to the id_print() function.
Use getgrouplist(3) for the case when an user was specified,
and getgroups(2) when no user was given.
That reverts to the expected behaviour and makes it easy to
implement an option later to force using getgrouplist(3).
theoretically unload pci bridges or pci drivers. It will also allow
detach to work if one needed to detach a subtree.
This is inspired by looking at the p4 commits from bms to his 5.4
tree, but I didn't look at the final results.
/usr/src/sbin/ipf/ipftest/../../../sys/contrib/ipfilter/netinet/ip_frag.c: In function `fr_ipid_newfrag':
/usr/src/sbin/ipf/ipftest/../../../sys/contrib/ipfilter/netinet/ip_frag.c:397: warning: cast to pointer from integer of different size
/usr/src/sbin/ipf/ipftest/../../../sys/contrib/ipfilter/netinet/ip_frag.c: In function `fr_ipid_knownfrag':
/usr/src/sbin/ipf/ipftest/../../../sys/contrib/ipfilter/netinet/ip_frag.c:582: warning: cast from pointer to integer of different size
for the VGA I/O or memory ranges, when it's not within the default
ranges decoded by the bridge. When allocation for VGA addresses is
attempted, check that the bridge has the VGA Enable bit set before
allowing it.
As such, newbusified VGA drivers can allocate their resources when
the VGA adapter is behind a PCI-to-PCI bridge.
Reviewed by: imp@, jhb@
NGROUPS groups. getgrouplist(3) may put a duplicate group
id into the passed array (it sets [0] and [1] to the value
of the gid argument), but id_print() sorts them out.
Showing the ids of both an user given by an argument to `id',
and the current user, is now handled in a single function.
Displaying the current user's ids was inaccurate because
getgroups(2) had been used. getgroups(2) returns the current
kernel state of a user's groups, which may not always be
correct if /etc/group was recently changed.
- Fix a few style bugs.
PR: bin/78085
When adding users from a preformatted file, do not exit
silently when empty lines or lines starting with a '#'
are encountered - ignore them instead.
- Fix a spelling error in a comment.
PR: bin/80058
Negative values would produce undefined behaviour including
a possible segmentation fault.
- Explicitly initialize the global row and column variables
to zero.
PR: bin/80348
Only allow a process to use the x86 RDPMC instruction if it has
allocated and attached a PMC to itself.
Inform the MD layer of the "pseudo context switch out" that needs
to be done when the last thread of a process is exiting.
a Makefile target to re-created this file. Note, that there is no
explicite dependency to automatically re-create the file, because this
is needed only when the directive table changes and it requires the
(yet to come) devel/mph port.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu> (first version)
Move crc32() and crc32_raw() from the latter to the former. Move
the declaration of crc32_tab[] to <sys/libkern.h> as well.
Pointed out by: bde@
Tested on: ia64, sparc64
CRC logic to a new function: crc32_raw() that obtains the initial
CRC value as well as leaves any post-processing to the caller. As
such, it can be used when the initial CRC value is not ~0U or when
the final CRC value does need to be inverted (bitwise). It also
means that crc32_raw() can be called repeatedly when the data is
not available as a single block, such as for scatter/gather lists
and the likes.
Avoid the additional call overhead incured by the refactoring by
moving the implementation off crc32() to sys/systm.h and making it
inlinable. Since crc32_raw() is itself trivial and since it may
be used in loops that iterate over fragments, having it available
for inlining can be beneficial. Hence, move its implementation
to sys/systm.h as well.
Keep the original implementation of crc32() in libkern/crc32.c for
documentation purposes (as a comment of course).
Triggered by: Jose M Rodriguez (josemi at freebsd dot jazztel dot es)
Discussed on: current@
Tested on: amd64, ia64 (BVO having GPT partitions)
Jargon file candidate: BVO = By Virtue Of :-)
fact that access to RR0 does not need a prior write to the register
index because the index always reverts to 0 after the indexed register
has been accessed.
Typically when a RR or WR is to accessed, one programs the index (which
is a write to the control register), followed by a read or write to the
actual indexed register (a read pr write to the same control register).
When this non-atomic sequence is interrupted after having written the
index and low-level console I/O is done in that situation, the write to
program the index will actually write to the indexed register and nuke
state. This almost always yields a wedge.
By not programming the index register and instead just reading from RR0,
the worst case scenario is non-fatal. For if we don't actually read from
RR0 but some other register we get an invalid status, which may lead us
to conclude that the transit data register is empty when it's not or that
the receive data register contains data when it doesn't. Hence, we may
lose an output character or get a sporadic input character, but given
the situation this is a non-issue.
Full serialization is not possible due to the fact that this code needs
to work from DDB and before mutex initialization has happened.
In collaboration with: kris@, marius@
Tested by: kris@
MFC after: 1 day
X-MFC: 5.4-RELEASE candidate