need this RSN.
Remove a pointless warning in the root device locating code.
Remove the "wd" compatibility name from the "ad" driver.
WARNING: If you have not updated to use /dev/wd* in your /etc/fstab
and modern bootblocks, it would be a very good idea to do so BEFORE
you upgrade your kernel.
until the incoming connection has either data waiting or what looks like a
HTTP request header already in the socketbuffer. This ought to reduce
the context switch time and overhead for processing requests.
The initial idea and code for HTTPACCEPT came from Yahoo engineers and has
been cleaned up and a more lightweight DELAYACCEPT for non-http servers
has been added
Reviewed by: silence on hackers.
options USERCONFIG being present. Due to the lack of early boot hints
neither sio or sc would succeed the console probe. If USERCONFIG was
active, there was a second cninit() after userconfig had run and that
happened to make the console selection work. If you left out USERCONFIG,
you would end up with no console at all. :-(
This needs a proper fix, especially when sc looses the "at isa" hint.
But for now, this works.
doesn't. In the Linux emulation layer, ignore the fd passed when
MAP_ANON is specified.
Known application to be fixed: Xanalys/Harlequin Lispworks
Also improve debug output for mmap, now showing what the emulation
layer mapped to what (-DDEBUG).
Reviewed by: marcel
dynamic hints. This allows the resource_XXX_value() calls to work
before malloc() has started. This gets the serial console working as well
as a few other things.
implying that they aren't used for the rest of the system.
Fix the lies:
253 is used by mfs (bad MFS for not registering it).
254 is a magic cookie inside of the dev code in at least one place.
255 is -1 which is magic in a different way in the dev code.
So, that means that 200-252 are reserved for local users. A grep for
252 didn't turn anything up, so I'm assuming it and lower are safe.
And I thought I was being smart by allocating our local major numbers
from 254 on down. This caused very very odd problems that were hard
to track down: close not being called, sync failing at reboot, etc.
no clue.
Set sourceid to 0 when booting, which is the correct setting for stdin.
Set sourceid to an arbitrary fd when include'ing, preserving and restoring
the previous sourceid. This is possibly broken(), as 0 is a valid fd. Maybe
we should +1 to this value.
This fixes the version problem widely reported.
errors were normally harmless because they were in unreachable code
and gcc apparently doesn't check the syntax inside asm statements
that it optimizes away.
Order the SYSINIT() for MALLOC_DEFINE() correctly so that malloc()
doesn't have to waste time initializing itself. The
(SI_SUB_KMEM, SI_ORDER_ANY) order was shared with syscons' SYSINIT()
for scmeminit(), and scmeminit() calls malloc(), so malloc()
initialization was not always complete on the first call to malloc().
kern/kern_malloc.c:
- Removed self-initialization in malloc().
- Removed half-baked sanity check in free(). Trust MALLOC_DEFINE().
around with floppies. Also document (for lack of a more appropriate place/file)
the problems the installer has when other disks are present with a BSD
disk label on them. Please remove this warning when the problem is fixed.
PR: alpha/17642
not allowed to return EINTR, but use of pthread_suspend_np() could cause
EINTR to be returned. To fix this, restructure pthread_suspend_np() so that
it does not interrupt a thread that is waiting on a mutex or condition, and
keep enough state around that pthread_resume_np() can fix things up
afterwards.
Reviewed by: deischen
in the dysfunctional !KMEMSTATS case. This hasn't compiled since
rev.1.31 of kern_malloc.c quietly removed the core of the support
for the !KMEMSTATS case. I fixed it to see if it was worth saving
and found that (as usual) inlining just wasted space and increased
complexity without significantly affecting time, at least for the
lmbench2 micro-benchmark on a Celeron. The space bloat was
surprisingly large - the text size increased from 1700K to 1840K
for a version with the entire malloc() family inlined.
Removed even older garbage (kmemxtob() and btokmemx() macros).
Attempt to deprecate MALLOC() and FREE(). Given current compilers
(gcc-2.x or C99), they don't do anything that (safe) function-like
macros or inline functions named malloc() and free() couldn't do.
Fixed missing casts of macro args in MALLOC() and FREE().
It does mean that it is now possible to run passive-mode FTP
server behind NAT.
- SECURITY: FTP aliasing engine now ensures that:
o the segment preceding a PORT/227 segment terminates with a \r\n;
o the IP address in the PORT/227 matches the source IP address of
the packet;
o the port number in the PORT command or 277 reply is greater than
or equal to 1024.
Submitted by: Erik Salander <erik@whistle.com>
Reviewed by: ru
is failing for everybody that I have spoken with that has tried it.
FreeBSD/i386 bootstrap loader, Revision 0.8
(root@outback.netplex.com.au, Tue Jun 13 23:26:49 PDT 2000)
Loader version 0.3+ required
Aborted!
start not found
Note that the 0.3+ message is from inside the arch-alpha block, not the
i386 block of code. And even then, 0.8 is higher than 0.3.
This prevents the rest of the loader.conf stuff working. :-/
Implement the Solaris way to break into DDB over a serial console
instead of sending a break. Sending the character sequence
CR ~ ^b will break the kernel into DDB (if DDB is enabled).
Reviewed by: peter