In a few days I will commit a patch which changes vn(4) to use the
disk-minilayer. This will make vn(4) fully DEVFS friendly but have
the side effect that vnconfig needs the vn%d.ctl devices to be able
to configure vn(4).
Please remake your /dev/vn entries with this revision of MAKEDEV if
you don't rung DEVFS already.
1. ICMP ECHO and TSTAMP replies are now rate limited.
2. RSTs generated due to packets sent to open and unopen ports
are now limited by seperate counters.
3. Each rate limiting queue now has its own description, as
follows:
Limiting icmp unreach response from 439 to 200 packets per second
Limiting closed port RST response from 283 to 200 packets per second
Limiting open port RST response from 18724 to 200 packets per second
Limiting icmp ping response from 211 to 200 packets per second
Limiting icmp tstamp response from 394 to 200 packets per second
Submitted by: Mike Silbersack <silby@silby.com>
the kernel console. Instead, change logwakeup() to set a flag in the
softc. A callout then wakes up every so often and wakes up any processes
selecting on /dev/log (such as syslogd) if the flag is set. By default
this callout fires 5 times a second, but that can be adjusted by the
sysctl kern.log_wakeups_per_second.
Reviewed by: phk
Add detach routine and turn driver into a module so it can be loaded
and unloaded. Also take a stab at implementing multicast packet
reception so that this NIC will work with IPv6. Promiscuous mode
doesn't seem to work, but I'm not sure why. It works well enough that
I can run dhclient on it and put it on the office network though.
Also ripped out spl stuff and replaced it with mutexes.
Looking in src/Makfile* it looks like all the "WANT_AOUT" support
has been removed, maybe these should just go away...
Note that the a.out `ld' reaches over into src/contrib/gcc for libiberty
bits. This is biting us because the libiberty bits have evolved beyond
what the a.out `ld' can handle.
This change fixes the broken world, but only because very few have
"WANT_AOUT" defined.
This is a driver for the LanMedia/SBE LMC150x E1/T1 family of cards.
The driver currently support unframed E1 (2048kbit/s) and framed
E1 (nx64).
These cards will provision E1/T1 lines for about 1/4 the cost of
a cisco router...
a SIGINFO (normally via Ctrl-T), a line will be output indicating
the current phase number and progress information relevant to the
current phase.
Approved by: mckusick