reference count is initialised to zero to be more kosher.
Reviewed by: Bosko Milekic <bmilekic@technokratis.com>
Spotted by: jdp and Jake Burkholder <jburkhol@home.com> respectively
elements defined by foo_if.c aren't sharable amoung modules (I'm
working on a bug report for it now), or else I don't understand
something. It showed up as kobj functions not being called.
In any event, link in the pcic and pccard parts of the modules to work
around the problem for now.
by -n is nonexistant, then the following -d was misinterpreted with
a strange error. By putting double quotes (") around the argument,
we can be sure there is _something_ there that we can check a zero
length against.
that should be better.
The old code counted references to mbuf clusters by using the offset
of the cluster from the start of memory allocated for mbufs and
clusters as an index into an array of chars, which did the reference
counting. If the external storage was not a cluster then reference
counting had to be done by the code using that external storage.
NetBSD's system of linked lists of mbufs was cosidered, but Alfred
felt it would have locking issues when the kernel was made more
SMP friendly.
The system implimented uses a pool of unions to track external
storage. The union contains an int for counting the references and
a pointer for forming a free list. The reference counts are
incremented and decremented atomically and so should be SMP friendly.
This system can track reference counts for any sort of external
storage.
Access to the reference counting stuff is now through macros defined
in mbuf.h, so it should be easier to make changes to the system in
the future.
The possibility of storing the reference count in one of the
referencing mbufs was considered, but was rejected 'cos it would
often leave extra mbufs allocated. Storing the reference count in
the cluster was also considered, but because the external storage
may not be a cluster this isn't an option.
The size of the pool of reference counters is available in the
stats provided by "netstat -m".
PR: 19866
Submitted by: Bosko Milekic <bmilekic@dsuper.net>
Reviewed by: alfred (glanced at by others on -net)
has the side effect of detaching the children before I delete them.
When I put the last commits in a loop for loop it died after 5 or so
iterations. After this change, I lasted 50 before I stopped the test.
Add pcic_detach which removes all of the pcic's children.
This lets me load/unload pcic multiple times w/o having multiple
instances of each slot attached to pcic.
the output for the linux_enable and svr4_enable stuff "floating
in the middle of nowhere".
Give them their own section, called "additional ABI support".
kernel modules for ibcs2_enable and svr4_enable.
Don't rely on a shell script to do the neglibly less simple
job of loading a kernel module and running one command for
linux_enable.
These shell scripts are going away.
it to a mbuf. This patch makes it attach it to mbuf. This patch
is in preperation for Bosko Milekic's mbuf external reference
counting patches.
PR: 19866 (first stage)
Submitted by: Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>
Reviewed by: alfred
Fix two bugs:
- The ftpPassive() function seemed to think that the PASV command
is a toggle. This is not true (however, the ftp(1) "pass" command
is indeed a toggle). So no need to emit a "PASV" command each time
this function is called; that's handled by ftp_file_op().
- check_passive() is supposed to check if FTP_PASSIVE_MODE is defined,
and if so, override ftpPassive(). However, it was overriding
ftpPassive() even if FTP_PASSIVE_MODE was not defined, rendering
calls to the ftpPassive() function completely ineffectual.
Also, clarify the relationship between ftpPassive() and the
FTP_PASSIVE_MODE environment variable in the man page.
with Brian's kernel support for i386 debug registers. This makes
watchpoints actually usable for real-life problems. Note: you can
only set watchpoints on 1-, 2- or 4-byte locations, gdb automatically
falls back to [sloooow] software watchpoints when attempting to use
them on variables which don't fit into this category. To circumvent
this, one can use the following hack:
watch *(int *)0x<some address>
David O'Brien is IMHO considering to get this fully integrated into the
official GDB, but as long as we've got the i386/* files sitting around
in our private FreeBSD tree here, the feature can now be tested more
extensively, so i'm committing this for the time being.
This work has been done in order to debug a tix toolkit problem, thus
it has been sponsored by teh Deutsche Post AG.
Reviewed by: bsd (not the operating system, but Brian :-)
cause the working directory to be used. Make it so.
When we're more convinced that it'll work, we might try this
to avoid a shell invocation:
.if defined(MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX) && !empty(MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX) &&
exists(${CANONICALOBJDIR}/)
Reported by: bde
Bump the MRU by 4 bytes to make room for the MP header
Down the autoload threshold to a practical value
Don't specify the ISDN bandwidth as 65536 (ahem!)
Don't specifiy a carrier period (the default of 6 seconds is fine)
isn't open and the links MRU >= our MRRU, send outbound traffic as
PROTO_IP rather than PROTO_MP. This shaves some bytes off the front
of each packet 'till the second link is brought up.
Idea obtained from: Cisco