needed to hold the GEOM tree. At this point, pointer 'p' has an improper
value (as it was used previously), and we're getting EFAULT. Fix this
functionality by passing NULL instead of 'p'.
This fixes mdconfig(8) -l output with high number of md(4) devices.
Found by: kris
Reviewed by: phk
consistent with the naming of other structure field members, and
reducing improper grep matches. Clean up and comment structure
fields in structure definition.
sc->mii_anegticks according to whether the respective BGE chip
supports Fast Ethernet only or also Gigabit Ethernet.
- At least the BGE chips I've tested with wedge when isolating them
so document this as the reason for setting MIIF_NOISOLATE and
remove the unused (and partially even #ifdef'ed out) isolation
related code. Add code that panics if we encounter a non-zero MII
instance as generally there's no way a PHY requiring MIIF_NOISOLATE
can be handled gracefully in a multi-PHY configuration (it's ok for
the internal PHY of single-PHY-only-NIC to not support isolation
though).
- Additionally set MIIF_NOLOOP as loopback doesn't seem to work
either and remove the #ifdef'ed out code for adding respective
media. The MIIF_NOLOOP flag currently triggers nothing but
hopefully will be respected by mii_phy_setmedia() later on.
Reviewed by: jkim, yongari
MFC after: 1 month
Blade 2500, Fire V210 and probably some other sparc64 machines.
These chips are typically not fitted with an EEPROM which means
that we have to obtain the MAC address via OFW and that some chip
tests will just always fail.
These changes are based on the respective code found in OpenBSD
with some additional info obtained from OpenSolaris and some style
suggestions by jkim@. They also have the desired side-effect of
respecting the 'local-mac-address?' system configuration variable
for the affected BGEs.
- In bge_attach() factor out calling bge_release_resources() before
going to the fail label into the fail label as well as replace a
magic 6 with ETHER_ADDR_LEN.
Reviewed by: yongari (before style changes), jkim
"The setenv( ) function shall fail if:
[EINVAL] The name argument is a null pointer, points to an empty string,
or points to a string containing an '=' character."
The fix (like all others in this subject) is backward-compatible.
"The setenv( ) function shall fail if:
[EINVAL] The name argument is a null pointer, points to an empty string,
or points to a string containing an '=' character."
The fix (like all others in this subject) is backward-compatible.
traceroute6(8) force -w flag (wait time) to be > 1 sec. Make it
possible to use 1 sec wait time.
PR: bin/110933
Submitted by: Dmitry Marakasov
Reviewed by: freebsd-net (silence)
MFC after: 1 month
Before:
$ ipfw -n add 100 count icmp from any to any mac-type 0x01
00100 count icmp 0x0001
$ ipfw -n add 100 count icmp from any to any mac any any
00100 count icmp MAC any any any
After:
$ ipfw -n add 100 count icmp from any to any mac-type 0x01
00100 count icmp from any to any mac-type 0x0001
$ ipfw -n add 100 count icmp from any to any mac any any
00100 count icmp from any to any MAC any any
PR: bin/112244
Submitted by: Andrey V. Elsukov
MFC after: 1 month
(also IEEE Std 1003.1-2001)
The specs explicitly says that altering passed string
should change the environment, i.e. putenv() directly puts its arg
into environment (unlike setenv() which just copies it there).
It means that putenv() can't be implemented via setenv()
(like we have before) at all. Putenv() value lives (allows modifying)
up to the next putenv() or setenv() call.
- Wake up DMA engine after adding a new receive buffer.
- Skip buffers which have unknown state after error.
- More rigid error detection.
MFC after: 1 week
Rationale:
We are interested in the current (last) element of the argv array
there, not in its first element. The if construct is there because
we want to avoid adding empty (zero-length) arguments to argv, so
we just don't advance argvp if the current argument is empty, and
it gets overwritten at the next iteration. Note that strsep(3)
doesn't treat consecutive delim characters as a single separator,
it returns empty fields between such characters, and it's up to the
caller to handle them this or that way.
Also add a comment that the argv array ends up null-terminated in
any case (it's due to the design of the for loop) as an answer to
a possible question why the whole argv isn't zero-filled.
Submitted by: yongari
Tested by: yongari
MFC after: 3 days
o Print "unknown ICMP" instead of "(null)" if we don't have a description for a icmp type.
Based on code
Submitted by: Christoph Weber-Fahr
PR: misc/112126
MFC after: 2 weeks
1) Under POSIX unsetenv("foo=bar") is explicit error and not equal
to unsetenv("foo")
2) Prepare for upcomig POSIXed putenv() rewrite: make putenv() calls
portable and conforming to standard.
as some combinations of chipset, controller and target do not behave
correctly when DMA is enabled for other commands.
PR: kern/103602
MFC after: 2 weeks
compatibility with the different environment conventions" (man page).
With the standards, we don't have them different anymore and
IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 says that
"The values that the environment variables may be assigned are not
restricted except that they are considered to end with a null byte"
Issue 6 (also IEEE Std 1003.1-2001) in following areas:
args, return, errors.
Putenv still needs rewriting because specs explicitly says that
altering passed string later should change the environment (currently we
copy the string so can't provide that).