As part of this, we import bpf_filter.c from NetBSD. Even though that
file is part of the NetBSD kernel, it is also used by userland (as is
clear here). Our LWIP service has its own bpf_filter.c implementation
but that implementation has certain limits (e.g. on program size) that
are fine for a system service but should not apply to userland.
The libpcap code has a number of blocks guarded by __NetBSD__, but
none of those blocks apply to MINIX 3. In particular, some of the
alignment logic used for NetBSD may in fact not work in our case.
Change-Id: Ib187e22d627c929e111d5d4a991c3bee3c0154cb
Also known as ISC bind. This import adds utilities such as host(1),
dig(1), and nslookup(1), as well as many other tools and libraries.
Change-Id: I035ca46e64f1965d57019e773f4ff0ef035e4aa3
This library provides an event-based abstraction model and dispatching
facility for socket drivers. Its main goal is to eliminate any and
all need for socket drivers to keep track of pending socket calls.
Additionally, this library takes over responsibility of a number of
other tasks that would otherwise be duplicated between socket drivers,
but in such a way that individual socket drivers retain a large degree
of freedom in terms of API behavior. The library's main features are:
- suspension, resumption, and cancellation of socket calls;
- an abstraction layer for select(2);
- state tracking of shutdown(2);
- pending (asynchronous) errors and the SO_ERROR socket option;
- listening-socket tracking and the SO_ACCEPTCONN socket option;
- generation of SIGPIPE signals; SO_NOSIGPIPE, MSG_NOSIGNAL;
- send and receive low-watermark tracking, SO_SNDLOWAT, SO_RCVLOWAT;
- send and receive timeout support and SO_SNDTIMEO, SO_RCVTIMEO;
- an abstraction layer for the SO_LINGER socket option;
- tracking of various on/off socket options as well as SO_TYPE;
- a range of pre-checks on socket calls that are required POSIX.
In order to track per-socket state, the library manages an opaque
"sock" object for each socket. The allocation of such objects is left
entirely to the socket driver. Each sock object has an associated
callback table for calls from libsockevent to the socket driver. The
socket driver can raise events on the sock object in order to flag
that any previously suspended operations of a particular type should
be resumed. The library may defer processing such raised events if
immediate processing could interfere with internal consistency.
The sockevent library is layered on top of libsockdriver, and should
be used by all socket driver implementations if at all possible.
Change-Id: I3eb2c80602a63ef13035f646473360293607ab76
This library provides abstractions for socket drivers, and should be
used as the basis for all socket driver implementations. It provides
the following functionality:
- a function call table abstraction, hiding the details of the
socket driver protocol with simple parameters and presenting the
socket driver with callback functions very similar to the BSD
socket API calls made from userland;
- abstracting data structures and helper functions for suspending
and resuming blocking calls;
- abstracting data structures and helper functions for copying data
from and to the caller.
Overall, the library is similar to lib{block,char,fs,input,net}driver
in concept. Some of the abstractions provided here should in fact be
applied to libchardriver as well. As always, for the case that the
provided message loop is too restrictive, a set of more low-level
message processing functions is provided.
Change-Id: I79ec215f5e195c3b0197e223636f987d3755fb13
Imported with no changes, but not all parts are expected to be
functional. The libc nlist functionality is enabled for the
purpose of successful linking, although the nlist functionaly has
not been tested on MINIX3 nor is it needed for how we use libkvm.
In terms of function calls: kvm_getproc2, kvm_getargv2,
kvm_getenvv2, and kvm_getlwps are expected to work, whereas
kvm_getproc, kvm_getargv, kvm_getenvv, and kvm_getfiles are not.
Change-Id: I7539209736f1771fc0b7db5e839d2df72f5ac615
The magic runtime library is now built as part of the regular build, if
the MKMAGIC=yes flag is passed to the build system. The library has
been renamed from "magic" to "magicrt" to resolve a name clash with BSD
file(1)'s libmagic. All its level-5 LLVM warnings have been resolved.
The final library, "libmagicrt.bcc", is now stored in the destination
library directory rather than in the source tree.
Change-Id: Iebd4b93a2cafbb59f95d938ad1edb8b4f6e729f6
This brings our tree to NetBSD 7.0, as found on -current on the
10-10-2015.
This updates:
- LLVM to 3.6.1
- GCC to GCC 5.1
- Replace minix/commands/zdump with usr.bin/zdump
- external/bsd/libelf has moved to /external/bsd/elftoolchain/
- Import ctwm
- Drop sprintf from libminc
Change-Id: I149836ac18e9326be9353958bab9b266efb056f0
. bitcode fixes
. switch to compiler-rt instead of netbsd libc functions
or libgcc for support functions for both x86 and arm
. minor build fixes
. allow build with llvm without crossbuilding llvm itself
. can now build minix/arm using llvm and eabi - without C++
support for now (hence crossbuilding llvm itself is turned off
for minix/arm)
Change-Id: If5c44ef766f5b4fc4394d4586ecc289927a0d6eb
This library provides new abstractions for the upper (VFS) side of
file system services, and should be used for all file system service
implementations from now on. It provides the following functionality:
- a function call table abstraction, hiding the details of the
VFS-FS protocol with simple parameters;
- a (currently limited) number of per-function steps required for
all file system implementations, such as copying in and out path
names and result buffers;
- a default implementation for multicomponent path lookups, such
that the file system merely has to implement resolution of single
components at a time;
- an abstraction for copying data from and to the file system, which
allows transparent intraprocess copying as required for the lookup
implementation;
- a set of functions to simplify getdents implementations.
The message loop provided by the library is currently for use by
single-threaded file system implementations only. Multithreaded file
system services may use the more low-level message processing
functionality.
Protocol-level optimizations such as including names in protocol
messages may be hidden entirely in this library. In addition, in the
future, the lookup implementation may be replaced by a single-
component lookup VFS/FS protocol request as part of a VFS name cache
implementation; this, too, can be hidden entirely in this library.
Change-Id: Ib34f0d0e021dfa3426ce8826efcf3eaa94d3ef3e
. get rid of includes in libcompat_minix:
. move configfile.h to minix/include/
. all others are unneeded as they point to other files
. merge the .c files with libc
Change-Id: I5e840c66fb9bc484f377926aa9d66473bbd16259
This library is built just so that something is present in
/usr/lib/libgcc_s.so.1. This is needed for dynamically programs built
with gcc, which might reference that library at runtime (i.e. all pkgsrc
packages). The necessary symbols are in libc however, so when built on a
clang-only system, so an empty library is a working stopgap.
This patch adds pthread compatibility by using libmthread.
To use this with a program using pthreads, you have to replace
#include <pthread>
with
#define _MTHREADIFY_PTHREADS
#include <minix/mthreads>
This also changes the initialization function to be a constructor, which
is implicitly called before the call to main. This allows for
conformance with pthreads, while not paying a high price by checking on
each mthread_* call whether the library has been initialized or not.
As mthread_init is now a constructor, it also has been set as static, and
relevent calls removed from programs using it.
Change-Id: I2aa375db557958d2bee9a70d285aabb990c88f00
- Fix for possible unset uid/gid in toproto
- Fix for default mtree style
- Update libelf
- Importing libexecinfo
- Resynchronize GCC, mpc, gmp, mpfr
- build.sh: Replace params with show-params.
This has been done as the make target has been renamed in the same
way, while a new target named params has been added. This new
target generates a file containing all the parameters, instead of
printing it on the console.
- Update test48 with new etc/services (Fix by Ben Gras <ben@minix3.org)
get getservbyport() out of the inner loop
Change-Id: Ie6ad5226fa2621ff9f0dee8782ea48f9443d2091
This commit separates the low-level keyboard driver from TTY, putting
it in a separate driver (PCKBD). The commit also separates management
of raw input devices from TTY, and puts it in a separate server
(INPUT). All keyboard and mouse input from hardware is sent by drivers
to the INPUT server, which either sends it to a process that has
opened a raw input device, or otherwise forwards it to TTY for
standard processing.
Design by Dirk Vogt. Prototype by Uli Kastlunger.
Additional changes made to the prototype:
- the event communication is now based on USB HID codes; all input
drivers have to use USB codes to describe events;
- all TTY keymaps have been converted to USB format, with the effect
that a single keymap covers all keys; there is no (static) escaped
keymap anymore;
- further keymap tweaks now allow remapping of literally all keys;
- input device renumbering and protocol rewrite;
- INPUT server rewrite, with added support for cancel and select;
- PCKBD reimplementation, including PC/AT-to-USB translation;
- support for manipulating keyboard LEDs has been added;
- keyboard and mouse multiplexer devices have been added to INPUT,
primarily so that an X server need only open two devices;
- a new "libinputdriver" library abstracts away protocol details from
input drivers, and should be used by all future input drivers;
- both INPUT and PCKBD can be restarted;
- TTY is now scheduled by KERNEL, so that it won't be punished for
running a lot; without this, simply running "yes" on the console
kills the system;
- the KIOCBELL IOCTL has been moved to /dev/console;
- support for the SCANCODES termios setting has been removed;
- obsolete keymap compression has been removed;
- the obsolete Olivetti M24 keymap has been removed.
Change-Id: I3a672fb8c4fd566734e4b46d3994b4b7fc96d578
On the AM335X, writes to the padconf registers must be done in privileged
mode. To allow userspace drivers to dynamically change the padconf at
runtime, a kernel call has been added.
Change-Id: I4b25d2879399b1785a360912faa0e90b5c258533
To do so, a few dependencies have been imported:
* external/bsd/lutok
* external/mit/lua
* external/public-domain/sqlite
* external/public-domain/xz
The Kyua framework is the new generation of ATF (Automated Test
Framework), it is composed of:
* external/bsd/atf
* external/bsd/kyua-atf-compat
* external/bsd/kyua-cli
* external/bsd/kyua-tester
* tests
Kyua/ATF being written in C++, it depends on libstdc++ which is
provided by GCC. As this is not part of the sources, Kyua is only
compiled when the native GCC utils are installed.
To install Kyua do the following:
* In a cross-build enviromnent, add the following to the build.sh
commandline: -V MKBINUTILS=yes -V MKGCCCMDS=yes
WARNING:
At this point the import is still experimental, and not supported
on native builds (a.k.a make build).
Change-Id: I26aee23c5bbd2d64adcb7c1beb98fe0d479d7ada
-By adding MKGCC=yes and MKGCCCMDS=yes on the make commandline
it is now possible to compile and install GCC on the system.
Before doing this, if you are not using the build.sh script,
you will need to call the fetch scripts in order to retrieve
the sources of GCC and its dependencies.
-Reduce difference with NetBSD share/mk
Move Minix-specific parameters from bsd.gcc.mk to bsd.own.mk,
which is anyway patched, so that bsd.gcc.mk is now aligned
on the NetBSD version.
-Clean libraries dependencies, compiles stdc++ only if gcc is
also compiled (it is part of the gcc sources)
-Correct minix.h header sequence, cleanup spec headers.
-Fix cross-compilation from a 32bit host targeting MINIX/arm
Change-Id: I1b234af18eed4ab5675188244e931b2a2b7bd943
Clock configuration will be needed by other/future subsystems such as i2c.
Extract the functionality from libgpio and put it into it's own library.
Change-Id: I6f6de0b3fb4d305ddfeac74123b78c983d1318dd
* Generalize GPIO handling.
* Add libs to configure gpio's clocks and pads
* Add Interrupt handling.
* Introduce mmio.h and log.h
Change-Id: I928e4c807d15031de2eede4b3ecff62df795f8ac
Due to the ABI we are using we have to use the earm architecture
moniker for the build system to behave correctly. This involves
then some headers to move around.
There is also a few related Makefile updates as well as minor
source code corrections.
The tested targets are the followgin ones:
* tools
* distribution
* sets
* release
The remaining NetBSD targets have not been disabled nor tested
*at all*. Try them at your own risk, they may reboot the earth.
For all compliant Makefiles, objects and generated files are put in
MAKEOBJDIR, which means you can now keep objects between two branch
switching. Same for DESTDIR, please refer to build.sh options.
Regarding new or modifications of Makefiles a few things:
* Read share/mk/bsd.README
* If you add a subdirectory, add a Makefile in it, and have it called
by the parent through the SUBDIR variable.
* Do not add arbitrary inclusion which crosses to another branch of
the hierarchy; If you can't do without it, put a comment on why.
If possible, do not use inclusion at all.
* Use as much as possible the infrastructure, it is here to make
life easier, do not fight it.
Sets and package are now used to track files.
We have one set called "minix", composed of one package called "minix-sys"
building defaults to off until clang is updated.
current clang does not handle -shared, necessary to change the ld
invocation to build shared libraries properly. a new clang should be
installed and MKPIC defaults to no unless the newer clang is detected.
changes:
. mainly small imports of a Makefile or two and small fixes
(turning things back on that were turned off in Makefiles)
. e.g.: dynamic librefuse now depends on dynamic
libpuffs, so libpuffs has to be built dynamically too
and a make dependency barrier is needed in lib/Makefile
. all library objects now have a PIC (for .so) and non-PIC
version, so everything is built twice.
. generate PIC versions of the compat (un-RENAMEd) jump files,
include function type annotation in generated assembly
. build progs with -static by default for now
. also build ld.elf_so
. also import NetBSD ldd
This Shared Folders File System library (libsffs) now contains all the
file system logic originally in HGFS. The actual HGFS server code is
now a stub that passes on all the work to libsffs. The libhgfs library
is changed accordingly.
- libnetsock - internal implementation of a socket on the lwip
server side. it encapsulates the asynchronous protocol
- lwip server - uses libnetsock to work with the asynchronous
protocol
There is important information about booting non-ack images in
docs/UPDATING. ack/aout-format images can't be built any more, and
booting clang/ELF-format ones is a little different. Updating to the
new boot monitor is recommended.
Changes in this commit:
. drop boot monitor -> allowing dropping ack support
. facility to copy ELF boot files to /boot so that old boot monitor
can still boot fairly easily, see UPDATING
. no more ack-format libraries -> single-case libraries
. some cleanup of OBJECT_FMT, COMPILER_TYPE, etc cases
. drop several ack toolchain commands, but not all support
commands (e.g. aal is gone but acksize is not yet).
. a few libc files moved to netbsd libc dir
. new /bin/date as minix date used code in libc/
. test compile fix
. harmonize includes
. /usr/lib is no longer special: without ack, /usr/lib plays no
kind of special bootstrapping role any more and bootstrapping
is done exclusively through packages, so releases depend even
less on the state of the machine making them now.
. rename nbsd_lib* to lib*
. reduce mtree