather than special
constants 1 and -1. If dma is non-zero, there is an ongoing DMA. If
DMAREADY is set, the next chunk is ready to transfer.
Reference: https://gbdev.io/pandocs/#ff55-hdma5-cgb-mode-only-new-dma-length-mode-start
Tested with pokemon crystal.
What was happening is that when the game was loading N background tiles
into vram (each 16 bytes, so one per h-blank), it did something like
this:
- start an hdma transfer for N+1 tiles
- after the Nth tile is transferred, it would read HDMA5, clear the
high bit, then write it back to abort the transfer.
games/gb would instead transfer all N+1 tiles at once, overwriting one
extra tile with whatever was 1 past the end of the source array, and
then would interpret the cancel request as the start of a new transfer
of 16 bytes, which would copy an additional tile past the end. The end
result is that every transfer would end up copying N+2 tiles instead
of just N, overwriting certain tiles with whatever was after the end
of the source data.
According to [0], input clock 0 should divide by 1024=2¹⁰, not 2¹².
This caused audio to run at quarter-speed in one game I tried.
[0] https://gbdev.io/pandocs/#ff07-tac-timer-control-r-w
Tested with zelda: oracle of seasons, and dr. mario
---
upas/vf was converted to use tmdate, but the formatter was never
installed. This caused it to send attachments to validateattachment
with header `From virusfilter %τ%`, which always failed since upas/fs
would just skip over the message.
On the pi400, the xhci reset firmware mailbox request
assumes that the pci windows match the ones specified
in the device tree. The inbound window (pcidmawin)
also varies now depending on the amount of memory
installed.
It is all pretty ridiculous, as the firmware could as
well just read the pci controllers hardware register
to determine the window configuration and the os could
keep a nice simple 1:1 mapping (with pci dma addresses
== physical addresses).
The old parser code was rubbish and only worked for trivial
expressions. The new code properly handles complex expressions,
including short circuit evaluation.
As such, the BUGS section has been removed from the test(1) man page.
The description of an unimplemented feature has also been removed.
Despite pervious efforts, mk clean still doesn't remove libcommon.a*
files from cmd/upas/common/. To fix this, let's tell cmd/mklib to do
the job instead.
Runq spawns a number of processes, and wait()s for them
in 2 different places. Because of the way that the exit
handling is done, the wait can get the wrong message.
It turns out that only one place in the code needs to
wait for the child, and in all other cases, it's just
muddling the problem.
This change adds the RFNOWAIT call to all the processes
we don't need to wait for, so that the places that do
need wait will always get the correct child.
Screenlock should use libdraw(2) to init the display
and create the window, instead of looking at the screen
file directly. Also, to prevent new windows from popping
up over screenlock, bring it to the top periodically.
on arm32, we can do one of 4 shifts
by a constant:
reg<<(0..31)
reg>>(1..32)
((u32int)reg)>>(1..32)
reg ROT (0..31)
There's no way to encode a 0 bit right
shift, so when encoding reg>>0, flip
it to the equivalent nop reg<<0, which
can be encoded.
This prevents an incorrect warning for a comparison such as `0 < x`,
where x is an unsigned type. Previously, this would get normalized as
`x >= 0` rather than `x > 0` when checking the comparison.
With ntlm auth, we were trying to set 0 bytes of
the auth struct to its size. The args were clearly
swapped. Fix it.
While we're here, remove some dead code.
When running a mail queue, it's useful to run it with limited
parallelism. This helps mailing lists process messages in a
reasonable time.
At the same time, we can remove the load balancing from runq,
since the kinds of systems that this matters on no longer
exist, and running multiple queues at once can be better
done through xargs.
Querying battery (or temperature) using ACPI takes quite some
resources, which makes the battery discharge faster. It doesn't make
much sense to have it queried as often either. So, when using ACPI:
1) set battery query period to 10s minimum
2) set temperature query period to 5s minimum
When _startbuf is invoked, it would crash on the second invocation
if creating a mux segment failed. This is because the first attempt
would assign the return value -1 to the global mux variable, and
the second attempt would notice that the global mux was not nil,
and would attempt to use it.
This change only assigns to the global variable if the allocation
of the segment was a success.
While we're here, we should also check the return of the rfork call.
When invoking with dd with an invalid size suffix, we
silently accept the suffix. This can lead to confusion,
because lines like:
dd -bs 1K
dd -bs 1m
will silently copy in 1-byte increments. This has caught
people by surprise. While we're at it, megabytes are
convenient, so let's have them too.
Passwd used to produce a very confusing error
about DES not being enabled whenever the password
was mistyped. This happened because we attempted
to guess what authentication method to use, and
preseneted the error from the wrong one on failure.
This puts the legacy mode behind a flag, so that
we don't even try the old method unless it's
explicitly requested.
This adds the new function pointer PCArch.clockinit(),
which is a timer dependent initialization routine.
It also takes over the job of guesscpuhz(). This way, the
architecture ident code can switch between different
timers (i8253, HPET and XEN timer).
Revert the change, as it causes system lockups on bootup
on some systems with USB OHCI controllers, suspected to be
caused by BIOS/SMM accessing the device as BIOS handover
has not been executed yet.
We might bring that back when the problem has is better
understood.
when loading large binaries such as netsurf, with many
symbols, our hash table fills up with collisions and
loading the symbol table gets very slow. Bumping it up
drops the time to lstk() in acid on netsurf from 4 minutes
to 8 seconds.
Call exits(0) instead of returning from main. Also call sysfatal if
writing of image data fails. Previously, qr(1) would exit with
default non-nil status "main" unconditionally as a result of returning
from main.
/$objtype/include/ape/math.h contained an almost
identical copy of math.h for each architecture.
The only difference between them architectures
was that some had an incorrect version of isinf
defined.
This change picks one of the versions of math.h
with a correct definition, moves it to /sys/include,
and removes the redundant versions.
Tilting allows using left/right rotated or invetrted display orientation.
This can be changed at runtime such as: echo tilt right > /dev/vgactl
This removes the old panning and vga overlays as they are only implemented
with some ancient vga controllers.
The idea is to avoid the magic files that contain
per process information in devcons when possible.
It will make it easier to deprecate them in the future.
Previously, mmurelease() was always called with
palloc spinlock held.
This is unneccesary for some mmurelease()
implementations as they wont release pages
to the palloc pool.
This change removes pagechainhead() and
pagechaindone() and replaces them with just
freepages() call, which aquires the palloc
lock internally as needed.
freepages() avoids holding the palloc lock
while walking the linked list of pages,
avoding some lock contention.
On 12/18/20, Jacob Moody wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I recently ran in to some issues with pointing an unbound server towards a
> 9front dns server as its upstream.
> The parsing seemed to fail when ndb/dns received a DNSKEY RR from it's own
> upstream source on behalf of unbound.
> This patch catches and stores the DNSKEY from the upstream server to prevent
> this.
we might as well handle the per process cycle
counter in the portable part instead of duplicating the code
in every arch and have inconsistent implementations.
we now have a portable kenter() and kexit() function,
that is ment to be used in trap/syscall from user,
which updates the counters.
some kernels missed initializing Mach.cyclefreq.
Provide a central function to change the user id
of the calling process.
This is mostly used by programs to become the none
user, followed by a call to newns().
vt sets several environment variables ($TERM, $COLS, $LINES)
after exiting. This change rforks the environment so that this
detritus doesn't get left behind.
Using strlen in strndup will walk past the first
n bytes up to the terminator, which may not be
present. This is not what we want.
While we're here, do some cleanups.
hget supports adding custom headers with -r;
it makes sense for hpost to do the same, both
because custom headers are more likely necessary
with POSTs, and for consistency.
the tulip driver is used in microsofts hypver-v
as the legacy ethernet adapter for pxe booting.
to make the driver work on pc64, we need to
store the Block* pointers in a separate array
instead of stuffing them into buffer address 2
of the hardware descriptor.
also, enable the driver in the pc64 kernel.
The initial protocol handling in exportfs for
cpu and import services is a huge mess.
Saparate the code out into its own program with
its own oexportfs(4) manpage.
The OCEXEC flag used to be maintained per channel,
making it shared between all the file desciptors.
This has a unexpected side effects with regard to
channel passing drivers such as devdup (/fd),
devsrv (/srv) and devshr (/shr).
For example, opening a /srv file with OCEXEC
makes it impossible to be remounted by exportfs
as it internally does a exec() to mount and
re-export it. There is no way to reset the flag.
This change makes the OCEXEC flag per file descriptor,
so a open with the OCEXEC flag only affects the fd
group of the calling process, and not the channel
itself.
On rfork(RFFDG), the per file descriptor flags get
copied.
On dup(), the per file descriptor flags are reset.
The second modification is that /fd, /srv and /shr
should reject the ORCLOSE flag, as the files that
are returned have already been opend.
enable pci busmaster before set the fis-receive-enable
bit in the port command register.
not doing so triggers a crash in qemu like:
address_space_unmap: Assertion `mr != NULL' failed.
as qemu tries to process the dma command list as soon
as we set that flag and busmaster dma needs to be enabled
at this point.
Bhyve returns 0 in MTRRCap register, so we
can use that instead on relying on cpuid only
to see if MTRR's are supported.
That way we can get rid of the sanity check
in memory.c.
Opening a /srv file sets the close-on-exec flag on the
shared channel breaking the exportfs openmount() hack.
The devsrv tries to prevent posting a channel with the
close-on-exec or remove-on-close flags. but nothing
currently prevents this poisoning on open.
Until this gets fixed in eigther exportfs or devsrv,
i'll back out the changes that could have potential side
effects like this.
On AMD64, CR0/CR4 are 64-bit registers, with
the upper half reserved. So use uintptr type
to store the register values to get 32 bit on 386
and 64 bit on AMD64.
The -v flag now does not create a new rio window,
while -w flag does (restores the old behaviour).
This allows vmx to run under vncs and is in general
mode aligned to other emulators and programs.
Removes the 128 kB limit for files making up the database.
We used to skip over and complain about files that exceeded
the limit, forcing the user to generate hash files.
This caused things to inexplicably stop working after a file
hit the hidden limit, which is unreasonable behaviour considering
that libndb happily, albeit slowly, works with bigger files.
The previous resize optimization now means that the wfill()
is skipped on resize for libdraw programs.
So do it once /dev/mouse is closed and the window processes
the Refresh message.
"" looks for patterns in the form 'prompt;' or 'prompt%',
and gets confused when proof emits 'illegal;'. This change
replaces the ';' with a ':', which both matches other
conventional error outputs and prevents "" from getting
confused.
Initially the code tried to guess the date format. This
turned out to be a bit too magical, so the feature was
removed, but the manpage still documented the nonfeature.
As long as the client as the mouse file open
and maintains reading the winname file of the window
after a resize we will avoid drawing the text frame
on a resize as it will be overdrawn by the client.
This reduces flicker on resize somewhat for slow systems.
This implements proper intrdisable() support for all
interrupt controllers.
For enable, (*arch->intrassign)(Vctl*) fills in the
Vctl.enable and Vctl.disable pointers with the
appropriate routines and returns the assigned
vector number.
Once the Vctl struct has been linked to its vector
chain, Vctl.enable(Vctl*, shared) gets called with a
flag if the vector has been already enabled (shared).
This order is important here as enabling the interrupt
on the controller before we have linked the chain can
cause spurious interrupts, expecially on mp system
where the interrupt can target a different cpu than
the caller of intrenable().
The intrdisable() case is the other way around.
We first disable the interrupt on the controller
and after that unlink the Vctl from the chain.
On a multiprocessor, the xfree() of the Vctl struct
is delayed to avoid freeing it while it is still
in use by another cpu.
The xen port now also uses pc/irq.c which has been
made generic enougth to handle xen's irq scheme.
Also, archgeneric is now a separate file to avoid
pulling in dependencies from the 8259 interrupt
controller code.
Plan 9 memcpy(2) uses the same implementation as memmove(2) to handle
overlapping ranges. Hovewer, the MIX MOVE instruction, as described
in TAOCP, specifically does not do this. It copies words one at a
time starting from the lowest address.
This change also expands the address validation to check that all
addresses within the source and destination ranges are valid before
proceeding.
Fixes 3 issues in our upas mkfiles:
- mk/mkfile and send/mkfile were rebuilding
only the rfc822.tab.$O, even though the
header also needed to be rebuilt.
- CLEANFILES had a pattern that would not
get expanded.
- Third, ../upas/mkfile was being included
in the wrong place and making the wrong
rule default.
currently the EFI loader's behavior is to search all disks in a
firmware-defined order. we search the list returned by the firmware
in reverse order in the hopes of searching the first 9FAT instead of
the ESP, but this results in unintuitive behavior when there are
multiple FAT partitions (possibly in multiple disks), such as loading
a plan9.ini and kernel from a different disk than the one you executed
the EFI loader from.
to resolve this, we change the EFI loader to instead prefer read
plan9.ini and the kernel from the same disk as the EFI loader was read
from, and then fall back to the old behavior, since the old behavior
is relied on by current installations.
dc crashes because a Blk* sometimes ends getting double freed.
To make it crash, any of these lines will do:
(each line is a separate input to dc):
1 sa 2 :a le d sa v :a
1 sa 2 :a le d sa :a
1 sa 2 :a le d sa c
Fix by assigning p to sptr->val before EMTPY causes a jump.
Additionally, dcgetwd() can return 0. all other uses check for
0 ptr; Also fix a buffer overflow.
It appears that our IDT overlaps with the data structures
passed from grub in multiboot load.
So defer setup of the interrupt table after the multiboot
parameters have been processed.
The driver used to register the interrupt handler just
after reset, tho the Ctlr struct, including the buffer
descriptor arrays where only allocated on attach.
This moves most of the reset/init out of pnp
function and into attach. This also means we can
error out and even retry on the next attach.
The logic of the reseter kproc has been changed:
now it is only started once the first initialization
completely succeeded. This avoids the strange qlock
passing.
Implement a shutdown function so the device gets
halted for /dev/reboot.
Assume 64 bit physical addresses for dma.
Check that pci bar0 is actually I/O.
the hid 1.11 specification says that for hid devices which arent in
the boot subclass (subclass 1), it is only optional to support the set
protocol command. for my devices, trying to set protocol results in a
stall error and unusable devices.
fixes my Tex Shinobi keyboard and Playstation 4 controller.
The new MTRR code handles overlapping ranges
and supports AMD specific TOM2 MSR.
The format in /dev/archctl now only shows
the effective cache ranges only, without
exposing the low level registers.
Before the "native" awk work, a call to the fflush function resulted
in one or more calls to the APE fflush(2).
Calling fflush on a stream open for reading has different behavior
based on the environment: within APE, it's a no-op¹; on OpenBSD, it's
an error²; in musl, it depends on whether or not the underlying file
descriptor is seekable³; etc. I'm sure glibc is subtly different.
Now that awk uses libbio, things are different: calling Bflush(2) on a
file open for reading simply discards any data in the buffer. This
explains why we're seeing truncated input. When awk attempts to read
in the next record, there's nothing in the buffer and no more data to
read so it gets EOF and exits normally. Note that this behavior is not
documented in bio(2). It was added in the second edition but I haven't
figured out why or what depends on it.
The simple fix is to have awk only call Bflush on files that were
opened for writing. You could argue that this is the only correct
behavior according to the awk(1) manual and it is, in fact, how GNU
awk behaves⁴.
1. /sys/src/ape/lib/ap/stdio/fflush.c
2. https://cvsweb.openbsd.org/src/lib/libc/stdio/fflush.c?rev=1.9
3. https://git.musl-libc.org/cgit/musl/tree/src/stdio/fflush.c
4. https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gawk.git/tree/io.c#n1492
Changeset 50ad211fb12f broke the libcommon rule in
mkupas. Deleting the 'mk clean' in the recipe fixes
this.
Cleanup includes deleting UPDATE vars from all mkfiles,
reorganization of vars in TARG,LIB,OFILE,HFILE order,
and deletion of extra vars used for UPDATE.
loading the interrupt vector table early allows
us to handle traps during bootup before mmuinit()
which gives better diagnostics for debugging.
we also can handle general protection fault on
rdmsr() and wrmsr() which helps during
cpuidentify() and archinit() when probing for
cpu features.
before removing the double map at 0, load our
initial gdt pointer with its new KZERO based
virtual address.
this is prerequisite for handling traps early during
bootup before mmuinit() loads the final gdt.
The fsdestroyfid() is called regardless if the open succeeded
or failed. This causes erroneous videoclose() when opening
the frame or video file while the camera is active.
When using /dev/reboot, the MSI vecor might have already
been setup causing interrupts to fire on the designated
cpu while we send the commands to the card.
reseting irbsts bits in hdacmd() only works
while interrupts are disabled during hdareset().
once interrupts are enabled we need to reset the
irbsts bits in the interrupt handler or else the
interrupt never clears and locks up the system.
Upas/marshal -F was broken with the '-8' command, and silly
without it: It used aliases passed on the command line, so
the destination address was ignored with -8 was passed.
In addition, it would create a new mailbox for any aliases
being sent to, instead of putting them all in one location.
The new -S option is similar to -F, but specifies where the
message should go.
The change 3306:c5cf77167bfe made the code reuse MTRR slots
of the default memory type.
But this did not take overlapping ranges into account!
If two or more variable-range MTRRs overlap, the following rules apply:
a. If the memory types are identical, then that memory type is used.
b. If at least one of the memory types is UC, then UC memory type is used.
c. If at least of of the memory types is WT. and the only other memory type
is WB, then th WT memory type is used.
d. If the combination of memory types is not listed above,
then the memory type used in undefined.
It so happend that on a Dell Latitude E7450 that the BIOS defines
the default type as UC. and the first slot defines a 16GB range
of type WB. Then the rest of the ranges mark the PCI space back
as UC, but overlapping the first WB range! This works because
of rule (B) above.
When trying to make the framebuffer write-combining, we would
falsely reuse one of the UC sub-ranges and making the UC memory
into WB as a side effect.
Thanks to Fulton for his patience and providing debug logs and
doing experiments for us to narrow the problem down.
With some newer UEFI firmware, not all pci bars get
programmed and we have to assign them ourselfs.
This was already done for memory bars. This change
adds the same for i/o port space, by providing a
ioreservewin() function which can be used to allocate
port space within the parent pci-pci bridge window.
Also, the pci code now allocates the pci config
space i/o ports 0xCF8/0xCFC so userspace needs to
use devpnp to access pci config space now. (see
latest realemu change).
Also, this moves the ioalloc()/iofree() code out
of devarch into port/iomap.c as it can be shared
with the ppc mtx kernel.
libcommon.a$O doesn't end with a .a, so mk
doesn't know how to look inside it in order
to check if the files are up to date.
This means that when 'mk clean' is run,
libcommon.a$O looks up to date:
% mk clean
...
% mk
mk: 'default' is up to date
Deleting the library works around this problem.
When $wsys doesn't exist (eg, drawterm -G, or
rcpu from a text console), the profile would
create an empty $wsys variable, and sessions
started in this environment would fail with a
null list in concatenation.
This change tests if /mnt/term/env/wsys exists
before assigning it.
This prevents VESA bios from accessing the pci
CONFIG_ADDRESS/CONFIG_DATA registers (0xCF8/0xCFC)
directly to access pci config space.
This makes sure the access to pci config space is
properly serialized by the kernel.
Our qsort has an optimization to recurse on one
half of the array, and do a tail call on the other
half. Unfortunately, the condition deciding which
half of the array to recurse on was wrong, so we
were recursing on the larger half of the array and
iterating on the smaller half.
This meant that if we picked the partition poorly,
we were pessimizing our stack usage instead of
optimizing it.
This change reduces our stack usage from O(n)
to O(log(n)) for poorly chosen pivots.
vt chording behaves slightly differently from other
applications: a chord must be fully released before
the next chord can be applied. This makes any change
in chord apply the action.
the driver was not using irb interrupts
and was just polling the irb write pointer
to wait for command completion.
this is not supported by qemu.
qemu requires the use of irb interrupt handshake
and it refuses to accept the next command until we
acknowledge the irb interrupt.
supplying a non-ip address in ADD_EDGE crashes the unix tincd.
the reason was that we where misreporting ADD_EDGE messages;
ignoring the information from our peers; and always supplying
the Address string from our configuration instead of the
connections ip address.
now we just report the edge information as is.
the access functions for pci config space in config mode #1
used to set bit 0 in the register offset if the access was
to a device on any bus different from 0.
it is completely unclear why this was done and i can't find
any documentation on this.
but for sure, this breaks all pci config spacess access to
pci devices behind a bridge on qemu. with -trace pci* it
was discovered that all config space register offsets on
devies behind pci brige where off by one.
on real hardware, setting bit 0 in the offset doesnt appear
to be an issue.
thanks mischief for reporting and providing a qemu demo
configuration to reproduce the problem.
On my 6235 card, if we calibrate the crystal
immediately after disabling wimax, the the
firmware gets unhappy. A short nap before
sending the command prevents the command from
timing out.
When moving messages between folders, mbappend,
deliver, and nedmail were trying to parse the
timestamp ouut of the message. They were doing
it incorrectly, trying to include the user name
as part of the date format.
Change to pass just the date to the date parser.
ori and echoline are reporting regression on some 6000 cards;
which sometimes time out on crystal calibration command;
which is expected by the driver. but the new code used
to force a device reset on any command timeout.
reverting to old behaviour until for now until we have
a chance investigating.
We used to assume a 1:1 pairing of processors to submit queues.
With recent machines, we now got more cpu cores than what some
nvme drives support so we need to distribute the queues across
these cpu's which requires locking on command submission.
There is a feature get/set command to probe the number of submit
and completion queues, but we decided to just handling
submission queue create command error gracefully as it is simpler
and has less chance of regression with existing setups.
Thanks to mischief for investigating and writing the code.
I have the problem that i need to delegate a subdomain
to another name server that is confused about its own zone
(and its own name) returning unusable ns records.
With this, one can make up a nameserver entry in ndb that
is authoritative and owned by us for that nameserver,
and then put it in the soa=delegated ns entry.
This promotes the ns record in the soa=delegated to
Authoritative, which avoids overriding the ns rr's from
the confused server for the delegated zone.
we used to only allocate ports from 6881 to 6890,
which limits the maximum of parallel torrents to 9.
this change make it go up to 9000, which gives us
at best 2120 ports, which is overkill but ports might
be randomly occupied by other connections.
the new date format introduced by the previous commit;
using numeric timezone offsets; needs one character more,
so increase the date format buffer to 31 characters.
the whole idea of a ucallocb() is bad, as even access to the
metadata header would be in uncached memory. also, it tuns out
that it was never used by anyone.
the 9000 series uses a new receive descriptor format
wich appears to reqire 4k aligned buffers. the old
format "halfworks" and just makes the firmware not
respond to any commands after the enable paging command.
the smartfifo command appears to causes problems.
but apparently not issuing it at all seems to work
fine on both the 8265 and 9260. so removing the code
for now.
issuing the bindingquota command before associated
makes association impossible. but enabling afterwards
works fine. (tested in 8265 and 9260).
the prph access functions now mask the address with
0xfffff. it is unclear why linux and openbsd drivers
specify addresses beyond that in ther register constants.
the timeevent change is interesting. the timeevent
needs to be restarted when it has stoped to make sure
probing/association packets are sent during the evnet.
Complete the conversion of upas to remove ctime,
use the new date library, and print time zones
in +hhmm format, instead of NNN format.
This may affect code that expects specific names
for timezones. Fix that code.
Recently the script which generates tab.h and the code including it got
incompatibly changed. People reported problems involving syntax errors
when trying to rebuild the system following a sysupdate.
The problem was with the script being embedded within a mkfile rule,
meaning that mk didn't notice it changing and therefore didn't rebuild
the target file. For people who were rebuilding the system this meant
that the old tab.h got included, causing syntax errors.
This patch moves the codegen script into a file and tells mk about this
new dependency, so that tab.h will get rebuilt for everyone. I also
took an opportunity to rewrite the script, hopefuly making it easier to
follow.
RFC959 says:
"The ALLO command should be treated as a NOOP (no
operation) by those servers which do not require
that the maximum size of the file be declared
beforehand..."
Ignoring '?' when formatting date strings allows
the format strings to be reused for parsing. This
is convenient, since we don't need to duplicate
the format strings.
Import the following improvements and bugfixes from plan9port:
4650064a acme: scale window bodies on resize, not including tag space
d28913a9 acme: save/restore multiline tags in Dump/Load
d2df5d6c acme: fix crash in X |cat with multiple windows
3d6e5cb5 acme: preserve window position and selection during Get
The format produced by `diff -u` is inferior to that
produced by `diff -c`, but it's what ape/patch and
unix patch expect, so it's useful to generate it.
This patch adds `diff -u`.
Following is a list of functional changes:
* The -o flag outputs the entire buffer to the length returned
by the syscall, or, in case of fd2path(2) and errstr(2), to '\0'.
* The -x flag is removed; the above makes it possible to pipe
into xd(1) to get the same result.
* The -s flag uses dirfmt(2) to format the stat message, instead
of trying to imitate ls(1).
* Stderr reports are normalized and made easier to parse.
The code also suffered a number of stylistic changes.
Right now, upasfs exposes header lines as is, without stripping
out new lines. It also documents that it provides one header per
line in the info file.
As a result, when we get a mail with headers that span lines,
our tools get confused.
These split lines are not semantically meaningful. From RFC5322:
2.2.3. Long Header Fields
Each header field is logically a single line of characters comprising
the field name, the colon, and the field body. For convenience
however, and to deal with the 998/78 character limitations per line,
the field body portion of a header field can be split into a
multiple-line representation; this is called "folding". The general
rule is that wherever this specification allows for folding white
space (not simply WSP characters), a CRLF may be inserted before any
WSP.
As a result, to simplify processing, we should just strip out the
line separators when exposing the headers from upasfs.
The new pci code is moved to port/pci.[hc] and shared by
all ports.
Each port has its own PCI controller implementation,
providing the pcicfgrw*() functions for low level pci
config space access. The locking for pcicfgrw*() is now
done by the caller (only port/pci.c).
Device drivers now need to include "../port/pci.h" in
addition to "io.h".
The new code now checks bridge windows and membars,
while enumerating the bus, giving the pc driver a chance
to re-assign them. This is needed because some UEFI
implementations fail to assign the bars for some devices,
so we need to do it outselfs. (See pcireservemem()).
While working on this, it was discovered that the pci
code assimed the smallest I/O bar size is 16 (pcibarsize()),
which is wrong. I/O bars can be as small as 4 bytes.
Bit 1 in an I/O bar is also reserved and should be masked off,
making the port mask: port = bar & ~3;
There were a number of ideas that were tried out as the tmdate
api evolved. As a result, there were some references in the
manpage to things that are no more.
Fix them.
Ctime is defined as printing a 3-character timezone
name. The timezone name is ambiguous. For example,
EST refers to both Australian and American eastern
time. On top of that, we don't want to make the
tzabbrev table exhaustive. So, we put in this hack:
Before we consult the well known table of timezones,
we check if the local time matches the timezone name.
On top of that, tm2sec
If you want unambiguous timezone parsing, use numeric
timezone offsets (Z, ZZ formats).
do not try to parse the m->unixfrom field, it only contains
the unix mail address.
instead, have parseunix() save a pointer into the unixheader
after the unix mail address for the unixdate, and later use
it to derive the mails timestamp.
Our ctype.h mistakenly ommitted isblank. Add it in.
While we're here, the make the 'isfoo()' functions
are broken: they're offsetting into the array, and
don't work with negative character values.
Sync the function bodies with the macros, and make
them produce correct results.
In addition to being more code, this date parser would
treat local times as local, but anything that wasn't a
local time would get parsed as gmt, due to a quirk of
how tm2sec used to work.
This moves the code to tmparse, and fixes timezone parsing
at the same time.
We almost always want to skip leading whitespace in time
formats, so make tmparse just do it. This fixes upas mbox
parsing, which leaves a leading whitespace at the start of
the date.
Old users of the time APIs would hand-craft
time structs without first zeroing all the
members. When this got into tmnorm(), we
would try to access the new members, and
things would go off the rails.
This makes tm2sec() clear the new fields
before passing them to the new APIs, so
that the hand-crafted structs remain
valid.
The Abind case in namec() needs to cunique() the chan
before attaching the umh mount head pointer onto it.
This is because we cannot give a reference to the mount
head to any of the mh->mount...->to channels, as they
will never go away until the mount head goes away.
This is a cyclic reference.
This could be reproduced with:
@{rfork n; mount -a '#s/boot' /mnt/root; bind /mnt/root /}
Also, fix memory leaks around cunique(), which can
error, leaking the mount head we got from domount().
Move the umh != nil check inside cunique().
The putc macro is specified as returning an int, but our
type conversion rules turned it into a uint. Put in the
appropriate cast to make the type what we want.
aux/na was comparing the return of putc with <0, when it should
have been comparing against EOF, which is not specified as -ve.
aux/ms2 was zero-extending the mask for the address when it
should have been sign extended.
The current date and time APIs on Plan 9 are not good. They're
inflexible, non-threadsafe, and don't expose timezone information.
This commit adds new time APIs that allow parsing arbitrary
dates, work from multiple threads, and can handle timezones
effectively.
C99 integer constants with no type suffix promote differently
depending on the way that they're written: hex and oct consts
promote as int => uint => long => ulong => vlong => uvlong.
Decimal constants are always signed.
We used to promote all values to uint on overflow, and never
went wider. This change fixes that, and adds a warning when
a decimal constant that would have been promoted to uint in
the past gets promoted to int.
The de-duplication of txt, nullrr, cert, key and sig records
reduced all records to a single one.
Also, dblookup1() missed the txt record case and did not return
a unique list of rr's.
Now we consider these records unique if their value is different.
The new txtequiv() function does that for TXT records, which is
a bit tricky as it needs to take different segmentation into account.
the previous patch broke 64-bit ops as the type for the
operation is determined from the first argument to
gopcode() (nod1.type), not the type the result (nod.type).
so we need to include the conversion of nod1 type to
the type of nod.
the bug can be reproduced with the following test case:
#include <u.h>
#include <libc.h>
void
main()
{
int size = 1;
size*=1.5;
exits(0);
}
this produces the following assembly:
TEXT main+0(SB),0,$16
MOVW $1,R1
FCVTZSDW $1.50000000000000000e+00,R2 <- tries to convert rhs to int??
MULW R2,R1,R2 <- multiplication done in int? bug!
MOV $0,R0
BL ,exits+0(SB)
RETURN ,
END ,
the confusion comes from the *= operation using the wrong type
for the multiplication. in this case we should use the float
type of the rhs, do the operation, and then convert the result
back to int type of the lhs.
this change ports the same logic from 5c's getasop().
Characters greater than 0X80 will cause a read beyond the bounds of the
array chars[]. For particular unicode characters this can cause deroff
to segfault.
A minimal example:
$ deroff
.EQ
u∈
Segmentation fault
Throughout deroff, charclass() is used instead of directly indexing
chars[] so I presume this was just missed.
version(5) says:
If the server does not understand the client's version
string, it should respond with an Rversion message (not
Rerror) with the version string the 7 characters
``unknown''.
Pre-lib9p file servers -- all except cwfs(4) -- do return Rerror.
lib9p(2) follows the above spec, although ignoring the next part
concerning comparison after period-stripping. It assumes an
Fcall.version starting with "9P" is correctly formed and returns
the only supported version of the protocol, which seems alright.
This patch brings pre-lib9p servers in accordance with the spec.
The current logging prints a debug line for every
message in an inbox, which is unusably verbose.
This removes the prints for unchanged messages,
and adds a print for flag changes.
The $SCRIPTS were added to $TARG, which complicates the all rule, as
each script's object file must be suppressed.
Fix by removing $SCRIPTS from $TARG, removing the script object file
suppression rule, and overriding the install rule.
The script bin install rule assumes that only one script install is
called at a time. Valid calls like 'mk -a /$objtype/replica/changes
/$objtype/replica/pull' will fail.
Fix by adding a for loop.
Remove the unused $UPDATE variable.
to reproduce:
ipnet=foo0 ip=192.168.0.0 ipmask=/16
ipnet=foo1 ip=192.168.0.0 ipmask=/24
ip=192.168.0.1 sys=foo2
% ndb/ipquery sys foo2 ipnet ipmask
ipnet=foo0 ipmask=/16
we would expect to get ipnet=foo1 here as it is more
specific subnet.
the solution is to order the subnets by prefix length
in subnet() before calling filter(), so that we process
the longest prefixes first.
ape cp, mv, and cc build with ?c, not pcc
ape cp and mv just ignore one or two extra flags,
instead of providing posix compatibility
it's better to fail then do nothing
remove cp.c and mv.c
move cc.c to /sys/src/ape/9src so it doesn't
need its own mkfile rule
we have to disable interrupts during mmuwalk() of user pages
as we can get preempted during mmu walk and the original
m->pml4 might become one of a different process.
Handle cases where parameterless macros expand to each other:
#define FOO BAR
#define BAR FOO
FOO
There were cases where the macros didn't make it into the hidesets,
and we would recurse infinitely. This fixes that.
This change makes it mandatory for programs to call segflush() on
code that is not in the text segment if they want to execute it.
As a side effect, this means that everything but the text segment
will be non-executable by default, even without the SG_NOEXEC
attribute. Segments with the SG_NOEXEC attribute never become
executable, even when segflush() is called on them.
when wstating a file, its directory should be updated to
reflect this change.
here is what the manpage states:
> The mtime field reflects the time of the last change of content
> (except when later changed by wstat). For a directory it is the
> time of the most recent remove, create, or wstat of a file in the
> directory.
when wstating a file, its directory should be updated to
reflect this change.
here is what the manpage states:
> The mtime field reflects the time of the last change of content
> (except when later changed by wstat). For a directory it is the
> time of the most recent remove, create, or wstat of a file in the
> directory.
When calling putc, we need to return either EOF
or the character returned. To distinguish the
two, we need to avoid sign extending 0xff. The
code attempted to do this, but the order of
operations was wrong, so we ended up masking,
setting a character, and then sign extending
the character.
This fixes things so we mask after assignment.