bsd.lib.mk and thus broke the build since AFLAGS were not taken
into considered anymore, as bsd.lib.mk currently has wrong .s.o
rule that uses cc(1) instead of as(1).
Revision 1.14 reverted to using as(1), and revision 1.15 brought
AFLAGS back to the business, but revision 1.14 also broke "make
clean".
To fix this, but not break anything that was fixed in revisions
1.13-1.15, we revert mostly to revision 1.13 except for switching
back to using bsd.prog.mk. This gives us back the default .s.o
rule from sys.mk that uses as(1), and fixes "make clean" by
restoring the full contents of OBJS.
Also fixed LDFLAGS.
o add missing zeroize op when deleting an SA
o don't re-initialize an xform for an SA that already has one
Submitted by: Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@verniernetworks.com>
MFC after: 1 day
not spinlock_t. Spinlock_t and the associated functions and macros may
require blocking signals in order for async-safe libc functions to behave
appropriately in libthr. This is undesriable for libthr internal locking.
So, this is the first step in completely separating libthr from libc's
locking primitives.
Three new macros should be used for internal libthr locking from now on:
THR_LOCK, THR_TRYLOCK, THR_UNLOCK.
and the disabling of signals. What we are really interested in is
keeping track of recursive disabling of signals. We should not
be recursively acquiring thread locks. Any such situations should
be reorganized to not require a recursive lock.
Separating the two out also allows us to block signals independent of
acquiring thread locks. This will be needed in libthr in the near future when
we put the pieces together to protect libc functions that use pthread mutexes
and low level locks.
implementation of a largely MI pmap_object_init_pt() for vnode-backed
objects. pmap_enter_quick() is implemented via pmap_enter() on sparc64
and powerpc.
- Correct a mismatch between pmap_object_init_pt()'s prototype and its
various implementations. (I plan to keep pmap_object_init_pt() as
the MD hook for device-backed objects on i386 and amd64.)
- Correct an error in ia64's pmap_enter_quick() and adjust its interface
to match the other versions. Discussed with: marcel
components. This is generally considered a non-optimal solution but
it gets the job done for the /rescue case.
Submitted by: Tim Kientzle <kientzle@acm.org>
Change execvp to be a wrapper around execvP. This is necessary for some
of the /rescue pieces. It may also be more generally applicable as well.
Submitted by: Tim Kientzle <kientzle@acm.org>
Approved by: Silence on arch@
bit in the EEPROM mode register on. Also, the address must be written
in two 32-bit register accesses instead of 6 8-bit accesses.
Tested with my 8139B cardbus NIC.
PR: kern/35900
Submitted by: Mark Kettenis <kettenis@chello.nl>
implementation and the new improved one. We now precompute the
signal set passed to sigtimedwait, using an inverted set when
necessary for compatibility with older kernels.
network interfaces could only be turned on and off as a group (all
static interfaces or all dhcp interfaces).
When used to start the interface a 'long form' ifconfig output is
used to show the status of the interface, but when stopping an interface
the script will simply output the name of the interface. This is simply my
personal preference. Hopefully as this functionality matures we can
stabilize on a prefered form of output for these scripts.
A stop command to the dhclient script now explicitly releases the dhcp lease.
Behaviour at system shutdown; however, is unchanged since dhclient is not,
by default, run at that time. The client will not release its lease
at shutdown.
o Ensure rc.d/network2 and rc.d/network3 are not automatically run
during boot
o Modify script headers so rcorder(8) can put the two scripts in the
correct sequence.
o Change the provider names.
o Separate routing into two parts: static routing and routing options. The
start command will run both parts, but they can be run separately using
the static and options command, respectively:
(/etc/rc.d/routing static; /etc/rc.d/routing options)
the user requests a read-only mount. This is necessary because we
don't do the VOP_OPEN again if they upgrade a read-only mount to
read-write.
Fixes lockup when creating files on msdosfs mounts that have been
mounted read-only then upgraded to read-write. The exact cause of
the lockup is not known, but it is likely to be the kernel getting
stuck in an infinite loop trying to write dirty buffers to a device
without write permission.
Reported/tested by andreas, discussed with phk.