would print it with probability 1/2**32. It seems that the correct
behavior is to print 4 with probability 1/4, but I'd like to avoid
breaking POLA until all the range inconsistencies in jot can be fixed
in one pass. See PR for details.
PR: 54878
Submitted by: David Brinegar <jot.3.brinegar@spamgourmet.com>
from passing the -P flag to crunchgen which seems to confuse crunchgen
horribly. This is the preferable solution to modifing crunchgen to
unset the MAKEFLAGS environment variable.
Submitted by: gad@
- Move isa/ppc* to sys/dev/ppc (repo-copy)
- Add an attachment method to ppc for puc
- In puc we need to walk the chain of parents.
Still to do, is to make ppc(4) & puc(4) work on other platforms. Testers
wanted.
PR: 38372 (in spirit done differently)
Verified by: Make universe (if I messed up a platform please fix)
the userland version of [gs]etcontext to switch between a thread
and the UTS scheduler (and back again). This also fixes a bug
in i386 _thr_setcontext() which wasn't properly restoring the
context.
Reviewed by: davidxu
a constant string of little information these days.
This removes the need to #include <vm/swap_pager.h> which is due to
become a kernel only include file.
mac_mls_subject_equal_ok() to mac_mls_subject_privileged(),
which more consistently reflects the fact that this is really
about our notion of privilege in the MLS policy.
Since we don't use suser() for privilege in MLS, remove
the suser check from the ifnet relabel ioctl, and replace it
with an MLS privilege check.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
another thread. We use the td_oncpu member of the other field to locate
it's associated CPU and then search the that CPU's list of spin locks
contained in its per-CPU data. This is not always safe and may in fact
panic or just not work, but it is useful in at least one case.
already checks suser on a network interface relabel, so don't dup it
here. Rely solely on the Biba definition of privilege, which is
already tested.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
Submitted by: Andrew Reisse <areisse@nailabs.com>
callout when a specified number of lines have been output. This can be
used to implement pagers for ddb commands that output a lot of text. A
simple paging function is included that automatically rearms itself when
fired.
Reviewed by: bde, julian
This is controlled by a per-adapter sysctl hw.atm.hfaX.shape. When
set to 0, no shaping occures. When set to 1 at most 1 channel is
shaped. When set to 2 all CBR channels are shaped. Note, that the
latter may actually not work, because of the adapter supporting
the shaping of only one PDU at the same time.
The old firmware (3.0.1) can still be used by specifying the '-3' option
to fore_dnld.
Document the -r option that resets the adapter prior to the download.
Ther newer firmware version allows traffic shaping.
also do it). Three problems have been encountered:
1. The initialisation command does not work in interrupt mode. Whether
this is a firmware bug or a feature is not clear. The original Fore
drivers execute the initialize command always in polling mode, so
it appears that this behaviour is expected. When we detect a 4.X.Y
firmware do busy wait on the command status.
2. The command code of the GET_PROM command has changed. This is an
unofficial command anyway. What was GET_PROM in 3.X.Y is CLEAR_STATS
in 4.X.Y (although unimplemented in the firmware). We need to
use the correct code depending on the firmware.
3. The 4.X.Y firmware can set the error flag in the command status
without also setting the completion flag (as the documenation says).
Check both variants.
An additional field in the per-card structure fu_ft4 is TRUE when we have
detected a 4.X.Y firmware. Otherwise it is false. The behaviour of the
driver when using a 3.X.Y firmware should be identical to the previous
behaviour.
This change will enable traffic shaping of (at least one) CBR channels.
incoming remote telephone numbers and subaddresses ignored the configured
list completely since it was always terminated by a break at the end of
the first run (which was a leftover from the implementation of subaddresses).
Submitted by: Christian Ullrich <chris@chrullrich.de>
The other option would be to remove it, but I can imagine it may be useful
for the forseeable future as we fiddle with segments in KSE and thr libraries,