Although not directly related the FreeBSD Foundation funded "Five New TCP
Congestion Control Algorithms for FreeBSD" project, the understanding and
inspiration required to write this documentation was significantly bolstered
by the Foundation's support.
Reviewed by: pjd
MFC after: 1 week
This allows specifying a %job (which is equivalent to the corresponding
process group).
Additionally, it improves reliability of kill from sh in high-load
situations and ensures "kill" finds the correct utility regardless of PATH,
as required by POSIX (unless the undocumented %builtin mechanism is used).
Side effect: fatal errors (any error other than kill(2) failure) now return
exit status 2 instead of 1. (This is consistent with other sh builtins, but
not in NetBSD.)
Code size increases about 1K on i386.
Obtained from: NetBSD
i386, how to configure the kernel, and some known issues. Further
refinement almost certainly required. This is not a Xen installation
manual.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
i386, how to configure the kernel, and some known issues. Further
refinement almost certainly required. This is not a Xen installation
manual.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Passing a count of zero on i386 and amd64 for [I386|AMD64]_BUS_SPACE_MEM
causes a crash/hang since the 'loop' instruction decrements the counter
before checking if it's zero.
PR: kern/80980
Discussed with: jhb
case user wants to implement his own actions and doesn't want the attributes to
vanish.
Obtained from: Wheel Systems Sp. z o.o. http://www.wheelsystems.com
MFC after: 3 days
only happen if VOP_INACTIVATE() drops the vnode lock, which is quite
unreasonable behaviour for filesystem, and should not be mentioned
in the description of VFS primitives.
MFC after: 1 week
media option generally should be used instead. Actually I think the lists
of media types should be removed from the manual pages of MAC drivers
altogether and users just pointed to the output of `ifconfig -m` instead;
even before r215297 there were several outdated descriptions, technically
it's wrong most of the time as not the MAC drivers support these media
types but actually the PHY drivers do and it generally doesn't make sense
to maintain these lists in every manual page of a driver as the media is
auto-detected.
This was removed in 2001 but I think it is appropriate to add it back:
* I do not want to encourage people to write fragile and non-portable echo
commands by making printf much slower than echo.
* Recent versions of Autoconf use it a lot.
* Almost no software still wants to support systems that do not have
printf(1) at all.
* In many other shells printf is already a builtin.
Side effect: printf is now always the builtin version (which behaves
identically to /usr/bin/printf) and cannot be overridden via PATH (except
via the undocumented %builtin mechanism).
Code size increases about 5K on i386. Embedded folks might want to replace
/usr/bin/printf with a hard link to /usr/bin/alias.