When we truncate the msgbuf size because the last chunk is too small,
correctly terminate the phys_avail[] array - the VM system tests
the *end* for zero, not the start. This leads the VM startup to
attempt to recreate a duplicate set of pages for all physical memory.
XXX the msgbuf handling is suspiciously different on i386 vs
alpha/ia64...
o Add reference to TrustedBSD Project in license header.
o Update dated comments, including comment in extattr.h claiming that
no file systems support extended attributes.
o Improve comment consistency.
credential selection, rather than reference via a thread or process
pointer. This is part of a gradual migration to suser() accepting
a struct ucred instead of a struct proc, simplifying the reference
and locking semantics of suser().
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
refuses to start if it does not find a matching entry for the terminal
type.
My impression is that this is a problem in the shell, because
at least on PicoBSD images, the shell itself coredumps.
Anyways, this is the quickest fix i can come up with.
- Now that apm loadable module can inform its existence to other kernel
components (e.g. i386/isa/clock.c:startrtclock()'s TCS hack).
- Exchange priority of SI_SUB_CPU and SI_SUB_KLD for above purpose.
- Add simple arbitration mechanism for APM vs. ACPI. This prevents
the kernel enables both of them.
- Remove obsolete `#ifdef DEV_APM' related code.
- Add abstracted interface for Powermanagement operations. Public apm(4)
functions, such as apm_suspend(), should be replaced new interfaces.
Currently only power_pm_suspend (successor of apm_suspend) is implemented.
Reviewed by: peter, arch@ and audit@
- if nsswitch.conf exists, host.conf is auto-generated for compatibility
with legacy applications and libraries.
- if host.conf exists but nsswitch.conf does not, nsswitch.conf is auto-
generated as usual.
us a lot on older Alphas.
Andrew Gallatin, Thomas V. Crimi, and Peter Jeremy contributed to this
work along with the submitter.
Submitted by: Andrew M. Miklic <miklic@home.com>
dedicated" mode. This was specifying that there are 256 (illegal!)
heads on the disk. If bioses store that in a byte, and it gets truncated
to 0, then that almost certainly causes the infamous divide-by-zero
nightmare.
This is also most likely the reason why the Thinkpad T20/A20 series
were locking up when FreeBSD was installed. This is also the most likely
reason why a boot1 being present causes an IA64 box to lock up at boot.
(removing the "part4" stuff from boot1.s fixes the IA64 boxes and would
most likely have fixed the T20/A20 and some TP600E series thinkpads)