interface congestion (eg: nfs over a ppp link, etc). Don't log these
for UDP mounts, and don't cause syscalls to fail with EINTR.
This stops the 'nfs send error 55' warnings.
If the error is because the system is really hosed, this is the least
of your problems...
do TLD *before* processing the config request as
TLD initialises the peers LCP values.
It's strange that an IRC isn't required here - but
I'll bow to the wisdom of the rfc.
Sparse macros have moved to <machine/swiz.h>.
Fix sparse memory access so that it actually works as intended.
Tidy up sparse configuration access slightly.
pthread_mutex routines. I've also tweaked pthread_create.3 to point to
pthread_cleanup_push(3) and pthread_cleanup_pop(3).
PR: 7450
Submitted by: Brian Cully <shmit@kublai.com>
st_write_filemarks(). This means that it is possible to write a file
on the tape for which all the writes and the close return without
errors, but the all bits did not make it onto the tape.
PR: 741
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Andrew Heybey <ath@niksun.com>
libc/gen/getpass.c. The old behaviour of blocking SIGINT and not
changing SIGQUIT was restored in rev.1.5 of getpass.c. The change
here completely restores the old behaviour of not supporting killing
login with keyboard signals (only) at the password prompt. There
is no reason to support this, since login can be exited normally
by typing a couple of ^D's. Login certainly shouldn't dump core
in response to user input. Previously, SIGQUIT killed login
immediately but SIGINT killed it only after the password was
entered.
PR: 7444
PR: bin/5721
Submitted by: Oliver Fromme <oliver.fromme@heim3.tu-clausthal.de>
Also, add "volatile" to a variable modified by signal handlers (coincidentally,
the same variable involved in the above fix, although this isn't related
to the reported problem).
of some disk ioctls and uniformizes bounds checking in the strategy
routine. EOF handling got fixed as a side effect. The changes
are similar to old changes for SCSI disks, except slices and labels
are not searched for on the disk and the in-core label has a few
more details (mostly just for backwards compatibility). Bugs in
the in-core label had to be fixed to get dsopen() to accept it.
The slice interfaces had to support large sectors for all this to
work.
and DSO_NOLABELS flags prevent searching for slices and labels
respectively. Current drivers don't set these flags. When
DSO_NOLABELS is set, the in-core label for the whole disk is cloned
to create an in-core label for each slice. This gives the correct
result (a good in-core label for the compatibility slice) if
DSO_ONESLICE is set or only one slice is found, but usually gives
broken labels otherwise, so DSO_ONESLICE should be set if DSO_NOLABELS
is set.
`make world' to avoid problems with picking up (new) target or (stale)
host shared libraries.
Don't honor -static in LDFLAGS for linking LKMs. LDFLAGS is not
actually for ld, but we use it anyway, and must prevent -static being
misinterpreted as -s.
Don't hide any of the link steps.
- Call isa_dmadone() whenever necessary to stop DMA and/or free bounce
buffers. Undead DMA corrupted the malloc freelist fairly consistently
in the following configuration: SLICE kernel, 2 floppy drives, no disk
in fd0, disk in fd1.
- Don't call fdc_reset() from fd_timeout(). Doing so gave an "extra"
interrupt which was usually misinterpreted as being for completion
of the next FDC command; the interrupt for completion of the next
FDC command was then usually misinterpreted... There were further
complications for interrupts latched by the soft-spl mechanism so
that they were delivered after all the h/w interrupts went away.
This caused at least wrong head settle delays and may be why the
FreeBSD floppy driver seems to munch floppies more than most floppy
drivers. The reset was unnecessary anyway in cases that didn't have
the bug described next, since is was repeated a little later for
the IOTIMEDOUT state. The state machine has complications to handle
resets correctly, so just use it.
- Don't call retrier() from fd_timeout(). The IOTIMEDOUT state needs
to be processed next, and it isn't valid to set to that state if
retrier() has aborted the current transfer. Doing so caused null
pointer panics after the previous bug was fixed.
Improved error handling:
- If an i/o is aborted, arrange to reset in the state machine before
doing the next i/o. New fdc flag for this. This fixes spurious
warnings and lengthy busy-waiting for the next i/o.
- Split STARTRECAL into RESETCOMPLETE and STARTRECAL and only check
for the results from reset if we actually reset. This fixes spurious
warnings for other paths to STARTRECAL. [Oops, it may break reset
handling for motor-off resets.]
Cleanups in fd_timeout():
- Renamed to fd_iotimeout() to make it clearer that it is only used
for i/o.
- Don't handle the bp == 0 case. This case can't happen for i/o.
- Don't check for controller-busy. We know it must be.
- Don't print anything. retrier() already prints too much for normal
errors.
- Fudge the state differently so that the state machine advances
fdc->retry and the status is invalid (perhaps this should fudge a
valid state like the one for WP).
- Style fixes.
protection checks. Using the partition-relative blkno in some
parts broke the write protection for partitions at unusual
offsets (only for partitions at offset 1 on i386's).