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Date:      Thu, 16 Jul 2020 00:19:18 +0200
From:      Daniel Ebdrup Jensen <debdrup@FreeBSD.org>
To:        announce@freebsd.org
Subject:   [FreeBSD-Announce] FreeBSD Quarterly Status Report - Second Quarter 2020
Message-ID:  <20200715221918.z7no7tkbyaus3tsy@nerd-thinkpad.local>

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FreeBSD Project Quarterly Status Report - Second Quarter 2020
Introduction

   This report will be covering FreeBSD related projects between April and
   June, and covers a diverse set of topics ranging from kernel updates
   over userland and ports, as well to third-party work.

   Some hilights picked with the roll of a d100 include, but are not
   limited to, the ability to forcibly unmounting UFS when the underlying
   media becomes inaccessible, added preliminary support for Bluetooth Low
   Energy, a introduction to the FreeBSD Office Hours, and a repository of
   software collections called potluck to be installed with the pot
   utility, as well as many many more things.

   As a little treat, readers can also get a rare report from the
   quarterly team.

   Finally, on behalf of the quarterly team, I would like to extend my
   deepest appreciation and thank you to salvadore@, who decided to take
   down his shingle. His contributions not just the quarterly reports
   themselves, but also the surrounding tooling to many-fold ease the
   work, are immeassurable.

   We hope you find the report as interesting as we have,
   Daniel Ebdrup Jensen (debdrup@), on behalf of the quarterly team.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Team Reports

     * FreeBSD Foundation
     * FreeBSD Core Team
     * FreeBSD Release Engineering Team
     * Cluster Administration Team
     * Continuous Integration
     * Ports Collection
     * FreeBSD Office Hours
     * Quarterly Status Reports Team

Projects

     * FreeBSD on Microsoft HyperV and Azure
     * Git Migration Working Group
     * Lua Usage in FreeBSD
     * Linux compatibility layer update
     * NFS over TLS implementation

Kernel

     * SoC audio framework and more audio drivers
     * bhyve - NVMe emulation improvements
     * Bluetooth Support
     * DRM Drivers Update
     * DTS Update
     * ENA FreeBSD Driver Update
     * Forcible Unmount of UFS/FFS Filesystems on Disk Failure
     * i.MX 8M support
     * Intel wireless and 11ac update
     * amd64 5-Level Paging Structures support
     * Not-transparent superpages
     * NXP ARM64 SoC support
     * amd64 pmap Fine-grained pv lists locking
     * Lockless routing lookups and scalable multipath
     * ZSTD Compression in ZFS
     * CheriBSD 2020 Q2

Architectures

     * Continuous Integration on !x86
     * FreeBSD/RISC-V Project

Userland Programs

     * Import of new implementation of bc and dc
     * Binutils Retirement
     * Run-Time Dynamic Linker improvements
     * VHDX support in mkimg(1)

Ports

     * Bastille
     * KDE on FreeBSD
     * Haskell on FreeBSD
     * rtsx - Porting driver for Realtek SD card reader from OpenBSD
     * Valgrind updates

Documentation

     * FreeBSD Translations on Weblate

Miscellaneous

     * FreshPorts
     * PCI passthrough with bhyve on Intel and for OpenBSD guests
     * SageMath

Third-Party Projects

     * chaifi - a tool to simplify joining public WiFi networks
     * MixerTUI
     * Potluck - Flavour & Image Repository for pot
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Team Reports

   Entries from the various official and semi-official teams, as found in
   the Administration Page.

FreeBSD Foundation

   Contact: Deb Goodkin <deb@FreeBSDFoundation.org>

   The FreeBSD Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated
   to supporting and promoting the FreeBSD Project and community
   worldwide. Funding comes from individual and corporate donations and is
   used to fund and manage software development projects, conferences and
   developer summits, and provide travel grants to FreeBSD contributors.
   The Foundation purchases and supports hardware to improve and maintain
   FreeBSD infrastructure and provides resources to improve security,
   quality assurance, and release engineering efforts; publishes marketing
   material to promote, educate, and advocate for the FreeBSD Project;
   facilitates collaboration between commercial vendors and FreeBSD
   developers; and finally, represents the FreeBSD Project in executing
   contracts, license agreements, and other legal arrangements that
   require a recognized legal entity.

   Here are some highlights of what we did to help FreeBSD last quarter:

COVID-19 Impact to the Foundation

   Like other organizations, we put policies in place for all of our staff
   members to work from home. We also put a temporary ban on travel for
   staff members. We are continuing our work supporting the community and
   Project, but some of our work and responses may be delayed because of
   changes in some of our priorities and the impact of limited childcare
   for a few of our staff members.

Partnerships and Commercial User Support

   We help facilitate collaboration between commercial users and FreeBSD
   developers. We also meet with companies to discuss their needs and
   bring that information back to the Project. Not surprisingly, the stay
   at home orders, combined with our company ban on travel during Q2 made
   in-person meetings non-existent. However, the team was able to continue
   meeting with our partners and commercial users virtually. These
   meetings help us understand some of the applications where FreeBSD is
   used.

Fundraising Efforts

   Last quarter we raised $268,400! Thank you to the individuals and
   organizations that stepped in to help fund our efforts. We'd like to
   thank Netflix, employees of Nginx, Beckhoff Automation, and Mozilla
   Foundation for their large contributions last quarter, which helped
   bring our 2020 fundraising effort to $339k. We hope other organizations
   will follow their lead and give back to help us continue supporting
   FreeBSD.

   These are trying times, and we deeply appreciate every donation that
   has come in from $5 to $150,000. We're still here giving 110% to
   supporting FreeBSD!

   We are 100% funded by donations, and those funds go towards software
   development work to improve FreeBSD, FreeBSD advocacy around the world,
   keeping FreeBSD secure, continuous integration improvements, sponsoring
   BSD-related and computing conferences (even the virtual events!), legal
   support for the Project, and many other areas.

   Please consider making a donation to help us continue and increase our
   support for FreeBSD.

   We also have the Partnership Program, to provide more benefits for our
   larger commercial donors. Find out more information about the
   partnership program and share with your companies!

OS Improvements

   A number of FreeBSD Foundation grant recipients started, continued
   working on, or completed projects during the second quarter. These
   include:
     * WiFi improvements
     * Linuxulator application compatibility
     * DRM / Graphics driver updates
     * Zstd compression for OpenZFS
     * Online RAID-Z expansion
     * if_bridge performance improvements

   You can find more details about most of these projects in other
   quarterly reports.

   Staff members also worked on a number of larger projects, including:
     * Run-Time Dynamic Linker (rtld) improvements
     * Improved FreeBSD support on Microsoft HyperV and Azure
     * Fine-grained locking for amd64 pmap
     * 5-level paging structures for amd64
     * Non-transparent superpages
     * Migration to a Git repository
     * Tool chain modernization

   Many of these projects also have detailed entries in other quarterly
   report entries.

   Staff members also put in significant effort in many ways other than
   larger, individual projects. These include assisting with code reviews,
   bug report triage, security report triage and advisory handling,
   addressing syzkaller reports, and ongoing maintenance and bug fixes in
   functional areas such as the tool chain, developer tools, virtual
   memory kernel subsystem, low-level x86 infrastructure, sockets and
   protocols, and others.

University of Waterloo Co-op

   Foundation co-op students Colin, Tiger, and Yang completed their winter
   2020 work term during the second quarter, and continued on with the
   next school term in their respective programs. Although COVID-19
   presented a unique challenge and prompted an abrupt transition to
   remote work just over half way through the term, all three learned a
   lot and provided positive contributions to the FreeBSD Project and to
   the Foundation.

   A few projects that were in progress or completed during the work term
   were committed to the FreeBSD tree in the second quarter.

Continuous Integration and Quality Assurance

   The Foundation provides a full-time staff member who is working on
   improving continuous integration, automated testing, and overall
   quality assurance efforts for the FreeBSD project.

   During the second quarter of 2020, Foundation staff continued improving
   the Project's CI infrastructure, monitoring regressions and working
   with contributors to fix the failing build and test cases. The setting
   up of VM host for CI jobs and staging environment is in progress. We
   are also working with other teams in the Project for their testing
   needs. For example, we added jobs for running full tests on non-x86
   architectures. We are also working with many external projects and
   companies to improve their support of FreeBSD.

   See the FreeBSD CI section of this report for completed work items and
   detailed information.

Supporting FreeBSD Infrastructure

   The Foundation provides hardware and support to improve FreeBSD
   infrastructure. Last quarter, we continued supporting FreeBSD hardware
   located around the world. We started working on getting the new NYI
   Chicago colocation facility prepared for some of the new FreeBSD
   hardware we are planning on purchasing. NYI generously provides this
   for free to the Project.

FreeBSD Advocacy and Education

   A large part of our efforts are dedicated to advocating for the
   Project. This includes promoting work being done by others with
   FreeBSD; producing advocacy literature to teach people about FreeBSD
   and help make the path to starting using FreeBSD or contributing to the
   Project easier; and attending and getting other FreeBSD contributors to
   volunteer to run FreeBSD events, staff FreeBSD tables, and give FreeBSD
   presentations.

   The FreeBSD Foundation sponsors many conferences, events, and summits
   around the globe. These events can be BSD-related, open source, or
   technology events geared towards underrepresented groups. We support
   the FreeBSD-focused events to help provide a venue for sharing
   knowledge, to work together on projects, and to facilitate
   collaboration between developers and commercial users. This all helps
   provide a healthy ecosystem. We support the non-FreeBSD events to
   promote and raise awareness of FreeBSD, to increase the use of FreeBSD
   in different applications, and to recruit more contributors to the
   Project. As is the case for most of us in this industry, COVID-19 has
   put our in-person events on hold. In addition to attending virtual
   events, we are continually working on new training initiatives and
   updating our selection of how-to guides to facilitate getting more
   folks to try out FreeBSD.

   Check out some of the advocacy and education work we did last quarter:
     * Silver sponsor of BSDCan 2020. The event was held virtually, June
       2-6, 2020
     * Community Sponsor of Rootconf 2020. The event was held virtually,
       June 19-20, 2020
     * Annual FreeBSD Day, June 19. This year's celebration was postponed
       in support of Juneteeth. However the activities surrounding FreeBSD
       Day have been transformed into an ongoing series of online
       sessions. See FreeBSD Fridays below for more information.
     * Presented 27 Years of FreeBSD and Why You Should Get Involved as
       part of a Linux Professional Institute series of webinars on June
       24, 2020.
     * Attended and presented at the virtual Open Source Summit 2020.
     * Announced FreeBSD Fridays: A series of 101 classes designed to get
       you started with FreeBSD. Find out more in the announcement
     * Participated as an Admin for Google Summer of Code 2020
     * Participated in the new FreeBSD Office Hours series including
       holding our own Foundation led office hours. Videos from the one
       hour sessions can be found on the Project's YouTube Channel. You
       can watch ours here.

   In addition to the information found in the Development Projects update
   section of this report, take a minute to check out the latest update
   blogs:
     * 5x if_bridge Performance Improvement
     * My Experience as a FreeBSD Foundation Co-Op Student

   Keep up to date with our latest work in our Bi-Monthly newsletters.

   Mellanox provided an update on how and why they use FreeBSD in our
   latest Contributor Case Study.

   We help educate the world about FreeBSD by publishing the
   professionally produced FreeBSD Journal. As we mentioned previously,
   the FreeBSD Journal is now a free publication. Find out more and access
   the latest issues on the Journal site.

   You can find out more about events we attended and upcoming events.

   We have continued our work with a new website developer to help us
   improve our website. Work is nearly complete to make it easier for
   community members to find information more easily and to make the site
   more efficient. We look forward to unveiling the refreshed site in Q3.

Foundation Board Meeting

   Our annual board meeting was held on Tuesday June 2, 2020. We normally
   hold this meeting the Tuesday before BSDCan, in Ottawa, Ontario,
   Canada, but with the company travel ban, and the conference going
   virtual, our meeting went virtual for the first time. The purpose of
   the annual board meeting is to hold our board director and officer
   elections, review work accomplished over the past year, and put
   together strategic goals for the upcoming 12 months.

   The board generally has two all-day board meetings each year, this one,
   and a more informal one in January, typically held in Berkeley. Both
   meetings allow us to connect, reevaluate and discuss new ideas, while
   assessing what we should do to help the Project.

   Some of our longer-term goals include Growing User and Developer
   Communities, Developing Training and OS Course Content, Improving
   desktop/laptop experience, Promoting FreeBSD (as you can see in all the
   advocacy work listed above), and Improving Testing Capabilities.

   Results of the director and officer elections were:
     * Justin Gibbs (President)
     * Benedict Reuschling (Vice President)
     * Kirk McKusick (Treasurer)
     * Philip Paeps (Secretary)
     * Deb Goodkin (Assistant Secretary)
     * Robert Watson (Director)
     * Hiroki Sato (Director)
     * George Neville-Neil (Director)

   Find out more about the FreeBSD Foundation Board of Directors on our
   website.

Legal/FreeBSD IP

   The Foundation owns the FreeBSD trademarks, and it is our
   responsibility to protect them. We also provide legal support for the
   core team to investigate questions that arise.

   Go to the FreeBSD Foundation's web site to find out how we support
   FreeBSD and how we can help you!
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Core Team

   Contact: FreeBSD Core Team <core@FreeBSD.org>

   The FreeBSD Core Team is the governing body of FreeBSD.

   The Core Team held 10 meetings during the second quarter of 2020,
   including a 2020-05-21 joint meeting with members of the FreeBSD
   Foundation. Here are some highlights from that meeting:
     * Deb requested guidance on how the Foundation can support the
       community. Core and Foundation members believe that more developer
       support is necessary to fill gaps in areas where commercial
       customers do not provide backing. The clearest example of such a
       gap is the desktop experience, including graphics and wireless
       support. What makes this request different from past requests is
       that rather than support for one-time projects, ongoing positions
       are necessary for a consistently high-quality desktop experience.
       "FreeBSD not being able to run on your laptop is the first step to
       irrelevance." Ed Maste
     * Both teams discussed topics for upcoming sessions of FreeBSD Office
       Hours, informal FreeBSD video conferences that anyone can attend.
       Everyone agreed that the Office Hours have been a useful way for
       different parts of the Project to engage with each other and with
       the wider community. Kudos to Allan Jude for initiating the Office
       Hours and for everyone who has helped make them a success by
       hosting or attending sessions.
     * Both teams agreed that they should meet once per quarter.

   The second annual community survey closed on 2020-06-16. The purpose of
   the survey is to collect data from the public to help guide the
   Project's efforts and priorities. As an example, last year's survey
   results helped initiate the Project's conversion to Git. Thank you to
   all who took the time to respond. The results will be released soon.

   The Core-initiated Git Working Group continued to make progress, but
   there are still some remaining issues to be worked out with the
   translation from Subversion. Hopefully the new Git src repository will
   be ready for use this summer. A beta version has been published for
   people to test and a preliminary version of a Using Git for FreeBSD
   Development primer will soon be ready to share. Core, the Git Working
   Group, and Release Engineering are working towards the goal of
   releasing 12.2 from the new Git repository.

   Following the results of a Core-initiated developer survey, The FreeBSD
   Project has adopted a new LLVM-derived [code of
   conduct](https://www.freebsd.org/internal/code-of-conduct.html).

   The eleventh FreeBSD Core Team was elected by active developers. From a
   pool of 23, the 9 successful candidates for core.11 are:
     * Sean Chittenden (seanc, incumbent)
     * Baptiste Daroussin (bapt)
     * Kyle Evans (kevans)
     * Mark Johnston (markj)
     * Scott Long (scottl)
     * Warner Losh (imp, incumbent)
     * Ed Maste (emaste)
     * George V. Neville-Neil (gnn)
     * Hiroki Sato (hrs, incumbent)

   A new Core Team secretary, Muhammad Moinur Rahman (bofh), was
   unanimously approved by core.11. The outgoing core team met three times
   with the new core team to help with the transition. Core.10 wishes
   core.11 a successful term.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Release Engineering Team

   Links
   FreeBSD 11.4-RELEASE announcement=20
    URL: https://www.freebsd.org/releases/11.4R/announce.html
   FreeBSD 11.4-RELEASE schedule=20
    URL: https://www.freebsd.org/releases/11.4R/schedule.html
   FreeBSD development snapshots=20
    URL: https://download.freebsd.org/ftp/snapshots/ISO-IMAGES/

   Contact: FreeBSD Release Engineering Team <re@FreeBSD.org>

   The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team is responsible for setting and
   publishing release schedules for official project releases of FreeBSD,
   announcing code slushes, and maintaining the respective branches, among
   other things.

   During the second quarter of 2020, the Release Engineering Team started
   work on the 11.4-RELEASE cycle, the fifth release from the stable/11
   branch. The release cycle went quite smoothly, with both BETA3 and RC3
   removed from the schedule. This allowed the final release to occur one
   week earlier than originally scheduled, which was announced June 16.
   FreeBSD 11.4-RELEASE is expected to be the final 11.x release.

   The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team would like to thank everyone
   involved in this cycle for their hard work.

   Additionally throughout the quarter, several development snapshots
   builds were released for the head, stable/12, and stable/11 branches.

   Much of this work was sponsored by Rubicon Communications, LLC
   (netgate.com) and the FreeBSD Foundation.
     __________________________________________________________________

Cluster Administration Team

   Links
   Cluster Administration Team members=20
    URL: https://www.freebsd.org/administration.html#t-clusteradm

   Contact: Cluster Administration Team <clusteradm@FreeBSD.org>

   The FreeBSD Cluster Administration Team consists of the people
   responsible for administering the machines that the Project relies on
   for its distributed work and communications to be synchronised. In this
   quarter, the team has worked on the following:
     * Upgrade all x86 ref- and universe-machines
     * Setup Amsterdam (PKT) mirror
     * Solve hardware issue for bugzilla and svnweb backend
     * Setup public beta git server
     * Decommission CyberOne Data (CYB) mirror
     * Ongoing systems administration work:
          + Accounts management for committers.
          + Backups of critical infrastructure.
          + Keeping up with security updates in 3rd party software.

   Work in progress:
     * Setup Malaysia (KUL) mirror
     * Setup Brazil (BRA) mirror
     * Review the service jails and service administrators operation.
     * Infrastructure of building aarch64 and powerpc64 packages
          + NVME issues on PowerPC64 Power9 blocking dual socket machine
            from being used as pkg builder.
          + Drive upgrade test for pkg builders (SSDs) courtesy of the
            FreeBSD Foundation.
          + Boot issues with Aarch64 reference machines.
     * New NYI.net sponsored colocation space in Chicago-land area.
     * Work with git working group
     * Check new hardware requirement from other teams
     * Searching for more providers that can fit the requirements for a
       generic mirrored layout or a tiny mirror
     __________________________________________________________________

Continuous Integration

   Links
   FreeBSD Jenkins Instance=20
    URL: https://ci.FreeBSD.org
   FreeBSD Hardware Testing Lab=20
    URL: https://ci.FreeBSD.org/hwlab
   FreeBSD CI artifact archive=20
    URL: https://artifact.ci.FreeBSD.org
   FreeBSD CI weekly report=20
    URL: https://hackmd.io/@FreeBSD-CI
   FreeBSD Jenkins wiki=20
    URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/Jenkins
   Hosted CI wiki=20
    URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/HostedCI
   3rd Party Software CI=20
    URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/3rdPartySoftwareCI
   Tickets related to freebsd-testing@=20
    URL: https://preview.tinyurl.com/y9maauwg
   FreeBSD CI Repository=20
    URL: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-ci

   Contact: Jenkins Admin <jenkins-admin@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Li-Wen Hsu <lwhsu@FreeBSD.org>

   Contact: freebsd-testing Mailing List
   Contact: IRC #freebsd-ci channel on EFNet

   The FreeBSD CI team maintains the continuous integration system for the
   FreeBSD project. The CI system firstly checks the committed changes can
   be successfully built, then performs various tests and analysis over
   the newly built results. The artifacts from the build jobs are archived
   in the artifact server for further testing and debugging needs. The CI
   team members examine the failing builds and unstable tests and work
   with the experts in that area to fix the codes or adjust test
   infrastructure. The details of these efforts are available in the
   weekly CI reports.

   During the second quarter of 2020, we continue working with the
   contributors and developers in the project for their testing needs and
   also keep working with external projects and companies to improve their
   support of FreeBSD.

   Important changes:
     * All -test jobs will run tests under /usr/tests, previously only x86
       architectures doing this. See the Continuous Integration on !x86
       section in this report for more information.
     * Compression algorithm of disk images on the artifact server has
       been changed to zstd to speed up compression and decompression.
     * The build and test results will be sent to the dev-ci mailing list
       soon. Feedback and help with analysis is very appreciated!

   New jobs added:
     * https://ci.freebsd.org/job/FreeBSD-head-armv7-test/
     * https://ci.freebsd.org/job/FreeBSD-head-aarch64-test/
     * https://ci.freebsd.org/job/FreeBSD-head-mips64-test/
     * https://ci.freebsd.org/job/FreeBSD-head-powerpc64-test/

   Work in progress:
     * Collecting and sorting CI tasks and ideas here
     * Testing and merging pull requests in the the FreeBSD-ci repo
     * Setting up a builder dedicated to run jobs using provisioned VMs.
     * Setting up the CI stage environment and putting the experimental
       jobs on it
     * Implementing automatic tests on bare metal hardware
     * Adding drm ports building tests against -CURRENT
     * Planning to run ztest and network stack tests
     * Adding external toolchain related jobs
     * Improving the hardware lab to be more mature and adding more
       hardware
     * Helping more 3rd software get CI on FreeBSD through a hosted CI
       solution
     * Working with hosted CI providers to have better FreeBSD support

   Please see freebsd-testing@ related tickets for more WIP information,
   and don't hesistate to join the effort!

   Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation
     __________________________________________________________________

Ports Collection

   Links
   About FreeBSD Ports=20
    URL: https://www.FreeBSD.org/ports/
   Contributing to Ports=20
    URL: https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributing/=
ports-contributing.html
   FreeBSD Ports Monitoring=20
    URL: http://portsmon.freebsd.org/index.html
   Ports Management Team=20
    URL: https://www.freebsd.org/portmgr/index.html

   Contact: Ren=E9 Ladan <portmgr-secretary@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: FreeBSD Ports Management Team <portmgr@FreeBSD.org>

   The Ports Management Team is responsible for overseeing the overall
   direction of the Ports Tree, building packages, and personnel matters.
   Below is what happened in the last quarter.

   There are currently 2,373 open ports PRs of which 526 are unassigned,
   for a total of 39,628 ports. In the last quarter there were 10,315
   commits to HEAD and 476 to the quarterly branch by respectively 178 and
   65 committers. Compared to the quarter before, this means a significant
   increase in commits and also a slight decrease in open PRs.

   During the last quarter, we welcomed Hiroki Tagato (tagattie@). We said
   goodbye to seanc@, zleslie@, gnn@ and salvadore@.

   A few default versions got bumped:
     * Java (new) at 8
     * Lazarus to 2.0.8

   It is now possible to write pkg scripts in Lua instead of sh.

   They have two advantages over their sh versions:
     * they run in a Capsicum sandbox
     * they respect rootdir, the directory which pkg will use as the
       starting point to install all packages under.

   Some user-facing packages were also updated:
     * pkg to 1.14.6
     * Firefox to 78.0.1
     * Thunderbird to 68.10.0
     * Chromium to 83.0.4103.116
     * Ruby to 2.5.8, 2.6.6, and 2.7.1
     * Qt5 to 5.14.2

   During the last quarter, antoine@ ran 55 exp-runs to test port version
   updates, make liblzma use libmd, flavor devel/scons and Lua ports, add
   and update library functions in the base system, make malloc.h usable
   again, remove as(1) from the base system, and augment sed(1) with -f.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Office Hours

   Links
   Office Hours on the FreeBSD Wiki=20
    URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/OfficeHours
   Poll: What time would you prefer Office Hours be at=20
    URL: https://forms.gle/3HjjRx9KMcM3SL4H7
   live.FreeBSD.org: Aggregation of Live streams=20
    URL: https://live.freebsd.org/

   Contact: Allan Jude <allanjude@freebsd.org>

   Starting on the first of April 2020, the FreeBSD project has started
   hosting regular video streams to foster greater communication within
   the wider FreeBSD community. The first of these sessions took the form
   of a public question and answer session, which drew over 60
   participants. A second session was held two weeks later at a time more
   appropriate for those in Asia, but only drew 20 participants. With the
   help of the FreeBSD Foundation, we ran a poll to discover what times
   worked best for the greatest number of people.

   On May 13th the FreeBSD Foundation hosted a session where the community
   could ask questions of or about the foundation. On May 27th many of the
   candidates for the new FreeBSD Core Team joined an office hours session
   to answer questions from the community. Finally on June 24th another
   general question and answer office hours was held.

   Each office hours session consists of a video meeting of some FreeBSD
   developers or other subject matter experts, live streamed along with an
   IRC chat room for viewers to pose questions to the panel. The stream is
   recorded and posted to the official FreeBSD youtube channel.

   If you would like to host an office hours session, please contact:
     * Allan Jude
     * Anne Dickison

   Sponsor: ScaleEngine Inc. (video streaming)
     __________________________________________________________________

Quarterly Status Reports Team

   Links
   Quarterly status reports=20
    URL: https://www.freebsd.org/news/status/
   Git repository          =20
    URL: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-quarterly

   Contact: Quarterly Status Reports <quarterly@FreBSD.org>
   Contact: Daniel Ebdrup Jensen <debdrup@FreeBSD.org>

   The Quarterly Status Reports Team collects and publish the reports that
   you are reading right now.

   Many improvements have been done recently and thus we believe it is
   useful that the Quarterly Status Reports Team submits a report. Not all
   the changes below are specific to the last quarter, but we list them
   here anyway since we did not write an entry for earlier reports.
     * Reports are now built using Makefiles. Among the many advantages,
       this allows us to easily sort reports logically. Indeed, starting
       with 2019Q4, all reports are sorted logically, while before they
       were sorted alphabetically within each category.
     * The conversion from markdown to docbook was performed using a
       python script, with some known bugs. Salvadore has rewritten the
       script using perl fixing most of the bugs. Some features are
       missing and many improvements are possible, but the script is very
       unlikely to receive any change since it will become obsolete as
       soon as the conversion to Hugo/AsciiDoctor is completed.
     * Another perl script to ease the preparation of the mail version of
       the reports was written.
     * One more perl script has been written to allow the quarterly team
       to send quarterly calls automatically using a cron job. We used it
       this quarter for the first time.
     * As you might have noticed, last quarterly calls have been sent to
       freebsd-quarterly-calls@: this is a new mailing list to which you
       can subscribe to receive calls for quarterly reports. Please note
       this is a moderated list, with very low traffic and a high signal
       to noise ratio.
     * If you read carefully the last quarterly calls, you should have
       noticed that we now ask you to send reports to
       quarterly-submissions@ instead of quarterly@. This was done to help
       the quarterly team distinguishing internal discussions from
       submissions. Please keep in mind however that the quarterly team
       prefers receiving pull requests, as they ease the administrative
       work.

   We would like to thank philip@, from the postmaster team, for having
   created the freebsd-quarterly-calls@ mailing list and the
   quarterly-submissions@ address for us.
     __________________________________________________________________

Projects

   Projects that span multiple categories, from the kernel and userspace
   to the Ports Collection or external projects.

FreeBSD on Microsoft HyperV and Azure

   Links
   FreeBSD on MicrosoftAzure wiki=20
    URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/MicrosoftAzure
   FreeBSD on Microsoft HyperV   =20
    URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/HyperV

   Contact: FreeBSD Integration Services Team <bsdic@microsoft.com>
   Contact: Wei Hu <whu@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Li-Wen Hsu <lwhsu@FreeBSD.org>

   HyperV socket for FreeBSD implemented by Wei was checked into FreeBSD
   head branch on May 20th as r361275. It supports guest/host
   communications without the need for networking. Some HyperV and Azure
   features rely on this to be available in guests.

   Details of HyperV Socket is available here.

   This project is sponsored by Microsoft.

   Li-Wen is working on the FreeBSD release code related to Azure for the
   -CURRENT, 12-STABLE and 11-STABLE branches. The work-in-progress is
   available here. The 12.1-RELEASE image on Azure Marketplace is
   published. The work on the 11.4-RELEASE image on Azure Marketplace is
   in progress.

   This project is sponsored by The FreeBSD Foundation.
     __________________________________________________________________

Git Migration Working Group

   Links
   Git conversion tooling repo=20
    URL: https://github.com/freebsd/git_conv
   FreeBSD-git mailing list=20
    URL: https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-git
   Beta doc git repo=20
    URL: https://cgit-beta.FreeBSD.org/doc
   Beta ports git repo=20
    URL: https://cgit-beta.FreeBSD.org/ports
   Beta src git repo=20
    URL: https://cgit-beta.FreeBSD.org/src

   Contact: Ed Maste <emaste@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Warner Losh <imp@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Ulrich Sp=F6rlein <uqs@FreeBSD.org>

   Work continues on FreeBSD's migration from Subversion to Git. Ulrich
   has iterated on updates to svn2git in order to improve the fidelity of
   the conversion, particularly in regards to vendor (contrib) code
   updates. We believe the conversion is now at an acceptable state, but
   may make minor adjustments if additional issues are found. We expect to
   push modifications to the converter every two weeks (first and third
   Sunday of the month). This means that commit hashes in the beta repo
   will remain stable for at least two weeks at a time, to allow others to
   test and experiment with the beta repo.

   We are now working on updating FreeBSD processes and documentation.
   This includes:
     * Writing a Git Primer, akin to the existing Subversion primer
     * Updates to the Security Team's tools and processes
     * Release engineering updates
     * Ports and packages process updates

   Those with an interest in the migration to Git are encouraged to
   subscribe to the FreeBSD-git mailing list and test out the beta src,
   ports, and/or doc repositories.

   You are also welcome check out the wiki, issues, README and other
   documentation at the Git conversion tooling repo.

   We expect to be ready for the migration in the next quarter.

   Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation (in part)
     __________________________________________________________________

Lua Usage in FreeBSD

   Contact: Ed Maste <emaste@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Kyle Evans <kevans@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Ryan Moeller <freqlabs@FreeBSD.org>

   Lua is a small, efficient scripting language that FreeBSD imported
   before FreeBSD 12.0 for use in the bootloader. Since then, several
   projects outside of the bootloader have gained some amount of traction
   with Lua usage:
     * /usr/libexec/flua is now installed for internal usage
     * makesyscalls.sh was rewritten in Lua
     * pkg has gained support for lua scripts
     * lldb in the base system now supports lua scripting

   FreeBSD Lua ("flua") is a version of the lua interpreter that has
   several modules built-in for convenient usage within the base system.
   flua is installed with a non-standard name and in a location not
   included in $PATH so that it is not accidentally found by third-party
   software or configure scripts. The FreeBSD project makes no guarantees
   about upgrade cadence or module stability. That said, it is available
   for use by downstream projects and FreeBSD users aware of those
   limitations.

   Previous work with flua includes, for example, adding libucl support
   and future work includes libifconfig support for scripting usage.

   People interested in working with Lua in FreeBSD are welcome to get in
   contact to discuss other project ideas. To name a couple of potential
   projects, some interesting modules that have not been started but could
   prove useful (listed in no particular order):
     * libcrypt
     * libexpat
     * libjail
     * libnv
     * libxo
     __________________________________________________________________

Linux compatibility layer update

   Contact: Edward Tomasz Napierala <trasz@FreeBSD.org>

   Earlier Linuxulator work focused on code cleanups and improving
   diagnostic tools. Work has now shifted from cleanups to fixing actual
   applications. Current status is being tracked at Linux app status Wiki
   page. Initial focus is on applications that don't involve X11, mostly
   because they tend to be easier to test and debug, and the bug fixes are
   not application-specific.

   Example problems fixed include buggy madvise(2) handling, which could
   break applications linked against jemalloc; uname(2) returning wrong
   results for 32 bit apps, which caused problems for Steam; recvmsg(2)
   and accept(2) being broken in some circumstances, which was breaking
   Redis; and missing support for SO_REUSEPORT, SO_SNDBUFFORCE,
   SO_RCVBUFFORCE, and SO_PROTOCOL, which spammed the log files when
   running the Python regression test suite. The default soft open files
   limit is now automatically adjusted to 1024, as several Linux apps
   iterate over all the file descriptors up to that limit instead of using
   closefrom(2).

   There's ongoing work on cleanups and the debugging framework for Linux
   compatibility, such as logging warnings for unrecognized system call
   parameters, or adding the compat.linux.debug sysctl to turn the
   warnings off.

   The Linux Test Project tests that are being run as part of the the
   FreeBSD Continuous Integration infrastructure has been upgraded to
   20200605 snapshot. This raised the number of test cases from 3670 to
   3749, and, predictably, also the number of failures, from 583 to 647.

   There's still a lot to do:
     * There are pending reviews for patches that add extended attributes
       support, and fexecve(2) syscall, and they require wrapping up and
       committing
     * There are over 500 failing LTP tests. Some of them are false
       positives, some are easy to fix bugs, and some require adding new
       system calls. Any help is welcome.

   Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation
     __________________________________________________________________

NFS over TLS implementation

   Contact: Rick Macklem <rmacklem@freebsd.org>

   In an effort to improve NFS security, an internet draft which I expect
   will become an RFC soon specifies the use of TLS 1.3 to encrypt all
   data traffic on a Sun RPC connection used for NFS.

   Although NFS has been able to use sec=3Dkrb5p to encrypt data on the
   wire, this requires a Kerberos environment and, as such, has not been
   widely adopted. It also required that encryption/decryption be done in
   software, since only the RPC message NFS arguments are encrypted. Since
   Kernel TLS is capable of using hardware assist to improve performance
   and does not require Kerberos, NFS over TLS may be more widely adopted,
   once implementations are available.

   The project to implement this has largely been completed. The code will
   slowly be merged into head/current and at least the kernel portion
   should be in FreeBSD-13.

   To support clients such as laptops, the daemons that perform the TLS
   handshake may optionally handle client X.509 certificates from a site
   local CA. There are now exports(5) options to require client(s) to
   provide a valid X.509 certificate.

   The code is now available for testing. See:
   https://people.freebsd.org/~rmacklem/nfs-over-tls-setup.txt Setting up
   system(s) for testing is still a little awkward, as explained by the
   above rough document.

   The main limitation in the current implementation is that it uses
   TLS1.2 and not TLS1.3. This should change once the KERN_TLS rx patch
   includes TLS1.3 support. Also, testing of pNFS configurations has not
   yet been done, but will be tested soon.

   Third party testing would be appreciated.
     __________________________________________________________________

Kernel

   Updates to kernel subsystems/features, driver support, filesystems, and
   more.

SoC audio framework and more audio drivers

   Links
   rk3399_audio=20
    URL: https://github.com/gonzoua/freebsd/tree/rk3399_audio

   Contact: Oleksandr Tymoshenko <gonzo@FreeBSD.org>

   SoC audio framework made a good progress since last report.
   Support for AUX devices was added (devices like auxiliary amplifiers
   that are not part of main CODEC chip).
   To verify the framework design following audio drivers were added:
   recording support for RT5640 CODEC(Firefly-RK3399), Allwinner I2S,
   Alwinners sun8i and A64 CODECs (Pine A64+), both recording and
   playback.
   Current work in progress is RK3328 CODEC (Rock64) and ES8316 CODEC
   (RockPro64 and Pinebook Pro).
     __________________________________________________________________

bhyve - NVMe emulation improvements

   Links
   bhyve NVMe reviews=20
    URL: https://reviews.freebsd.org/search/query/xvbcF20W__Km/

   Contact: Chuck Tuffli <chuck@freebsd.org>

   The University of New Hampshire InterOperability Laboratory (a.k.a. UNH
   IOL) develops a suite of tests to determine if an NVMe device conforms
   to the specification and is interoperable with other NVMe products.
   This quarter, I undertook getting bhyve's emulated NVMe device to pass
   the mandatory tests. Changes include:
     * implement Flush command
     * implement Format NVM command
     * implement AER support
     * implement Namespace Identification Descriptor
     * fix Active Namespace list
     * fix queue creation and deletion
     * validate Deallocate range values
     * handle zero length DSM ranges
     * fix Get Log Page command
     * implement SMART data I/O statistics
     * validate the LBA start and count
     * add basic Firmware Commit support
     * add more compliant Get/Set Features
     * add Feature, Interrupt Vector Config
     * fix Get Features, Predictable Latency

   This was also a good opportunity to restructure parts of the code to
   make it more modular and easier to enhance. This includes
     * convert logging statements to parameterized macros
     * refactor I/O command handling
     * add locks around queue accesses
     * consolidate CQ update
     * base pci_nvme_ioreq size on advertised MDTS

   You can help by testing and/or commenting on the code reviews.
     __________________________________________________________________

Bluetooth Support

   Contact: Marc Veldman <marc@bumblingdork.com>

   Bluetooth is a wireless technology for creating personal networks,
   connecting peripherals like keyboards and mice but also speakers and
   heart rate monitors.

   FreeBSD has limited Bluetooth Basic Rate (BR) support and no functional
   Bluetooth Low Energy (LE) support.

   During this quarter many small improvements have been made to help the
   development of Bluetooth LE support. A number of commands have been
   added to hccontrol(8), mainly to do LE functions. It is now possible to
   scan for LE devices within range using hccontrol. A panic that occurred
   when enabling LE support has also been fixed.

   Work is still needed to add Attribute Protocol (ATT) and Generic
   Attribute Profile (GATT) support.
     __________________________________________________________________

DRM Drivers Update

   Links
   drm-kmod=20
    URL: https://github.com/freebsd/drm-kmod/

   Contact: Emmanuel Vadot <manu@FreeBSD.Org>

   The drm drivers for FreeBSD 13-CURRENT have been updated to match Linux
   5.3 This brings us a little bit closer to the last LTS release of Linux
   (5.4).

   The current plan is to first update the driver to match 5.4 and then
   look at making it work on FreeBSD-12-STABLE to have it ready for the
   12.2 release.

   Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation
     __________________________________________________________________

DTS Update

   Contact: Emmanuel Vadot <manu@FreeBSD.org>

   DTS files (Device Tree Sources) were updated to be on par with Linux
   5.7 for HEAD and 5.6 for the 12-STABLE branch.
     __________________________________________________________________

ENA FreeBSD Driver Update

   Links
   ENA README=20
    URL: https://github.com/amzn/amzn-drivers/blob/master/kernel/fbsd/ena/R=
EADME

   Contact: Michal Krawczyk <mk@semihalf.com>
   Contact: Artur Rojek <ar@semihalf.com>
   Contact: Marcin Wojtas <mw@semihalf.com>

   ENA (Elastic Network Adapter) is the smart NIC available in the
   virtualized environment of Amazon Web Services (AWS). The ENA driver
   supports multiple transmit and receive queues and can handle up to 100
   Gb/s of network traffic, depending on the instance type on which it is
   used.

   Completed since the last update:
     * Fixes for Rx refill to improve stability on low memory conditions
       (also released as an errata notice for FreeBSD-12.1)
     * Upstream of the v2.2.0 driver, introducing:
          + Add driver support for the upcoming HW features (reporting Tx
            drops, disabling meta caching)
          + Add sysctl tuneables for IO queue number
          + Create IO queues with optional size backoff
          + Rework the way of configration of drbr and Rx ring size to be
            more robust and stable
          + New HAL version
          + Driver is now marked as epoch ready
          + Default RSS key is created using RNG to improve security
          + Other minor fixes and improvements
     * MFC of the ENA v2.2.0 driver to the FreeBSD 11.4

   Sponsor: Amazon.com Inc
     __________________________________________________________________

Forcible Unmount of UFS/FFS Filesystems on Disk Failure

   Links
   Phabricator Details=20
    URL: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24088

   Contact: Chuck Silvers <chs@freebsd.org>
   Contact: Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>

   Commit -r361491 on May 25, 2020 enables a UFS file system to do a
   forcible unmount when the underlying media fails or becomes
   inaccessible. For example when a USB flash memory card hosting a UFS
   file system is unplugged.

   The rest of this report describes in more detail how forcible unmounts
   are done. Suprisingly, less than 500 lines of file system code were
   added or changed.

   The strategy for handling disk I/O errors when soft updates are enabled
   is to stop writing to the disk of the affected file system but continue
   to accept I/O requests and report that all future writes by the file
   system to that disk actually succeed. Then initiate an asynchronous
   forced unmount of the affected file system.

   There are two cases for disk I/O errors:
     * ENXIO, which means that this disk is gone and the lower layers of
       the storage stack already guarantee that no future I/O to this disk
       will succeed.
     * EIO (or most other errors), which means that this particular I/O
       request has failed but subsequent I/O requests to this disk might
       still succeed.

   For ENXIO, we can just clear the error and continue, because we know
   that the file system cannot affect the on-disk state after we see this
   error. For EIO or other errors, we arrange for the geom_vfs layer to
   reject all future I/O requests with ENXIO just like is done when the
   geom_vfs is orphaned. In both cases, the file system code can just
   clear the error and proceed with the forcible unmount.

   This new treatment of I/O errors is needed for writes of any buffer
   that is involved in a dependency. Most dependencies are described by a
   structure attached to the buffer's b_dep field, but some are created
   and processed as a result of the completion of the dependencies
   attached to the buffer.

   Clearing of some dependencies require a read. For example if there is a
   dependency that requires an inode to be written, the disk block
   containing that inode must be read, the updated inode copied into place
   in that buffer, and the buffer then written back to disk.

   Often the needed buffer is already in memory and can be used. But if it
   needs to be read from the disk, the read will fail, so we fabricate a
   buffer full of zeroes and pretend that the read succeeded. This zero'ed
   buffer can be updated and "written" back to disk.

   The only case where a buffer full of zeros causes the code to do the
   wrong thing is when reading an inode buffer containing an inode that
   still has an inode dependency in memory that will reinitialize the
   effective link count (i_effnlink) based on the actual link count
   (i_nlink) that we read. To handle this case we now store the i_nlink
   value that we wrote in the inode dependency so that it can be restored
   into the zero'ed buffer thus keeping the tracking of the inode link
   count consistent.

   Because applications depend on knowing when an attempt to write their
   data to stable storage has failed, the fsync(2) and msync(2) system
   calls need to return errors if data fails to be written to stable
   storage. So these operations return ENXIO for every call made on files
   in a file system where we have otherwise been ignoring I/O errors.

   Sponsor: Netflix
     __________________________________________________________________

i.MX 8M support

   Links
   D25274=20
    URL: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25274

   Contact: Oleksandr Tymoshenko <gonzo@FreeBSD.org>

   i.MX 8M is the family of application processors from NXP based on Arm=AE
   Cortex=AE-A53 and Cortex-M4 cores. The initial code drop for the platform
   support includes CCM driver and clock implementation, GPC driver, clock
   tree for i.MX 8M Quad. Most of the drivers from i.MX 6 can be reused
   for i.MX 8M systems with relatively minor modifications. Common changes
   include adding clock support and extending list of FDT compat strings.

   With the linked patch FreeBSD successfully booted to multiuser with NFS
   root on Nitrogen8M SBC.
     __________________________________________________________________

Intel wireless and 11ac update

   Links
   Initial project announcement=20
    URL: https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-wireless/2020-April/00=
9055.html
   The freebsd-wireless mailing list=20
    URL: https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-wireless

   Contact: Bjoern A. Zeeb <bz@FreeBSD.org>

   The Intel Wireless cards are one of the most commonly used and ask for
   in FreeBSD notebooks.

   This project has three main goals:
     * newer Intel Wireless device support,
     * newer WiFi standards support for Intel Wireless,
     * integration of 802.11ac client support and infrastructure in
       FreeBSD.

   The first one is needed as iwm(4) currently does not support the latest
   generations of Intel Wireless cards at all. The second is needed as in
   FreeBSD iwm(4) does not even support 802.11n. The third one we want to
   catch up and use the improvements the new Wifi standard offers, e.g.,
   speed.

   One of the decisions made was: rather than improving iwm(4) this work
   uses the dual-licensed native Linux driver under BSD license and the
   linuxkpi framework to stay as close to upstream as possible as a first
   step. This will give us several advantages, such as, the full support
   for all cards, quick support for new chipsets, vendor bug fixes, but
   also the ability to contribute back.

   At this point the lower level hardware attachments and the firmware
   loading and initialisation works. I plan to release a patchset for
   testing before mid-July, you can see if your currently supported or
   unsupported hardware will be detected. This first cut will not support
   any wireless operation yet, which will follow later in the year.

   If you want to help testing, please watch the freebsd-wireless list.

   Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation
     __________________________________________________________________

amd64 5-Level Paging Structures support

   Links
   Patch=20
    URL: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25273
   Intel SDM=20
    URL: https://software.intel.com/content/www/us/en/develop/articles/inte=
l-sdm.html
   Intel whitepaper=20
    URL: https://software.intel.com/content/www/us/en/develop/download/5-le=
vel-paging-and-5-level-ept-white-paper.html

   Contact: Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.org>

   Since its introduction, x86 Long Mode (AKA 64bit execution mode, amd64
   in FreeBSD terminology) uses 4-level paging structures, which provides
   48 bits of virtual address space (LA48). FreeBSD evenly divides the
   space between userspace and kernel, giving both 47 virtual address
   bits.

   In near future Intel CPUs will start providing 5-level paging
   structures, i.e. giving 57 bits for virtual addresses (LA57). This
   means, with preservation of the existing divide between KVA and UVA, 56
   bit for UVA, or 2^9 =3D 512 times more virtual memory.

   The amd64 pmap was modified to support both LA48 and LA57, defaulting
   to LA57 if hardware supports it. The tunable is provided to force using
   LA48 even if hardware can do LA57.

   The most interesting part of the patch is the switch from boot paging
   mode to LA57. Loaders, either legacy or UEFI, pass control to the
   kernel in Long Mode, which implies that the paging is turned on. This
   neccessarily means that it is LA48 mode. SDM states that paging mode
   cannot be switched while Long Mode is active, so kernel has to create
   new page table structures, turn Long Mode off, then load new %cr3 and
   finally re-enable Long Mode.

   I decided to only provide the larger virtual address space to usermode
   for the initial step, leaving KVA layout intact. The main motivation is
   that changing KVA arrangements requires changing the auto-tuning
   settings, which deserve separate work. Another argument for it is that
   most of the kernel memory is non-swappable, so cannot be over-commited.
   We have 2:1 ratio of useful KVA to physical memory (due to direct map),
   and until machines get more physical address lines, increasing KVA is
   not useful.

   After this was decided, creating a 5-level paging structure for kernel
   pmap from existing 4-level one is quite straightforward; we need to add
   one page for top level, create one PML5 entry to point to existing PML4
   page, and create the famous self-referential entry for
   vtopte()/vtopde().

   Care was taken to provide binary compatible layout of UVA for binaries
   that cannot be executed correctly with larger address space. For
   instance, programs could have knowledge about used bits in the
   addresses and used upper bits for other data, or implemented compressed
   pointers. Even if system runs in LA57 mode, specific binary can request
   LA48-compatible UVA by procctl(2) or by the flag in the FreeBSD
   features ELF note.

   Since I do not have access to a machine with LA57, development was done
   using QEMU. It would be interesting to try it on the real hardware.

   Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation
     __________________________________________________________________

Not-transparent superpages

   Links
   Patch=20
    URL: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24652

   Contact: Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.org>

   FreeBSD already provides excellent support for superpages, in a manner
   completely transparent to applications. It tries to proactively prevent
   fragmentation, reserves contigous runs of the physical pages for linear
   allocations in managed objects, and auto-promote runs of small pages
   when they form complete superpage.

   The shortcomings of this approach directly follows from its strength:
   some applications want to get guaranteed superpage mappings, typically
   because the underlying physical memory is also offloaded into a
   hardware which also has memory mapping unit. For instance, Infiniband
   RMDA adapters do memory registration and remapping, which is more
   efficient with large pages. In such cases transparent (non-guaranteed)
   support cannot be used.

   The extension was developed for POSIX shared memory subsystem to allow
   the creator request that the shared memory object was backed by
   physically contiguous pages, with runs of specified size. The mmap(2)
   syscall is aware of such objects, and if the requested mapping is
   properly aligned, it will be served by superpages.

   The new type of the shared memory objects are backed by modified a
   physical pager, which only allocates contigous physical memory. The VM
   ensures that mappings of the objects are never split (clipped) on a
   non-superpage boundary. The fault handler is specially optimized to be
   very fast by quickly installing the superpage PTE, and to avoid
   touching all small pages constituing it.

   Currently the required pmap support is provided for amd64 with 2M and
   1G superpage sizes.

   Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation
     __________________________________________________________________

NXP ARM64 SoC support

   Contact: Marcin Wojtas <mw@semihalf.com>
   Contact: Artur Rojek <ar@semihalf.com>
   Contact: Dawid Gorecki <dgr@semihalf.com>

   The Semihalf team initiated working on FreeBSD support for the NXP
   LS1046A SoC

   LS1046A are quad-core 64-bit ARMv8 Cortex-A72 processors with
   integrated packet processing acceleration and high speed peripherals
   including 10 Gb Ethernet, PCIe 3.0, SATA 3.0 and USB 3.0 for a wide
   range of networking, storage, security and industrial applications.

   Completed since the last update:
     * Improve code in a couple of review cycles and merge following new
       features to the FreeBSD-HEAD (r361458 - r361464):
          + QorIQ platform clockgen driver
          + LS1046A clockgen driver
          + GPIO support for QorIQ boards
          + QorIQ LS10xx AHCI driver
          + VF610 I2C controller support
          + TCA6416 GPIO expander
          + Epson RX-8803 RTC

   Todo:
     * Upstreaming of the QorIQ SDHCI driver - it is expected to be
       submitted/merged to HEAD in the Q3 of 2020.

   Sponsor: Alstom Group
     __________________________________________________________________

amd64 pmap Fine-grained pv lists locking

   Links
   Patch=20
    URL: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24217

   Contact: Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.org>

   FreeBSD kernel Virtual Memory subsystem handles 'normal' application
   memory, i.e. anonymous or file-backed shared and private mappings, with
   so called managed pages. Managed page is fully controlled by VM, which
   tracks it status. In particular, managed page can be made read-only for
   write-back to the file, or unmapped for reuse (paging).

   The machine-dependent VM layer, pmap, must support managed pages, for
   instance it must provide operations such as pmap_remove_write() to
   downgrade all mappings to read-only, or pmap_remove_all() to unmap the
   page from all address spaces. To implement this kind of operations,
   while not causing the overhead of scanning all page tables, pmap must
   track existing mappings of the page. The tracking is done by allocating
   a small data structure 'pv entry' per mapping, and linking all pv
   entries for the given page into pv list.

   Since pv entries come from context of different address spaces, pmap
   must provide synchronization to guarantee correctness of the list
   structures. Current pmap allocates one mutex per one 2M physical
   superpage in NUMA configurations, and MAXCPU =3D=3D 256 locks hashed by =
the
   page physical address for non-NUMA. The end result is often undeserved
   lock aliasing causing pv list locks contention, since all 4k pages in
   the 2M superpage share the same lock, and reservations typically cause
   adjasted pages to come from the same superpage.

   The proposed patch creates a new kernel synchronization primitive
   called one byte mutex, which is embedded into the currently unused
   padding in machine-dependent portion of the struct vm_page. This way
   each page gets dedicated pv list lock without using any more memory. In
   the ever-important buildkernel benchmark on non-NUMA config, this
   change provides 2x reduction of the system time.

   One complication is that old locking distribution scheme made a natural
   fit for superpages promotion and demotion, since all embedded small
   pages shared the same pv list lock, and the operations basically
   fold/unfold corresponding pv entries. Now the promotion and demotion
   operations require taking all locks for constituent small pages, which
   provides small but measurable impact on them. It is possible to
   optimize it further by providing the 'superlock' on the first page from
   the superpage run, but the affected operations are relatively rare so
   that it is not even obvious that implementing the optimization would
   not slow down other pathes.

   Another important nuance of the pv entries handling is that sometimes
   pv entries allocator must not fail. Typically this is required when
   kernel makes a call to pmap_enter() which must establish new mapping,
   and for managed page this includes allocating the pv entry if existing
   cannot be reused. If allocator cannot get a fresh page from the
   vm_page_alloc(9), it opts to destroy some other managed mapping to
   either get a reusable pv entry from current pmap, or destroy enough
   managed mappings from some other pmap to free whole page.

   To do the reclamation, currently all pages from which with pv entries
   are allocated, are linked in the global pv chunk list, which is
   protected by global (per-NUMA domain) mutex. Any allocation or free of
   pv entry has to lock the mutex, which is apparently a contention point
   for large machines.

   Patch removes the global list of chunks, instead linking all pmaps in
   the global list like it is done on i386 (but for different reason). Now
   the global lock is only taken for pmap creation and free, which
   corresponds to fork/exec and exit of a process, and when pv allocator
   starts reclaiming from other pmaps (which is normally does not happen).

   Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation
     __________________________________________________________________

Lockless routing lookups and scalable multipath

   Links
   Implementation of scalable multipath=20
    URL: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24141#change-ZOjdMqgDgUr7

   Contact: Alexander Chernikov <melifaro@FreeBSD.org>

   The primary goal of this work is to bring scalable routing multipath
   implementation, enabled by default. Another goal is enabling
   high-performance routing lookups.

   Multipath will close long-standing feature gap that modern networking
   OS must have. Lockless routing lookups will remove lookup bottlenecks,
   improve both dataplane and control plane performance for the setups
   with large number of routes.

Background

   The initial routing kpi was introduced back in 1980. It was a nice
   generic approach back then, as no one knew how the protocols would
   evolve. It has been enormously successful as it was able to survive for
   20+ years.

   Unfortunately, this kpi does not try to protect subsystem internals
   from the outside users, resulting in tight coupling with other
   subsystems. As a result, making changes is hard, leading to compromises
   and piling technical debt.

Implementation overview

   Most changes are based on introduction of the concept of nexthops.
   Nexthops are separate datastructures, containing all necessary
   information to perform packet forwarding such as gateway, interface and
   mtu. They are shared among the routes, providing more pre-computed
   cache-efficient data while requiring less memory. Interested reader can
   find more detailed description in D24141. Another overview can be found
   in Nexthop object talk describing Linux implementation.

   Multipath implementation extends nexthop concept further by introducing
   nexthop groups.

   Each route has a pointer to either nexthops or a nexthop group,
   decoupling lookup algorithm from the routing stack internals. Both
   nexthops and nexthop groups are immutable and use epoch(9)-backed
   reclamation.

   A pre-requisite for lockless routing lookup is the introduction of
   modular lookup framework, allowing to attach any longes-prefix-match
   algorithm implementation to any IPv4/IPv6 fib.

   Currently there are plans to use modified DIR-24-8 algorithm from DPDK
   for both IPv4 and IPv6 families as an example of base lockless
   implementation.

Status

     * Nexthop objects [ DONE ]

     * Introduction of nexthop objects [ DONE ]
     * Conversion of old KPI users to the new one [ DONE ]
     * Conversion of route caching to nexthop caching [ DONE ]
     * Conversion of struct rtentry field access to nhop field access [
       DONE ]
     * Eliminating old lookup KPI and hiding struct rtentry [ DONE ]



   Multipath [ IN PROGRESS ]
     * Switch control plane consumers to use (rtentry, nhop) pairs instead
       of rtentry to allow multipath changes happen transparently [ 90%
       DONE ]
     * Introduce nexthop group objects
     * Add mutipath support for the rib (routing information base)
       manipulation functions
     * Add flowid generation for outbound traffic to enable load balancing



   Modular longest-prefix-match lookup algorithm [ IN PROGRESS ]
     * Design control plane framework for attaching algorithms [ 90% DONE
       ]
     * Port IPv6 lockless lookup algorithm [ DONE ]
     * Port IPv4 lockless lookup algorithm
     __________________________________________________________________

ZSTD Compression in ZFS

   Contact: Allan Jude <allanjude@freebsd.org>

   Zstandard (ZSTD) is a modern high-performance compression algorithm
   designed to provide the compression ratios of gzip while offering much
   better performance. ZSTD has been adopted in FreeBSD for a number of
   other uses, including compressing kernel crash dumps, as a replacement
   for gzip or bzip for compressing log files, and for future versions of
   pkg(8).

   This effort to complete the integration of ZSTD into ZFS is sponsored
   by the FreeBSD Foundation.

   Integrating ZSTD into ZFS will further extend the transparent
   compression feature of ZFS by offering higher compression ratios
   without the performance penalty associated with gzip. ZSTD offers
   compression levels ranging from 1 (low compression) to 22 (maximum
   compression), plus ZSTD-Fast levels that offer less compression but
   even greater speed. This will allow the storage administrator to select
   the performance-vs-compression tradeoff that best suits their needs.

   Tasks remaining to be completed:
     * Extend ZFS to support compression algorithms with large numbers of
       levels
     * Solve issues around the inheritence of compression settings
     * Restore compression level when reading blocks from disk
     * Create a future-proofing scheme to handle changing versions of ZSTD
     * Extend ZFS replication to handle backwards compatibility with pools
       that do not yet support ZSTD
     * Resolve issues around backwards compatibility when ZSTD is
       configured but not used

   Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation
     __________________________________________________________________

CheriBSD 2020 Q2

   Links
   CHERI-CPU                    =20
    URL: http://www.cheri-cpu.org
   DARPA FETT Bug Bounty Program=20
    URL: https://fett.darpa.mil

   Contact: Alex Richardson <arichardson@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Andrew Turner <andrew@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Brooks Davis <brooks@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Edward Tomasz Napierala <trasz@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Jessica Clarke <jrtc27@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Robert Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Ruslan Bukin <br@FreeBSD.org>

   CheriBSD extends FreeBSD to implement memory protection and software
   compartmentalization features supported by the CHERI instruction set
   extensions.

   Support for CHERI-RISC-V in CheriBSD has continued to mature this
   quarter in tandem with refinements to the CHERI-RISC-V architecture. We
   have recently made CheriBSD's "pure capability" (CheriABI) process
   environment the default ABI rather than a compatibility layer. It has
   grown support for:
     * dynamically linked binaries (previously only statically-linked
       binaries were supported)
     * C++ including exceptions
     * sealed return address and function pointer capabilities
       ("sentries") which provide additional CFI protection
     * initial MMU protections for loading and storing tags

   At this point, CHERI-RISC-V support in CheriBSD is generally on par
   with support for CHERI-MIPS.

   Much of this effort has been focused on preparing CheriBSD on
   CHERI-RISC-V for inclusion as a demonstrator system in DARPA's Finding
   Exploits to Thwart Tampering (FETT Bug Bounty program).

   In addition, work has begun this quarter on porting CheriBSD to Arm's
   Morello SoC. Morello is a prototype demonstrator board which adds CHERI
   extensions to ARMv8-A.

   We've recently switched to a dev-branch model where active work takes
   place on the dev branch and we periodically merge to master with
   synchronization between CheriBSD and dependencies like CHERI-LLVM.

   For those interested in what it's like to program for CHERI, we've
   recently released a CHERI C/C++ Programming Guide.
     __________________________________________________________________

Architectures

   Updating platform-specific features and bringing in support for new
   hardware platforms.

Continuous Integration on !x86

   Contact: Edward Tomasz Napierala <trasz@FreeBSD.org>

   For quite a while the FreeBSD CI infrastructure has been running
   FreeBSD builds and regression tests, making it easy to spot
   regressions. While CI was building images for all architectures, the
   regression tests were only run on amd64 and i386, which means they
   couldn't detect architecture-specific runtime breakage on non-x86
   architectures. This poses a problem not only for FreeBSD itself, but
   also for people working on FreeBSD forks for !x86, such as the CHERI
   project at University of Cambridge and SRI International.

   The goal of this project is to run regression tests on the remaining
   architectures supported by FreeBSD: ARM, ARM64, MIPS, POWER, and
   RISC-V. The tests are being run using common, mostly
   machine-independent scripts. Those required some changes to make it
   possible to use QEMU in addition to Bhyve, the hypervisor used for x86
   tests. The sysutils/u-boot-qemu-arm and sysutils/u-boot-qemu-arm64
   ports were added to the Ports Collection. Finally, each of the
   architectures required some tweaks, to account for different
   configuration requirements - for example the MIPS kernel doesn't
   support VirtIO disks, or even AHCI, whereas on ARM64 the U-Boot gets
   confused with more than one VirtIO disk.

   On ARM, we're currently at 52 failures and 590 skipped tests, of 5925
   tests ran
   (https://ci.freebsd.org/job/FreeBSD-head-armv7-test/lastCompletedBuild/t=
estReport/).
   On ARM64 it's 19 failures and 160 skipped
   (https://ci.freebsd.org/job/FreeBSD-head-aarch64-test/lastCompletedBuild=
/testReport/).
   On MIPS it's 172 failures and 734 skipped
   (https://ci.freebsd.org/job/FreeBSD-head-mips64-test/lastCompletedBuild/=
testReport/).
   For POWER, and RISC-V the results are not available yet.

   Remaining work:
     * Failing regression tests need to be fixed.
     * The tests are quite slow on QEMU, for example the ARM64 run takes
       about five hours. Running them automatically after each commit
       would quickly overload the CI cluster. A solution would be to e.g.
       run them daily.
     * Some of the jobs still fail to produce results: powerpc64 deadlocks
       at the end of regression test suite due to an unkillable process,
       riscv64 panics randomly, and on mips64 kyua(1) often crashes on
       jemalloc assertion. Those might be fixed by an upcoming QEMU port
       update.

   Sponsor: DARPA
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD/RISC-V Project

   Links
   Wiki=20
    URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/riscv

   Contact: Mitchell Horne <mhorne@FreeBSD.org>

   Contact: freebsd-riscv Mailing List
   Contact: IRC #freebsd-riscv channel on freenode

   The FreeBSD/RISC-V project is providing support for running FreeBSD on
   the RISC-V Instruction Set Architecture. Since RISC-V is still a young
   and evolving platform, one of our goals is to have FreeBSD be a
   well-supported option for users as RISC-V hardware increases in
   availability.

   This quarter saw a number of improvements to the boot process.

   The physmem interface used by arm and arm64 to enumerate physical
   memory resources was moved to machine-independent code and adopted on
   RISC-V. As a result, the kernel is now able to detect and exclude
   physical memory reserved by devices or firmware. A bug that prevented
   the kernel from using physical memory below its load address was fixed.
   This typically did not manifest in much waste, as the kernel is loaded
   2MB after the start of physical memory by default. In future boot
   configurations, the impact would have been much larger.

   Our port for OpenSBI was updated to v0.8, bringing several new features
   and fixes. In particular, it brought the Hardware State Management
   (HSM) extension, which can be used to start and stop CPUs. FreeBSD will
   now use this extension whenever it detects that it is available.

   There has also been a lot of work done to port FreeBSD's standard
   bootloader, loader(8), to RISC-V. This has big advantages in terms of
   boot flexibility, and brings us closer to what's needed to produce
   official FreeBSD/RISC-V release images. By leveraging UEFI support from
   u-boot, loader.efi can be used in a manner similar to arm and arm64.
   Next quarter will likely bring u-boot ports for RISC-V targets, pending
   the v2020.07 release. Booting the kernel directly via SBI firmware will
   continue to be supported.
     __________________________________________________________________

Userland Programs

   Changes affecting the base system and programs in it.

Import of new implementation of bc and dc

   Links
   Official repository        =20
    URL: https://git.yzena.com/gavin/bc
   Repository mirror on GitHub=20
    URL: https://github.com/gavinhoward/bc/

   Contact: Stefan Esser <se@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Gavin D. Howard <yzena.tech@gmail.com>

   A new version of bc and dc has been imported into FreeBSD-CURRENT and
   enabled by default. An import into 12-STABLE is planned before the end
   of July, but it will not be enabled by default (will require
   "WITH_GH_BC=3Dyes" to be set in /etc/src.conf).

   This version has been developed by Gavin D. Howard with the goal to
   provide a highly portable and POSIX compatible implementation. It
   offers GNU bc compatibility and should be a drop-in replacement for the
   bc in FreeBSD, except for standard-violating behavior of the bc
   currently in FreeBSD (e.g., the modulo operator).

   Additional features:
     * High performance (up to more than a factor of 100 faster than the
       current FreeBSD implementation in some tests)
     * support of message catalogs with a large number of languages
       supported in the current release (contributions of further
       translations are welcome).
     * Extra built-in functions and operators.
     * Extended library of advanced math functions
     * Detailed man-page explaining standard conformant and extended
       features
     * One shared binary for bc and dc (bc is not just a pre-processor
       that relies on dc for the actual computations)

   The only dc feature not supported by the dc is the execution of
   sub-processes, since the author considers it a security hazard for a
   calculator to have.

   This code is also available as a port and package (math/gh-bc or
   gh-bc), e.g. for use with a FreeBSD binary release.
     __________________________________________________________________

Binutils Retirement

   Links
   GPL in Base wiki page=20
    URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/GPLinBase

   Contact: Ed Maste <emaste@FreeBSD.org>

   We have been working on migrating to a modern and copyfree or
   permissively licensed toolchain for quite some time. In the last
   quarter we retired two obsolete GNU bintuils: objdump, and as.

   Many uses of objdump can be replaced with readelf, and llvm-objdump is
   also available in the base system. Ports that depend on objdump have
   been updated to rely on the GNU binutils port or package.

   The GNU as utility was used by both the base system and by ports. As
   with objdump, ports that require GNU as have generally been updated to
   depend on binutils. One file in the base system (skein_block_asm.s)
   proved troublesome during earlier attempts to migrate to using Clang's
   integrated assembler (IAS). However, after the update to Clang 10 (and
   with some trivial modifications to the source) IAS can assemble the
   file.

   Both GNU as and objdump have been removed from FreeBSD-CURRENT and will
   be absent from FreeBSD 13.0.

TODO

   The final task in the binutils retirement project is to remove GNU GDB
   6.1. It is currently retained for crashinfo(8).

   Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation
     __________________________________________________________________

Run-Time Dynamic Linker improvements

   Contact: Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.org>

   Rtld gets some number of small bug fixes and improvements.

   RTLD_DEEPBIND dlopen(3) flag was implemented, despite being a strange
   and even unsafe idea, for compatibility with glibc.

   Several improvements to the direct execution mode were made. Most
   interesting are perhaps the '-v' switch to report some configuration
   parameters for rtld, the ability to specify argv0 different from the
   executed binary name, and fixes to properly set osrel/ABI for the
   directly executed binary.

   The link_map structure that is used by tools that need to know the list
   of loaded shared objects (like gdb and wine) was made more compatible
   with glibc, while keeping existing FreeBSD ABI intact.

   In the course of the link_map work, it become apparent that rtld
   sometimes needs to report presence of features that cannot be deduced
   by just a runtime test for symbol presence or for function behavior.
   For that, a scheme of reporting features with uniformingly named
   symbols was designed - see the rtld(1) man-page (in CURRENT) for an
   explanation.

   Position-independent (PIE) binaries on FreeBSD are now marked with the
   DF_1_PIE DT_FLAG1 flag. Otherwise, such binaries are just ET_DYN
   objects and it is quite hard to distinguish proper dynamically shared
   object (DSO) from PIE binary. The problem is that for binaries, the
   static linker strips some information which is required for proper
   loading as a DSO, and additonally, binaries contains relocations like
   copy-relocations that cannot be handled for non-main binaries at all.

   With the flag addition, rtld properly detects binaries and refuses to
   load them with dlopen() or as DT_NEEDED dependency. ldd(1) also
   misdetected PIE vs. DSO, and required a fix to parse dynamic segments
   to not try to dlopen() them.

   Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation
     __________________________________________________________________

VHDX support in mkimg(1)

   Contact: Oleksandr Tymoshenko <gonzo@FreeBSD.org>

   VHDX is the successor of Microsoft's VHD virtual drive file format. It
   increases maximum capacity of the virtual drive to 64TB and introduces
   features to better handle power/system failures.
   VHDX is the required format for 2nd generation Hyper-V VMs.
     __________________________________________________________________

Ports

   Changes affecting the Ports Collection, whether sweeping changes that
   touch most of the tree, or individual ports themselves.

Bastille

   Links
   Bastille GitHub   =20
    URL: https://github.com/bastillebsd/bastille
   Bastille Templates=20
    URL: https://gitlab.com/bastillebsd-templates
   Bastille Website  =20
    URL: https://bastillebsd.org

   Contact: Christer Edwards <christer.edwards@gmail.com>

   Bastille is an open-source system for automating deployment and
   management of containerized applications on FreeBSD.

   Bastille Templates automate container setup allowing you to easily
   reproduce containers as needed.

   Bastille is available in ports at sysutils/bastille.

Q2 2020 Status

   In Q2 2020 Bastille merged some exciting new features into GitHub.
   Changes include:
     * experimental support for new Bastillefile template syntax
     * added mount and umount sub-commands
     * added a default Vagrantfile for simple testing
     * experimental support for empty containers
     * improvements to VNET DHCP support
     * cosmetic bugfixes in error output
     * extended config file documentation
     * updated bastille help output
     * option to (-f) force destroy container

   sysutils/bastille was updated to 0.6.20200414 (latest).

   New Bastille templates added this quarter include:
     * Percona database server
     * Asterisk SIP server
     * dnsmasq DNS/DHCP server (VNET required)
     * nginx pkg server for poudriere

   Everything mentioned here was done under COVID-19 quarantine. Special
   thanks to everyone that contributed during this time.
     __________________________________________________________________

KDE on FreeBSD

   Links
   KDE FreeBSD          =20
    URL: https://freebsd.kde.org/
   KDE Community FreeBSD=20
    URL: https://community.kde.org/FreeBSD

   Contact: Adriaan de Groot <kde@FreeBSD.org>

   The KDE on FreeBSD project packages the software produced by the KDE
   Community for FreeBSD. The software includes a full desktop environment
   KDE Plasma, IDE KDevelop, a PIM suite Kontact and hundreds of other
   applications that can be used on any FreeBSD desktop machine.

   This quarter has been an ever-so-peculiar one. While we are used to
   working remotely, collaborating over the internet to update the ports
   tree, it's qualitatively different when the whole world locks down.
   Meanwhile, software continues to be released, so this quarter the kde@
   team:
     * Restored a patch that closes down a remote TCP held by X11
       applications that use the ICE library. Thanks to Colin Percival for
       reporting it. It went missing in one of the port updates. To
       prevent this in the future, the patch has been upstreamed. PR
       229772.
     * Chased KDE-adjacent software like CMake, Cutelyst, Latte-dock and
       Nheko through new releases. In particular CMake takes a lot of
       effort every time because it is a build-time dependency of over
       2000 ports.
     * graphics/poppler was updated to the latest upstream release. This
       is a low-level dependency for many document-viewing applications,
       and like CMake requires chasing a lot of other software. Poppler is
       one of the components shared between various software stacks (and
       "desktop environments") under the desktop@ group, in which kde@
       participates.
     * KDE Frameworks release like clockwork, reaching KDE Frameworks 5.70
       mid-may.
     * KDE Applications -- the KDE release service, really, which delivers
       libraries, applications, and add-ons -- had one large release, with
       20.04.1 landing in the ports tree also mid-may and its monthly
       update 20.04.2 in mid-june.
     * Some new Wayland support for KDE Plasma -- we have not tested this
       on FreeBSD -- has appeared and has been duly packaged.
     * A great deal of preparation has gone into Qt 5.15. Many ports have
       been pre-emptively patched for this new -- and last -- LTS release
       of Qt 5. The update itself has not yet landed, pending a few last
       bits of fallout.

   The kde@ team would like to thank Antoine for many exp-runs, mikael@
   for useful tips, swills@ for patience and kai@ for dealing with
   WebEngine.

   The next big round of updates for the KDE stack is slated: CMake 3.18,
   Qt 5.15 LTS, and KDE Frameworks 5.71.
     __________________________________________________________________

Haskell on FreeBSD

   Links
   Haskell language homepage=20
    URL: http://www.haskell.org/
   Ports development repo   =20
    URL: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-ports-haskell

   Contact: Gleb Popov <haskell@FreeBSD.org>

   Haskell is a general-purpose strictly-typed pure functional language.
   The Haskell on FreeBSD projects strives to provide the up-to-date
   Haskell toolchain as well as various application written in this
   language.

   This quarter brought the long-awaited GHC update, which is now at
   version 8.8.3. Along the compiler, the Haskell build system frontend,
   cabal-install, was also upgraded to 3.0.2.0. During this update,
   numerous Haskell ports were updated too.

   All existing ports of Haskell applications were migrated to USES=3Dcabal,
   which implements Go-style build proccess - all dependencies are
   compiled as part of the build. As a consequence, ports for Haskell
   libraries have been deprecated and removed.

   Upgrading GHC became a tedious task for a single person, so a new
   GitHub repository was created under the FreeBSD organization -
   freebsd-ports-haskell. Right now, work is being done on preparing
   another GHC upgrade in the ghc-upgrade-810 branch. Any contributions
   are welcome.
     __________________________________________________________________

rtsx - Porting driver for Realtek SD card reader from OpenBSD

   Links
   rtsx    =20
    URL: https://github.com/hlh-restart/rtsx
   PR204521=20
    URL: https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=3D204521

   Contact: Henri Hennebert <hlh@restart.be>

   The rtsx driver for Realtek SD card reader has been ported from
   OpenBSD. Its development snapshot is available via the
   sysutils/rtsx-kmod port.

   From March to May 2020, the code has been completed with the help of
   Gary Jennejohn (gj@) and Jesper Schmitz Mouridsen (jsm@). Some tweaks
   have been imported from the Linux counterpart.

   The driver has been successfully tested with:
     * RTS5209 under head (Lenovo ThinkPad L520)
     * RTS5227 under stable/11 and releng/12.1 (HP ProBook 430 g2, Lenovo
       ThinkPad T450/T450s)
     * RTS5229 under releng/12.1 (Lenovo IdeaPad 120S-14IAP)
     * RTS522A under releng/12.1 and head (Intel NUC8i5BE, Lenovo ThinkPad
       P50s)
     * RTS525A under releng/12.1 (Dell Latitude E5570)
     * RTL8411B under stable/12 (Acer Aspire E 15 E5-576-77W6)

   The driver should also work for Realtek RTS5249, RTL8402 and RTL8411.

   More tests are welcome, especially for the devices not yet tested.
   These devices may require more tweaks.

   PR204521 contains the bulk of exchanges for completion of the code.
     __________________________________________________________________

Valgrind updates

   Links
   Patch for valgrind=20
    URL: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25452

   Contact: Paul Floyd <paulf@free.fr>
   Contact: Kyle Evans <kevans@FreeBSD.org>

   A large amount of work has been done to rebase FreeBSD support on top
   of Valgrind 3.17.0, and to address numerous test suite failures.
   Currently, almost all of the regression tests pass on amd64. This is a
   major improvement over the current state of affairs, in which the
   Valgrind is quite out of date and is missing important functionality.
   Some follow-up work aims to make FreeBSD an officially supported target
   platform for Valgrind.

   The devel/valgrind-devel port is in the process of being updated to
   point at the new work.
     __________________________________________________________________

Documentation

   Noteworthy changes in the documentation tree, in manpages, or in
   external books/documents.

FreeBSD Translations on Weblate

   Links
   Translate FreeBSD on Weblate wiki=20
    URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/DocTranslationOnWeblate
   FreeBSD Weblate Instance=20
    URL: https://translate-dev.freebsd.org/

   Contact: Danilo G. Baio <dbaio@FreeBSD.org>
   Contact: Edson Brandi <ebrandi@FreeBSD.org>

   This quarter was improved the renderization of RTL (Right-to-left)
   languages on the FreeBSD Documentation. We faced this issue after the
   first RTL language joined the translations effort (fa_IR).

   We are looking forward to receive more languages and translators to the
   project as well.

Q2 2020 Status

     * 10 languages (No new languages)
     * 80 registered users (33 new users since last quarter)

Languages

     * Chinese (Simplified) (zh_CN)
     * Chinese (Traditional) (zh_TW)
     * French (fr_FR)
     * German (de_DE)
     * Italian (it_IT)
     * Norwegian (nb_NO)
     * Persian (fa_IR)
     * Portuguese (pt_BR)
     * Spanish (es_ES)
     * Turkish (tr-TR)

   We want to thank everyone that contributed, translating or reviewing
   documents. And please, help promote this effort on your local user
   group, we always need more volunteers.
     __________________________________________________________________

Miscellaneous

   Objects that defy categorization.

FreshPorts

   Links
   FreshPorts     =20
    URL: http://freshports.org/
   FreshPorts blog=20
    URL: http://news.freshports.org/

   Contact: Dan Langille <dan@langille.org>

   FreshPorts, and its sister site, FreshSource, have reported upon
   FreeBSD commits for 20 years. They cover all commits, not just ports.

   FreshPorts tracks the commits and extracts data from the port Makefiles
   to create a database of information useful to both port developers and
   port users.

   For example, https://www.freshports.org/security/acme.sh/ shows the
   history of this port, back to its creation in May 2017.

git

   Work on git started back in September. It was ignored for a while and
   started back in mid-June with the creation of new git-specific jails
   for commit ingress (commit processing gitdev) and for the website.

   Serhii (Sergey) Kozlov created a script to transform GIT commit entries
   into XML digestible by FreshPorts. This was a huge step foward for the
   effort.

   The next step include:
     * incorporate a that script the automated processes of FreshPorts
     * migrate to new test & stage versions of FreshPorts
     * test
     * get ready for prod

Help wanted

   git is not far away now. I could use helpers to
     * review code
     * watch the commits on the devgit websites
     * catch missing stuff

   Thank you

Packages

   FreshPorts now displays the packages version available from the repo
   sources. This covers all primary tiers (e.g. FreeBSD:12:amd64) and all
   secondary tiers (e.g. FreeBSD:13:powerpc64). This helps uses know what
   versions they can expect and when then repo was last built.

Dependency lines

   Some things are easiest done via copy/paste. If you are working on a
   port Makefile and need to add a new dependency, FreshPorts shows the
   dependency line for that port. For example:

acme.sh>0:security/acme.sh

   Libraries are also covered by this feature.

   Python ports were recently adjusted to display

 ${PYTHON_PKGNAMEPREFIX}virtualenv>0:devel/py-virtualenv

   instead of

py37-virtualenv>0:devel/py-virtualenv

   You can read more about this change in [issue
   #73](https://github.com/FreshPorts/freshports/issues/73).

Watch ports I maintain

   The search page has long had the "Ports I Maintain" button (if you are
   logged in). This feature recently branched out to a new automated watch
   list option: Watch ports I maintain.

   This report subscription will notify you of any commits to the ports
   you maintain. Your email address on FreshPorts must match the value in
   the MAINTAINER field of the port. This is always a daily report.

   From time to time, an infrastructure change will occur which touches
   your port. This feature ensures you know about that change.

Repology links

   Repology links were requested. This allows you to see what versions of
   that port are in the repositories of other systems. A link to
   repology.org appears on every port page.

Further reading

   Based upon things you didn't know FreshPorts can do

   There are many things FreshPorts can do, including search Makefile's
   and pkg-plist. This is from a recent blog post:
     * provides example dependency line. e.g.
       p5-XML-RSS>0:textproc/p5-XML-RSS
     * list of dependencies for a port
     * list of ports depending upon this port
     * see default configuration options
     * what packages install a given file (e.g. bin/unzip)
     * find out what ports a person maintains
     * find Makefiles which contain references to bunzip
     * search results can be plain-text consisting of a list of foo/bar
       ports
     * the Maximum Effort checkbox on the search page does nothing
     * committers can be notified of sanity test failures after the commit
     * find a commit, any commit, based on SVN revision number, e.g. :
       https://www.freshports.org/commit.php?revision=3D352332

Javascript help wanted

   We recently upgraded some outdated Javascript modules. This broke our
   [JavaScript based graphs](https://www.freshports.org/graphs2.php). We
   could use some help on fixing that please. The starting points are
   listed on that URL. If you need a working website to play with, please
   contact me with a ssh public-key.

   Sponsor: hardware provided by iXsystems
     __________________________________________________________________

PCI passthrough with bhyve on Intel and for OpenBSD guests

   Links
   bhyve Intel bug report=20
    URL: https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=3D229852
   bhyve OpenBSD bug report=20
    URL: https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=3D245392
   PCI passthrough with bhyve (FreeBSD wiki article)=20
    URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/bhyve/pci_passthru

   Contact: Anatoli <me@anatoli.ws>
   Contact: Callum <callum@aitchison.org>
   Contact: Peter Grehan <grehan@freebsd.org>

   bhyve(8) is a hypervisor that supports running a variety of guest
   operating systems in virtual machines. bhyve(8) includes support for
   PCI devices passthru, a technique to pass host PCI devices to a virtual
   machine for its exclusive control and use.

   For some years, PCI passthrough (ppt) in bhyve was not working on some
   Intel systems and for OpenBSD guests due to two bugs. The first one was
   crashing FreeBSD host when bhyve was started with ppt on Intel
   processors with two VT-d translation units (IOMMU), included in most
   Skylake and newer Intel processors.

   The second bug was preventing correct interrupts handling for OpenBSD
   guests. As a result, OpenBSD guests running on bhyve were not able to
   use any PCI devices passed through to them from the host.

   During the last 2 months the second bug was identified and fixed and
   they both were backported to 12.1-RELEASE (p7). So now it's possible to
   fully take advantage of PCI passthrough (ppt) with bhyve in a
   production-ready RELEASE version.

   The most typical case for ppt is to pass to the guest network adapters
   for its complete control, but you can also pass through USB devices
   (including external HDDs). Note though, passthrough of VGA and GPU
   devices is not supported yet (for more details see the 3rd link).

   A particularly interesting case for ppt is to use OpenBSD guest as a
   firewall and a router for a FreeBSD server.

   With ppt you can achieve this all inside a single server. You could
   pass to the OpenBSD guest a network adapter connected to the internet
   and it would take a complete control of it. After filtering the
   traffic, it could pass good packets via virtual network interfaces to
   other guests or to the host.

   Once a network adapter is passed through, a FreeBSD host not only
   doesn't see it and hence doesn't handle the network traffic, it doesn't
   even have to initialize the adapter (e.g. in case of a WiFi card, it's
   the guest that loads the firmware).

   In simple terms the host only passes the device interrupts to the guest
   as they come from the hardware. Everything related to the device
   management happens inside the guest so there's no danger that some
   network traffic exploits some issue in the host's network stack and
   causes the host to crash or misbehave in other ways.
     __________________________________________________________________

SageMath

   Links
   SageMath site=20
    URL: https://www.sagemath.org/

   Contact: Thierry Thomas <thierry@FreeBSD.org>

   SageMath is a free open-source mathematics software system licensed
   under the GPL. It builds on top of many existing open-source packages:
   NumPy, SciPy, matplotlib, Sympy, Maxima, GAP, FLINT, R and many more.
   Thanks to SageMath it is possible to access their combined power
   through a common, Python-based language or directly via interfaces or
   wrappers.

   The goal is creating a viable free open source alternative to Magma,
   Maple, Mathematica and Matlab.

   This is a complex port, with a lot of dependencies, and it has been
   broken for some time. Upstream is working on easing its packaging, and
   many previously bundled applications can now be replaced by external
   packages.

   If you are interested, it would be nice to create a team of maintainers
     * to maintain some of the dependencies;
     * to maintain SageMath itself and prepare the next release (9.2 is
       coming!).
     __________________________________________________________________

Third-Party Projects

   Many projects build upon FreeBSD or incorporate components of FreeBSD
   into their project. As these projects may be of interest to the broader
   FreeBSD community, we sometimes include brief updates submitted by
   these projects in our quarterly report. The FreeBSD project makes no
   representation as to the accuracy or veracity of any claims in these
   submissions.

chaifi - a tool to simplify joining public WiFi networks

   Links
   chaifi=20
    URL: https://github.com/gonzoua/chaifi

   Contact: Oleksandr Tymoshenko <gonzo@FreeBSD.org>

   chaifi is a TUI (text UI) utility aimed at simplifying the process of
   joining public WiFi networks in places like coffee shops or libraries.
   It replaces the process of scanning and manually editing
   wpa_supplicant.conf with an interactive dialog. The utility is in no
   way a replacement for full-featured network managers in major desktop
   environments. Still, if you're working from a console or using a tiling
   window manager, it may save you some seconds (or in worst case minutes)
   of your time.
     __________________________________________________________________

MixerTUI

   Links
   mixertui=20
    URL: https://gitlab.com/alfix/mixertui

   Contact: Alfonso Sabato Siciliano <alfonso.siciliano@email.com>

   MixerTUI is a volume mixer with a Terminal User Interface built on the
   FreeBSD sound system. It can show the current Sound Driver
   configuration and select an audio device: to get its information, to
   change the volume or to set it as default, the last feature allows to
   switch easily audio from/to laptop and hdmi, headphones and speakers,
   and so on.
   MixerTUI can be installed via the audio/mixertui port.

   I would like to thank the FreeBSD community for the tips, feedbacks and
   patches to improve this project.
     __________________________________________________________________

Potluck - Flavour & Image Repository for pot

   Links
   Potluck Repository & Project=20
    URL: https://potluck.honeyguide.net/
   Potluck on github           =20
    URL: https://github.com/hny-gd/potluck
   pot project                 =20
    URL: https://pot.pizzamig.dev

   Contact: Stephan Lichtenauer <sl@honeyguide.eu>

   pot is a jail management tool that also supports orchestration through
   nomad.

   Potluck aims to be to FreeBSD and pot what Dockerhub is to Linux and
   Docker: A repository of pot flavours and complete images for usage with
   pot.

   This should simplify setting up complex software with many packages and
   ports in comparison to manual configuration: Potluck aims to provide a
   content library as an additional layer of abstraction, on top of
   existing infrastructure like pkg, that pot has to offer.

   Pot "flavour" files are provided on
   [Github]((https://github.com/hny-gd/potluck)) and fed into a Jenkins
   instance. On the Potluck Repository, for each flavour, detailed
   descriptions as well as ready-made images to be imported by pot are
   provided.

   The initial project has been set up, and three simple flavours, along
   with a complete Jitsi Meet instance in a jail has been created as a
   Proof of Concept that should allow running a fully-fledged video
   conference system with just a few easy commands within a few minutes.

   As only the initial versions have been set up and implemented so far,
   general feedback, tests, as well as additional, useful flavours are
   very welcome!
     __________________________________________________________________

   News Home | Status Home

   Site Map | Legal Notices | =A9 1995-2020 The FreeBSD Project. All rights
   reserved.

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