1 Make promiscuous mode work
2 A few header additions
3 Allow device config before IFF_UP
These were (respectively)...
Submitted by: Allan Saddi <asaddi@philosophysw.com>
Submitted by: Dave Cornejo <dave@dogwood.com>
Submitted by: Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.com>
Tested by: David Wolfskill <dhw@whistle.com>
acl_add_perm, acl_clear_perms, acl_copy_entry, acl_create_entry,
acl_delete_perm, acl_get_permset, acl_get_qualifier, acl_get_tag_type,
acl_set_permset, acl_set_qualifier, acl_set_tag_type
This brings us within 4 functions of a full ACL editing library.
Reviewed by: rwatson
pccard in the kernel for those drivers with pccard attachments. This
makes the compat layer a little larger by introducing some inlines,
but should almost make it possible to have independent attachments.
The pccard_match function are the only one left, which I will take
care of shortly.
Make struct cmessage visible from socket.h (about 4 places were
defining it for themselves which wasn't good)
Make __rpc_get_local_uid() useable and give it prototype that's
visible.
Fix some issues with printing out usernames from rpcbind and keyserv.
which resulted in the output of warning messages at boot if
UFS_EXTATTR_AUTOSTART was enabled but ".attribute" and possible
sub-directories weren't in a mounted MFS or UFS file systems.
Pointed out by: dcs
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
fatal trap. Also, reload the GDT register to point to BTX's GDT before
playing around with the segment registers to return to real mode. This is
helpful if the kernel causes a fatal exception before it has setup its own
IDT and fault handlers. For example, if one happens to break mtx_init().
Without these changes BTX would recursively page fault (if paging was not
disabled) or triple fault and reset the CPU (without the GDT reload)
instead of providing a potentially useful register dump.
Reviewed by: rnordier
sysctl, net.inet.ip.fw.permanent_rules.
This allows you to install rules that are persistent across flushes,
which is very useful if you want a default set of rules that
maintains your access to remote machines while you're reconfiguring
the other rules.
Reviewed by: Mark Murray <markm@FreeBSD.org>
(as is done in unmount).
Remove a snapshot inode from the superblock list when its last
name goes away rather than when its last reference goes away.
That way it will be properly reclaimed by fsck after a crash
rather than reenabled when the filesystem is mounted.
I was hanging after sending a xfer CTIO and a status CTIO for a non-discon
INQUIRY- the xfer CTIO was returned as completed OK, but the status CTIO
was dropped on the floor. All the fields looked good. I don't know why
it got dropped. But allowing status to go back with data xfer seemed to
work. I also noticed that with a non-disconnecting command that the
firmware handle in the ATIO is zero- this leads me to believe that the
f/w really can only handle one CTIO at a time in the discon case, and
it had no idea what to do with the second (status) CTIO.
CAM_SEND_STATUS. Set a timeout of 2 seconds per CTIO. Make sure
that the 'real' tag value is being checked against- not the
one that also carries the firmware handle.
routine instead of pccard_event(). This avoids spurious extra calls
to pccard_insert_beep() at insert or remove time which could occur
due to noise on the card-present lines.
Clean up some code in pccard_beep.c; we were depending on the order
of evaluation of function arguments, which is undefined in C. Also,
use `0' rather than `NULL' for integer values.
Reviewed by: sanpei, imp
In our idle loop, use an or instruction to set PRELOADEN rather
than rewriting the contents of DMAPARAMS to DFCNTRL. The later
may re-enable the DMA engine if the idle loop is called to complete
the preload of at least one segment when a target disconnects on
an S/G segment boundary but before we have completed fetching the
next segment. This correts a hang, usually in message out phase,
when this situation occurs. This bug has been here for a long
time, so the situation is rare, but not impossible to reproduce.
It only affected Ultra2/U160 controllers.
Correct a few comments.
Extra Sanity. Make sure that SCSIEN is also turned off, along with
HDMAEN, at the end of the data phase.
Allow the initial hash value to be passed in, as the examples do.
Incrementally hash in the dvp->v_id (using the official api) rather than
add it. This seems to help power-of-two predictable filename trees
where the filenames repeat on a power-of-two cycle and the directory trees
have power-of-two components in it. The simple add then mask was causing
things like 12000+ entry collision chains while most other entries have
between 0 and 3 entries each. This way seems to improve things.
very specific scenarios, and now that we have had net.inet.tcp.blackhole for
quite some time there is really no reason to use it any more.
(last of three commits)
very specific scenarios, and now that we have had net.inet.tcp.blackhole for
quite some time there is really no reason to use it any more.
(first of three commits)
associated changes that had to happen to make this possible as well as
bugs fixed along the way.
Bring in required TLI library routines to support this.
Since we don't support TLI we've essentially copied what NetBSD
has done, adding a thin layer to emulate direct the TLI calls
into BSD socket calls.
This is mostly from Sun's tirpc release that was made in 1994,
however some fixes were backported from the 1999 release (supposedly
only made available after this porting effort was underway).
The submitter has agreed to continue on and bring us up to the
1999 release.
Several key features are introduced with this update:
Client calls are thread safe. (1999 code has server side thread
safe)
Updated, a more modern interface.
Many userland updates were done to bring the code up to par with
the recent RPC API.
There is an update to the pthreads library, a function
pthread_main_np() was added to emulate a function of Sun's threads
library.
While we're at it, bring in NetBSD's lockd, it's been far too
long of a wait.
New rpcbind(8) replaces portmap(8) (supporting communication over
an authenticated Unix-domain socket, and by default only allowing
set and unset requests over that channel). It's much more secure
than the old portmapper.
Umount(8), mountd(8), mount_nfs(8), nfsd(8) have also been upgraded
to support TI-RPC and to support IPV6.
Umount(8) is also fixed to unmount pathnames longer than 80 chars,
which are currently truncated by the Kernel statfs structure.
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
Manpage review: ru
Secure RPC implemented by: wpaul
o Attempt to disable the slot when we detect that there are problems with
it in our ISR. This should make polling mode work better for more cards,
but more work may be needed. This "disabling" sets the card interrupt
register to 0. This worked for me for lots of tests in polling mode.
o Now that I've found datasheets, fix a boatload of magic numbers in the
source to make it easier to understand.
o Use a table of names rather than a big case statement.
o Cull a few of the "unused" controller types that we map to other times
that were a vestiage of PAO code that we never merged in the same way.
o Enforce legal IRQs. You are no longer allowed to try to use IRQs that
will fail on all known ISA/PCI <-> PCMCIA bridges. The bridges do not
have pins for these illegal interrupts, and all of them are listed as
reserved and/or illegeal in the datasheets depending on which one you
look at.
o Add comments about how IBM-AT based computers and NEC PC-98 based computers
map these interrupts and which ones are valid.
o Always clear the bit that steers the management interrupt either to the
value listed in the PCIC_STAT_INT register. I've seen this bit get set
on suspend/resume and after windows boot, and it does't hurt to clear it.
NOTE: this might mean we can share this interrupt in the future.
is under-tested, and that MFS appears to be in the process of being
deprecated in favor of FFS over md. Note also that UFS_EXTATTR_AUTOSTART
doesn't make much sense on MFS unless the MFSROOT is compiled in, so
manual configuration is generally required.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
aic7xxx.c:
Correct code that traverses the phase table. A much too quick
push to staticize this structure resulted in non-functional
lookup code. This corrects the printing of the phase where
a timeout occurred.
aic7xxx.reg:
Use FIFOQWDEMP as the name for bit 5 of DFSTATUS just like
the Adaptec data books.
aic7xxx.seq:
Refine the 2.1 PCI retry bug workaround for certain, non-ULTRA2,
controllers. When the DMA of an SCB completes, it can take
some time for HDONE to come true after MREQPEN (PCI memory request
pending) falls. If HDONE never comes true, we are in the hung
state and must manually drain the FIFO. We used to test HDONE for
3 clock cycles to detect this condition. This works on all of the
hardware I can personally test. Some controllers were reported
to take 4 clock cycles, so the last version of this code waited
4 clock cycles. This still didn't work for everyone. To fix this,
I've adjusted the work around so that even if the hardware hasn't
hung, but we run the work-around code, the result is a long winded
way to complete the transfer, rather than a hang.
options UFS_EXTATTR and UFS_EXTATTR_AUTOSTART respectively. This change
reflects the fact that our EA support is implemented entirely at the
UFS layer (modulo FFS start/stop/autostart hooks for mount and unmount
events). This also better reflects the fact that [shortly] MFS will also
support EAs, as well as possibly IFS.
o Consumers of the EA support in FFS are reminded that as a result, they
must change kernel config files to reflect the new option names.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
o acl_calc_mask(): calculates the ACL mask entry associated with
the given ACL.
o acl_delete_entry(): remove a specified ACL entry from the given
ACL.
Approved by: rwatson
of long and int64_t; and print the result as an unsigned long. This should
make the output from the bzero() test more readable, and avoid printing a
negative bandwidth. Note that this doesn't change the decision process,
since that is based on time elapsed, not on computed bandwidth.
the driver. Doing this breaks the ability to unload the unneeded
parts of the driver (e.g unload the PCI section when using an ISA
card), but currently ifconfig(8) expects an interface `XXX' to have
a driver name of `if_XXX'.
PR: kern/25582
Submitted by: Alexander N. Kabaev <kabaev@mail.ru>, imp (apparently
Warner suggested a similar fix some time ago).
Reviewed by: paul (who would prefer to see ifconfig changed instead)
using it. Not checking this may have caused the wrong IP address to be
used when processing certain IP options (see example below). This also
caused the wrong route to be passed to ip_output() when forwarding, but
fortunately ip_output() is smart enough to detect this.
This example demonstrates the wrong behavior of the Record Route option
observed with this bug. Host ``freebsd'' is acting as the gateway for
the ``sysv''.
1. On the gateway, we add the route to the destination. The new route
will use the primary address of the loopback interface, 127.0.0.1:
: freebsd# route add 10.0.0.66 -iface lo0 -reject
: add host 10.0.0.66: gateway lo0
2. From the client, we ping the destination. We see the correct replies.
Please note that this also causes the relevant route on the ``freebsd''
gateway to be cached in ipforward_rt variable:
: sysv# ping -snv 10.0.0.66
: PING 10.0.0.66: 56 data bytes
: ICMP Host Unreachable from gateway 192.168.0.115
: ICMP Host Unreachable from gateway 192.168.0.115
: ICMP Host Unreachable from gateway 192.168.0.115
:
: ----10.0.0.66 PING Statistics----
: 3 packets transmitted, 0 packets received, 100% packet loss
3. On the gateway, we delete the route to the destination, thus making
the destination reachable through the `default' route:
: freebsd# route delete 10.0.0.66
: delete host 10.0.0.66
4. From the client, we ping destination again, now with the RR option
turned on. The surprise here is the 127.0.0.1 in the first reply.
This is caused by the bug in ip_rtaddr() not checking the cached
route is still up befor use. The debug code also shows that the
wrong (down) route is further passed to ip_output(). The latter
detects that the route is down, and replaces the bogus route with
the valid one, so we see the correct replies (192.168.0.115) on
further probes:
: sysv# ping -snRv 10.0.0.66
: PING 10.0.0.66: 56 data bytes
: 64 bytes from 10.0.0.66: icmp_seq=0. time=10. ms
: IP options: <record route> 127.0.0.1, 10.0.0.65, 10.0.0.66,
: 192.168.0.65, 192.168.0.115, 192.168.0.120,
: 0.0.0.0(Current), 0.0.0.0, 0.0.0.0
: 64 bytes from 10.0.0.66: icmp_seq=1. time=0. ms
: IP options: <record route> 192.168.0.115, 10.0.0.65, 10.0.0.66,
: 192.168.0.65, 192.168.0.115, 192.168.0.120,
: 0.0.0.0(Current), 0.0.0.0, 0.0.0.0
: 64 bytes from 10.0.0.66: icmp_seq=2. time=0. ms
: IP options: <record route> 192.168.0.115, 10.0.0.65, 10.0.0.66,
: 192.168.0.65, 192.168.0.115, 192.168.0.120,
: 0.0.0.0(Current), 0.0.0.0, 0.0.0.0
:
: ----10.0.0.66 PING Statistics----
: 3 packets transmitted, 3 packets received, 0% packet loss
: round-trip (ms) min/avg/max = 0/3/10
- Use explicit sizes for header structure fields.
- Use __attribute__ ((__packed__)) for header structures.
- Define struct iso88025_rif; for future use.
- Prototype upcoming iso88025_ifdetach()
- Get rid of __P() constructs in prototypes.
off of the file system root: "user" for user attributes, and "system"
for system attributes. When the scan occurs, attribute backing files
discovered in those directories will be started in the respective
namespaces. This re-introduces support for auto-starting of user
attributes, which was removed when the "$" prefix for system attributes
was replaced with explicit namespacing.
For users of the TrustedBSD UFS POSIX.1e ACL code, you'll need to:
mv ${FSROOT}/'$posix1e.acl_access' ${FSROOT}/system/posix1e.acl_access
mv ${FSROOT}/'$posix1e.acl_default' ${FSROOT}/system/posix1e.acl_default
For users of the TrustedBSD POSIX.1e Capability code, you'll need to:
mv ${FSROOT}/'$posix1e.cap' ${FSROOT}/system/posix1e.cap
For users of the TrustedBSD MAC code, you'll need to:
mv ${FSROOT}/'$freebsd.mac' ${FSROOT}/system/freebsd.mac
Updated versions of relevant patches will be released in the near
future.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
- Make sure that m_mballoc() really doesn't allow over nmbufs mbufs to
be allocated from mb_map. In the case where nmbufs-reserved space is not
an exact multiple of PAGE_SIZE (which it should be, but anyway...), we
hold nmbufs as an absolute maximum which need not ever be reached.
- Clean up m_clalloc(); make it more consistent in the sense that the first
argument `ncl' really means "the number of clusters ensured to be allocated"
and not "the number of pages worth of clusters to be allocated," as was
previously the case. This also makes it consistent with m_mballoc() as well
as the comment that preceeds it.
Reviewed by: jlemon
char *
FooFileChunk(const char *filename, char *buf, off_t offset, off_t length)
Which only hashes part of a file.
Implement FooFile() in terms of this function.
Submitted by: roam
Make the name cache hash as well as the nfsnode hash use it.
As a special tweak, create an unsigned version of register_t. This allows
us to use a special tweak for the 64 bit versions that significantly
speeds up the i386 version (ie: int64 XOR int64 is slower than int64
XOR int32).
The code layout is a little strange for the string function, but I was
able to get between 5 to 10% improvement over the original version I
started with. The layout affects gcc code generation choices and this way
was fastest on x86 and alpha.
Note that 'CPUTYPE=p3' etc makes a fair difference to this. It is
around 45% faster with -march=pentiumpro on a p6 cpu.
Fowler / Noll / Vo Hash (http://www.isthe.com/chongo/tech/comp/fnv/).
This improves hash coverage a *massive* amount. We were seeing one
set of machines that were using 0.84% of their 131072 entry nfsnode
hash buckets with maximum chain lengths of up to ~500 entries. The
machine was spending nearly 100% of its time in 'system'.
A test with this has pushed the coverage from a few perCent up to 91%
utilization with a max chain length of 11.
Submitted by: David Filo
Add the AAC_DEBUG option to enable debugging in the aac driver.
Correct a race condition in the interrupt handler where the
controller may queue a fib to a response queue after the driver
has serviced the queue but before the interrupt is cleared.
This could leave a completed fib stranded in the response queue
unless another I/O completed and generated another interrupt.
Reviewed by: msmith
the socket buffer size, the receive is done in sections. After completing
a read, call pru_rcvd on the underlying protocol before blocking again.
This allows the the protocol to take appropriate action, such as
sending a TCP window update to the peer, if the window happened to
close because the socket buffer was filled. If the protocol is not
notified, a TCP transfer may stall until the remote end sends a window
probe.
- enable 10MHz (fast SCSI) operation on boards that support it. (only
aic6360 boards with fast SCSI enabled can do it)
- bounds check sync periods and offsets passed in from the transport layer
- tell the user which resource allocation failed (for the ISA probe) if we
weren't able to allocate an IRQ, DRQ or I/O port.
inq_len member of the ccb_getdev structure, but we've never filled that
value in..
So we now get the length from the inquiry data returned by the drive.
(Since we will fetch as much inquiry data as the drive claims to support.)
Reviewed by: mjacob
Reported by: Andrzej Tobola <san@iem.pw.edu.pl>
supports Xircom netwave series of cards. I have one of these cards
(but am trying to find one or two to test with), but it compiles and
aizu-san says it works.
I don't know if this supports 802.11 or not. I've seen conflicting
information on this.
Submitted by: Hiroyuki Aizu <aizu@jaist.ac.jp>
Obtained from: NetBSD
killing ipv6 and some other things.
This makes GENERIC and NEWCARD the same, with OLDCARD stuff commented
out and the NEWCARD stuff included. For the moment, pcic is commented
out (which has a old). Plus invariants. Plus ddb.
see atacontrol(8) for more.
Also the ATA_ENABLE_ATAPI_DMA, ATA_ENABLE_WC and ATA_ENABLE_TAGS
options are gone, use the tuneables listed in ata.4 instead from
the loader (this makes it possible to switch off DMA before the
driver has to touch the devices on broken hardware).
A route generated from an RTF_CLONING route had the RTF_WASCLONED flag
set but did not have a reference to the parent route, as documented in
the rtentry(9) manpage. This prevented such routes from being deleted
when their parent route is deleted.
Now, for example, if you delete an IP address from a network interface,
all ARP entries that were cloned from this interface route are flushed.
This also has an impact on netstat(1) output. Previously, dynamically
created ARP cache entries (RTF_STATIC flag is unset) were displayed as
part of the routing table display (-r). Now, they are only printed if
the -a option is given.
netinet/in.c, netinet/in_rmx.c:
When address is removed from an interface, also delete all routes that
point to this interface and address. Previously, for example, if you
changed the address on an interface, outgoing IP datagrams might still
use the old address. The only solution was to delete and re-add some
routes. (The problem is easily observed with the route(8) command.)
Note, that if the socket was already bound to the local address before
this address is removed, new datagrams generated from this socket will
still be sent from the old address.
PR: kern/20785, kern/21914
Reviewed by: wollman (the idea)
interface on this chip is compatable with the PIIX4. The catch is that
this interferes with isab0 which wants to attach to the same PCI node.
It seems to work, but we only tested it on systems with no ISA cards.
For UP, we were using $tmp_stk as a stack from the data section. If the
kernel text section grew beyond ~3MB, the data section would be pushed
beyond the temporary 4MB P==V mapping. This would cause the trampoline
up to high memory to fault. The hack workaround I did was to use all of
the page table pages that we already have while preparing the initial
P==V mapping, instead of just the first one.
For SMP, the AP bootstrap process suffered the same sort of problem and
got the same treatment.
MFC candidate - this breaks on 4.x just the same..
Thanks to: Richard Todd <rmtodd@ichotolot.servalan.com>
introduce a new argument, "namespace", rather than relying on a first-
character namespace indicator. This is in line with more recent
thinking on EA interfaces on various mailing lists, including the
posix1e, Linux acl-devel, and trustedbsd-discuss forums. Two namespaces
are defined by default, EXTATTR_NAMESPACE_SYSTEM and
EXTATTR_NAMESPACE_USER, where the primary distinction lies in the
access control model: user EAs are accessible based on the normal
MAC and DAC file/directory protections, and system attributes are
limited to kernel-originated or appropriately privileged userland
requests.
o These API changes occur at several levels: the namespace argument is
introduced in the extattr_{get,set}_file() system call interfaces,
at the vnode operation level in the vop_{get,set}extattr() interfaces,
and in the UFS extended attribute implementation. Changes are also
introduced in the VFS extattrctl() interface (system call, VFS,
and UFS implementation), where the arguments are modified to include
a namespace field, as well as modified to advoid direct access to
userspace variables from below the VFS layer (in the style of recent
changes to mount by adrian@FreeBSD.org). This required some cleanup
and bug fixing regarding VFS locks and the VFS interface, as a vnode
pointer may now be optionally submitted to the VFS_EXTATTRCTL()
call. Updated documentation for the VFS interface will be committed
shortly.
o In the near future, the auto-starting feature will be updated to
search two sub-directories to the ".attribute" directory in appropriate
file systems: "user" and "system" to locate attributes intended for
those namespaces, as the single filename is no longer sufficient
to indicate what namespace the attribute is intended for. Until this
is committed, all attributes auto-started by UFS will be placed in
the EXTATTR_NAMESPACE_SYSTEM namespace.
o The default POSIX.1e attribute names for ACLs and Capabilities have
been updated to no longer include the '$' in their filename. As such,
if you're using these features, you'll need to rename the attribute
backing files to the same names without '$' symbols in front.
o Note that these changes will require changes in userland, which will
be committed shortly. These include modifications to the extended
attribute utilities, as well as to libutil for new namespace
string conversion routines. Once the matching userland changes are
committed, a buildworld is recommended to update all the necessary
include files and verify that the kernel and userland environments
are in sync. Note: If you do not use extended attributes (most people
won't), upgrading is not imperative although since the system call
API has changed, the new userland extended attribute code will no longer
compile with old include files.
o Couple of minor cleanups while I'm there: make more code compilation
conditional on FFS_EXTATTR, which should recover a bit of space on
kernels running without EA's, as well as update copyright dates.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
a 82557 (e.g.: a newer chip) then:
+ enable MWI, if the PCI configuration indicates the system supports it
+ enable usage of extended TxCB, for better performance
+ enable hardware flow control. FC frames will be passed up to the
host only if promiscuous mode is enabled.
IOMEGA deserves a medal for making the most nonstandard ATAPI
devices, if they are ignorant or just not smart enough I don't
know, but somebody should help them out of their misery...
Proberly fail outstanding bio requests on devices that are detached.
This makes it possible to change between disk/cdrom/dvd/whathaveyou
in a notebook, just by suspending it, changing the device in the
bay (or what you model calls it), unsuspend and the ATA driver
will figure out what disappeared and properly fail those, and attach
any new devices found.
programs. There is a case during a fork() which can cause a deadlock.
From Tor -
The workaround that consists of setting a flag in the vm map that
indicates that a fork is in progress and using that mark in the page
fault handling to force a revalidation failure. That change will only
affect (pessimize) page fault handling during fork for threaded
(linuxthreads style) applications and applications using aio_*().
Submited by: tegge
call is correct, but it interferes with the massive hack called
vm_map_growstack(). The call will be returned after our stack handling
code is fixed.
Reported by: tegge
"options FFS_EXTATTR". When extended attribute auto-starting
is enabled, FFS will scan the .attribute directory off of the
root of each file system, as it is mounted. If .attribute
exists, EA support will be started for the file system. If
there are files in the directory, FFS will attempt to start
them as attribute backing files for attributes baring the same
name. All attributes are started before access to the file
system is permitted, so this permits race-free enabling of
attributes. For attributes backing support for security
features, such as ACLs, MAC, Capabilities, this is vital, as
it prevents the file system attributes from getting out of
sync as a result of file system operations between mount-time
and the enabling of the extended attribute. The userland
extattrctl tool will still function exactly as previously.
Files must be placed directly in .attribute, which must be
directly off of the file system root: symbolic links are
not permitted. FFS_EXTATTR will continue to be able
to function without FFS_EXTATTR_AUTOSTART for sites that do not
want/require auto-starting. If you're using the UFS_ACL code
available from www.TrustedBSD.org, using FFS_EXTATTR_AUTOSTART
is recommended.
o This support is implemented by adding an invocation of
ufs_extattr_autostart() to ffs_mountfs(). In addition,
several new supporting calls are introduced in
ufs_extattr.c:
ufs_extattr_autostart(): start EAs on the specified mount
ufs_extattr_lookup(): given a directory and filename,
return the vnode for the file.
ufs_extattr_enable_with_open(): invoke ufs_extattr_enable()
after doing the equililent of vn_open()
on the passed file.
ufs_extattr_iterate_directory(): iterate over a directory,
invoking ufs_extattr_lookup() and
ufs_extattr_enable_with_open() on each
entry.
o This feature is not widely tested, and therefore may contain
bugs, caution is advised. Several changes are in the pipeline
for this feature, including breaking out of EA namespaces into
subdirectories of .attribute (this is waiting on the updated
EA API), as well as a per-filesystem flag indicating whether
or not EAs should be auto-started. This is required because
administrators may not want .attribute auto-started on all
file systems, especially if non-administrators have write access
to the root of a file system.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
the target mode code or outer layers.
Increase cd_tagval to be 32 bits since it will have to now carry 16
bits of parallel SCSI ATIO handle as well as a normal tag (if any).
Solaris (which, for reasons unknown to me, chokes on u_int16_t
as a typedef of unsigned short if used in a transitional (mixed K&R
and ANSI) way), we'll go the extra mile and fully ANSIfy things.
offset is set to 0.
Re-arrange the DT limiting code so that we don't end up setting the period
to 0xa if the user really wants async. The previous behavior seemed to
confuse the aic(4) driver.
PR: kern/22733
Reviewed by: gibbs
devices. opening /dev/{dsp,dspW,audio}0 and then opening a different device
from that list and closing it resulted in a panic when any operation is
performed on the first fd.
we prevent this happening by denying the second open unless it uses the same
minor device as the first.
PR: kern/25519
is transmitted as all ones". This got broken after introduction
of delayed checksums as follows. Some guys (including Jonathan)
think that it is allowed to transmit all ones in place of a zero
checksum for TCP the same way as for UDP. (The discussion still
takes place on -net.) Thus, the 0 -> 0xffff checksum fixup was
first moved from udp_output() (see udp_usrreq.c, 1.64 -> 1.65)
to in_cksum_skip() (see sys/i386/i386/in_cksum.c, 1.17 -> 1.18,
INVERT expression). Besides that I disagree that it is valid for
TCP, there was no real problem until in_cksum.c,v 1.20, where the
in_cksum() was made just a special version of in_cksum_skip().
The side effect was that now every incoming IP datagram failed to
pass the checksum test (in_cksum() returned 0xffff when it should
actually return zero). It was fixed next day in revision 1.21,
by removing the INVERT expression. The latter also broke the
0 -> 0xffff fixup for UDP checksums.
Before this change:
: tcpdump: listening on lo0
: 127.0.0.1.33005 > 127.0.0.1.33006: udp 0 (ttl 64, id 1)
: 4500 001c 0001 0000 4011 7cce 7f00 0001
: 7f00 0001 80ed 80ee 0008 0000
After this change:
: tcpdump: listening on lo0
: 127.0.0.1.33005 > 127.0.0.1.33006: udp 0 (ttl 64, id 1)
: 4500 001c 0001 0000 4011 7cce 7f00 0001
: 7f00 0001 80ed 80ee 0008 ffff