This adds some new NetBSD releases and makes some simple formatting changes.
With this commit NetBSD and FreeBSD should have identical files.
DragonflyFBSD has the version immediately prior to this commit.
When committing to this file please try to coordinate with all three groups.
Submitted by: Alan Barrett <apb@cequrux.com>
ZFS event processing should work on R/O root filesystems
Illumos ZFS issues:
3749 zfs event processing should work on R/O root filesystems
MFC after: 2 weeks
zpool create should treat -O mountpoint and -m the same
Illumos ZFS issues:
3745 zpool create should treat -O mountpoint and -m the same
MFC after: 2 weeks
to 999.99% CPU. It still won't be aligned if you have a multithreaded
process using more than 1000% CPU (e.g. idle process on an idle 12-way
system), but 100% is a common case.
Submitted by: Jeremy Chadwick (partial)
MFC after: 1 week
- When operating on a core file (-M) and -c is specified we don't clear
the message buffer of the running system.
- If we don't have permission to clear the buffer print the error message
only. That's what Linux does in this case, where this feature was ported
from, and it ensures that the error message doesn't get lost in the noise.
Discussed with: antoine, cognet
Approved by: cognet
linux_file structure and use it instead of directly accessing td_fpop
when destroying the linux_file structure. The td_fpop pointer is not
valid when a cdevpriv destructor is run, and the type-specific close
method has already been called, so f_vnode may not be valid (and the
vnode might have been recycled without our own reference).
Tested by: Julian Stecklina <jsteckli@os.inf.tu-dresden.de>
MFC after: 1 week
This is a workaround for WITH_LDNS_UTILS forcing BIND_UTILS off. It can
be reverted when we no longer have these conflicting options, or made more
general if we grow more cases like this.
running state. fxp(4) requires controller reinitialization for the
following cases.
o RX lockup condition on i82557
o promiscuous mode change
o multicast filter change
o WOL configuration
o TSO/VLAN hardware tagging/checksum offloading configuration
o MAC reprogramming after speed/duplex/flow-control resolution
o Any events that result in MAC reprogramming(link UP/DOWN,
remote link partner's restart of auto-negotiation etc)
o Microcode loading/unloading
Apart from above cases which come from hardware limitation, upper
stack also blindly reinitializes controller whenever an IP address
is assigned. After r194573, fxp(4) no longer needs to reinitialize
the controller to program multicast filter after upping the
interface. So keeping track of driver running state should remove
all unnecessary controller reinitializations.
This change will also address endless controller reinitialization
triggered by dhclient(8).
Tested by: hrs, Alban Hertroys <haramrae@gmail.com>
about mount and unmount events. This is used by Juniper to implement a more
optimal implementation of NetBSD's veriexec.
Submitted by: stevek@juniper.net
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc
when booting from ZFS turned out to also cause the boot path not being
adjusted if booting from CD-ROM with firmware versions that do not employ
the "cdrom" alias in that case. So shuffle the code around instead in order
to achieve the original intent. Ideally, we shouldn't fiddle with the boot
path when booting from UFS on a disk either; unfortunately, there doesn't
seem to be an universal way of telling disks and CD-ROMs apart, though. [1]
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
PR: 179289
MFC after: 1 week
This allows setting attributes on tables. One simply does not provide
an index in that case. Otherwise the entry corresponding the index has
the attribute set or unset.
Use this change to fix a relatively longstanding bug in our GPT scheme
that's the result of rev 198097 (relatively harmless) followed by rev
237057 (damaging). The damaging part being that our GPT scheme always
has the active flag set on the PMBR slice. This is in violation with
EFI. Existing EFI implementions for both x86 and ia64 reject the GPT.
As such, GPT disks created by us aren't usable under EFI because of
that.
After this change, GPT disks never have the active flag set on the PMBR
slice. In order to make the GPT disk bootable under some x86 BIOSes,
the reason of rev 198097, one must now set the active attribute on the
gpt table. The kernel will apply this to the PMBR slice For (S)ATA:
gpart set -a active ada0
To fix an existing GPT disk that has the active flag set in the PMBR,
and that does not need the flag, use (again for (S)ATA):
gpart unset -a active ada0
The EBR, MBR & PC98 schemes, which also impement at least 1 attribute,
now check to make sure the entry passed is valid. They do not have
attributes that apply to the table.
{,ipv6_}static_routes and rc.d/routing. For example:
static_routes="foo bar:em0"
route_foo="-net 10.0.0.0/24 -gateway 192.168.2.1"
route_bar="-net 192.168.1.0/24 -gateway 192.168.0.2"
At boot time, all of the static routes are installed as before.
The differences are:
- "/etc/rc.d/netif start/stop <if>" now configures static routes
with :<if> if any.
- "/etc/rc.d/routing start/stop <af> <if>" works as well. <af> cannot be
omitted when <if> is specified, but a keyword "any" or "all" can be used
for <af> and <if>.