a null pointer panic when the pointer for the incorrect process is
NULL. getpriority() was broken in rev.1.27. Rev.1.28 broke the
warning instead of fixing the problem.
PR: 5495
config option in pmap. Fix a problem with faulting in pages. Clean-up
some loose ends in swap pager memory management.
The system should be much more stable, but all subtile bugs aren't fixed yet.
This is Junichi's v1.0 driver.
NOTE: Major device numbers have been changed to avoid conflict with other
FreeBSD 3.0 devices. The new numbers should be considered "official."
This driver is still considered "beta" quality, although we have been
playing with it. Please submit bugs to junichi and myself.
Submitted by: junichi@astec.co.jp
not quite correct, because the Makefiles in lkm/syscons don't set up the
`machine' symlink, but other, more volatile headers in <machine> are
already used.
it contains an address. This can replace all the myriad (wrong) ways
in which this task is performed in the current system. As an added
bonus, since it's a macro, then third-party software vendors have an easy
way to tell whether it's there or not. (This will become necessary
when sizeof(struct sockaddr) is increaased, and also when additional
fields are added to struct ifreq.)
Fix the UIO optimization code.
Fix an assumption in vm_map_insert regarding allocation of swap pagers.
Fix an spl problem in the collapse handling in vm_object_deallocate.
When pages are freed from vnode objects, and the criteria for putting
the associated vnode onto the free list is reached, either put the
vnode onto the list, or put it onto an interrupt safe version of the
list, for further transfer onto the actual free list.
Some minor syntax changes changing pre-decs, pre-incs to post versions.
Remove a bogus timeout (that I added for debugging) from vn_lock.
PHK will likely still have problems with the vnode list management, and
so do I, but it is better than it was.
referenced by the build of user-space libraries. These files were
obtained from NetBSD (with ansi.h being modified to reflect the FreeBSD
off_t and pid_t implementation).
- don't declare `struct arpcom' except in the kernel, so that there is no
dependency on <net/if.h> except in the kernel. This may break something
else.
- spell ETHER_ADDR_LEN as 6 again, so that there is no dependency on
<net/ethernet.h> even in the kernel.
(accent_key + space does still print the accent letter too, as in
the previous commit.)
Requested by a couple of users.
- Clear the accent flag when the next_screen key is pressed.
- Added some comment lines regarding accent key processing.
This will not make any of object files that LINT create change; there
might be differences with INET disabled, but hardly anything compiled
before without INET anyway. Now the 'obvious' things will give a
proper error if compiled without inet - ipx_ip, ipfw, tcp_debug. The
only thing that _should_ work (but can't be made to compile reasonably
easily) is sppp :-(
This commit move struct arpcom from <netinet/if_ether.h> to
<net/if_arp.h>.
- IIR_TXRDY is never off even if reading a IIR register.
- Know as PIAFS "Palido 321S", "DC-*S" oemed by Sharp corp.
2. Omiting a restrict probing if it's already probed by pccardd.
Note: Define a new id_flags as follows
0x40000 - NO PROBE (Already probed as serial)
0x80000 - Has a bogus IIR_TXRDY register
Sato Junichi <junichi@astec.co.jp>
Nrihiro Kumagai <kuma@slab.tnr.sharp.co.jp>
Hirao Tetsuya <ai.cs.fujitsu.co.jp>
Toshiharu Asai <asai@mbc.infoshere.or.jp>
Shin'ya Kumabuchi <kumabu@t3.rim.or.jp>
Freebsd-users-jp@jp.freebsd.orgbsd-nomads@ai.cs.fujitsu.co.jp
consequence, ipfw's list command now adjusts its output at runtime
based on the largest packet/byte counter values.
NOTE:
o The ipfw struct has changed requiring a recompile of both kernel
and userland ipfw utility.
o This probably should not be brought into 2.2.
PR: 3738
and int32_t -- this adds their unsigned counterparts uint8_t, uint16_t,
and uint32_t. Bruce has noted that C9x also defines these types (in a
different file), so this may have to be revisited with some ifdefs at a
later date.
Reviewed by: bde
With a keymap with accent key definitions loaded to syscons, you press
an accent key followed by a regular letter key to produce an accented
letter. Press an accent key followed by the space bar to get the
accent letter itself.
Code is based on the ideas and work by jmrueda@diatel.upm.es and
totii@est.is.
PR: i386/4016
console.h
- Defined structures and constants for accent (dead) keys.
syscons.c, kbdtables.h
- When an accent key is pressed, set the corresponding index to
`accents'. If the next key is the space key, produce the accent char
itself. Otherwise search the accent key map entry, indexed by
`accents', for a matching pair of a regular char and an accented char.
- Added ioctl functions to set and get the accent key map (PIO_DEADKEYMAP
and GIO_DEADKEYMAP).
original BSD code. The association between the vnode and the vm_object
no longer includes reference counts. The major difference is that
vm_object's are no longer freed gratuitiously from the vnode, and so
once an object is created for the vnode, it will last as long as the
vnode does.
When a vnode object reference count is incremented, then the underlying
vnode reference count is incremented also. The two "objects" are now
more intimately related, and so the interactions are now much less
complex.
When vnodes are now normally placed onto the free queue with an object still
attached. The rundown of the object happens at vnode rundown time, and
happens with exactly the same filesystem semantics of the original VFS
code. There is absolutely no need for vnode_pager_uncache and other
travesties like that anymore.
A side-effect of these changes is that SMP locking should be much simpler,
the I/O copyin/copyout optimizations work, NFS should be more ponderable,
and further work on layered filesystems should be less frustrating, because
of the totally coherent management of the vnode objects and vnodes.
Please be careful with your system while running this code, but I would
greatly appreciate feedback as soon a reasonably possible.
was not being set copied to the bsd arguments..
frequently, resulting in files of over 100MB of NULs
PR: 386/5044
Reviewed by: jmb
Submitted by: (Richard Winkel) rich@math.missouri.edu
In sppp_chap_input:
1) in the CHAP_CHALLENGE case don't output the peer's name if it is not
what we expected (DEBUG) since it will be printed out in the course
of events anyway.
2) in the CHAP_SUCCESS case test whether the peer is required to
authenticate himself [(sp->lcp.opts & (1 << LCP_OPT_AUTH_PROTO))],
otherwise the state machine may never switch into the network state.
I saw this case against 2 different ISPs; they never bothered to
authenticate themselves to me.
In sppp_pap_input:
in the PAP_ACK case do the same as in 2) above for the same reason.
address range. They may have been trashed earlier in the boot
process, or the directory header may simply be bogus.
PR: 5140
Submitted by: Joel Faedi <Joel.Faedi@esial.u-nancy.fr>
Brought-to-attention-by: Derek Inksetter <derek@saidev.com>, bde
- wrong name in .file statement.
- stale comment about CONSPEED.
- style bugs in comments.
- inconsistent defaulting of operand sizes (should never depend on default).
- inconsistent choosing between je and jz (should always use je).
Submitted by: Jonathan Hanna <pangolin@rogers.wave.ca>
The patch is for a Hauppauge Win/TV dbx with FM. I still need to
config OVERRIDE_TUNER, but it works nicely.
mlock, mmap, mprotect, msync, munlock, and munmap are defined by
POSIX as taking void *. The const modifier has been added to
mlock, munlock, and mprotect as the standard dictates.
minherit comes from OpenBSD and has been updated to conform with
their recent change to void *.
madvise and mincore are not defined by POSIX, but their arguments
have been modified to be consistent with the POSIX-defined functions.
mincore takes a const pointer, but madvise does not due to the
MADV_FREE case.
Discussed with: bde
the "READ_CAPACITY" command, rather than the physical blocksize
reported in the physical geometry code-page.
Also don't print out worrying bogus messages when probing a
device that has no media. There's no point in printing out
something that is unknowable. It just confuses things.
Move the check for valid blocksize out of 'open()' to the subroutine
that actually finds this out, thus probe/attach can also report and
act on the problem.
of vnodes and objects. There are some metadata performance improvements
that come along with this. There are also a few prototypes added when
the need is noticed. Changes include:
1) Cleaning up vref, vget.
2) Removal of the object cache.
3) Nuke vnode_pager_uncache and friends, because they aren't needed anymore.
4) Correct some missing LK_RETRY's in vn_lock.
5) Correct the page range in the code for msync.
Be gentle, and please give me feedback asap.
necessary to call it when the tty layer's output state has not been
changed, but siostop() sometimes changes the TS_BUSY state and then
calls comstart() mainly for its side effect of calling ttwwakeup().
need to do it directly, since ttwwakeup() is always called just before
returning from rpstart(). The brokenness was waking up the wrong address
after clearing TS_SO_OLOWAT. It's not clear how processes waiting for
output to drain below low water ever got woken up.
Found by: when I fixed longstanding warts in output watermark
handling, this was the only driver that knew too much
(anything) about the watermarks
for field widths being 2 larger than specified for "%<number>p". Only
printing of null pointers is "wrong" now (it is actually "right", but
inconsistent with printf(3)).
really used any features from <sys/malloc.h> since it was "blasted
from the past" in rev.1.15, and most .c files did not depend on
the namespace pollution (others have been fixed). The mbuf allocation
control values M_DONTWAIT and M_WAIT were just defined in terms of
the malloc control values M_NOWAIT and M_WAITOK. The mbuf values
are now defined directly.
here, but kmem_malloc() is used and it takes the same "flags" as
malloc().
Use the mbuf allocation "flags" M_WAIT and M_DONTWAIT consistently.
There is really only one boolean flag, M_DONTWAIT, but the "flags"
were always treated as enum-like values, except in some places here
where the values are tacitly converted to boolean flags. Treat
them as enum-like values everywhere, except where we tacitly assume
that there are only two values in order to convert them to the
corresponding two kmem_malloc() "flags".
used, and caused a reference to an uninitialised variable (state).
I think I've fixed it now, but since nothing in the tree seems to use it,
I'm not sure.
under -current. The actual preparation of the next track will now be
deferred until just before the first write operation. Otherwise,
opening the device with write intent will cause the execution of
commands that are illegal in `limited command set mode' (i.e., after
the write channel has been opened).
While i was at it, cleaned up the worm_open() function a bit.
Removed the volume overflow pre-check in worm_strategy(). It was
time-consuming, and rather useless in many cases anyway (with the size
being reported for just the entire volume only), so we can as well let
the actual SCSI command fail instead, where it'll properly be reported
as EIO.
Partially submitted by & discussed with: jmz
fix PR#3618 weren't sufficient since malloc() can block - allowing the
net interrupts in and leading to the same problem mentioned in the
PR (a panic). The order of operations has been changed so that this
is no longer a problem.
Needs to be brought into the 2.2.x branch.
PR: 3618
of time that the laptop was suspending. Thus, select() calls that might have
suspended rather than firing at 1hr + "time suspended" since the timer was
posted.
Adding:
options APM_FIXUP_CALLTODO
to the kernel config enables the patch.
[
This patch was slightly modified to use a consistant indent style and
I removed some unused local variables. After this has been tested a
few weeks we'll make the options the default, so for now I'm now
documenting it in LINT. Mike can later if he wants.
]
Reviewed by: Mike Smith <msmith@freebsd.org>
Submitted by: Ken Key <key@cs.utk.edu>
half the way down. Otherwise, further attempts to mount the device
will be rejected with BUSY.
IMHO, this flag can completely go away for cd9660. There's no reason
you need to prevent CDs from being mounted multiple times, and in case
of multisession CDs it can even make sense to mount two different
sessions by the same time (to different mount points, otherwise it
would be pointless ;).
unknown drive. Such a drive will be configured by worm(4)
nevertheless (albeit with a warning), but cannot be opened except of
the SCSI control device (so scsi(8) or cdrecord will continue to
work).
It failed to recognize the PCI bus in a system that had only an
old chip-set (class code 000000) and a Cyclom multiport serial
card on PCI bus 0, but no VGA card or disk or network controller.
PR: i386/5300
Submitted by: Nickolay N. Dudorov <nnd@itfs.nsk.su>
flag is set in the p_pfsflags field. This, essentially, prevents an SUID
proram from hanging after being traced. (E.g., "truss /usr/bin/rlogin" would
fail, but leave rlogin in a stopevent state.) Yet another case where procctl
is (hopefully ;)) no longer needed in the general case.
Reviewed by: bde (thanks bruce :))
out of bounds a_entry is a kernel and use the usual kludge to find
the text address). If gdb had used this, it would have been able
to find the kernel text address properly. Unfortunately, it uses
its own a.out macros, so this is mainly an example for gdb to copy.