that use SSE. The compiler does attempt to do this in main() but not very
successfully - it still manages to use unaligned offsets from %ebp in some
cases. Also we need to have an aligned stack in case something uses SSE
via _init().
MFC After: 1 week
copying, rather than a page at a time. This was creating far
too many single-page mappings, and eventually OFW overflowed
some internal data structure and refused to map any more.
The new algorithm creates far less mappings and fixed a bug
where multiple mappings for the same page would be created.
'Twas known this was a problem, but only became urgent when the
install CD's mfs_root grew large enough to cause the overflow.
works again.
This driver uses NdisScheduleWorkItem(), and we have to take special steps
to insure that its workitems don't collide with any of the other workitems
used by the NDISulator. In particular, if one of the driver's work jobs
blocks, it can prevent NdisMAllocateSharedMemoryAsync() from completing
when expected.
The original hack to fix this was to have NdisMAllocateSharedMemoryAsync()
defer its work to the DPC queue instead of the general task queue. To
fix it now, I decided to add some additional workitem threads. (There's
supposed to be a pool of worker threads in Windows anyway.) Currently,
there are 4. There should be at least 2. One is reserved for the legacy
ExQueueWorkItem() API, while the others are used in round-robin by the
IoQueueWorkItem() API. NdisMAllocateSharedMemoryAsync() uses the latter
API while NdisScheduleWorkItem() uses the former, so the deadlock is
avoided.
Fixed NdisMRegisterDevice()/NdisMDeregisterDevice() to work a little
more sensibly with the new driver_object/device_object framework. It
doesn't really register a working user-mode interface, but the existing
code was completely wrong for the new framework.
Fixed a couple of bugs dealing with the cancellation of events and
DPCs. When cancelling an event that's still on the timer queue (i.e.
hasn't expired yet), reset dh_inserted in its dispatch header to FALSE.
Previously, it was left set to TRUE, which would make a cancelled
timer appear to have not been cancelled. Also, when removing a DPC
from a queue, reset its list pointers, otherwise a cancelled DPC
might mistakenly be treated as still pending.
Lastly, fix the behavior of ntoskrnl_wakeup() when dealing with
objects that have nobody waiting on them: sync event objects get
their signalled state reset to FALSE, but notification objects
should still be set to TRUE.
connections to Bluetooth HID device. As soon as Bluetooth HID device
is powered off (or goes out of RF range) the stack will terminate both
connections. File descriptors for both connections will become active
on next select(2) call. Because bthidd(8) processes file descriptors
in order, it will detect descriptor for one of the closed connections
first and kill the session. However, there is still a second (active)
descriptor that used to point to the same session. bthidd(8) used to
assert() if it cant find session by file descriptor, which was wrong.
While I'm here fix a couple of typos in parser.y
Reported by: Eric Anderson anderson AT centtech DOT com
MFC after: 3 days
occur on a filesystem running with soft updates after a crash and
before a background fsck has been run. To prevent discrepancies
from arising in a background fsck that may already be running,
the directory is removed but its inode is not freed and is left
with the residual reference count. When encountered by the
background fsck it will be reclaimed.
Group's documentation is `/usr/share/examples/mdoc/POSIX-copyright',
not the one I copied from `/usr/share/examples/etc/bsd-copyright'.
Suggested by: simon
2nd pointy hat of the day: yours truly
the Open Group manpage for pthread_atfork(), available online at:
http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/pthread_atfork.html
which should be ok, since Daniel Eischen had mailed me about Open
Group manpages and the fact that they have granted permission to
FreeBSD to use their material. Any differences from the OG text are
my changes to the original manpage text submitted by Alex Vasylenko:
- In an effort to clean up the part that describes hooks and their
calling order, I used a list instead of a single paragraph for all the three
types of fork() hooks.
- After a short discussion with Dima Dorfman a long long time ago in a
far away galaxy, I changed the RETURN VALUES section to look more
like the rest of the pthread_xxx.3 manpages.
PR: docs/68201
Submitted by: Alex Vasylenko <lxv@omut.org>
introduce a struct that holds all the information about an argument
vector and pass that around.
Author: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
Obtained from: DragonFlyBSD
have been noticed by running top(1) in terminals that are too narrow
(or on systems with usernames that were too long, pushing everything
too far to the right).
Note that this does *not* solve the wrap-around problem of the system
statistics, which is an entirely different matter :-/
Tested on: i386, sparc64 (panther), amd64 (sledge)
Approved by: davidxu (in principle)
command that toggles between the two and update the ORDER_PCTCPU()
macro to sort correctly by the visible "cpu" value.
This saves 6 more columns in 80-column terminals, making things a lot
better for the COMMAND column.
Tested on: i386, sparc64 (panther), amd64 (sledge)
Approved by: davidxu (in principle)
initially written by Roland, but hacked for a while by me. Any
good parts are the results of Roland's hard work. Any typos or
style mistakes are mine.
Submitted by: Roland Smith <rsmith@xs4all.nl>
PR: docs/63808, docs/75433, docs/80458, docs/80459
MFC after: 2 weeks
post an event to the geom event queue that will take care of it,
letting outstanding bios finish, and closing the consumers.
Plus some cosmetic clean ups.
similar to the zmore script that comes with gzip (and in fact, in most
Linux distros, zless is a symlink to that very same zmore script) but has
the advantage that you get the correct file name on the less status line,
and can use :n and :p to navigate back and forth between multiple files.
MFC after: 1 week