md(8). The former is generally not going to fail, but the latter can
fail when the underlying swap device returns an error.
There are still plenty of other places where vm_pager_get_pages() failing
will lead directly to crashes, so it's a good idea to put your swap on
RAID if you care enough to put any of your disks on RAID....
by the time that kldload(8) returns. Satisfy that by making the GEOM
module load event -- only when the kernel is !cold -- wait until the
GEOM module init function has finished instead of returning immediately.
This is the other half of fixing md(8) (actually, "mfs" in fstab(5))
that is similar to r1.128 of src/sys/dev/md/md.c. This bug would be
why RAM disks would often fail on boot and the first call to mdconfig(8)
would probably fail.
pjd has ideas for not requiring kldload(8) to work synchronously for
control devices that could make this obsolete.
Silence on: -arch
that conjures up the device node so it isn't true PNP. Noticed by jhb@.
* Add an attachment for esscontrol since it too uses ISA_PNP_PROBE.
* Move an attachment from snd_mss to snd_pnpmss. The latter is the real
PNP user.
sysctl routines and state. Add some code to use it for signalling the need
to downconvert a data structure to 32 bits on a 64 bit OS when requested by
a 32 bit app.
I tried to do this in a generic abi wrapper that intercepted the sysctl
oid's, or looked up the format string etc, but it was a real can of worms
that turned into a fragile mess before I even got it partially working.
With this, we can now run 'sysctl -a' on a 32 bit sysctl binary and have
it not abort. Things like netstat, ps, etc have a long way to go.
This also fixes a bug in the kern.ps_strings and kern.usrstack hacks.
These do matter very much because they are used by libc_r and other things.
Extract the struct cdev pointer and the tty device from inside rather than
incorrectly casting the 'struct cdev *' pointer to a 'dev_t' int. Not
that this was particularly important since it was only used for reading
vmcore files.
that was fixed by this should not normally happen, and since I did not
record the traces of my failed build attempt that had been solved with
that change, it's not entirely clear whether it hadn't been a pilot
error on my end. In dubio pro reo. :-)
* Fix a bug where caches were flushed on non-C3 transitions.
* Be sure a working flush cache instruction is present before using it.
* Disable C3 completely if it isn't present.
- Make some minor rearrangements in the introduction.
- Mention the problem with argument reduction on i386.
- Add recently-implemented functions to the table.
- Un-document the error bounds that only apply to the old 4BSD math
library, and fill in the correct values where I know them. No
attempt has been made to document bounds lower than 1 ulp, although
smaller bounds are usually achievable in round-to-nearest mode.
well. This field is actually used by various netisr functions to determine
the availablility of the specified netisr. This uncomplete unregister leads
directly to a crash when the KLD unregistering the netisr is unloaded.
Submitted by: Sam <sah@softcardsystems.com>
MFC after: 3 days
- Consistently use err/errx/warnx throughout, rather than using perror()
and exit().
- Teach the tests how to better manage (and therefore test) privilege:
in particular, how to create sockes with root credentials but exercise
the privileges with non-root credentials, etc.
- Teach the test suite to apply each of the non-IP_HDRINCL options across
each of SOCK_DGRAM, SOCK_STREAM, and SOCK_RAW.
atempts to read and write various IP-level socket options as root and
nobody, making sure the initial values are as expected, that they can
be changed to valid values and take effect, etc. No attempt is made
to check for the correct implementation of side effects (such as
changes in packet headers) as yet.
The IP options section is currently broken but will be fixed shortly.
Not all multicast options are currently tested.
remove previous entropy harvesting mutex names as they are no longer
present. Commit to this file was ommitted when randomdev_soft.c:1.5
was made.
Feet shot: Robert Huff <roberthuff at rcn dot com>
Sockets in the listen queues have reference counts of 0, so if the
protocol decides to disconnect the pcb and try to free the socket, this
triggered a race with accept() wherein accept() would bump the reference
count before sofree() had removed the socket from the listen queues,
resulting in a panic in sofree() when it discovered it was freeing a
referenced socket. This might happen if a RST came in prior to accept()
on a TCP connection.
The fix is two-fold: to expand the coverage of the accept mutex earlier
in sofree() to prevent accept() from grabbing the socket after the "is it
really safe to free" tests, and to expand the logic of the "is it really
safe to free" tests to check that the refcount is still 0 (i.e., we
didn't race).
RELENG_5 candidate.
Much discussion with and work by: green
Reported by: Marc UBM Bocklet <ubm at u-boot-man dot de>
Reported by: Vlad <marchenko at gmail dot com>
may want to shut down here but the chance of BIOS vendors getting this
wrong is high. They're only supposed to announce this when all batteries
hit their critical level but past experience indicates we should be
conservative about this for now.