a running timer. This fixes a problem where a dial is manually
aborted, the hangup script kicks in and the chat timer ends up
on the timer queue twice (tick tick tick tick *boom*)
Add the submitter as a contributor in the man page
freebsd -> FreeBSD, while I'm poking around.
PR: bin/15162
Submitted by: Dominic Mitchell <dom@palmerharvey.co.uk>
files in a 'files.XXX' file, config allows non-FreeBSD source files
with the same name as a FreeBSD source file to override the latter,
and in this situation it issues a warning.
However, if one of the user-specified files is actually a FreeBSD
source file (perhaps your kernel has some custom option that requires
that file), config mistakenly thinks it's a completely new file
and goes ahead and overrides all previous information for that file
(and issues the warning).
Fix this.
With help from: julian
the environment. This allows big ID warnings to be suppressed for
vipw and chpass as well.
Since the environment variable test is only performed for callers
of pw_scan() that do not set pw_big_ids_warning, the test can still
be overriden. Currently, chpass and pwd_mkdb are the only users
of pw_scan() and neither of them overrides the environment variable
test.
individual slots at one's whim. Useful for turning the slots into
card carrying cases, etc. Patch was originally from mihira-san in
message to freebsd-mobile. He ported the code originally from PAO.
Submitted by: MIHIRA Sanpei Yoshiro <sanpei@sanpei.org>
method avoided all race conditions, but suffered from
sometimes running out of buffer space if enough clients
were piled up at the same time.
Now, the client pushes the link descriptor, one end of a
socketpair() and the ppp version via sendmsg() at the
server. The server replies with a pid. The client then
transfers any link lock with uu_lock_txfr() and writev()s
the actual link contents. The socketpair is now the only
place we need to have large socket buffers and the bind()ed
socket can keep the default 4k buffer while still handling
around 90 racing clients.
NGM_BINARY2ASCII, which convert control messages to ASCII and back.
This allows control messages to be sent and received in ASCII form
using ngctl(8), which makes ngctl a lot more useful.
This also allows all the type-specific debugging code in libnetgraph
to go away -- instead, we just ask the node itself to do the ASCII
translation for us.
Currently, all generic control messages are supported, as well as
messages associated with the following node types: async, cisco,
ksocket, and ppp.
See /usr/share/examples/netgraph/ngctl for an example of using this.
Also give ngctl(8) the ability to print out incoming data and
control messages at any time. Eventually nghook(8) may be subsumed.
Several other misc. bug fixes.
Reviewed by: julian