covered now, and i've attempted to give textual representations
instead of magic numbers.
The st(4) driver still misses some pieces; i'm going to implement the
EOM functionality RSN.
Any takers for the MTCOMP command? Seems to have never been implemented.
the top level and have the build-package sequence of each port work
together.
For the old behavior (i.e, just go ahead and blindly pack everything up,
regardless of the contents of work/), there is a new target "repackage".
Since "build" depends on "configure", which depends on "patch", etc.,
this shouldn't disrupt any Makefile that doesn't break the dependency
chain.
The old behavior was very annoying because when I did a "make -k",
it would still try to go configure and build even if the extraction
failed.
The first problem I found was that descriptor 0 was being closed.
This happens because the modem variable is set to 0 to indicate
that it is not valid but there are not enough tests for the modem
variable being 0. You can see where I have done this in the patch.
Code in OpenModem() dups the modem descriptor if it is < 3. Once
this happened the modem was always open and an incomming call would
have getty and ppp reading the modem.
Descriptor 1 is closed when the quit command was executed from a
telnet connection. The next modem open returns descriptor 1
and this gets duped leaving the modem always open again.
The modem was not being closed when the connection dropped or was
closed from the other end. The UUCP lock was also not removed if
the modem could not be opened.
Reviewed by: Atsushi Murai <amurai@spec.co.jp>
Submitted by: John Capo <jc@irbs.com>
interested parties.
Make the loader refuse to load anything below 1 MB -- we didn't
support it since FreeBSD 2.0R. Avoid gratuitously wiping out the BIOS
variables or the loader.
the kernel at 0-640k; we haven't had the ability to do that since before
2.0R. Furthermore, I fail to see how putting an instruction at 0 and then
doing a .org 0x500 is going to prevent the stuff from getting clobbered
in the first place; a.out is just too stupid to know about sparse address
spaces.
is necessary in order for panic+sync to work. Will also gloss over a panic
that Jordan was having with the install floppies that remains unexplainable.
2) Handle "bogus_page" a little better.
3) Set page protection to VM_PROT_NONE if the entire page has become !valid.
Submitted by: John Dyson (2&3), me (1).
1) Rewrote screwy code that uses an incore buffer without making it busy.
2) Use B_CACHE instead of B_DONE in cases where it is appropriate.
3) Minor code optimization.
This *might* fix kern/345 submitted by Heikki Suonsivu.
pages that are in FS buffers. This fixes the (believed to already have been
fixed) problem with msync() not doing it's job...in other words, the
stuff that Andrew has continuously been complaining about.
Submitted by: John Dyson, w/minor changes by me.
Previously they were only guarded by `#ifndef _ANSI_SOURCE'. They are
neither ANSI nor POSIX nor std and should never have been declared here.
Declare functions like abs() as having attribute `__pure2'. Declaring them
as having type `__pure' has been a no-op for some time.
Delete obsolete comment about stub locale functions.
Use consistent formatting for the rand48 functions. These and about 30
other functions should never have been declared here either.
one ypbind broadcast can yield several responses. This can lead to
some confusion: the syslog message from ypbind will indicate a rebinding
to the first server that responds, but we may subsequently change our
binding to another server when the other responses arrive. This results
in ypbind reporting 'server OK' to one address and ypwhich reporting a
binding to another.
The behavior of the rpc_received() function has been changed to prevent
this: subsequent responses received after a binding has already been
established are ignored. Rebinding gratuitously each time we get a
new response is silly anyway.
Also backed out the non-fix I made in my last ypbind commit. (Pass
me the extra large conical hat, please.)
(At some point I'm going to seriously re-work ypbind and the _yp_dobind()
library function to bring them in line with SunOS's documented behavior:
binding requests are supposed to be 'client-driven.' The _yp_dobind()
function should be responsible for retrying connections in response to
calls from client programs rather than having ypbind broadcasting
continously until a server responds. The current setup works okay in
normal operation, but we broadcast far too often than we should.)