diff --git a/UPDATING b/UPDATING index 15d71286c265..9444b66ccae4 100644 --- a/UPDATING +++ b/UPDATING @@ -1,360 +1,364 @@ Updating Information for FreeBSD current users This file is maintained and copyrighted by M. Warner Losh . See end of file for further details. For commonly done items, please see the COMMON ITEMS: section later in the file. Items affecting the ports and packages system can be found in /usr/ports/UPDATING. Please read that file before running portupgrade. NOTE TO PEOPLE WHO THINK THAT FreeBSD 6.x IS SLOW: FreeBSD 6.x has many debugging features turned on, in both the kernel and userland. These features attempt to detect incorrect use of system primitives, and encourage loud failure through extra sanity checking and fail stop semantics. They also substantially impact system performance. If you want to do performance measurement, benchmarking, and optimization, you'll want to turn them off. This includes various WITNESS- related kernel options, INVARIANTS, malloc debugging flags in userland, and various verbose features in the kernel. Many developers choose to disable these features on build machines to maximize performance. +20050605: + if_bridge was added to the tree. This has changed struct ifnet. + Please recompile userland and all network related modules. + 20050603: The n_net of a struct netent was changed to an uint32_t, and 1st argument of getnetbyaddr() was changed to an uint32_t, to conform to POSIX-2001. These changes broke an ABI compatibility on 64 bit architecture. With these changes, shlib major of libpcap was bumped. You have to recompile userland programs that use getnetbyaddr(3), getnetbyname(3), getnetent(3) and/or libpcap on 64 bit architecture. 20050528: Kernel parsing of extra options on '#!' first lines of shell scripts has changed. Lines with multiple options likely will fail after this date. For full details, please see http://people.freebsd.org/~gad/Updating-20050528.txt 20050503: The packet filter (pf) code has been updated to OpenBSD 3.7 Please note the changed anchor syntax and the fact that authpf(8) now needs a mounted fdescfs(5) to function. 20050415: The NO_MIXED_MODE kernel option has been removed from the i386 amd64 platforms as its use has been superceded by the new local APIC timer code. Any kernel config files containing this option should be updated. 20050227: The on-disk format of LC_CTYPE files was changed to be machine independent. Please make sure NOT to use NO_CLEAN buildworld when crossing this point. 20050225: The ifi_epoch member of struct if_data has been changed to contain the uptime at which the interface was created or the statistics zeroed rather then the wall clock time because wallclock time may go backwards. This should have no impact unless an snmp implementation is using this value (I know of none at this point.) 20050224: The acpi_perf and acpi_throttle drivers are now part of the acpi(4) main module. They are no longer built separately. 20050223: The layout of struct image_params has changed. You have to recompile all compatibility modules (linux, svr4, etc) for use with the new kernel. 20050223: The p4tcc driver has been merged into cpufreq(4). This makes "options CPU_ENABLE_TCC" obsolete. Please load cpufreq.ko or compile in "device cpufreq" to restore this functionality. 20050220: The responsibility of recomputing the file system summary of a SoftUpdates-enabled dirty volume has been transferred to the background fsck. A rebuild of fsck(8) utility is recommended if you have updated the kernel. To get the old behavior (recompute file system summary at mount time), you can set vfs.ffs.compute_summary_at_mount=1 before mounting the new volume. 20050206: The cpufreq import is complete. As part of this, the sysctls for acpi(4) throttling have been removed. The power_profile script has been updated, so you can use performance/economy_cpu_freq in rc.conf(5) to set AC on/offline cpu frequencies. 20050206: NG_VERSION has been increased. Recompiling kernel (or ng_socket.ko) requires recompiling libnetgraph and userland netgraph utilities. 20050114: Support for abbreviated forms of a number of ipfw options is now deprecated. Warnings are printed to stderr indicating the correct full form when a match occurs. Some abbreviations may be supported at a later date based on user feedback. To be considered for support, abbreviations must be in use prior to this commit and unlikely to be confused with current key words. 20041221: By a popular demand, a lot of NOFOO options were renamed to NO_FOO (see bsd.compat.mk for a full list). The old spellings are still supported, but will cause annoying warnings on stderr. Make sure you upgrade properly (see the COMMON ITEMS: section later in this file). 20041219: Auto-loading of ancillary wlan modules such as wlan_wep has been temporarily disabled; you need to statically configure the modules you need into your kernel or explicitly load them prior to use. Specifically, if you intend to use WEP encryption with an 802.11 device load/configure wlan_wep; if you want to use WPA with the ath driver load/configure wlan_tkip, wlan_ccmp, and wlan_xauth as required. 20041213: The behaviour of ppp(8) has changed slightly. If lqr is enabled (``enable lqr''), older versions would revert to LCP ECHO mode on negotiation failure. Now, ``enable echo'' is required for this behaviour. The ppp version number has been bumped to 3.4.2 to reflect the change. 20041201: The wlan support has been updated to split the crypto support into separate modules. For static WEP you must configure the wlan_wep module in your system or build and install the module in place where it can be loaded (the kernel will auto-load the module when a wep key is configured). 20041201: The ath driver has been updated to split the tx rate control algorithm into a separate module. You need to include either ath_rate_onoe or ath_rate_amrr when configuring the kernel. 20041116: Support for systems with an 80386 CPU has been removed. Please use FreeBSD 5.x or earlier on systems with an 80386. 20041110: We have had a hack which would mount the root filesystem R/W if the device were named 'md*'. As part of the vnode work I'm doing I have had to remove this hack. People building systems which use preloaded MD root filesystems may need to insert a "/sbin/mount -u -o rw /dev/md0 /" in their /etc/rc scripts. 20041104: FreeBSD 5.3 shipped here. 20041102: The size of struct tcpcb has changed again due to the removal of RFC1644 T/TCP. You have to recompile userland programs that read kmem for tcp sockets directly (netstat, sockstat, etc.) 20041022: The size of struct tcpcb has changed. You have to recompile userland programs that read kmem for tcp sockets directly (netstat, sockstat, etc.) 20041016: RELENG_5 branched here. For older entries, please see updating in the RELENG_5 branch. COMMON ITEMS: General Notes ------------- Avoid using make -j when upgrading. From time to time in the past there have been problems using -j with buildworld and/or installworld. This is especially true when upgrading between "distant" versions (eg one that cross a major release boundary or several minor releases, or when several months have passed on the -current branch). Sometimes, obscure build problems are the result of environment poisoning. This can happen because the make utility reads its environment when searching for values for global variables. To run your build attempts in an "environmental clean room", prefix all make commands with 'env -i '. See the env(1) manual page for more details. To build a kernel ----------------- If you are updating from a prior version of FreeBSD (even one just a few days old), you should follow this procedure. With a /usr/obj tree with a fresh buildworld, make -DALWAYS_CHECK_MAKE buildkernel KERNCONF=YOUR_KERNEL_HERE make -DALWAYS_CHECK_MAKE installkernel KERNCONF=YOUR_KERNEL_HERE To test a kernel once --------------------- If you just want to boot a kernel once (because you are not sure if it works, or if you want to boot a known bad kernel to provide debugging information) run make installkernel KERNCONF=YOUR_KERNEL_HERE KODIR=/boot/testkernel nextboot -k testkernel To just build a kernel when you know that it won't mess you up -------------------------------------------------------------- This assumes you are already running a 5.X system. Replace ${arch} with the architecture of your machine (e.g. "i386", "alpha", "amd64", "ia64", "pc98", "sparc64", etc). cd src/sys/${arch}/conf config KERNEL_NAME_HERE cd ../compile/KERNEL_NAME_HERE make depend make make install If this fails, go to the "To build a kernel" section. To rebuild everything and install it on the current system. ----------------------------------------------------------- # Note: sometimes if you are running current you gotta do more than # is listed here if you are upgrading from a really old current. make buildworld make kernel KERNCONF=YOUR_KERNEL_HERE [1] [3] mergemaster -p [5] make installworld mergemaster [4] To cross-install current onto a separate partition -------------------------------------------------- # In this approach we use a separate partition to hold # current's root, 'usr', and 'var' directories. A partition # holding "/", "/usr" and "/var" should be about 2GB in # size. make buildworld make buildkernel KERNCONF=YOUR_KERNEL_HERE make installworld DESTDIR=${CURRENT_ROOT} cd src/etc; make distribution DESTDIR=${CURRENT_ROOT} # if newfs'd make installkernel KERNCONF=YOUR_KERNEL_HERE DESTDIR=${CURRENT_ROOT} cp /etc/fstab ${CURRENT_ROOT}/etc/fstab # if newfs'd To upgrade in-place from 5.x-stable to current ---------------------------------------------- make buildworld [9] make kernel KERNCONF=YOUR_KERNEL_HERE [8] [1] [3] mergemaster -p [5] make installworld mergemaster -i [4] Make sure that you've read the UPDATING file to understand the tweaks to various things you need. At this point in the life cycle of current, things change often and you are on your own to cope. The defaults can also change, so please read ALL of the UPDATING entries. Also, if you are tracking -current, you must be subscribed to freebsd-current@freebsd.org. Make sure that before you update your sources that you have read and understood all the recent messages there. If in doubt, please track -stable which has much fewer pitfalls. [1] If you have third party modules, such as vmware, you should disable them at this point so they don't crash your system on reboot. [3] From the bootblocks, boot -s, and then do fsck -p mount -u / mount -a cd src adjkerntz -i # if CMOS is wall time Also, when doing a major release upgrade, it is required that you boot into single user mode to do the installworld. [4] Note: This step is non-optional. Failure to do this step can result in a significant reduction in the functionality of the system. Attempting to do it by hand is not recommended and those that pursue this avenue should read this file carefully, as well as the archives of freebsd-current and freebsd-hackers mailing lists for potential gotchas. [5] Usually this step is a noop. However, from time to time you may need to do this if you get unknown user in the following step. It never hurts to do it all the time. You may need to install a new mergemaster (cd src/usr.sbin/mergemaster && make install) after the buildworld before this step if you last updated from current before 20020224 or from -stable before 20020408. [8] In order to have a kernel that can run the 4.x binaries needed to do an installworld, you must include the COMPAT_FREEBSD4 option in your kernel. Failure to do so may leave you with a system that is hard to boot to recover. Make sure that you merge any new devices from GENERIC since the last time you updated your kernel config file. [9] When checking out sources, you must include the -P flag to have cvs prune empty directories. If CPUTYPE is defined in your /etc/make.conf, make sure to use the "?=" instead of the "=" assignment operator, so that buildworld can override the CPUTYPE if it needs to. MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX must be defined in an environment variable, and not on the command line, or in /etc/make.conf. buildworld will warn if it is improperly defined. FORMAT: This file contains a list, in reverse chronological order, of major breakages in tracking -current. Not all things will be listed here, and it only starts on October 16, 2004. Updating files can found in previous releases if your system is older than this. Copyright information: Copyright 1998-2005 M. Warner Losh. All Rights Reserved. Redistribution, publication, translation and use, with or without modification, in full or in part, in any form or format of this document are permitted without further permission from the author. THIS DOCUMENT IS PROVIDED BY WARNER LOSH ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL WARNER LOSH BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. If you find this document useful, and you want to, you may buy the author a beer. Contact Warner Losh if you have any questions about your use of this document. $FreeBSD$ diff --git a/sys/sys/param.h b/sys/sys/param.h index 792149c009b5..fbf49d4e3073 100644 --- a/sys/sys/param.h +++ b/sys/sys/param.h @@ -1,326 +1,326 @@ /*- * Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1989, 1993 * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. * (c) UNIX System Laboratories, Inc. * All or some portions of this file are derived from material licensed * to the University of California by American Telephone and Telegraph * Co. or Unix System Laboratories, Inc. and are reproduced herein with * the permission of UNIX System Laboratories, Inc. * * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions * are met: * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. * 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors * may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software * without specific prior written permission. * * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF * SUCH DAMAGE. * * @(#)param.h 8.3 (Berkeley) 4/4/95 * $FreeBSD$ */ #ifndef _SYS_PARAM_H_ #define _SYS_PARAM_H_ #include #define BSD 199506 /* System version (year & month). */ #define BSD4_3 1 #define BSD4_4 1 /* * __FreeBSD_version numbers are documented in the Porter's Handbook. * If you bump the version for any reason, you should update the documentation * there. * Currently this lives here: * * doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml * * scheme is: Rxx * 'R' is 0 if release branch or x.0-CURRENT before RELENG_*_0 * is created, otherwise 1. */ #undef __FreeBSD_version -#define __FreeBSD_version 600029 /* Master, propagated to newvers */ +#define __FreeBSD_version 600030 /* Master, propagated to newvers */ #ifndef LOCORE #include #endif /* * Machine-independent constants (some used in following include files). * Redefined constants are from POSIX 1003.1 limits file. * * MAXCOMLEN should be >= sizeof(ac_comm) (see ) * MAXLOGNAME should be == UT_NAMESIZE+1 (see ) */ #include #define MAXCOMLEN 19 /* max command name remembered */ #define MAXINTERP 32 /* max interpreter file name length */ #define MAXLOGNAME 17 /* max login name length (incl. NUL) */ #define MAXUPRC CHILD_MAX /* max simultaneous processes */ #define NCARGS ARG_MAX /* max bytes for an exec function */ #define NGROUPS NGROUPS_MAX /* max number groups */ #define NOFILE OPEN_MAX /* max open files per process */ #define NOGROUP 65535 /* marker for empty group set member */ #define MAXHOSTNAMELEN 256 /* max hostname size */ #define SPECNAMELEN 63 /* max length of devicename */ /* More types and definitions used throughout the kernel. */ #ifdef _KERNEL #if 0 #if (defined(BURN_BRIDGES) || __FreeBSD_version >= 600000) \ && defined(OBSOLETE_IN_6) #error "This file contains obsolete code to be removed in 6.0-current" #endif #endif #include #include #include #include #define FALSE 0 #define TRUE 1 #endif #ifndef _KERNEL /* Signals. */ #include #endif /* Machine type dependent parameters. */ #include #ifndef _KERNEL #include #endif #ifndef _NO_NAMESPACE_POLLUTION #ifndef DEV_BSHIFT #define DEV_BSHIFT 9 /* log2(DEV_BSIZE) */ #endif #define DEV_BSIZE (1<>PAGE_SHIFT) #endif /* * btodb() is messy and perhaps slow because `bytes' may be an off_t. We * want to shift an unsigned type to avoid sign extension and we don't * want to widen `bytes' unnecessarily. Assume that the result fits in * a daddr_t. */ #ifndef btodb #define btodb(bytes) /* calculates (bytes / DEV_BSIZE) */ \ (sizeof (bytes) > sizeof(long) \ ? (daddr_t)((unsigned long long)(bytes) >> DEV_BSHIFT) \ : (daddr_t)((unsigned long)(bytes) >> DEV_BSHIFT)) #endif #ifndef dbtob #define dbtob(db) /* calculates (db * DEV_BSIZE) */ \ ((off_t)(db) << DEV_BSHIFT) #endif #endif /* _NO_NAMESPACE_POLLUTION */ #define PRIMASK 0x0ff #define PCATCH 0x100 /* OR'd with pri for tsleep to check signals */ #define PDROP 0x200 /* OR'd with pri to stop re-entry of interlock mutex */ #define NZERO 0 /* default "nice" */ #define NBBY 8 /* number of bits in a byte */ #define NBPW sizeof(int) /* number of bytes per word (integer) */ #define CMASK 022 /* default file mask: S_IWGRP|S_IWOTH */ #define NODEV (dev_t)(-1) /* non-existent device */ #define CBLOCK 128 /* Clist block size, must be a power of 2. */ #define CBQSIZE (CBLOCK/NBBY) /* Quote bytes/cblock - can do better. */ /* Data chars/clist. */ #define CBSIZE (CBLOCK - sizeof(struct cblock *) - CBQSIZE) #define CROUND (CBLOCK - 1) /* Clist rounding. */ /* * File system parameters and macros. * * MAXBSIZE - Filesystems are made out of blocks of at most MAXBSIZE bytes * per block. MAXBSIZE may be made larger without effecting * any existing filesystems as long as it does not exceed MAXPHYS, * and may be made smaller at the risk of not being able to use * filesystems which require a block size exceeding MAXBSIZE. * * BKVASIZE - Nominal buffer space per buffer, in bytes. BKVASIZE is the * minimum KVM memory reservation the kernel is willing to make. * Filesystems can of course request smaller chunks. Actual * backing memory uses a chunk size of a page (PAGE_SIZE). * * If you make BKVASIZE too small you risk seriously fragmenting * the buffer KVM map which may slow things down a bit. If you * make it too big the kernel will not be able to optimally use * the KVM memory reserved for the buffer cache and will wind * up with too-few buffers. * * The default is 16384, roughly 2x the block size used by a * normal UFS filesystem. */ #define MAXBSIZE 65536 /* must be power of 2 */ #define BKVASIZE 16384 /* must be power of 2 */ #define BKVAMASK (BKVASIZE-1) /* * MAXPATHLEN defines the longest permissible path length after expanding * symbolic links. It is used to allocate a temporary buffer from the buffer * pool in which to do the name expansion, hence should be a power of two, * and must be less than or equal to MAXBSIZE. MAXSYMLINKS defines the * maximum number of symbolic links that may be expanded in a path name. * It should be set high enough to allow all legitimate uses, but halt * infinite loops reasonably quickly. */ #define MAXPATHLEN PATH_MAX #define MAXSYMLINKS 32 /* Bit map related macros. */ #define setbit(a,i) ((a)[(i)/NBBY] |= 1<<((i)%NBBY)) #define clrbit(a,i) ((a)[(i)/NBBY] &= ~(1<<((i)%NBBY))) #define isset(a,i) ((a)[(i)/NBBY] & (1<<((i)%NBBY))) #define isclr(a,i) (((a)[(i)/NBBY] & (1<<((i)%NBBY))) == 0) /* Macros for counting and rounding. */ #ifndef howmany #define howmany(x, y) (((x)+((y)-1))/(y)) #endif #define rounddown(x, y) (((x)/(y))*(y)) #define roundup(x, y) ((((x)+((y)-1))/(y))*(y)) /* to any y */ #define roundup2(x, y) (((x)+((y)-1))&(~((y)-1))) /* if y is powers of two */ #define powerof2(x) ((((x)-1)&(x))==0) /* Macros for min/max. */ #define MIN(a,b) (((a)<(b))?(a):(b)) #define MAX(a,b) (((a)>(b))?(a):(b)) #ifdef _KERNEL /* * Basic byte order function prototypes for non-inline functions. */ #ifndef _BYTEORDER_PROTOTYPED #define _BYTEORDER_PROTOTYPED __BEGIN_DECLS __uint32_t htonl(__uint32_t); __uint16_t htons(__uint16_t); __uint32_t ntohl(__uint32_t); __uint16_t ntohs(__uint16_t); __END_DECLS #endif #ifndef lint #ifndef _BYTEORDER_FUNC_DEFINED #define _BYTEORDER_FUNC_DEFINED #define htonl(x) __htonl(x) #define htons(x) __htons(x) #define ntohl(x) __ntohl(x) #define ntohs(x) __ntohs(x) #endif /* !_BYTEORDER_FUNC_DEFINED */ #endif /* lint */ #endif /* _KERNEL */ /* * Constants for setting the parameters of the kernel memory allocator. * * 2 ** MINBUCKET is the smallest unit of memory that will be * allocated. It must be at least large enough to hold a pointer. * * Units of memory less or equal to MAXALLOCSAVE will permanently * allocate physical memory; requests for these size pieces of * memory are quite fast. Allocations greater than MAXALLOCSAVE must * always allocate and free physical memory; requests for these * size allocations should be done infrequently as they will be slow. * * Constraints: PAGE_SIZE <= MAXALLOCSAVE <= 2 ** (MINBUCKET + 14), and * MAXALLOCSIZE must be a power of two. */ #if defined(__alpha__) || defined(__ia64__) || defined(__sparc64__) #define MINBUCKET 5 /* 5 => min allocation of 32 bytes */ #else #define MINBUCKET 4 /* 4 => min allocation of 16 bytes */ #endif #define MAXALLOCSAVE (2 * PAGE_SIZE) /* * Scale factor for scaled integers used to count %cpu time and load avgs. * * The number of CPU `tick's that map to a unique `%age' can be expressed * by the formula (1 / (2 ^ (FSHIFT - 11))). The maximum load average that * can be calculated (assuming 32 bits) can be closely approximated using * the formula (2 ^ (2 * (16 - FSHIFT))) for (FSHIFT < 15). * * For the scheduler to maintain a 1:1 mapping of CPU `tick' to `%age', * FSHIFT must be at least 11; this gives us a maximum load avg of ~1024. */ #define FSHIFT 11 /* bits to right of fixed binary point */ #define FSCALE (1<> (PAGE_SHIFT - DEV_BSHIFT)) #define ctodb(db) /* calculates pages to devblks */ \ ((db) << (PAGE_SHIFT - DEV_BSHIFT)) #endif /* _SYS_PARAM_H_ */