Fix by dhartmei@ and mcbride@
1.433
Properly m_copyback() modified TCP sequence number after demodulation
1.432
Fix icmp checksum when sequence number modlation is being used.
Also fix a daddr vs saddr cut-n-paste error in ICMP error handling.
Fixes PR 3724
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Reviewed by: dhartmei
Approved by: rwatson
This includes a modified form of some code from Thomas Moestl (tmm@)
to properly clean up the UMA zone and the "nfsnodehashtbl" hash
table.
Reviewed By: iedowse
PR: 16299
we get the resource allocation stuff hammered out.
Fix and off by one error that caused unnecessary filtering of valid
BARs for only 4 bytes than ICH3 and other PCI IDE controllers have.
Andrew Gallatin submitted this, although it doesn't solve the problems
ICH3 controllers have with the new code, it does restore the former
resource list on the probe line.
move its declaration to the machine-dependent header file on those
machines that use it. In principle, only i386 should have it.
Alpha and AMD64 should use their direct virtual-to-physical mapping.
- Remove pmap_kenter_temporary() from ia64. It is unused. Approved
by: marcel@
The VIA Nehemias is so obviously specific to i386 that it should not
be compiled on non-i386 platforms. The obviousness is in the fact that
all functions in nehemias.c are purely i386 inline assembly, guarded
by #ifdef __i386__
device in D0 to D0, that's a no-op, however the messages seem to be
confusing some people. Eventually, these messages will be parked
behind a if (bootverbose).
# I don't think this will fix any real bugs...
Xircom had an unfortunate habit of re-using PCMCIA IDs for quite different
cards - the xe driver knows about this and uses the first byte of 'extra'
PCMCIA ID info to identify cards with ambiguous IDs.
Reviewed by: imp (mentor)
can more easily be used INSTEAD OF the hard-working Yarrow.
The only hardware source used at this point is the one inside
the VIA C3 Nehemiah (Stepping 3 and above) CPU. More sources will
be added in due course. Contributions welcome!
o Save and restore bars for suspend/resume as well as for D3->D0
transitions.
o preallocate resources that the PCI devices use to avoid resource
conflicts
o lazy allocation of resources not allocated by the BIOS.
o set unattached drivers to state D3. Set power state to D0
before probe/attach. Right now there's two special cases
for this (display and memory devices) that need work in other
areas of the tree.
Please report any bugs to me.
Reference objects changed from ACPI_TYPE_ANY to ACPI_TYPE_LOCAL_REFERENCE
in Oct. 2002, this may help systems where switching the cooler on failed.
We support both types for now until this sorts out.
some machines to enable wake events for more devices although I haven't
seen a system yet that uses this form. Also, introduce acpi_GetReference()
which retrieves an object reference from various types.
address discovery and caching (similar to inet ARP). Use a single
global mutex, aarptab_mtx, to protect the table. Remove spl/spx.
Tested by: Bob Bishop <rb@gid.co.uk>
the reduction of the pager map's size by 8M bytes. In other words, eight
megabytes of largely wasted KVA are returned to the kernel map for use
elsewhere.
side effect of that change caused headers to not be sent if a 0 byte
file was passed to sendfile. This change fixes that behavior, allowing
sendfile to send out the headers even with a 0 byte file again.
Noticed by: Dirk Engling
equal to the process ID) is still present when we dump a core. It
already may have been destroyed. In that case we would end up
dereferencing a NULL pointer, so specifically test for that as well.
Reported & tested by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
Remove spurious whitespace, add indent protection, fix punctuation,
remove initialization of static variables to zero, put wakeup_ctr
and wakeup_needed in the correct order. (reported by bde)
This doesn't fix all the style bugs I introduced, but the remaining
style bugs make it easier for me to understand what I did here.
are enumerated in the ACPI device tree. In addition to the normal PCI
powerstate functionality, the ACPI _PSx methods are executed and ACPI
PowerResources are switched on and off via the acpi_pwr_switch_consumer()
function.
Glanced at by: imp, njl
before calling BUS_GET_RESOURCE_LIST(). Previously, the list head would
only be initialized if BUS_GET_RESOURCE_LIST() succeeded; it needs to
be initialized unconditionally so that the list cleanup code won't
trip over potential stack garbage.
we convert ip_len into a network byte order; in_delayed_cksum() still
expects it in host byte order.
The symtom was the ``in_cksum_skip: out of data by %d'' complaints
from the kernel.
To add to the previous commit log. These fixes make tcpdump(1) happy
by not complaining about UDP/TCP checksum being bad for looped back
IP multicast when multicast router is deactivated.
Reported by: Vsevolod Lobko
a callout, and use the new callout_drain API to make sure that a callout
has finished before we deallocate memory it is using.
PR: kern/64121
Discussed with: gallatin
license, per letter dated July 22, 1999 and irc message from Robert
Watson saying that clause 3 can be removed from those files with an
NAI copyright that also have only a University of California
copyrights.
Approved by: core, rwatson
callout_stop(), except that if the callout being stopped is currently
in progress, it blocks attempts to reset the callout and waits until the
callout is completed before it returns.
This makes it possible to clean up callout-using code safely, e.g.,
without potentially freeing memory which is still being used by a callout.
Reviewed by: mux, gallatin, rwatson, jhb
count is protected by the mutex that protects the condition, so the count
does not require any extra locking or atomic operations. It serves as an
optimization to avoid calling into the sleepqueue code at all if there are
no waiters.
Note that the count can get temporarily out of sync when threads sleeping
on a condition variable time out or are aborted. However, it doesn't hurt
to call the sleepqueue code for either a signal or a broadcast when there
are no waiters, and the count is never out of sync in the opposite
direction unless we have more than INT_MAX sleeping threads.
to awaken all waiters when a contested mutex is released instead of just
the highest priority waiter. If the various threads are awakened in
sequence then each thread may acquire and release the lock in question
without contention resulting in fewer expensive unlock and lock
operations. This old behavior of waking just the highest priority is
still used if this option is specified. Making the algorithm conditional
on a kernel option will allows us to benchmark both cases later and
determine which one should be used by default.
Requested by: tanimura-san
more consistent with other APIs. sleepq and cv's use signal/broadcast, and
msleep uses wakeup_one/wakeup. Prior to this turnstiles were using a
signal/wakeup mixture.
to implement this mistake.
Fixed some nearby style bugs (initialization in declaration, misformatting
of this initialization, missing blank line after the declaration, and
comparision of the non-boolean result of the initialization with 0 using
"!". In KNF, "!" is not even used to compare booleans with 0).
- don't say what a small subset of the options includes are for.
- don't mark up functions which use all their args with /* ARGSUSED */.
The markup should have been removed when the unused retval parameter
was removed.
- don't comment on what routine suser() checks do. Removed nearby
excessive vertical whitespace.
While here, begin fixing dependencies of <sys/mount.h> on normal namespace
pollution (__BSD_VISIBLE) by not using u_int in the prototype for nmount(2),
although it is used in the man page.
While there, begin cleaning up another set of prototypes:
- use u_int in the prototype for the kernel part of nmount().
- consistently don't use parameter names in prototypes in the
"exported vnode operations" set of prototypes, although style(9) says to
use names in the kernel.
status registers for error conditions and updating statistics
when there are cycles left (inspired by the nge(4) driver).
- Removed the TX list counter and the producer/consumer gap; it's
enough to just ensure we don't reuse the last (free) descriptor,
as the chip may not have read its next pointer yet. If we reuse
it, the TX may stall under a heavy TX load with polling enabled.
- Dropped code to recharge the watchdog timer, it's pointless; the
watchdog routine will re-init the chip and both RX and TX lists.