For some very unclear reason this device contains a FTDI 8U232AM USB->COM
adapter, but reports different device id than original 8U232AM. At the same
time, it reports vendor id of FTDI.
Sponsored by: Porta Software Ltd
MFC after: 2 weeks
Suggested by: nate
- get rid of "magick" values in code and make sysctl's reflecting reality
on processor versions which have one or another frequency "forbidden"
due to errata.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Suggested by: nate
- get rid of "magick" values in code and make sysctl's reflecting reality
on processor versions which have one or another frequency "forbidden"
due to errata.
PR:
Submitted by:
Reviewed by:
Approved by:
Obtained from:
MFC after: 2 weeks
the user requests a read-only mount. This is necessary because we
don't do the VOP_OPEN again if they upgrade a read-only mount to
read-write.
Noticed by: bde
The uidinfo code appears to be MPSAFE, and is referenced without Giant
elsewhere. While this grab of Giant was only made in fairly rare
circumstances (actually GC'ing on refcount==0), grabbing Giant here
potentially introduces lock order issues with any locks held by the
caller. So this probably won't help performance much unless you change
credentials a lot in an application, and leave a lot of file descriptors
and cached credentials around. However, it simplifies locking down
consumers of the credential interfaces.
Bumped into by: sam
Appeased: tjr
to a new prison_complete() task run by a task queue. This removes
a requirement for grabbing Giant in crfree(). Embed the 'struct task'
in 'struct prison' so that we don't have to allocate memory from
prison_free() (which means we also defer the FREE()).
With this change, I believe grabbing Giant from crfree() can now be
removed, but need to check the uidinfo code paths.
To avoid header pollution, move the definition of 'struct task'
to _task.h, and recursively include from taskqueue.h and jail.h; much
preferably to all files including jail.h picking up a requirement to
include taskqueue.h.
Bumped into by: sam
Reviewed by: bde, tjr
Replace wrong check returned EFBIG with EOVERFLOW handling from POSIX:
36708 [EOVERFLOW] The file is a regular file, nbyte is greater than 0, the
starting position is before the end-of-file, and the starting position is
greater than or equal to the offset maximum established in the open file
description associated with fildes.
ffs_write:
Replace u_int64_t cast with uoff_t cast which is more natural for types
used.
ffs_write & ffs_read:
Remove uio_offset and uio_resid checks for negative values, the caller
supposed to do it already. Add comments about it.
Reviewed by: bde
recwin and sendwin. This removes a big source of confusion and makes
following the code much easier.
Reviewed by: sam (mentor)
Obtained from: DragonFlyBSD rev 1.6 (hsu)
rid's and to deallocate resources if a failure occurs during attach. This
patch also fixes the driver to return failure if bus_alloc_resource() for
the IRQ fails rather than panic'ing on the next line by passing a NULL
resource to bus_setup_intr(). The other attachments already do all this.
Submitted by: Jun Su <csujun@263.net>
In case no real/physical IEEE 802 address is available, both the expired
"draft-leach-uuids-guids-01" (section "4. Node IDs when no IEEE 802
network card is available") and RFC 2518 (section "6.4.1 Node Field
Generation Without the IEEE 802 Address") recommend (quoted from RFC
2518):
"The ideal solution is to obtain a 47 bit cryptographic quality random
number, and use it as the low 47 bits of the node ID, with the _most_
significant bit of the first octet of the node ID set to 1. This bit
is the unicast/multicast bit, which will never be set in IEEE 802
addresses obtained from network cards; hence, there can never be a
conflict between UUIDs generated by machines with and without network
cards."
Unfortunately, this incorrectly explains how to implement this and
the FreeBSD UUID generator code inherited this generation bug from
the broken reference code in the standards draft. They should instead
specify the "_least_ significant bit of the first octet of the node ID"
as the multicast bit in a memory and hexadecimal string representation
of a 48-bit IEEE 802 MAC address.
This standards bug arised from a false interpretation, as the multicast
bit is actually the _most_ significant bit in IEEE 802.3 (Ethernet)
_transmission order_ of an IEEE 802 MAC address. The standards authors
forgot that the bitwise order of an _octet_ from a MAC address _memory_
and hexadecimal string representation is still always from left (MSB,
bit 7) to right (LSB, bit 0).
Fortunately, this UUID generation bug could have occurred on systems
without any Ethernet NICs only.
no-op on {i386/alpha/ia64/sparc64} where chars are signed by
default. Should help ARM and S390 which also suffer from this.
Tested on: ppc, i386, objdump disasm before/after diffs
Reviewed by: obrien, bde (a while back)
use a bounce buffer for the actual transfer to avoid crossing a 64k
boundary. To do this, we malloc a buffer twice as big as we need and then
find an aligned block within that buffer to do the transfer. The check
to see which part of the block we use used the wrong variable for part of
the condition meaning that in certain edge cases we would ask the BIOS to
cross a 64k boundary. The BIOS request would then fail resulting in file
transfers that just magically fail in the middle without any apparent
reason. Specifically, my tests for the splitfs boot floppies managed to
trigger this edge case.
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC-info: along with fixes to libstand filesystems