Formerly, a command like find dir1/dir2 -delete would delete everything
under dir1/dir2 but not dir1/dir2 itself.
When -L is not specified and "." can be opened, the fts(3) code underlying
find(1) is careful to avoid following symlinks or being dropped in different
locations by moving the directory fts is currently traversing. If a
problematic concurrent modification is detected, fts will not enter the
directory or abort. Files found in the search are returned via the current
working directory and a pathname not containing a slash.
For paranoia, find(1) verifies this when -delete is used. However, it is too
paranoid about the root of the traversal. It is already assumed that the
initial pathname does not refer to directories or symlinks that might be
replaced by untrusted users; otherwise, the whole traversal would be unsafe.
Therefore, it is not necessary to do the check for fts_level ==
FTS_ROOTLEVEL.
Deleting the pathnames given as arguments can be prevented without error
messages using -mindepth 1 or by changing directory and passing "." as
argument to find. This works in the old as well as the new version of find.
Tested by: Kurt Lidl
Reviewed by: jhb
* Add in some new register debugging under IWN_DEBUG_REGISTER
* Make IWN_DEBUG an option now for building. I'll chase this up
with a commit to 'options' soon.
Submitted by: Cedric GROSS <cg@cgross.info>
- mbuf reused after an RX_COPY optimized operation can sometimes have
a bogus cached address, resulting in TCP hangs. Add critical save points
to the cached address. Thanks to Michael and the team at Verisign for
finding this problem.
- A couple more spots where the rxbuf->flags member should be cleared just
to be sure no incorrect RX_COPY state is left around. Thanks to Adrian
for tracking these down.
- Remove the rearm_queues function from the driver, this was found to be
responsible for some out-of-order packets by Verisign, and was always a
bandaid, with the other fixes in this delta the bandaid can finally be
removed.
- In the other/link interrupt handler the entire state of the EICS register
was being writen back into EICR (which clears causes and thus re-enables
those interrupts), this was wrong, so now mask off the queue portion of
the register value, so we only clear the other/link interrupt we intend.
Marc from Verisign found this.
- Make the SFP+ unsupported option tuneable now, by customer request.
- Finally, just a couple of minor DEBUG string fixes.
I want to call out and thank all the participants in the 10G community/Intel
calls for helping track down these problems and make the driver better for
everyone!
MFC after: 3 days, these are critical fixes for 9.2!
interpreter that can be run on the system and as such cannot be
compiled against libbstand. On the one hand this means we need to
include the usual headers for system interfaces that we use and
on the the other hand we can only use standard system interfaces.
While here, define local variables only when needed to make this
WARNS=2 clean on amd64.
PR: 172542
Obtained from: peterj@
Pointed out by: Jan Beich <jbeich@tormail.org>
The htree implementation uses code derived from the
RSA Data Security, Inc. MD4 Message-Digest Algorithm.
Add a proper licensing statement for the code and clarify
the corresponding comments.
Approved by: core (hrs)
of unloading the module while VMs existed. This would
result in EBUSY, but would prevent further operations
on VMs resulting in the module being impossible to
unload.
Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale <at> plurisbusnetworks.com)
Reviewed by: grehan, neel
This was exposed with AP spinup of Linux, and
booting OpenBSD, where the CR0 register is unconditionally
written to prior to the longjump to enter protected
mode. The CR-vmexit handling was not updating CPU state which
resulted in a vmentry failure with invalid guest state.
A follow-on submit will fix the CPU state issue, but this
fix prevents the CR-vmexit prior to entering protected
mode by properly initializing and maintaining CR* state.
Reviewed by: neel
Reported by: Gopakumar.T @ netapp
other than the one specified by the BOOTP server. This configures NFS
using the BOOTP protocol while also respecting other root-path options such
as setting vfs.root.mountfrom in the environment or using the RB_DFLTROOT
boot option. It allows you to override the root path provided by the
server, or to supply a root path when the server provides IP configuration
but no root path info.
This maintains the historical BOOTP_NFSROOT behavior of panicking on a
failure to mount the root path provided by the server, unless you've
provided an alternative via the ROOTDEVNAME kernel option or by setting
vfs.root.mountfrom. The behavior of panicking when given no other options
is preserved because it amounts to a bit of a retry loop that could
eventually recover from a transient network or server problem.
The user can now override the root path from loader(8) even if the
kernel is compiled with BOOTP_NFSROOT. If vfs.root.mountfrom is set in
the environment it is used unconditionally -- it always overrides the
BOOTP info. If it begins with [old]nfs: then the BOOTP code uses it
instead of the server-provided info. If it specifies some other
filesystem then the bootp code will not panic like it used to and the code
in vfs_mountroot.c will invoke the right filesystem to do the mount.
If the kernel is compiled with the ROOTDEVNAME option, then that name is
used by the BOOTP code if either
* The server doesn't provide a pathname.
* The boothowto flags include RB_DFLTROOT.
The latter allows the user to compile in alternate path in ROOTDEVNAME
such as ufs:/dev/da0s1a and boot from that path by setting
boot_dftlroot=1 in loader(8) or using the '-r' option in boot(8).
The one thing not provided here is automatic failover from a
server-provided path to a compiled-in one without the user manually
requesting that. The code just isn't currently structured in a way that
makes that possible with a lot of rewrite. I think the ability to set
vfs.root.mountfrom and to use ROOTDEVNAME automatically when the server
doesn't provide a name covers the most common needs.
A set of patches submitted by Lars Eggert provided the part I couldn't
figure out by myself when I tried to do this last year; many thanks.
Reviewed by: rodrigc
This is the default behaviour of the newer binutils as well as most alternative linkers.
All the ports tree has been fixed to be able to link properly with this new behaviour.
tcpdump will print an error message saying rfmon is not supported.
Give a concise explanation as to how one might solve this problem by
creating a monitor mode VAP.
Skip eviction step of processing free records when doing ZFS
receive to avoid the expensive search operation of non-existent
dbufs in dn_dbufs.
Illumos ZFS issues:
3834 incremental replication of 'holey' file systems is slow
MFC after: 2 weeks
To quote Illumos issue #3888:
When 'zfs recv -F' is used with an incremental recv it rolls
back any changes made since the last snapshot in case new
changes were made to the file system while the recv is in
progress (without -F the recv would fail when it does it's
final check to commit the recv-ed data as the recv-ed data
conflicts with the newly written data).
However, if there is a snapshot taken after the recv began
rolling back to the 'latest' snapshot will not help and the
recv will still fail. 'zfs recv -F' should be extended to
destroy any snapshots created since the source snapshot when
finishing the recv (effectively rolling back through all
snapshots, instead of just to the latest snapshot).
Illumos ZFS issues:
3888 zfs recv -F should destroy any snapshots created since the
incremental source
MFC after: 2 weeks