calculations. Long longs should never be used, since they break compiling
with C90 compilers and don't necessarily work any better than longs for
avoiding overflow.
Print percentages with another digit of precision since they can be small
and this is easy to do now that the format is floating point.
Restored some more of the old -m output:
Print the percentage of allocated memory that is in use. This is the
amount of memory in active mbufs and mbuf clusters relative to the
total amount of memory soft-allocated for mbufs and mbuf clusters.
Print the percentage of allocated memory that is wired (cached). The
old mbuf allocator never freed memory so printing this value wasn't
useful. A previous version of netstat for the new allocator printed
the in-use amount as a percentage of the wired amount.
Fixed some nearby style bugs (excessive parenthesization and a redundant
return).
Reviewed by: alfred
printf format warnings for inet6.c (pluralies() was implicit int, but
the context requires a "char *").
Added WARNS?=2 to the Makefile so that such errors don't come back.
Added NO_WERROR?= to the Makefile because I haven't checked that setting
WARNS doesn't uncover more bugs except on i386's.
overflow was breaking a bunch of the stats, specifically the
percentage displayed for wired memory.
Fix the output for current/peak/max lines, I forgot to output the types.
161/320/51200 (current/peak/max):
-to-
639/25696/51200 mbufs in use (current/peak/max):
using the old 'cached' value but reporting it as 'cached'.
I've decided to report the 'cached' as 'peak', why? Well because
it is the peak, the peak of what is actually allocated. 'cached'
doesn't make sense to me as a user.
truncated. In environments where many tunnel or vlan interfaces are created,
interface names have high numbers which overflow the field width.
PRs: bin/52349, bin/35838
Submitted by: Mike Tancsa, Scot W. Hetzel
Approved by: re (rwatson)
if_xname, if_dname, and if_dunit. if_xname is the name of the interface
and if_dname/unit are the driver name and instance.
This change paves the way for interface renaming and enhanced pseudo
device creation and configuration symantics.
Approved By: re (in principle)
Reviewed By: njl, imp
Tested On: i386, amd64, sparc64
Obtained From: NetBSD (if_xname)
netstat -s -p pim
2. Print information about the bandwidth meters installed in the kernel with
netstat -g
Submitted by: Pavlin Radoslavov <pavlin@icir.org>
multicast VIF tables.
This change is needed for consistency with the rest of the
netstat/mroute.c implementation, and because in some
cases "netstat -g" may fail to report the multicast forwarding
information (e.g., if we run a multicast router on PicoBSD).
* Remove "DVMRP" from the head comment of file netstat/mroute.c,
because the printed multicast-related statistics are not
DVMRP-specific anymore.
Submitted by: Pavlin Radoslavov <pavlin@icir.org>
The -l option is deprecated (hence undocumented in usage() and
SYNOPSIS), as was threatened in the commitlog accompanying rev.
1.10 of main.c.
Approved by: re (blanket)
netstat(1) not display it for now because its effects are not yet
completely implemented and we're about to cut 5.2-RELEASE.
This is temporary.
Approved by: re (scottl, rwatson)
(See: ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc3514.txt)
This fulfills the host requirements for userland support by
way of the setsockopt() IP_EVIL_INTENT message.
There are three sysctl tunables provided to govern system behavior.
net.inet.ip.rfc3514:
Enables support for rfc3514. As this is an
Informational RFC and support is not yet widespread
this option is disabled by default.
net.inet.ip.hear_no_evil
If set the host will discard all received evil packets.
net.inet.ip.speak_no_evil
If set the host will discard all transmitted evil packets.
The IP statistics counter 'ips_evil' (available via 'netstat') provides
information on the number of 'evil' packets recieved.
For reference, the '-E' option to 'ping' has been provided to demonstrate
and test the implementation.
compile-time constants). That is, a "bucket" now is not necessarily
a page-worth of mbufs or clusters, but it is MBUF_BUCK_SZ, CLUS_BUCK_SZ
worth of mbufs, clusters.
o Rename {mbuf,clust}_limit to {mbuf,clust}_hiwm and introduce
{mbuf,clust}_lowm, which currently has no effect but will be used
to set the low watermarks.
o Fix netstat so that it can deal with the differently-sized buckets
and teach it about the low watermarks too.
o Make sure the per-cpu stats for an absent CPU has mb_active set to 0,
explicitly.
o Get rid of the allocate refcounts from mbuf map mess. Instead,
just malloc() the refcounts in one shot from mbuf_init()
o Clean up / update comments in subr_mbuf.c
1) Include arpa/inet.h for ntohs.
2) Constness fixes.
3) Fix shadowing except for "sin" which shouldn't be in scope.
4) Remove register keyword.
5) Add missing initialsers to user defined structs.
5) Make prototype of netname6 globally visable.
6) Use right macros for printing syncache stats (even though entrie isn't
a word).
non-default but reasonable values of hz this member overflowed,
breaking NFS over UDP.
Also, as long as I'm plowing up struct sockbuf ... Change certain
members from u_long/long to u_int/int in order to reduce wasted
space on 64-bit machines. This change was requested by Andrew
Gallatin.
Netstat and systat need to be rebuilt. I am incrementing
__FreeBSD_version in case any ports need to change.
supplied rather than arbitrarily larger widths. This (almost) guarantees
that no columns will be truncated (routing table additions between the
width calculation and display passes may create a row with column widths
larger than those calculated).
Sponsored by: NTT Multimedia Communications Labs
of the recent WARNS commits. The idea is:
1) FreeBSD id tags should follow vendor tags.
2) Vendor tags should not be compiled (though copyrights probably should).
3) There should be no blank line between including cdefs and __FBSDIF.
- Restore the ability to look up network names in the networks(5)
database by passing getnetbyaddr(3) shifted network numbers,
but without duplicating the old bug that was fixed in 1.27 (we
now only shift netnums with standard netmasks). For example:
Before:
$ netstat -r
[...]
127.0.1/24 localhost UGSc 0 0 lo0
127.0.2/24 localhost UGSc 0 0 lo0
After:
$ netstat -r
[...]
subnet1/24 localhost UGSc 0 0 lo0
subnet2/24 localhost UGSc 0 0 lo0
- Only try to lookup with the forged netmask if the mask was not
explicitly specified, like it was before 1.27. For example:
Before:
$ netstat -r
net-44.ampr.org/25 localhost UGSc 0 0 lo0
net-44.ampr.org/25 localhost UGSc 0 0 lo0
After:
44.108.2/25 localhost UGSc 0 0 lo0
44.108.2.128/25 localhost UGSc 0 0 lo0
- Make sure to null-terminate the resulting string.
MFC after: 1 week