From owner-freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org Mon May 3 11:12:28 2021 Return-Path: Delivered-To: freebsd-hackers@mailman.nyi.freebsd.org Received: from mx1.freebsd.org (mx1.freebsd.org [IPv6:2610:1c1:1:606c::19:1]) by mailman.nyi.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id E5FF262F193 for ; Mon, 3 May 2021 11:12:28 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from 6yearold@gmail.com) Received: from mail-lj1-f182.google.com (mail-lj1-f182.google.com [209.85.208.182]) (using TLSv1.3 with cipher TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 (128/128 bits) key-exchange X25519 server-signature RSA-PSS (4096 bits) server-digest SHA256 client-signature RSA-PSS (2048 bits) client-digest SHA256) (Client CN "smtp.gmail.com", Issuer "GTS CA 1O1" (verified OK)) by mx1.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 4FYgL34kK6z4jND for ; Mon, 3 May 2021 11:12:27 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from 6yearold@gmail.com) Received: by mail-lj1-f182.google.com with SMTP id e12so3977978ljn.2 for ; Mon, 03 May 2021 04:12:27 -0700 (PDT) X-Google-DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=1e100.net; s=20161025; h=x-gm-message-state:mime-version:references:in-reply-to:from:date :message-id:subject:to:cc; bh=rwEzmdF3ipOx5AsjgJaQKSrYbnJRwWIu1EXw48wBW5E=; b=CVLxAmAtf8Peu2cW1gBB2OuJGtRg+o+1YgtvCwyl5S8+OGl/Ydq0fKNgM8PkKHczzA N0uuvMy62fFXmNpojmWgEsSRZ0M+pVfZYPYzA0/gpmP6aCs9SuAOwfjZnRr5TFL2zryX NgiPWPupEGxhYpmo3+bn+V6pD/2p1FuB42BzodmPQcRPDdJAH/fymWo1P+2b6F/yeTIp HumUlb91Tvf71iQPb6ejRcH+jjRKhVjmz4hrtFlBmU1Qs8HBlRNGtTr7+1VvExv97PaN J1EUtauMQXoW8bG0Dgi6gb5VdgcQCE17hE/fElkuQjDFxlqCqM6nXTx9S2EHLZtZd0BN d7Mw== X-Gm-Message-State: AOAM533t2kFK5Hecj1CcWviDipmtFahHImTiLPOuxNQIjCcUMaJDwvYl WNEdb1bTzjafAAME6HiOKGUpK4FTQnSX+w== X-Google-Smtp-Source: ABdhPJxVaJANMpDAFmLkTKVpx27EAbCpgzSn2UK3L6hz/Ncjyh8ssh1959NyEggmMxh4mlomvnZpnw== X-Received: by 2002:a2e:b5cd:: with SMTP id g13mr13392623ljn.0.1620040345708; Mon, 03 May 2021 04:12:25 -0700 (PDT) Received: from mail-lf1-f46.google.com (mail-lf1-f46.google.com. [209.85.167.46]) by smtp.gmail.com with ESMTPSA id l11sm1109137lfg.279.2021.05.03.04.12.25 for (version=TLS1_3 cipher=TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 bits=128/128); Mon, 03 May 2021 04:12:25 -0700 (PDT) Received: by mail-lf1-f46.google.com with SMTP id c3so3436897lfs.7 for ; Mon, 03 May 2021 04:12:25 -0700 (PDT) X-Received: by 2002:a19:f01a:: with SMTP id p26mr12909273lfc.139.1620040345434; Mon, 03 May 2021 04:12:25 -0700 (PDT) MIME-Version: 1.0 References: In-Reply-To: From: Gleb Popov Date: Mon, 3 May 2021 14:11:59 +0300 X-Gmail-Original-Message-ID: Message-ID: Subject: Re: ACLs are not reflected in FS extended attributes To: Ryan Moeller Cc: freebsd-hackers X-Rspamd-Queue-Id: 4FYgL34kK6z4jND X-Spamd-Bar: / Authentication-Results: mx1.freebsd.org; dkim=none; dmarc=none; spf=pass (mx1.freebsd.org: domain of 6yearold@gmail.com designates 209.85.208.182 as permitted sender) smtp.mailfrom=6yearold@gmail.com X-Spamd-Result: default: False [-1.00 / 15.00]; RCVD_VIA_SMTP_AUTH(0.00)[]; R_SPF_ALLOW(-0.20)[+ip4:209.85.128.0/17:c]; RCVD_COUNT_THREE(0.00)[4]; TO_DN_ALL(0.00)[]; RCPT_COUNT_TWO(0.00)[2]; FORGED_SENDER(0.30)[arrowd@freebsd.org,6yearold@gmail.com]; MIME_TRACE(0.00)[0:+,1:+,2:~]; RBL_DBL_DONT_QUERY_IPS(0.00)[209.85.208.182:from]; FREEMAIL_ENVFROM(0.00)[gmail.com]; ASN(0.00)[asn:15169, ipnet:209.85.128.0/17, country:US]; FROM_NEQ_ENVFROM(0.00)[arrowd@freebsd.org,6yearold@gmail.com]; ARC_NA(0.00)[]; NEURAL_HAM_MEDIUM(-1.00)[-0.999]; FROM_HAS_DN(0.00)[]; NEURAL_SPAM_SHORT(1.00)[1.000]; NEURAL_HAM_LONG(-1.00)[-1.000]; MIME_GOOD(-0.10)[multipart/alternative,text/plain]; R_DKIM_NA(0.00)[]; PREVIOUSLY_DELIVERED(0.00)[freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org]; DMARC_NA(0.00)[freebsd.org]; SPAMHAUS_ZRD(0.00)[209.85.208.182:from:127.0.2.255]; TO_MATCH_ENVRCPT_SOME(0.00)[]; RCVD_IN_DNSWL_NONE(0.00)[209.85.208.182:from]; RWL_MAILSPIKE_POSSIBLE(0.00)[209.85.208.182:from]; RCVD_TLS_ALL(0.00)[]; MAILMAN_DEST(0.00)[freebsd-hackers] Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" X-Content-Filtered-By: Mailman/MimeDel 2.1.34 X-BeenThere: freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.34 Precedence: list List-Id: Technical discussions relating to FreeBSD List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Mon, 03 May 2021 11:12:29 -0000 On Tue, Apr 27, 2021 at 8:58 PM Ryan Moeller wrote: > ACLs on FreeBSD are not exposed through extended attributes but rather > acl(9) interfaces in VFS implemented by each filesystem. There is a > good selection of library interfaces already in acl(3). > acl_extended_file(3) looks like it could be pretty much a convenience > wrapper around acl_is_trivial_np(3). Hope that helps point you in the > right direction! > > -Ryan > Thanks for your reply. Indeed, I used acl_is_trivial_np to implement this function and it seems to work! From owner-freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org Wed May 5 23:45:56 2021 Return-Path: Delivered-To: freebsd-hackers@mailman.nyi.freebsd.org Received: from mx1.freebsd.org (mx1.freebsd.org [IPv6:2610:1c1:1:606c::19:1]) by mailman.nyi.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id C6E68627593 for ; Wed, 5 May 2021 23:45:56 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from debdrup@freebsd.org) Received: from mailman.nyi.freebsd.org (unknown [127.0.1.3]) by mx1.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 4FbCyX0FDmz4sCK for ; Wed, 5 May 2021 23:45:56 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from debdrup@freebsd.org) Received: by mailman.nyi.freebsd.org (Postfix) id 04A0C627506; Wed, 5 May 2021 23:45:56 +0000 (UTC) Delivered-To: hackers@mailman.nyi.freebsd.org Received: from mx1.freebsd.org (mx1.freebsd.org [IPv6:2610:1c1:1:606c::19:1]) by mailman.nyi.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 041F162734B; Wed, 5 May 2021 23:45:56 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from debdrup@freebsd.org) Received: from freefall.freebsd.org (freefall.freebsd.org [96.47.72.132]) (using TLSv1.3 with cipher TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 (256/256 bits) key-exchange X25519 server-signature RSA-PSS (4096 bits) server-digest SHA256 client-signature RSA-PSS (4096 bits) client-digest SHA256) (Client CN "freefall.freebsd.org", Issuer "R3" (verified OK)) by mx1.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 4FbCyW48Z3z4rtV; Wed, 5 May 2021 23:45:55 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from debdrup@freebsd.org) DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=freebsd.org; s=dkim; t=1620258355; h=from:from:reply-to:subject:subject:date:date:message-id:message-id: to:to:cc:cc:mime-version:mime-version:content-type:content-type; bh=rrJ/C5LwQHzaG3LJF6uvUhFGPQ0tjX/3ofQaTQ3CVqs=; b=hb018o/V/uv/88ed98JfF8ar9h5kUbT0P3VpYvg6su6YyuHTnieLVL76rlO5qGWAZI0gqM gUGBdA/jR7AkjixU55f2qzHdUpfF3GarX3VrCkSt/2QckWS4RL+azwYf72x4g8gvkUHcZt 951Vk3YQaXqPIIwHyGiJj2vKmH0iA18Z23uGZYx9+wJ137/BaeksWKmYpX45l/8GRxNkTH 7MJMvZKns+6oQKGiG2s4iOODV9VwLGcG6spVvqaV4A6oNVYneB85zj6GMjIrZ3T+pZa8KM BFfr7IT1sJqHjfT+V4ongiBYArKz/UmsWi0ns1rKs3kAtRX7CkzbG8rhIah0SA== Received: by freefall.freebsd.org (Postfix, from userid 1471) id 827D01C061; Wed, 5 May 2021 23:45:55 +0000 (UTC) Date: Thu, 6 May 2021 01:45:53 +0200 From: Daniel Ebdrup Jensen To: hackers@FreeBSD.org Cc: current@FreeBSD.org, stable@FreeBSD.org Subject: FreeBSD Quarterly Status Report - First Quarter 2021 Message-ID: <20210505234553.br4gjrtkrjewezzs@nerd-thinkpad.local> Mail-Followup-To: Daniel Ebdrup Jensen , hackers@FreeBSD.org, current@FreeBSD.org, stable@FreeBSD.org MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/signed; micalg=pgp-sha512; protocol="application/pgp-signature"; boundary="p2qii6v5xswo6umh" Content-Disposition: inline ARC-Message-Signature: i=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=freebsd.org; s=dkim; t=1620258355; h=from:from:reply-to:subject:subject:date:date:message-id:message-id: to:to:cc:cc:mime-version:mime-version:content-type:content-type; bh=rrJ/C5LwQHzaG3LJF6uvUhFGPQ0tjX/3ofQaTQ3CVqs=; b=MU47EcyRiUfXLP90bn8A1Wfo7iWT/gxmlkuro27nq8ykDc4XMSFiHkiGrqBe6ItUQMRD60 Pbz5FWTjhrxaC+sLH21G0yznXX3g9+2GWF+L85oWbqEgncM+3zd9tr/hlDd7+h0OSqwgtS x6FISe651Wx6e/6Vl+/ks/t+NqFcmVayujsFPWIcNhLu6gnNm80iWai7Ku372RUFbk3apO x6H4A8gCzBD/tSUWPymU7Axcc4VtFqhBGPE2X6F8glqsC0YWfqKIz4lze1oB1tUREqknJk 7FbPfdSG9nQKEHWhzUGOI7zc8kDgA1Vo9d6eZKGtOrlFRgZA16s/6WcZaHRpDA== ARC-Seal: i=1; s=dkim; d=freebsd.org; t=1620258355; a=rsa-sha256; cv=none; b=cdwLTE2n5BsWtXU3jDegFsKpakkriJrc8FUrNLh9wDfdx8OYZx0Q2Ew8qi681I9xw8u3Iq 1yD37EEfCd/5BqMyA94hupckDIefHF3vNsZ2jhm10HTd1mXU8qrBX2SVClYDk5lbNGbdzS aZb6tPuG5PiOKoC+jWmsPmqkDRlBakj89C5tG49bkWqKE+E2xPf1iwp64FJD7oennHidxO 8L92Ud+mwCAS2aeQpnxxIexKSVrxt5efA4HzTwDEGJJwjKXyO1ksTqzANZ2yctPn3hZk+L FusqV2V7fRWtqxdJ07jiX3xbaA8SIIZ92xE3ZE39f0xc0luNykX+jAbxAujxUA== ARC-Authentication-Results: i=1; mx1.freebsd.org; none X-BeenThere: freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.34 Precedence: list List-Id: Technical discussions relating to FreeBSD List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Wed, 05 May 2021 23:45:56 -0000 --p2qii6v5xswo6umh Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Description: FreeBSD status report, 2020q1 Content-Disposition: inline Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Introduction This report covers FreeBSD related projects for the period between January = and March, and is the first of four planned reports for 2021. The first quarter of 2021 has been very active in both FreeBSD-CURRENT and -STABLE, with 13.0-RELEASE work starting in January and finishing up mid-Ap= ril. It provides lots of new features, and there=E2=80=99s even a good chance th= at some workloads will experience performance improvements. The number of entries is slightly down, and this is probably due to a combination of factors like code slush as well as the ongoing issues with COVID-19, but we naturally hope that things will look up next quarter. This combined with a switch-over to AsciiDoctor and a decision to make full use = of the status report work schedule to avoid stress, means that the report can = now be expected to come out at the end of the first month after the quarter has finished, rather than in the middle. This report in particular includes a number of interesting entries, covering everything from the linuxulator, various mitigation work, long-awaited work= on OpenBSM, work on kernel sanitizers, and many more things that it is hoped y= ou will enjoy reading about. Yours, Daniel Ebdrup Jensen, with a status hat on. =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Table of Contents =E2=80=A2 FreeBSD Team Reports =E2=96=A1 FreeBSD Foundation =E2=96=A1 FreeBSD Release Engineering Team =E2=96=A1 Cluster Administration Team =E2=96=A1 Continuous Integration =E2=96=A1 Ports Collection =E2=80=A2 Projects =E2=96=A1 Git Migration Working Group =E2=96=A1 LLDB Debugger Improvements =E2=96=A1 Linux compatibility layer update =E2=96=A1 Vulnerability Mitigations =E2=96=A1 OpenBSM Synchronisation =E2=80=A2 Kernel =E2=96=A1 ENA FreeBSD Driver Update =E2=96=A1 Intel wireless update =E2=96=A1 Kernel Sanitizers =E2=96=A1 Marvell ARM64 SoCs support =E2=96=A1 nv(9)-based audio device enumeration =E2=80=A2 Ports =E2=96=A1 KDE on FreeBSD =E2=96=A1 FreeBSD Office team 2021Q1 status report =E2=96=A1 VirtualBox FreeBSD port =E2=80=A2 Documentation =E2=96=A1 DOCNG on FreeBSD =E2=96=A1 FreeBSD Translations on Weblate =E2=96=A1 WebApps working group =E2=80=A2 Miscellaneous =E2=96=A1 Discord Server & Community Growth =E2=80=A2 Third-Party Projects =E2=96=A1 CBSD Project =E2=96=A1 helloSystem =E2=96=A1 PkgBase.live =E2=96=A1 Potluck & Potman =E2=96=A1 sysctl improvements =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 FreeBSD Team Reports Entries from the various official and semi-official teams, as found in the Administration Page. FreeBSD Foundation Contact: Deb Goodkin The FreeBSD Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to supporting and promoting the FreeBSD Project and community worldwide. Fundi= ng comes from individual and corporate donations and is used to fund and manage software development projects, conferences and developer summits, and provi= de travel grants to FreeBSD contributors. The Foundation purchases and supports hardware to improve and maintain FreeBSD infrastructure and provides resour= ces to improve security, quality assurance, and release engineering efforts; publishes marketing material to promote, educate, and advocate for the Free= BSD Project; facilitates collaboration between commercial vendors and FreeBSD developers; and finally, represents the FreeBSD Project in executing contra= cts, 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 most organizations, our team continued to work from home. Our temporary ban on travel for staff members remains in effect, but continues to not aff= ect our output too much, since most conferences are still virtual. We continued supporting the community and Project, even though some of our work and responses may have been 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 th= at information back to the Project. Not surprisingly, the stay at home orders, combined with our company ban on travel during Q1 made in-person meetings non-existent. However, the team was able to continue meeting with our partn= ers and commercial users virtually. These meetings help us understand some of t= he applications where FreeBSD is used. We were thrilled for the opportunity to work with AMD early on to ensure FreeBSD worked on their recently released third generation EPYC series. You= can read more about that here: https://freebsdfoundation.org/news-and-events/ latest-news/freebsd-well-prepared-for-amd-epyc-7003-series-processors/. Fundraising Efforts First, we=E2=80=99d like to say thank you to everyone who has given us a fi= nancial contribution this year! Last quarter we raised $88,237, which includes donations from organizations like Facebook and Tarsnap, as well as many individuals. We also have a few donation commitments for this quarter. Going forward this quarter, we will be reaching out to FreeBSD commercial u= sers to help support our growing efforts. At the beginning of 2021, we opened two job positions in our software development team, to increase the amount of support we are able to provide in this area. That includes increasing the amount of code reviews and bug fixes we do and adding some major features to FreeBSD, to help keep FreeBSD the innovative, secure, and reliable operating system you rely on. You=E2=80=99ll find out how we used your donations for Q1 in our report, as= well as individual reports throughout this status report. We are excited about our plans for 2021, which include more FreeBSD online advocacy and training, operating system course content, and the software development work mentioned above. While we are still in this pandemic, we= =E2=80=99re working hard to help connect folks within the community with more virtual opportunities. Please consider making a donation to help us continue and increase our supp= ort for FreeBSD in 2021: https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/donate/. We also have the Partnership Program, to provide more benefits for our larg= er commercial donors. Find out more information and share with your companies! https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/FreeBSD-foundation-partnership-program/ OS Improvements Over the quarter a total of 264 base system commits, 63 ports commits, and = 10 doc tree commits were tagged as sponsored by the FreeBSD Foundation. The Foundation also sponsored work that was committed to third-party repositori= es, including 26 commits to LLDB (the LLVM project debugger). This includes work =66rom staff members, interns, and grant recipients. In other quarterly rep= ort entries you can read more about some of these sponsored projects, such as L= LDB and other kernel debugging improvements, and kernel sanitizers. As usual, staff members committed numerous bug fixes, minor improvements, a= nd security patches. Focus areas in the kernel included virtual memory, x86 pm= ap, uma, tmpfs, nullfs, ffs and ufs, and job control improvements. User space work included changes to the libc, libcasper, and libthr librari= es, the run-time linker, as well as the ldd, cmp, diff, makefs, elfctl, growfs,= and bhyve utilities. Foundation staff also participated in many Phabricator code reviews, suppor= ted bug triage, integrated a number of submissions from third parties, and supported the Git transition working group. Foundation staff also supported the promotion of the AArch64 (arm64) architecture to Tier-1 status. Work included additions to freebsd-update, integration of various bug fixes, and test run issue triage. Continuous Integration and Quality Assurance The Foundation provides a full-time staff member and funds projects on improving continuous integration, automated testing, and overall quality assurance efforts for the FreeBSD Project. During the first quarter of 2021, the work was focused on pre-commit tests = and building release artifacts in the CI staging environment. The other main working item is following the VCS migration to change the src source from Subversion to Git and doc changed to AsciiDoc format. See the FreeBSD CI section of this report for completed work items and deta= iled information. Supporting FreeBSD Infrastructure The Foundation provides hardware and support to improve the FreeBSD infrastructure. Last quarter, we continued supporting FreeBSD hardware loca= ted around the world. We coordinated efforts between the new NYI Chicago facili= ty and clusteradm to start working on getting the facility prepared for some of the new FreeBSD hardware we are planning on purchasing. NYI generously prov= ides this for free to the Project. We also worked on connecting with the new own= ers of the NYI Bridgewater site, where most of the FreeBSD infrastructure is located. FreeBSD Advocacy and Education A large part of our efforts are dedicated to advocating for the Project. Th= is includes promoting work being done by others with FreeBSD; producing advoca= cy literature to teach people about FreeBSD and help make the path to starting using FreeBSD or contributing to the Project easier; and attending and gett= ing 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 even= ts geared towards underrepresented groups. We support the FreeBSD-focused even= ts to help provide a venue for sharing knowledge, to work together on projects, and to facilitate collaboration between developers and commercial users. Th= is 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. Wh= ile we were still unable to attend in-person meetings due to covid-19, we were = able to attend virtual events and began planning for the online Spring FreeBSD Developer Summit. In addition to attending and planning 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. https:// www.freebsdfoundation.org/freebsd/how-to-guides/ Check out some of the advocacy and education work we did last quarter: =E2=80=A2 Presented a workshop at Apricot 2021 =E2=80=A2 Staffed a virtual stand at FOSDEM 2021 and created a what=E2=80= =99s new in 13.0 video to accompany the stand =E2=80=A2 Staffed a virtual booth and was a community sponsor for FOSSASI= A 2021 =E2=80=A2 Participated as an Industry Partner for USENIX FAST =E2=80=9821 =E2=80=A2 Committed to be an Industry Partner for USENIX Annual Tech, USE= NIX OSDI, USENIX Security and USENIX LISA =E2=80=A2 Continued to promote the FreeBSD Office Hours series Videos fro= m the one hour sessions can be found on the Project=E2=80=99s YouTube Channel: ht= tps:// www.youtube.com/c/FreeBSDProject. See the Office Hours section of this report for more information. =E2=80=A2 Worked with the organizing committee to begin planning the Spri= ng FreeBSD Developers Summit. =E2=80=A2 Continued recruiting for the FreeBSD Fridays series. The series= will return in May. =E2=80=A2 Participated in an interview with The Register about FreeBSD 13= =2E0 highlights. https://www.theregister.com/2021/03/10/the_state_of_freebsd/ Keep up to date with our latest work in our newsletters: https:// freebsdfoundation.org/our-work/latest-updates/?filter=3Dnewsletter 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 at https= :// www.freebsdfoundation.org/journal/. You can find out more about events we attended and upcoming events at https= :// www.freebsdfoundation.org/news-and-events/. 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 http://www.freebsdfoundation.org to find out how we support FreeBSD a= nd how we can help you! =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 FreeBSD Release Engineering Team Links: FreeBSD 13.0-RELEASE schedule URL: https://www.freebsd.org/releases/13.0R/ schedule.html FreeBSD development snapshots URL: https://download.freebsd.org/ftp/snapsho= ts/ ISO-IMAGES/ Contact: FreeBSD Release Engineering Team, The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team is responsible for setting and publish= ing release schedules for official project releases of FreeBSD, announcing code freezes and maintaining the respective branches, among other things. During the first quarter of 2021, the Release Engineering Team started work= on the 13.0-RELEASE cycle, the first release from the stable/13 branch. As of = this writing, the release is progressing smoothly, with one additional BETA build and two additional RC builds added to the schedule. The schedule has been updated on the FreeBSD Project website to reflect the updates. Additionally throughout the quarter, several development snapshots builds w= ere released for the head, stable/12, and stable/11 branches. Development snaps= hot builds for stable/13 will be available after the 13.0 release. Thank you to all that have helped test the 13.0 builds up until this point = and have reported issues. As always, we strive for quality over quantity. Sponsor: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate") Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Cluster Administration Team Contact: Cluster Administration Team Links: Cluster Administration Team members URL: https://www.freebsd.org/administra= tion /#t-clusteradm The FreeBSD Cluster Administration Team consists of the people responsible = for administering the machines that the Project relies on for its distributed w= ork and communications to be synchronised. In this quarter, the team has worked= on the following: =E2=80=A2 Installed a new package builder =E2=80=A2 Added Git support to cluster management scripts =E2=80=A2 Put local Git mirrors on the universe machines =E2=80=A2 Replaced disks in the UK mirror =E2=80=A2 Replaced a disk in pointyhat (https://pkg-status.freebsd.org) =E2=80=A2 Recycled some old dead-weight servers eating up rackspace and p= ower at our primary cluster site =E2=80=A2 Upgraded developer reference platforms =E2=96=A1 ref{11,12,13,14}-{amd64,i386} =E2=96=A1 universe* =E2=80=A2 Installed two new aarch64 machines =E2=96=A1 ref12-aarch64, ref13-aarch64, ref14-aarch64 =E2=96=A1 security-officer aarch64 freebsd-update builder =E2=80=A2 Worked with asciidoc project to update https://www.freebsd.org = and https:// docs.freebsd.org =E2=80=A2 Installed a new mirror server in Brazil, sponsored by nic.br =E2=96=A1 gdns points everyone from South America to this mirror =E2=96=A1 complete {download,ftp,pkg}.freebsd.org mirror =E2=80=A2 Helped rmacklem@ participate in this year=E2=80=99s NFS Bakeath= on interoperability testing event by providing a cluster machine to the testing VPN =E2=80=A2 Ongoing day to day cluster management activity =E2=96=A1 Putting out fires =E2=96=A1 Babysitting pkgsync Work in progress: =E2=80=A2 Move pkg-master.nyi to new hardware =E2=80=A2 Fix git fallouts =E2=80=A2 Upgrade cluster hardware =E2=80=A2 Upgrade developer-facing machines to 14-CURRENT =E2=96=A1 Install ref14* machines =E2=80=A2 Improve to the package building infrastructure =E2=80=A2 Research and test migration away from mailman2 =E2=80=A2 Work with Git migration working group for ports tree migration =E2=80=A2 Review the service jails and service administrators operation =E2=80=A2 Improve the web service architecture =E2=80=A2 Improve the cluster backup plan =E2=80=A2 Setup powerpc pkgbuilder/ref/universal machines =E2=80=A2 Prepare for a new mirror site in Australia, to be hosted by IX = Australia =E2=80=A2 Search for more providers that can fit the requirements for a g= eneric mirrored layout or a tiny mirror =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Continuous Integration Links: FreeBSD Jenkins Instance URL: https://ci.FreeBSD.org FreeBSD Hardware Testing Lab URL: https://ci.FreeBSD.org/hwlab FreeBSD CI artifact archive URL: https://artifact.ci.FreeBSD.org FreeBSD CI weekly report URL: https://hackmd.io/@FreeBSD-CI FreeBSD Jenkins wiki URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/Jenkins Hosted CI wiki URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/HostedCI 3rd Party Software CI URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/3rdPartySoftwareCI Tickets related to freebsd-testing@ URL: https://preview.tinyurl.com/y9maau= wg FreeBSD CI Repository URL: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-ci Contact: Jenkins Admin Contact: Li-Wen Hsu Contact: freebsd-testing Mailing List Contact: IRC #freebsd-ci channel on EFNet The FreeBSD CI team maintains the continuous integration system of the Free= BSD project. The CI system firstly checks the committed changes can be successf= ully built, then performs various tests and analysis over the newly built result= s. The artifacts from those builds are archived in the artifact server for fur= ther 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 code or ad= just test infrastructure. The details of these efforts are available in the week= ly CI reports. During the first quarter of 2021, we continued working with the contributors and developers in the project to fulfil their testing needs and also keep collaborating with external projects and companies to improve their products and FreeBSD. Important changes: =E2=80=A2 All src jobs were changed to use git to follow VCS migration. T= hanks Brandon Bergren (bdragon@) again. =E2=80=A2 Doc job was updated for following the AsciiDoc migration. New jobs added: =E2=80=A2 TCP test suite for main on amd64 =E2=80=A2 GCC 9 build for main on amd64 Work in progress and open tasks: =E2=80=A2 Designing and implementing pre-commit CI building and testing =E2=80=A2 Designing and implementing use of CI cluster to build release a= rtifacts as release engineering does =E2=80=A2 Collecting and sorting CI tasks and ideas here =E2=80=A2 Testing and merging pull requests in the FreeBSD-ci repo =E2=80=A2 Reducing the procedures of CI/test environment setting up for c= ontributors and developers =E2=80=A2 Setting up the CI stage environment and putting the experimenta= l jobs on it =E2=80=A2 Setting up public network access for the VM guest running tests =E2=80=A2 Implementing automatic tests on bare metal hardware =E2=80=A2 Adding drm ports building tests against -CURRENT =E2=80=A2 Planning to run ztest and network stack tests =E2=80=A2 Adding more external toolchain related jobs =E2=80=A2 Improving the hardware lab to be more mature and adding more ha= rdware =E2=80=A2 Helping more software get FreeBSD support in their CI pipeline = Wiki pages: 3rdPartySoftwareCI, HostedCI =E2=80=A2 Working with hosted CI providers to have better FreeBSD support =E2=80=A2 The build and test results will be sent to the dev-ci mailing l= ist soon. Feedback and help with analysis is very appreciated! Please see freebsd-testing@ related tickets for more WIP information, and d= on=E2=80=99t hesitate to join the effort! Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Ports Collection Links: About FreeBSD Ports URL: https://www.FreeBSD.org/ports/ Contributing to Ports URL: https://docs.freebsd.org/en/articles/contributin= g/ ports-contributing/ FreeBSD Ports Monitoring URL: http://portsmon.freebsd.org/ Ports Management Team URL: https://www.freebsd.org/portmgr/ Ports Tarball URL: http://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/ports/ Contact: Ren=C3=A9 Ladan Contact: FreeBSD Ports Management Team The Ports Management Team is responsible for overseeing the overall directi= on of the Ports Tree, building packages, and personnel matters. Below is what happened in the last quarter. As always, first the quarterly dashboard: * we currently have around 43,800 ports (including flavors). * the open PR count for ports is currently 2477,= of which 532 are unassigned. * during the last quarter, 9481 commits were made= by 168 committers on the main branch, and 620 commits by 64 committers on the 2021Q1 branch. Compared to 2020Q4, the number of ports again grew by five percent, the number of open PRs dropped a bit, and the number of commits on= the main branch grew with almost nine percent. During the last quarter, we welcomed Neel Chauhan (nc@), Lewis Cook (lcook@= ), and Nuno Teixeira (eduardo@). Adrian Chadd (adrian@) who is already a src committer got a ports commit bit extension. Tobias Berner (tcberner@) asked= if he could join the portmgr-lurker program and was shortly added afterwards. We sent another mail to the ports@ mailing list outlining further plans for removing Python 2.7 from the Ports Tree. Currently all ports recursively depending on Python 2.7 are marked to expire on 2021-06-23, which unfortuna= tely includes a lot of KDE ports due to the qt5-webengine port. We are evaluating various mitigation strategies. portmgr has been collaborating with the Git Working Group over the last yea= r to prepare the Ports Tree to be converted to Git. Tasks included: * converting various scripts and tools to support Git * attending Git Working Group meet= ings * updating documentation * updating various internal and public third-party services * evaluating numerous test conversion (git-beta) results Regarding the Ports Tree itself, two new USES were introduced: * kodi to ea= se porting of Kodi add-ons * mpi for dependencies of MPICH and OpenMPI A new default version for ImageMagick was added and the default version for Julia= was removed as no Julia port currently exists. pkg was updated to 1.16.3, Firef= ox to 87.0, and Chromium to 89.0.4389.114 The Cluster Administration Team assisted with getting three new package building machines running in the build cluster. Two are for arm64 builds and one is a general builder. antoine@ was again busy with exp-runs, 28 this time, to: * test various por= ts updates * update the clang/LLVM version from 6 to 10 in USES=3Dcompiler * r= educe includes in /usr/include/crypto =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Projects Projects that span multiple categories, from the kernel and userspace to the Ports Collection or external projects. Git Migration Working Group Links: Git transition wiki URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/git doc git repo URL: https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/doc ports git repo URL: https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/ports src (base system) git repo URL: https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/src Committers guide Git primer URL: https://docs.freebsd.org/en/articles/ committers-guide/#git-primer Handbook Using Git appendix URL: https://docs.freebsd.org/en/books/handbook/ mirrors/#git Game of Trees URL: http://gameoftrees.org/ gitup URL: https://github.com/johnmehr/gitup Contact: Li-Wen Hsu Contact: Warner Losh Contact: Ed Maste Contact: Ulrich Sp=C3=B6rlein Contact: FreeBSD-git mailing list Contact IRC #gitcvt channel on EFnet The doc and src trees were migrated from Subversion to Git at the end of 20= 20, with some additional work extending into the first quarter of 2021. The Git Working Group implemented or updated commit hooks, and prepared for FreeBSD= 13 to be built from Git. We converted draft documentation from Markdown to AsciiDoc and merged it into the committer=E2=80=99s guide and handbook. The ports repository migration to Git started at the end of the quarter, beginning with a final Subversion commit on March 31st to indicate that the conversion started. We are working on portsnap and other ports infrastructu= re and they will be finished before or soon after the migration. The Git Working Group continues to track progress on two permissively-licen= sed git compatible tools: Gitup and Game of Trees. Gitup is a small, dependency-free tool to clone and update git repositories. It is used only = to keep a local tree up-to-date, and has no support for local commits. Game of Trees is a version control client that is compatible with Git repositories. It provides a user interface and workflow that is distinct fr= om that of Git. It is in no way intended to be a drop-in replacement for git, = but can be used to develop software maintained in a Git repository. Gitup and Game of Trees are currently available as ports and packages. Futu= re work will evaluate them as candidates for the base system. In the second quarter of 2021 we expect to complete some minor remaining migration tasks. This will complete the initial phase of the Git migration,= and the working group will wind down. The core team will then begin a new effor= t to investigate and evaluate new workflow changes. Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation (in part) =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 LLDB Debugger Improvements Links: Moritz Systems Project Description URL: https://www.moritz.systems/blog/ lldb-freebsd-cpu-target-support-and-userland-debugging-improvements/ Progress Report 1 URL: https://www.moritz.systems/blog/ freebsd-remote-process-plugin-on-non-x86-architectures/ Progress Report 2 URL: https://www.moritz.systems/blog/ freebsd-legacy-process-plugin-removed/ Progress Report 3 URL: https://www.moritz.systems/blog/ lldb-support-for-fork-and-vfork/ Git Repository URL: https://github.com/moritz-systems/llvm-project Contact: Kamil Rytarowski Contact: Micha=C5=82 G=C3=B3rny The LLDB project builds on libraries provided by LLVM and Clang to provide a great modern debugger. It uses the Clang ASTs and the expression parser, LL= VM JIT, LLVM disassembler, etc so that it provides an experience that =E2=80= =9Cjust works=E2=80=9D. It is also blazingly fast and more permissively licensed th= an GDB, the GNU Debugger. FreeBSD includes LLDB in the base system. At present, it has some limitatio= ns in comparison with the GNU GDB debugger, and does not yet provide a complete replacement. This project aimed to finish porting the FreeBSD platform supp= ort in LLDB to the modern client-server model on all architectures originally supported by LLDB on FreeBSD and removing the obsolete plugin. After switching to the new process model, the project focused on implementi= ng support for tracing fork(2) and vfork(2) syscalls. The proposed model is compatible with the follow-fork-mode setting from GDB. On fork, the debugger can either continuing tracing the parent and detach the child, or switch to tracing the child and detach the parent. The new code makes it possible to debug child processes. It also prevents software breakpoints from leaking to child processes and causing them to crash. The introduced changes are expected to be shipped with LLDB 13.0. The overall experience of FreeBSD/LLDB developers and advanced users on this rock solid Operating System reached the state known from other environments. Furthermore, the FreeBSD-focused work also resulted in generic improvements, enhancing the LLDB support for Linux and NetBSD. TODO: we are currently working on adding a ptrace(2) request to create a co= re dump of the stopped program without crashing it. Afterwards, we are plannin= g to improve LLDB test coverage for core dump support and work on any issues we might hit. Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Linux compatibility layer update Contact: Edward Tomasz Napierala, Linuxulator improvements have been ongoing for the last two years, with sup= port =66rom the FreeBSD Foundation over a few distinct project grants as well as contributions from the community. The goal of this project is to improve FreeBSD=E2=80=99s ability to execute unmodified Linux binaries. Current sup= port status of specific Linux applications is being tracked at the Linux app status Wiki page. The work this quarter focused on making sure the 13.0-RELEASE ships with Linuxulator in a good shape, and fixing problems reported by users. There a= re some new directories provided by linsysfs(5), the lack of which, through a curious chain of events, broke installation of make(1) in Ubuntu Focal. The getcwd(2) syscall was fixed to no longer return the wrong error value for certain conditions, which was breaking Mono. The getsockopt(2) syscall now supports SO_PEERSEC and SO_PEERGROUPS, which are being used by su(8) and su= do (8). Other fixes include flag handling for 32-bit send(2) syscall, and seve= ral ptrace(2) problems, which were affecting Steam games. The kernel version was bumped to 3.17.0 to unbreak Qt applications from Focal. The sysutils/ debootstrap port, and its corresponding debootstrap package, now correctly handle Ubuntu=E2=80=99s GPG keys. The debootstrap utility now installs the = mremap(2) workaround for apt(8). This reduces the number of steps required to set up Linux chroot or jail. Finally there have been some improvements to the star= tup scripts. Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Vulnerability Mitigations Contact: Ed Maste Contact: Konstantin Belousov Contact: Marcin Wojtas Contact: Dawid G=C3=B3recki We added support for enforcing a write XOR execute mapping policy. It is enabled by setting the kern.elf64.allow_wx and/or kern.elf32.allow_wx sysct= ls to 0 (for 64-bit and 32-bit binaries, respectively). Binaries can indicate = that they requre writeable and executable mappings by setting the NT_FREEBSD_FCTL_WXNEEDED ELF feature bit, set via elfctl. In addition, elfctl received a few usability improvements to support use by ports, targeting different FreeBSD base system versions. We added a -i flag= to ignore unknown flags (so that the same elfctl invocation could be used on o= lder FreeBSD versions) as well as the ability to specify features by value. Flags that request opt-out of a mitigation now have a no prefix to make the sense clearer. For example, the flag to indicate that the binary is not compatible with ASLR is now named noaslr. Unprefixed flag names are still supported, for backwards compatibility, but will emit a warning and will be removed in a later version. The next step is to introduce ports infrastructure to support tagging binar= ies in ports that require special flags. Details can be found in PR252629. Another update is that the base system binaries are now built as position-independent executable (PIE) by default, for 64-bit architectures.= PIE executables are used in conjunction with address randomization (ASLR) as a mitigation for certain types of security vulnerabilities. The ASLR feature still remains opt-in, however the described change allows enabling it using only sysctl knobs, without a need to rebuild the image. Enabling PIE result= s in no material performance impact for most workloads. It is also worth mentioning that a certain number of ports inherit the base systems /usr/share/mk infrastructure, and some initially failed to build af= ter toggling the PIE setting. All issues detected by executing the exp-run were addressed. The details can be found in PR253275. The next step is to try enabling ASLR by default for 64-bit architectures. = The patch is under discussion. Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation Sponsor: Stormshield =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 OpenBSM Synchronisation Links: TrustedBSD / OpenBSM URL: http://www.trustedbsd.org/openbsm.html OpenBSM Github Sources URL: https://github.com/openbsm/openbsm Synchronisation with macOS Catalina URL: https://github.com/openbsm/openbsm/ commit/54a0c07cf8bac71554130e8f6760ca68e5f36c7f Apple OpenSource URL: https://opensource.apple.com Contact: Gordon Bergling OpenBSM is a crucial part of FreeBSD, which provides auditing features for = the operating system. OpenBSM is incorporated into FreeBSD and macOS. Both Apple and FreeBSD have currently made changes to the OpenBSM framework, which wer= en=E2=80=99t upstreamed. This small project aims to consolidate these changes and upstre= am them to the OpenBSM github repository, so that both development efforts can= be merged to FreeBSD later on. There is currently a pull request pending that synchronizes the FreeBSD sou= rces with OpenBSM. A comparison was made to incorporate Apple=E2=80=99s Catalina= changes. A few weeks ago Apple has also made the source code of Big Sur available. In = the latest comparison against OpenBSM Apple has made overlapping ID changes, wh= ich are making a simple import of the changes impossible. I am currently trying= to work around that issue by making OpenBSM a little vendor specific. =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Kernel Updates to kernel subsystems/features, driver support, filesystems, and mor= e. ENA FreeBSD Driver Update Links: ENA README URL: https://github.com/amzn/amzn-drivers/blob/master/kernel/fbs= d/ ena/README Contact: Michal Krawczyk Contact: Artur Rojek Contact: Marcin Wojtas 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 traffi= c, depending on the instance type on which it is used. Completed since the last update: =E2=80=A2 Update ENA driver to v2.3.1 =E2=80=A2 Determine location of the MSIx vector table on the device and a= llocate it dynamically - this enables driver usage on instances like c5gn. =E2=80=A2 MFC of the ENA v2.3.1 driver to the FreeBSD 11/12/13-STABLE bra= nches =E2=80=A2 ENA v2.3.1 will be a part of the FreeBSD 13.0-RELEASE Work in progress: =E2=80=A2 Internal review ongoing: =E2=80=A2 Introduce full kernel RSS API support =E2=80=A2 Allow reconfiguration of the RSS indirection table and hash key =E2=80=A2 Adjust iflib framework for the ENA requirements =E2=80=A2 Add DMA width configuration field commit 6dd69f0064f1 =E2=80=A2 Add support for admin completion queues commit 09c3f04ff3be =E2=80=A2 Prototype the driver port to the iflib framework Sponsor: Amazon.com Inc =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Intel wireless update Links: The freebsd-wireless mailing list URL: https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/ listinfo/freebsd-wireless Contact: Bjoern A. Zeeb Newer Intel Wireless device support The Intel Wireless driver update project aims to bring support for newer chipsets. During the first quarter the driver and firmware were synched from upstream= so that we will have support for all modern cards currently supported in Linux. Some iwlwifi driver changes were also submitted back upstream. Several conflicts with the original implementation of LinuxKPI were or are being resolved and more LinuxKPI code was upstreamed to FreeBSD HEAD. LinuxKPI 802.11 compat code was improved and as of the day of writing we ha= ve data packets going over 11a. The plan for the next weeks is to clean things up, land as much as possible= in HEAD, provide the code for testing and work on stability based on feedback before filling gaps in the LinuxKPI 802.11 compat code to enhance support f= or more standards and features. Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Kernel Sanitizers Contact: Mark Johnston Work has been ongoing to port a pair of kernel sanitizers from NetBSD to FreeBSD. Sanitizers are debugging tools which make use of compiler instrumentation to validate memory accesses. They can automatically detect = many classes of C programming bugs, such as use-after-frees and loads of uninitialized variables. When combined with syzkaller or other testing tool= s, they are effective at detecting kernel bugs that may otherwise require a gr= eat deal of manual effort to identify. Two sanitizers are being ported, KASAN (AddressSanitizer) and KMSAN ( MemorySanitizer). KASAN checks the validity of all memory accesses within t= he kernel map and triggers a panic upon an out-of-bounds access or a use-after-free. Various kernel memory allocators annotate regions of memory= to denote whether corresponding accesses are valid. The initial port of KASAN = is complete and is planned to appear in the FreeBSD development branch in mid-April. KMSAN detects uses of uninitialized memory and can detect bugs t= hat result in the contents of kernel memory being leaked to userspace. Both sanitizers incur considerable memory and CPU overhead. They are intended to= be used mainly in conjunction with test frameworks, though it is certainly possible to boot and run sanitizer-enabled kernels in a desktop or laptop environment. Currently this work is amd64-only. It should be possible to po= rt it to arm64 and riscv with relatively little effort. Future work in this area consists of finishing the KMSAN port, fixing bugs found by the combination of KASAN and syzkaller, and making sure that sanitizers can validate accesses to the direct map. This may consist of an option to disable usage of the direct map, or introducing a shadow for the direct map. Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Marvell ARM64 SoCs support Contact: Zyta Szpak Contact: Kornel Dul=C4=99ba Contact: Marcin Wojtas The Semihalf team is working on improving the FreeBSD support for the Marve= ll Octeon TX2 CN913x and Armada 7k/8k SoC families. Marvell Armada 7k8k and Octeon TX2 CN913x SoC families are quad-core 64-bit ARMv8 Cortex-A72 processors with 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. Although the mentioned SoCs are mostly supported in FreeBSD HEAD, some piec= es required improvements. Applied changes: =E2=80=A2 Add missing frequency modes in ap806_clock driver (commit a86b0= 839d7bf) =E2=80=A2 Multiple fixes in mvebu_gpio driver - in cooperation with mmel = (commit a5dce53b75d8) =E2=80=A2 Fix device tree data parsing in mv\_ap806\_gicp interrupt contr= oller driver (commit 622d17da46eb) =E2=80=A2 Rework the ICU interrupt controller (mv\_cp110\_icu) and its pa= rent (mv\ _ap806\_gicp), so that they no longer rely on the data provided by firmware, which fixes booting the OS from the newer U-Boot/TF-A revisio= ns ( D28803) =E2=80=A2 PCIE Designware driver (pci_dw) fixes: =E2=96=A1 Correct setting of outbound I/O ATU window. =E2=96=A1 Allow mapping ATU windows bigger than 4GB. =E2=80=A2 Generic improvements that enable proper user-space mapping and = access of the PCI BARs TODO: =E2=80=A2 Upstream PCIE improvements. =E2=80=A2 Improve and merge ICU support rework. Sponsor: Marvell =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 nv(9)-based audio device enumeration Links: D26884 Implement sndstat nvlist-based enumeration ioctls. URL: https:// reviews.freebsd.org/D26884 commit c96151d33509655efb7fb26768cb56a041c176f1 URL: https://cgit.freebsd.o= rg/ src/commit/?id=3Dc96151d33509655efb7fb26768cb56a041c176f1 Contact: Ka Ho Ng This work presents a number of ioctl commands on /dev/sndstat using nv(9) to expose all available audio device nodes. nv(9) is used to generate a serial= ized binary stream representation of the information of audio device nodes prese= nted in the running system. The documented nvlist structure in sndstat(4) manual page is stable for programming use. For a long time, enumerating the audio device node interface required parsi= ng content of /dev/sndstat. It is tedious to write such a parser and handle different hw.snd.verbose levels correctly. Using nv(9) eliminates the need = to write a text parser to do audio device nodes enumeration. This work has been committed and is available in FreeBSD 14-CURRENT. Sponsor: The FreeBSD Foundation =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Ports Changes affecting the Ports Collection, whether sweeping changes that touch most of the tree, or individual ports themselves. KDE on FreeBSD Links: KDE FreeBSD URL: https://freebsd.kde.org/ KDE Community FreeBSD URL: https://community.kde.org/FreeBSD Contact: Adriaan de Groot The KDE on FreeBSD project aims to package all of the software produced by = the KDE Community for the FreeBSD ports tree. The software includes a full desk= top environment called KDE Plasma, graphics applications, instant-messengers, a video-editing suite, as well as a tea timer and hundreds of other applicati= ons that can be used on any FreeBSD machine. The KDE team (kde@) is part of desktop@ and x11@ as well, building the soft= ware stack to make FreeBSD beautiful and usable as a daily-driver graphics-based desktop machine. The KDE Frameworks have a monthly release cycle; KDE Plasma and the rest of= KDE software run on a quarterly cycle plus monthly bugfixes. All of those relea= ses landed in ports in a timely manner. Around KDE there are several hundred ot= her applications with their own releases, of which notable or new ones are: =E2=80=A2 deskutils/calindori, deskutils/kongress, net-im/kaidan, deskuti= ls/semantik and graphics/kgeotag =E2=80=A2 net-im/ruqola and net-im/neochat for Rocket and Matrix instant-= messaging, respectively =E2=80=A2 audio/amarok, the one-time favorite KDE music player Infrastructure work improved the way Qt5 ports install- and un-install chan= ges to the global header qconfig-modules.h. CMake releases landed with distress= ing regularity, and various low-level things like devel/libphonenumber and grap= hics /poppler were updated as needed. The big issue in the Qt stack on FreeBSD is Qt5-WebEngine, which is based on Chromium. Like Chromium itself (upstream), it has a tangled mess of a build system based on Python 2.7. The scheduled removal of Python 2.7 and ports t= hat depend on it is a sword looming over a large chunk of the Qt and KDE stack. Some resolution may be forthcoming in the form of WebEngine-less ports, but= the real effort is in trying to get WebEngine to build with Python3. More detailed descriptions of the updates in this quarter are available here (part 1) and here (part 2). =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 FreeBSD Office team 2021Q1 status report Links: The FreeBSD Office project URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/Office Contact: FreeBSD Office team ML Contact: Dima Panov Contact: Li-Wen Hsu The FreeBSD Office team works on a number of office-related software suites= and tools such as OpenOffice and LibreOffice. Work during this quarter was focused on providing the latest stable release= of LibreOffice suite and companion apps to all FreeBSD users. Latest and quarterly ports branches got a new branch (7.1) of the LibreOffi= ce suite and updated to 7.1.1 release. Meanwhile, our WIP repository got back a working CI instance again, thanks = to Li-Wen Hsu. We are looking for people to help with the open tasks: =E2=80=A2 The open bugs list contains all filed issues which need some at= tention =E2=80=A2 Upstream local patches in ports Patches, comments and objections are always welcome in the mailing list and bugzilla. =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 VirtualBox FreeBSD port Links: VirtualBox home page URL: https://www.virtualbox.org/ VirtualBox OSE port on FreshPorts URL: https://www.freshports.org/emulators/ virtualbox-ose Contact: VirtualBox port team The VirtualBox ports have been updated to the upstream 6.1.18 release. This is a new major release with new features and better support, especially for graphics output. This new release has support only for recent amd64 CPUs providing virtualization support in hardware (VT-x, AMD-V bits). The previous versions of the VirtualBox ports have been preserved as the -legacy versions to allow people unable to use the new version to have a virtualization solution. The new additions port at present fails to build on i386 but the old additi= ons do provide basic functionality for that emulation. =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Documentation Noteworthy changes in the documentation tree, in manpages, or in external b= ooks /documents. DOCNG on FreeBSD Contact: Sergio Carlavilla The Doc New Generation project is finished. The switch-over date was Saturd= ay, January 23rd. But there=E2=80=99s a list of remaining tasks: =E2=80=A2 Convert the Python scripts to Ruby using the AsciiDoctor API =E2=80=A2 Convert from releases from 4.4 to 9.0 to AsciiDoctor =E2=80=A2 Use rouge in the source sections instead of the CSS hack =E2=80=A2 Split the news page to reduce the total size of the page =E2=80=A2 Split the books =E2=80=A2 Improve the FDP book If you want to reduce the TODO list, give me a ping :) =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 FreeBSD Translations on Weblate Links: Translate FreeBSD on Weblate wiki URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/ DocTranslationOnWeblate FreeBSD Weblate Instance URL: https://translate-dev.freebsd.org/ Contact: Danilo G. Baio After the doc migration to Hugo/AsciiDoctor the Weblate tool it=E2=80=99s o= pened again. There are three projects on our Weblate: =E2=80=A2 Documentation (Books and Articles) - open =E2=80=A2 FreeBSD Doc (Archived) - former project =E2=80=A2 Website - pending Language teams that were using Weblate before the migration to Hugo/ AsciiDoctor, please see our Translation based on Automatic Suggestions Wiki article for more details. We=E2=80=99ve just started a project for converting the old method of autom= atically translating strings, using the Machine Translation feature, to a new system that will work for the new documentation. This will save time for our translators. There are still pending items: you can check the Status Page; any help is v= ery welcome. The next step for the new quarter is to prepare and release the Website translations through Weblate as well. =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 WebApps working group Contact: Sergio Carlavilla The purpose of this working group is to redesign the Website and the Documentation Portal. The work will be divided into 4 phases. Phase 1: =E2=80=A2 Redesign the documentation portal: new design, responsive and g= lobal search. Phase 2: =E2=80=A2 Redesign the manual pages scripts to generate the HTML using ma= ndoc. Phase 3: =E2=80=A2 Redesign the ports scripts to create an applications portal. Phase 4: =E2=80=A2 Redesign the main website: new design, responsive and dark them= e. =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Miscellaneous Objects that defy categorization. Discord Server & Community Growth Links: Discord Wiki Page URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/Discord Discord Invitation Link URL: https://discord.gg/RHprKbvWJN Contact: Lewis Cook Contact: Vincent Milum Jr Contact: Kubilay Kocak The FreeBSD project and community continues to grow, and in the last 2 quarters, we established an official FreeBSD server on the popular Discord platform, as a complementary means for out-reach, support, collaboration and social connection for and between members of the FreeBSD community, new and old. Discord boasts broad accessibility and unique features that the the communi= ty can enjoy without the steeper learning curves associated with other support= and social mediums, that can often deter or overwhelm newcomers. It also provid= es an opportunity to broaden FreeBSD=E2=80=99s reach outside traditional space= s and audiences. We currently have a respectable 480 members, with that number growing daily, and have established baseline community guidelines and moderation processes consistent with and complementary to other support channels and the FreeBSD Code of Conduct. While it=E2=80=99s early days, events have already been successfully hosted= on the platform. In January, Tom Jones (thj@) announced and ran an online Bugathon focusing on issues related to the branching of FreeBSD 13. We=E2=80=99ve al= so created dedicated text and voice channels to facilitate more of these kinds of even= ts in the future. We hope to see more events like these run as examples of how= we can utilize Discord constructively and in ways we haven=E2=80=99t as a comm= unity or project before. With the future in mind, we have plans to: =E2=80=A2 Automatically announce news, updates and advisories in Discord. =E2=80=A2 Verify and enable additional Discord features designed for large communities. =E2=80=A2 Set up bots with unique features, including moderation and inte= ractive features for members. We welcome ideas in this regard. We are keen on project and community members to reach out to talk about how= we can best leverage Discord. Some ideas we=E2=80=99d love people to get invol= ved with include: =E2=80=A2 Brainstorm/Suggest unique and creative ideas or features. =E2=80=A2 Provide bug reports and user experience feedback and suggestion= s. =E2=80=A2 Actively promote Discord in other social media spaces, particul= arly those that maybe new or curious to learn more about FreeBSD. =E2=80=A2 Contribute to the Wiki page and its content. =E2=80=A2 Participate and support other members on Discord. =E2=80=A2 Run a live stream on a FreeBSD-related topic. =E2=80=A2 Hang out in our live audio and video channels if you=E2=80=99re= comfortable doing so. =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 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. CBSD Project Links: CBSD API module URL: https://www.bsdstore.ru/en/cbsd_api_ssi.html Contact: Oleg Ginzburg What is CBSD? CBSD is a management layer written for the FreeBSD jail(8) subsystem, bhyve= (8) and xen(4). CBSD allows users to manage jail/bhyve/xen environments at different levels of abstraction by providing a varied number of unified methods: vagrant-like CBSDfiles, CLI and via dialog(1). CBSD 2021Q1 Status Report A RestAPI service layer was added during last quarter, enabling creation of programmable cloud solutions. In addition, work has been done to support RestAPI through a CBSDfile, allowing for private cloud environments deploym= ent. In such cases the local CBSD layer acts as a thin client. =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 helloSystem Links: Documentation URL: https://hellosystem.github.io/docs/ Contact: Simon Peter Contact: #helloSystem on irc.freenode.net, mirrored to #helloSystem:matrix.= org on Matrix What is helloSystem? helloSystem is FreeBSD preconfigured as a desktop operating system with a f= ocus on simplicity, elegance, and usability. Its design follows the =E2=80=9CLes= s, but better=E2=80=9D philosophy. Q1 2021 Status =E2=80=A2 helloSystem and some of the motivations and core ideas behind i= t were presented at the FOSDEM 2021 BSD Devroom in the talk "hello=E2=80=A6=E2= =80=8B again? Simplicity, elegance, and usability for the desktop". Video recordings = of the talk and Q&A session are available WebM/VP9, mp4 =E2=80=A2 Version 0.4.0 of helloSystem was published. Installable Live IS= O images are available. =E2=80=A2 Work has started towards 0.5.0. We are beginning to see contrib= uted features and bugfixes =E2=96=A1 System menu reflects changes made in Applications immediate= ly =E2=96=A1 Filer file manager brings already-open windows to the front= rather than opening multiple windows for the same folder =E2=96=A1 Initial spatial mode option (each folder opens in its own w= indow in the file manager that remembers its on-screen location) Experimental and release builds of the Live ISO are available at https:// github.com/helloSystem/ISO/releases. Contributing Help is wanted in a number of areas, especially in the areas of the FreeBSD core OS and kernel, and Qt/C++. =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 PkgBase.live Links: Website URL: https://alpha.pkgbase.live/ Contact: Mina Gali=C4=87 PkgBase.live is an unofficial repository for the FreeBSD PkgBase project. PkgBase packages the FreeBSD base system as ca 330 packages. The PkgBase project gives users the choice of which parts of the system to install. Users can choose which parts of the base system to install, without building their system from source and optionally choose to install -dbg packages when they need them. PkgBase is built with default options. There= =E2=80=99s no need to build WITHOUT_SENDMAIL, when users can just chose not to install it= ! In addition, PkgBase.live builds every usable kernel! This is especially impor= tant for architectures like armv7. As a service, PkgBase.live was inspired by up.bsd.live, which provides freebsd-update(8) for STABLE and CURRENT branches. Despite this inspiration, freebsd-update has been a constant point of frustrations for me, so I was looking for alternatives. PkgBase is not ready for prime time yet, or else the FreeBSD project would = be providing this service. With the call for testing open since 2016, I though= t it was time to offer a public service, so a broader part of the community can = take part in testing, without having to do all the work for themselves. A lot of things already work fine, but more work needs to be done, as can be seen from the TODO list, as well as the "Pending Changes" on the website. Perhaps the most important thing would be to provide ISOs which lets people setup a fresh system with PkgBase from the get-go. Hardware for PkgBase is kindly sponsored by a member of the FreeBSD communi= ty. =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 Potluck & Potman Links: Potluck Repository & Project URL: https://potluck.honeyguide.net/ Potluck on github URL: https://github.com/hny-gd/potluck Potman on github URL: https://github.com/grembo/potman Pot Project URL https://pot.pizzamig.dev Contact: Stephan Lichtenauer (Potluck) Contact: Michael Gmelin (Potman) Pot is a jail management tool that also supports orchestration through Noma= d. 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 and in ma= ny cases Nomad. The new Potman project aims to simplify building Pot images with Vagrant and VirtualBox based on the Potluck approach, e.g. as part of a DevOps workflow= for software development and testing. That way, Pot images can more easily be created as part of a Jenkins workflow to be deployed with Nomad and Consul. In the last two quarters, FreeBSD 12.2 Potluck images have been built and t= he 11.4 images have been upgraded with the new packages. Furthermore, new imag= es like Wordpress and an improved flavour script (which squashes a nasty netwo= rk problem) have been created. Future plans include further Potman workflow features, new and improved Pot= luck images and publishing FreeBSD 13-based images. As always, feedback and patches are welcome. =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2= =94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94= =81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81= =E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81=E2=94=81 sysctl improvements Links: sysctlinfo URL: https://gitlab.com/alfix/sysctlinfo sysctlbyname-improved URL: https://gitlab.com/alfix/sysctlbyname-improved BSDCan 2020 - sysctlinfo questions URL: https://git.io/Jm9x7 sysctl-libnv URL:https://gitlab.com/alfix/sysctl-libnv[https://gitlab.com/a= lfix /sysctl-libnv] sysctlmibinfo2 URL:https://gitlab.com/alfix/sysctlmibinfo2[https://gitlab.c= om/ alfix/sysctlmibinfo2] sysctlview URL: https://gitlab.com/alfix/sysctlview nsysctl URL: https://gitlab.com/alfix/nsysctl Contact: Alfonso Sabato Siciliano The sysctl system call and the wrapper sysctl utility can get and set the system state at runtime; the kernel exposes the available parameters as obj= ects of a Management Information Base. After a recent system update with a CURRENT-GENERIC configuration, the MIB has exceeded ten thousand objects (b= oth internal nodes and leaves, most in the vm.uma subtree) on my laptop with a Desktop environment without ZFS. Furthermore I received tips, ideas, PRs and issues about sysctl so some improvement has been fulfilled; finally the suggestions received during BSDCan 2020 have been accomplished. Kernel space sysutils/sysctlinfo has been updated to 20210222 and is an interface to vis= it the MIB and to retrieve info about an object (description, type, format, fl= ags, and so on). It has been refactored so the new version is almost 100% more efficient to explore the MIB and to pass all info about an object to userla= nd. Moreover new features have been implemented: to get more info about an obje= ct, to avoid extra computation in userland, and to improve the compatibilty with the current undocumented interface. sysutils/sysctlbyname-improved has been updated to 20210223 and is an exten= sion of sysctlinfo to handle an object name with some empty string level or exte= nded to pass an input to the handler of a CTLTYPE_NODE; it has been updated to t= ake advantage of the improvements (mainly efficiency) of sysctlinfo. sysctl-libnv is a project that provides an implementation and an example of= how to build a sysctl object with an nvlist value - to learn more about nvlist,= see the libnv(9) manual page. Properly a new sysctl handler has been defined: i= t is enough to create a nvlist and to pass it to a macro; then the system call u= ses the new handler to pass the nvlist to the userland and the nsysctl utility = can manage the object value. The following tools are been updated to give advantages from new kernel features and improvements. Library devel/libsysctlmibinfo2 has been updated to 2.0.1; primarily the sysctlmibi= nfo2 library wraps the low-level interfaces described above; moreover it defines= a struct sysctlmif_object with the properties of an object and provides a convenient API to build data structures of sysctlmif_object (for example: a subtree, a list of a list of a Depth First Traversal, and so on); therefore= it is useful for handling an object correctly and/or for building a sysctl-like utility. Obviously sysctlmibinfo2 benefits from the features of sysctlinfo: handles = OIDs up to CTL_MAXNAME levels, supports the Capability Mode, can seek an object matching its name (avoiding having to explore the MIB just to find the corresponding OID), gets all info about an object at a time, and manages a special name via sysctlbyname-improved. Version 2.0.1 takes advantage from the kernel improvements: improved effici= ency to build a sysctlmif_object and new features to get info about an object: "handler" and "nextbyname". The new functions are: sysctlmif_hashandler() a= nd sysctlmif_hashandlerbyname() to know if an object has a defined kernel hand= ler, sysctlmif_nextnodebyname() and sysctlmif_nextleafbyname() to explore the MI= B, sysctlmif_leaves() and sysctlmif_leavesbyname() to build only-leaf data structures. Documentation The APIs described above (both kernel and userspace) are really easy: "sysc= tl -aN", "sysctl -d kern.ostype", etc., can be implemented in a few lines of c= ode. Nevertheless each project provides a README with Introduction, Getting star= ted, Features, API, Real-world use cases, FAQ, and examples in the Public Domain= to build new projects. Of course the manuals and examples have recently been updated. Utilities deskutils/sysctlview has been updated to 2.1; the first version of sysctlvi= ew was just a graphical representation of the MIB, now it could be considered a GUI version of sysctl. This utility exploits the object serialization of sysctlinfo; indeed it is not feasible to have the kernel to find the same object many times to retrieve all its properties, considering the current M= IB size. Thanks to user feedbacks the new version provides a better UI, for example clicking a column title to sort the entries, moreover the "Handler" entry is been added in the "Object" window, it is useful to know if an obje= ct has a value or if the OID of a CTLTYPE_NODE can be extended. sysutils/nsysctl has been updated to 2.0 and is the CLI version of sysctlvi= ew; the output is explicitly indicated by the options and is printed via libxo = in human- and machine-readable formats; moreover some string value is parsed to display structured output. The options are not mutually exclusive and allow showing the properties of a parameter so nsysctl is useful to know the info= to handle an object without finding its implementation, for example: Is Multiprocessor safe? Is Capability mode available? Is the OID extensible? D= oes the integer represent a kelvin? Does it have a value? What is the label? An= d so on. The new version supports libnv; it is useful to manage a non-primitive = data type and could avoid hardcoding a generic opaque type in the future. Finally the new features of sysctlinfo allow using nsysctl to debug the MIB without= a kernel recompilation with SYSCTL_DEBUG. Note: the project provides a tutori= al to describe every feature. --p2qii6v5xswo6umh Content-Type: application/pgp-signature; name="signature.asc" -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQGTBAABCgB9FiEEDonNJPbg/JLIMoS6Ps5hSHzN87oFAmCTLjFfFIAAAAAALgAo aXNzdWVyLWZwckBub3RhdGlvbnMub3BlbnBncC5maWZ0aGhvcnNlbWFuLm5ldDBF ODlDRDI0RjZFMEZDOTJDODMyODRCQTNFQ0U2MTQ4N0NDREYzQkEACgkQPs5hSHzN 87oD7QgAslUF+YnxoSqDL8wJt7RzRfEaw75npm8glTp9I5Jbd9+n4mlxbueFH7KW KsARVZOrtdYW2X/M2VGZvl2Zd9vqPbelThpfquLvYrfwr/EajrjtElbLpFi/JVEY j+XuCTIEgNM+8KA2wLjKIKhxbs2q2bngPLGW6HbYxbkSBTdPCV8QNbRpvCFrz8cy QqbdjdybyptvzzLARO03RkV7y/wUoxErkcnBdRwkz0iSEX9a71DWzAllmLTsM3nQ RoswtfaLOwb7qt9DwNjFcSGmZx2io6/qbGmVy4QEiVLgjwtF+YT1xbnvQQTCM+eY 2T6L0/W6SVFiMjbqIOex17O0Q5iMmg== =tIS8 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- --p2qii6v5xswo6umh-- From owner-freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org Sat May 8 22:34:09 2021 Return-Path: Delivered-To: freebsd-hackers@mailman.nyi.freebsd.org Received: from mx1.freebsd.org (mx1.freebsd.org [IPv6:2610:1c1:1:606c::19:1]) by mailman.nyi.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 7E7526419EF for ; Sat, 8 May 2021 22:34:09 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from george+freebsd@m5p.com) Received: from mailhost.m5p.com (mailhost.m5p.com [74.104.188.4]) (using TLSv1.3 with cipher TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 (256/256 bits) key-exchange X25519 server-signature RSA-PSS (4096 bits) server-digest SHA256 client-signature RSA-PSS (2048 bits) client-digest SHA256) (Client CN "m5p.com", Issuer "R3" (not verified)) by mx1.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 4Fd2DJ5krQz3qyx for ; Sat, 8 May 2021 22:34:08 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from george+freebsd@m5p.com) Received: from [IPv6:2001:470:1f07:15ff::26] (court.m5p.com [IPv6:2001:470:1f07:15ff:0:0:0:26]) (authenticated bits=0) by mailhost.m5p.com (8.16.1/8.15.2) with ESMTPSA id 148MY1lq032676 (version=TLSv1.3 cipher=TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 bits=256 verify=NO) for ; Sat, 8 May 2021 18:34:07 -0400 (EDT) (envelope-from george+freebsd@m5p.com) To: FreeBSD Hackers From: George Mitchell Subject: amdgpu.ko crashes on Radeon Vega Message-ID: <36c9234e-4c1e-b7db-7905-c67e68c87bf6@m5p.com> Date: Sat, 8 May 2021 18:34:01 -0400 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; FreeBSD amd64; rv:78.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/78.9.1 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/signed; micalg=pgp-sha256; protocol="application/pgp-signature"; boundary="ZOi9oqqjy9imAUXRw97EttziJi8zsknLt" X-Spam-Status: No, score=0.2 required=10.0 tests=HELO_MISC_IP,HELO_NO_DOMAIN autolearn=no autolearn_force=no version=3.4.5 X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.4.5 (2021-03-20) on mattapan.m5p.com X-Rspamd-Queue-Id: 4Fd2DJ5krQz3qyx X-Spamd-Bar: ----- Authentication-Results: mx1.freebsd.org; dkim=none; dmarc=none; spf=pass (mx1.freebsd.org: domain of george@m5p.com designates 74.104.188.4 as permitted sender) smtp.mailfrom=george@m5p.com X-Spamd-Result: default: False [-5.40 / 15.00]; RCVD_VIA_SMTP_AUTH(0.00)[]; R_SPF_ALLOW(-0.20)[+a:c]; HAS_ATTACHMENT(0.00)[]; TO_DN_ALL(0.00)[]; NEURAL_HAM_SHORT(-1.00)[-1.000]; SIGNED_PGP(-2.00)[]; FROM_EQ_ENVFROM(0.00)[]; MIME_TRACE(0.00)[0:+,1:+,2:+,3:~]; RBL_DBL_DONT_QUERY_IPS(0.00)[74.104.188.4:from]; ASN(0.00)[asn:701, ipnet:74.104.0.0/16, country:US]; R_DKIM_NA(0.00)[]; TAGGED_FROM(0.00)[freebsd]; ARC_NA(0.00)[]; NEURAL_HAM_MEDIUM(-1.00)[-1.000]; MID_RHS_MATCH_FROM(0.00)[]; FROM_HAS_DN(0.00)[]; TO_MATCH_ENVRCPT_ALL(0.00)[]; NEURAL_HAM_LONG(-1.00)[-1.000]; MIME_GOOD(-0.20)[multipart/signed,multipart/mixed,text/plain]; PREVIOUSLY_DELIVERED(0.00)[freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org]; DMARC_NA(0.00)[m5p.com]; RCPT_COUNT_ONE(0.00)[1]; SPAMHAUS_ZRD(0.00)[74.104.188.4:from:127.0.2.255]; RCVD_COUNT_TWO(0.00)[2]; RCVD_TLS_ALL(0.00)[]; MAILMAN_DEST(0.00)[freebsd-hackers] X-BeenThere: freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.34 Precedence: list List-Id: Technical discussions relating to FreeBSD List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Sat, 08 May 2021 22:34:09 -0000 This is an OpenPGP/MIME signed message (RFC 4880 and 3156) --ZOi9oqqjy9imAUXRw97EttziJi8zsknLt Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="TRTXYUpQTKc1VcEjIFAIUoFCskzIlyaRf"; protected-headers="v1" From: George Mitchell To: FreeBSD Hackers Message-ID: <36c9234e-4c1e-b7db-7905-c67e68c87bf6@m5p.com> Subject: amdgpu.ko crashes on Radeon Vega --TRTXYUpQTKc1VcEjIFAIUoFCskzIlyaRf Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed Content-Language: en-US Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable I have (per dmesg): AMD Ryzen 3 2200G with Radeon Vega Graphics. (pciconf -lv reports: vgapci0@pci0:6:0:0: class=3D0x030000 card=3D0xd0001458 chip=3D0x15dd1= 002=20 rev=3D0xc8 hdr=3D0x00 vendor =3D 'Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD/ATI]' device =3D 'Raven Ridge [Radeon Vega Series / Radeon Vega Mobile= Series]') I am running FreeBSD 12.2-RELEASE-p6 r369558. I built amdgpu.ko from drm-fbsd12.0-kmod-4.16.g20201016_1. When I boot single-user, with only kernel, vboxdrv.ko, and sem.ko loaded, and I type "kldload amdgpu", I get about six or seven lines of output, ending with "pci i/o bar is not found." After a couple more seconds, the screen goes blank and the machine is as frozen as can be, and I have to cycle power to recover. I've tried all four combinations of hw.vga.textmode and hw.syscons.disable, but it crashes each time. Help! -- George --TRTXYUpQTKc1VcEjIFAIUoFCskzIlyaRf-- --ZOi9oqqjy9imAUXRw97EttziJi8zsknLt Content-Type: application/pgp-signature; name="OpenPGP_signature.asc" Content-Description: OpenPGP digital signature Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="OpenPGP_signature" -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- wsF5BAABCAAjFiEENdM4ZHktsJW5kKZXwRES3m+p4fkFAmCXEdkFAwAAAAAACgkQwRES3m+p4fmS kxAAnKMhii3AJH/1OYXRJusQWz8IxMXpBO87a8rBC4ZF7KEyELP06llg4fI20NayJZsk3pZaKvLP N6Txtv3bGQbRdD8rp3e+VV2JL9IEd3vzOqaX+IuyvHjM6GswRg3SoT5PMNBS8Rr9Ws29d0nvRwb7 IjrL4ldBFRcD5/mEfMoH03eHs7Lk7NQSdH1h2v38x6sUtiNHY+V6wXntJNwVKce7HcD5mM3Gqt32 582dblk6LEIQVkdqGeML1aEvCGVuUPstS4PU5knmIVyq2aVh9gaUlNcB9EAVToFWmK4UMDO4TRbK YUkTB/HBLN9aPX7a0gQjnoElQ1haMspA+rvhURyodFsJ8vo72f2k/4qvS9Qn9PnmkAvHev7ynehs iUwDgTUeMGPyEYBKnbLr5moe7lH8ddCpC7uPugUaFWY1hihwVvj0t7f0LfuXYcGzPsS+cSQQpWUN OoTdCqizORMyonbSjOQSy6mJXZ1gWzM0lH8NeyArnHLOfnQ6akhd/APEYHjyzwjI47dFPz0MI8xu 2uWmbtM04Oc13z24d6LgAO/E3jR+s92kUJiJXEtqkvgNY5z2K9qADXmdNxB5hQ4Q852KaO1HWbS5 qrKiWaTy9wwEbxK5xHF/hnl48Qh2dHldVyw/8Bb57znGTdgdYMl7idvzejeUoArAg8BTC3rbttMJ GMQ= =KQ5Y -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- --ZOi9oqqjy9imAUXRw97EttziJi8zsknLt-- From owner-freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org Sat May 8 22:40:03 2021 Return-Path: Delivered-To: freebsd-hackers@mailman.nyi.freebsd.org Received: from mx1.freebsd.org (mx1.freebsd.org [IPv6:2610:1c1:1:606c::19:1]) by mailman.nyi.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 9DBDD641E4F for ; Sat, 8 May 2021 22:40:03 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from hps@selasky.org) Received: from mail.turbocat.net (turbocat.net [IPv6:2a01:4f8:c17:6c4b::2]) (using TLSv1.3 with cipher TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 (256/256 bits) key-exchange X25519 server-signature RSA-PSS (4096 bits) server-digest SHA256) (Client did not present a certificate) by mx1.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 4Fd2M64s3dz3r0v for ; Sat, 8 May 2021 22:40:02 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from hps@selasky.org) Received: from hps2020.home.selasky.org (unknown [178.17.145.105]) (using TLSv1.3 with cipher TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 (128/128 bits) key-exchange X25519 server-signature RSA-PSS (2048 bits) server-digest SHA256) (No client certificate requested) by mail.turbocat.net (Postfix) with ESMTPSA id CA9B22603E7; Sun, 9 May 2021 00:39:59 +0200 (CEST) Subject: Re: amdgpu.ko crashes on Radeon Vega To: George Mitchell , FreeBSD Hackers References: <36c9234e-4c1e-b7db-7905-c67e68c87bf6@m5p.com> From: Hans Petter Selasky Message-ID: <107fa9e2-8096-7bc5-b53d-8de8956899ac@selasky.org> Date: Sun, 9 May 2021 00:38:42 +0200 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; FreeBSD amd64; rv:78.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/78.9.1 MIME-Version: 1.0 In-Reply-To: <36c9234e-4c1e-b7db-7905-c67e68c87bf6@m5p.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed Content-Language: en-US Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Rspamd-Queue-Id: 4Fd2M64s3dz3r0v X-Spamd-Bar: --- Authentication-Results: mx1.freebsd.org; dkim=none; dmarc=none; spf=pass (mx1.freebsd.org: domain of hps@selasky.org designates 2a01:4f8:c17:6c4b::2 as permitted sender) smtp.mailfrom=hps@selasky.org X-Spamd-Result: default: False [-3.30 / 15.00]; RCVD_TLS_ALL(0.00)[]; RCVD_VIA_SMTP_AUTH(0.00)[]; MID_RHS_MATCH_FROM(0.00)[]; FROM_HAS_DN(0.00)[]; RBL_DBL_DONT_QUERY_IPS(0.00)[2a01:4f8:c17:6c4b::2:from]; R_SPF_ALLOW(-0.20)[+a:mail.turbocat.net]; NEURAL_HAM_LONG(-1.00)[-1.000]; TAGGED_RCPT(0.00)[freebsd]; MIME_GOOD(-0.10)[text/plain]; ARC_NA(0.00)[]; DMARC_NA(0.00)[selasky.org]; SPAMHAUS_ZRD(0.00)[2a01:4f8:c17:6c4b::2:from:127.0.2.255]; TO_MATCH_ENVRCPT_SOME(0.00)[]; TO_DN_ALL(0.00)[]; NEURAL_HAM_SHORT(-1.00)[-1.000]; RCPT_COUNT_TWO(0.00)[2]; NEURAL_HAM_MEDIUM(-1.00)[-1.000]; FROM_EQ_ENVFROM(0.00)[]; R_DKIM_NA(0.00)[]; MIME_TRACE(0.00)[0:+]; ASN(0.00)[asn:24940, ipnet:2a01:4f8::/32, country:DE]; RCVD_COUNT_TWO(0.00)[2]; MAILMAN_DEST(0.00)[freebsd-hackers] X-BeenThere: freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.34 Precedence: list List-Id: Technical discussions relating to FreeBSD List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Sat, 08 May 2021 22:40:03 -0000 On 5/9/21 12:34 AM, George Mitchell wrote: > I have (per dmesg): AMD Ryzen 3 2200G with Radeon Vega Graphics. > (pciconf -lv reports: > vgapci0@pci0:6:0:0:     class=0x030000 card=0xd0001458 chip=0x15dd1002 > rev=0xc8 hdr=0x00 >     vendor     = 'Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD/ATI]' >     device     = 'Raven Ridge [Radeon Vega Series / Radeon Vega Mobile > Series]') > I am running FreeBSD 12.2-RELEASE-p6 r369558. > I built amdgpu.ko from drm-fbsd12.0-kmod-4.16.g20201016_1. > When I boot single-user, with only kernel, vboxdrv.ko, and sem.ko > loaded, and I type "kldload amdgpu", I get about six or seven lines > of output, ending with "pci i/o bar is not found."  After a couple > more seconds, the screen goes blank and the machine is as frozen as > can be, and I have to cycle power to recover.  I've tried all four > combinations of hw.vga.textmode and hw.syscons.disable, but it > crashes each time.  Help!                              -- George > Hi, If you hook up a USB serial adapter and redirect the console to it using: hw.usb.ucom.cons_baud: 9600 hw.usb.ucom.cons_subunit: 0 hw.usb.ucom.cons_unit: -1 Then you might get the prints from the panic which is happening. Also try to build a kernel with debugging support to get an automatic core dump. It is also recommended to try 13-stable. The DRM code there is much newer. --HPS From owner-freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org Sat May 8 22:52:00 2021 Return-Path: Delivered-To: freebsd-hackers@mailman.nyi.freebsd.org Received: from mx1.freebsd.org (mx1.freebsd.org [IPv6:2610:1c1:1:606c::19:1]) by mailman.nyi.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 9BA8264216C for ; Sat, 8 May 2021 22:52:00 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from george+freebsd@m5p.com) Received: from mailhost.m5p.com (mailhost.m5p.com [74.104.188.4]) (using TLSv1.3 with cipher TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 (256/256 bits) key-exchange X25519 server-signature RSA-PSS (4096 bits) server-digest SHA256 client-signature RSA-PSS (2048 bits) client-digest SHA256) (Client CN "m5p.com", Issuer "R3" (not verified)) by mx1.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 4Fd2cw0L95z3rgq for ; Sat, 8 May 2021 22:51:59 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from george+freebsd@m5p.com) Received: from [IPv6:2001:470:1f07:15ff::26] (court.m5p.com [IPv6:2001:470:1f07:15ff:0:0:0:26]) (authenticated bits=0) by mailhost.m5p.com (8.16.1/8.15.2) with ESMTPSA id 148Mpr7D032778 (version=TLSv1.3 cipher=TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 bits=256 verify=NO); Sat, 8 May 2021 18:51:58 -0400 (EDT) (envelope-from george+freebsd@m5p.com) Subject: Re: amdgpu.ko crashes on Radeon Vega To: Hans Petter Selasky , FreeBSD Hackers References: <36c9234e-4c1e-b7db-7905-c67e68c87bf6@m5p.com> <107fa9e2-8096-7bc5-b53d-8de8956899ac@selasky.org> From: George Mitchell Message-ID: Date: Sat, 8 May 2021 18:51:52 -0400 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; FreeBSD amd64; rv:78.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/78.9.1 MIME-Version: 1.0 In-Reply-To: <107fa9e2-8096-7bc5-b53d-8de8956899ac@selasky.org> Content-Type: multipart/signed; micalg=pgp-sha256; protocol="application/pgp-signature"; boundary="pRA8Uj1NoWo64GrqwTMrd4FnngXkxbmJV" X-Spam-Status: No, score=0.2 required=10.0 tests=HELO_MISC_IP, HELO_NO_DOMAIN, NICE_REPLY_A autolearn=no autolearn_force=no version=3.4.5 X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.4.5 (2021-03-20) on mattapan.m5p.com X-Rspamd-Queue-Id: 4Fd2cw0L95z3rgq X-Spamd-Bar: ----- Authentication-Results: mx1.freebsd.org; dkim=none; dmarc=none; spf=pass (mx1.freebsd.org: domain of george@m5p.com designates 74.104.188.4 as permitted sender) smtp.mailfrom=george@m5p.com X-Spamd-Result: default: False [-5.40 / 15.00]; ARC_NA(0.00)[]; RCVD_VIA_SMTP_AUTH(0.00)[]; RCVD_TLS_ALL(0.00)[]; FROM_HAS_DN(0.00)[]; RBL_DBL_DONT_QUERY_IPS(0.00)[74.104.188.4:from]; R_SPF_ALLOW(-0.20)[+a:c]; MID_RHS_MATCH_FROM(0.00)[]; HAS_ATTACHMENT(0.00)[]; MIME_GOOD(-0.20)[multipart/signed,multipart/mixed,text/plain]; DMARC_NA(0.00)[m5p.com]; SPAMHAUS_ZRD(0.00)[74.104.188.4:from:127.0.2.255]; TO_MATCH_ENVRCPT_SOME(0.00)[]; TO_DN_ALL(0.00)[]; NEURAL_HAM_LONG(-1.00)[-1.000]; RCPT_COUNT_TWO(0.00)[2]; NEURAL_HAM_SHORT(-1.00)[-1.000]; NEURAL_HAM_MEDIUM(-1.00)[-1.000]; SIGNED_PGP(-2.00)[]; FROM_EQ_ENVFROM(0.00)[]; R_DKIM_NA(0.00)[]; MIME_TRACE(0.00)[0:+,1:+,2:+,3:~]; ASN(0.00)[asn:701, ipnet:74.104.0.0/16, country:US]; TAGGED_FROM(0.00)[freebsd]; MAILMAN_DEST(0.00)[freebsd-hackers]; RCVD_COUNT_TWO(0.00)[2] X-BeenThere: freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.34 Precedence: list List-Id: Technical discussions relating to FreeBSD List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Sat, 08 May 2021 22:52:00 -0000 This is an OpenPGP/MIME signed message (RFC 4880 and 3156) --pRA8Uj1NoWo64GrqwTMrd4FnngXkxbmJV Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="Qyc55NO3uJ7x2Bjm08o05aoY7S40OTHnD"; protected-headers="v1" From: George Mitchell To: Hans Petter Selasky , FreeBSD Hackers Message-ID: Subject: Re: amdgpu.ko crashes on Radeon Vega References: <36c9234e-4c1e-b7db-7905-c67e68c87bf6@m5p.com> <107fa9e2-8096-7bc5-b53d-8de8956899ac@selasky.org> In-Reply-To: <107fa9e2-8096-7bc5-b53d-8de8956899ac@selasky.org> --Qyc55NO3uJ7x2Bjm08o05aoY7S40OTHnD Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed Content-Language: en-US Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable On 5/8/21 6:38 PM, Hans Petter Selasky wrote: > On 5/9/21 12:34 AM, George Mitchell wrote: >> I have (per dmesg): AMD Ryzen 3 2200G with Radeon Vega Graphics. >> (pciconf -lv reports: >> vgapci0@pci0:6:0:0:=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0 class=3D0x030000 card=3D0x= d0001458 chip=3D0x15dd1002=20 >> rev=3D0xc8 hdr=3D0x00 >> =C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0 vendor=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0 =3D 'Advanced = Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD/ATI]' >> =C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0 device=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0 =3D 'Raven Rid= ge [Radeon Vega Series / Radeon Vega Mobile >> Series]') >> I am running FreeBSD 12.2-RELEASE-p6 r369558. >> I built amdgpu.ko from drm-fbsd12.0-kmod-4.16.g20201016_1. >> When I boot single-user, with only kernel, vboxdrv.ko, and sem.ko >> loaded, and I type "kldload amdgpu", I get about six or seven lines >> of output, ending with "pci i/o bar is not found."=C2=A0 After a coupl= e >> more seconds, the screen goes blank and the machine is as frozen as >> can be, and I have to cycle power to recover.=C2=A0 I've tried all fou= r >> combinations of hw.vga.textmode and hw.syscons.disable, but it >> crashes each time.=C2=A0 Help!=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0= =C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2= =A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0=C2=A0 -- George >> >=20 > Hi, >=20 > If you hook up a USB serial adapter and redirect the console to it usin= g: >=20 > hw.usb.ucom.cons_baud: 9600 > hw.usb.ucom.cons_subunit: 0 > hw.usb.ucom.cons_unit: -1 >=20 >=20 > Then you might get the prints from the panic which is happening. Also=20 > try to build a kernel with debugging support to get an automatic core d= ump. >=20 > It is also recommended to try 13-stable. The DRM code there is much new= er. >=20 > --HPS Thanks -- trying 13-stable sounds simpler, but for the moment I may just stick with VESA mode ... -- George --Qyc55NO3uJ7x2Bjm08o05aoY7S40OTHnD-- --pRA8Uj1NoWo64GrqwTMrd4FnngXkxbmJV Content-Type: application/pgp-signature; name="OpenPGP_signature.asc" Content-Description: OpenPGP digital signature Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="OpenPGP_signature" -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- wsF5BAABCAAjFiEENdM4ZHktsJW5kKZXwRES3m+p4fkFAmCXFggFAwAAAAAACgkQwRES3m+p4flK RQ//UW+Karwn4dYa3kgd4sY7PsgfvFRJNWFDtlDKMOK+Are9Eev0n4+A19Kc01uiOTbTP7vg5Oe8 KKVsxYBGcq8uZJziXC1CDiTbDJ3s8DwhL/jfSqjtRI/yhwX2LvVLG5lEMpF+MleLVpQK59C2QgZd lvVozE9Mxs5cW7wwd5LmlS2pUKl7H2eFuMqmCfpg1SA4eALy3CNOriXba1eIbg1jSRLuXWSXijhu O0UpvCGvN5bvNZ1DnovFHQ7ycLBiN4S6Tci150VN6iK5OQgzfY+X0sJXfW4j8BVKQzpBBPMC61H9 tnOK6J1RkeoJBwM2sVFBkJsCCWkm8G/0AqYwSHw9TUkjLEEhGAO9wewjRdhZFUctplA4d8WQ1dYB htNIR8ZiR4mTXEdxGBZjvSNIxTjfUkg1/TQcQSUUP2dP6tP3CuMSXI45pFr8Rs/6yMfa1HfsLiIh JSpVb4oVC3gwN7YxBL16N4JEqONJ+s3PwG3I4XTMpul6QMqUbVwoaGA7L4KL6aDwLYep8BdB2uMP dXY9secbV0LCk7t0T/TFDtKbMGPtpnvHLkxtSDKixUZbPYPBWuIYtNuUJgy080KBTA3ZAT1L2IAy RhpQL9CY6aqATeXiuHhNhzOULt2y8HH6VXC6yyYI1I4Kf6J8QewEHapE/eAELotDRW4ZPN/Y9DiR cko= =A/OG -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- --pRA8Uj1NoWo64GrqwTMrd4FnngXkxbmJV--