The algorithm is supposed to work as follows:
in order to prevent starvation, when a new client starts being served we
record the start time and reset the counter of bytes served.
We then switch to a new client after a certain amount of time or bytes,
even if the current one still has pending requests.
To avoid charging a new client the time of the first seek,
we start counting time when the first request is served.
Unfortunately a bug in the previous version of the code failed
to set the start time in certain cases, resulting in some processes
exceeding their timeslice.
The fix (in this patch) is trivial, though it took a while to find
out and replicate the bug.
Thanks to Tommaso Caprai for investigating and fixing the problem.
Submitted by: Tommaso Caprai
MFC after: 1 week
at the Univ-of-Del. Basically when a 1-to-1 socket did a
socket/bind/send(data)/close. If the timing was right
we would dereference a socket that is NULL.
MFC after: 1 month
object's size field. Previously, that field was always zero, even
when the object tn_reg.tn_aobj contained numerous pages.
Apply style fixes to tmpfs_reg_resize().
In collaboration with: kib
cause OpenSSL to parse past the end of the message.
Note: Applications are only affected if they act as a server and call
SSL_CTX_set_tlsext_status_cb on the server's SSL_CTX. This includes
Apache httpd >= 2.3.3, if configured with "SSLUseStapling On".
Security: http://www.openssl.org/news/secadv_20110208.txt
Security: CVE-2011-0014
Obtained from: OpenSSL CVS
Due to UFS insistence to pretend that device sector size is 512 bytes,
sector size is obtained from ioctl(DIOCGSECTORSIZE) for real devices,
and from the label otherwise. The file images without label have to
be made with 512 sector size.
In collaboration with: pho
Reviewed by: jeff
Tested by: bz, pho
the fragment, and write the full block. Reading less might not work
due to device sector size bigger then size of direntries in the
last directory fragment.
Reported by: bz
In collaboration with: pho
Reviewed by: jeff
Tested by: bz, pho
journal blocks, instead of hard coding 512 byte sector size. Journal need
to atomically write the block, that can only be guaranteed at the device
sector size, not larger. Attempt to write less then sector size results in
driver errors.
Note that this is the first structure in UFS that depends on the
sector size. Other elements are written in the units of fragments.
In collaboration with: pho
Reviewed by: jeff
Tested by: bz, pho
the construct like printf("%\s", NULL) resulting from macroexpand of
ERROR(u, NULL), making it impossible to use LIBUFS_DEBUGGING.
With inline function, compiler cannot detect the NULL argument to
known function and does not try to convert it into puts().
In collaboration with: pho
active I/O to several disks (copying large file on ZFS) causes timeout after
just a few seconds of run. Single port 88SX6111 seems like not affected.
Skip reading transferred bytes count for these controllers. It works for
88SX6111, but 88SX6145 always returns zero there. Haven't tested others,
but better to be safe.
correctly:
* pass in whether to allow the hardware to override the duration field
in the main data frame (durupdate_en) - PS_POLL frames in particular
don't have the duration bit overriden;
* there's no rts/cts duration here; that's done elsehwere