BIND 9.17 changed exit code of skipped test to meet Automake
expectations in fa505bfb0e. BIND 9.16 was
not rewritten to Automake, but for consistency reasons, the same
SKIPPED_TEST_EXIT_CODE preprocessor macro is used (though the actual
exit code differs from the one in BIND 9.17).
(cherry picked from commit fa505bfb0e)
The BIND 9 libraries are considered to be internal only and hence the
API and ABI changes a lot. Keeping track of the API/ABI changes takes
time and it's a complicated matter as the safest way to make everything
stable would be to bump any library in the dependency chain as in theory
if libns links with libdns, and a binary links with both, and we bump
the libdns SOVERSION, but not the libns SOVERSION, the old libns might
be loaded by binary pulling old libdns together with new libdns loaded
by the binary. The situation gets even more complicated with loading
the plugins that have been compiled with few versions old BIND 9
libraries and then dynamically loaded into the named.
We are picking the safest option possible and usable for internal
libraries - instead of using -version-info that has only a weak link to
BIND 9 version number, we are using -release libtool option that will
embed the corresponding BIND 9 version number into the library name.
That means that instead of libisc.so.1608 (as an example) the library
will now be named libisc-9.16.10.so.
(cherry picked from commit c605d75ea5)
Using AC_RUN_IFELSE() in configure.ac breaks cross-compilation:
configure: error: cannot run test program while cross compiling
Commit 978c7b2e89 caused AC_RUN_IFELSE()
to be used instead of AC_LINK_IFELSE() because the latter had seemingly
been causing the check for --wrap support in the linker to not work as
expected. However, it later turned out that the problem lied elsewhere:
a minus sign ('-') was missing from the LDFLAGS variable used in the
relevant check [1].
Revert to using AC_LINK_IFELSE() for checking whether the linker
supports the --wrap option in order to make cross-compilation possible
again.
[1] see commit cfa4ea64bc
Some operating systems (e.g. Linux, FreeBSD) provide the
_Unwind_Backtrace() function in libgcc_s.so, which is automatically
linked into any binary using the functions provided by that library. On
OpenBSD, though, _Unwind_Backtrace() is provided by libc++abi.so, which
is not automatically linked into binaries produced by the stock system C
compiler.
Meanwhile, lib/isc/backtrace.c assumes that any GNU-compatible toolchain
allows _Unwind_Backtrace() to be used without any extra provisions in
the build system. This causes build failures on OpenBSD (and possibly
other systems).
Instead of making assumptions, actually check for _Unwind_Backtrace()
support in the toolchain if the backtrace() function is unavailable.
PKCS#11 support in BIND requires dlopen() support from the operating
system and thus building with "--enable-native-pkcs11 --without-dlopen"
should not be possible. Add an Autoconf check which enforces that
constraint. Adjust the pairwise testing model accordingly.
Since Mac OS X 10.1, Mach-O object files are by default built with a
so-called two-level namespace which prevents symbol lookups in BIND unit
tests that attempt to override the implementations of certain library
functions from working as intended. This feature can be disabled by
passing the "-flat_namespace" flag to the linker. Fix unit tests
affected by this issue on macOS by adding "-flat_namespace" to LDFLAGS
used for building all object files on that operating system (it is not
enough to only set that flag for the unit test executables).
Commit b580eb2fb3 inadvertently caused
dnstap-related man pages to be installed unconditionally. Ensure they
are only installed for dnstap-enabled builds.
The unittest.sh script tried to execute the unit tests when cmocka
development libraries was available, but kyua, the execution engine,
was not. Now, both need to be installed in the system.
The ARM and the manpages have been converted into Sphinx documentation
format.
Sphinx uses reStructuredText as its markup language, and many of its
strengths come from the power and straightforwardness of
reStructuredText and its parsing and translating suite, the Docutils.
(cherry picked from commit 9fb6d11abb)
Originally, every library and binaries got linked to everything, which
creates unnecessary overlinking. This wasn't as straightforward as it
should be as we still support configuration without libtool for 9.16.
Couple of smaller issues related to include headers and an issue where
sanitizer overload dlopen and dlclose symbols, so we were getting false
negatives in the autoconf test.
Revert the change from ad03c22e97 as
further testing has shown that with hyper-threading disabled, named with
ISC rwlocks outperforms named with pthread rwlocks in cold cache testing
scenarios. Since building named with pthread rwlocks might still be a
better choice for some workloads, keep the compile-time option which
enables that.
(cherry picked from commit 17101fd093)
- the configuration summary reported zlib compression was not
supported even when it was.
- when bind.keys.h was regenerated it violated clang-format style.
(cherry picked from commit beda680f90)
We were using our own versions of isc_uv_{export,import} functions
for multithreaded TCP listeners. Upcoming libuv version will
contain proper uv_{export,import} functions - use them if they're
available.
The new ISC_THREAD_LOCAL macro unifies usage of platform dependent
Thread Local Storage definition thread_local vs __thread vs
__declspec(thread) to a single macro.
The commit also unifies the required level of support for TLS as for
some parts of the code it was mandatory and for some parts of the code
it wasn't.
-Wl,-z,interpose is not supported.
-Wl,rpath=<path> is not supported use -Wl,rpath,<path> instead.
Use @SO@ for loadable extension.
Use -L <path> -l libwrap instead of libwrap.sa.
This is a replacement for the existing isc_socket and isc_socketmgr
implementation. It uses libuv for asynchronous network communication;
"networker" objects will be distributed across worker threads reading
incoming packets and sending them for processing.
UDP listener sockets automatically create an array of "child" sockets
so each worker can listen separately.
TCP sockets are shared amongst worker threads.
A TCPDNS socket is a wrapper around a TCP socket, which handles the
the two-byte length field at the beginning of DNS messages over TCP.
(Other wrapper socket types can be implemented in the future to handle
DNS over TLS, DNS over HTTPS, etc.)
Commit afa81ee4e4 omitted some spots in
the source tree which are still referencing the removed --with-cc-alg
"configure" option. Make sure the latter is removed completely.