received on an interface without an IP address, try to find a
non-loopback AF_INET address to use. If that fails, drop it.
Previously, we used the address at the top of the in_ifaddrhead list,
which didn't make much sense, and would cause a panic if there were no
AF_INET addresses configured on the system.
PR: 29337, 30524
Reviewed by: ru, jlemon
Obtained from: NetBSD
respects locks. Before SMPng, one was able to call psignal()
using the "call" command, but this is no longer possible because it
does not respect locks by itself. This is very useful when one has
gotten their machine into a state where it is impossible to spawn
ps/kill or su to root.
In this case, respecting locks essentially means trying to aquire the
proc lock before calling psignal(). We can't block in the debugger,
so if trylock fails, the operation fails. This also means that we
can't use pfind(), since that will attempt to lock the process for us.
Reviewed by: jhb
idle and the driver would not detect the event, requiring userland
to cycle the interface to bring it up again.
The fix consists in adding SIS_IMR_RX_IDLE to the interrupt mask and
add a command in sis_intr() to restart the receiver when this happens.
While at it, make the test of status bits more efficient.
for passive mode data connections (PASV/EPSV -> 227/229). Well,
the actual punching happens a bit later, when the aliasing link
becomes fully specified.
Prodded by: Danny Carroll <dannycarroll@hotmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
The problem was that the ISO9660 code wasn't opening the device prior to
issuing ioctl calls. In particular, the device must be open before
iso_get_ssector() is called in iso_mountroot().
If the device isn't opened first, the disk layer blows up due to an
uninitialized variable.
The solution was to open the device, call iso_get_ssector() and then close
it again.
The ATAPI CDROM driver doesn't have this problem because it doesn't use the
disk layer, and evidently doesn't mind if someone issues an ioctl without
first issuing an open call.
Thanks to phk for pointing me at the source of this problem.
Tested by: dirk
MFC after: 1 week
It is legal to have a device with device type 0x1f, that just means
that the device is of unknown type. Instead, only check the peripheral
qualifier when deciding whether or not to reject a device based on its
inquiry information.
Tested by: julian
MFC after: 3 weeks
Merge in the irq 0 detection. Add comment about why.
If we have irq 0, ignore it like we do irq 255. Some BIOS writers aren't
careful like they should be.
allows us to move the sio softc data structure back into sio.c and
reduce the complexity of the non sio.c sio files.
Submitted by: bde
# I didn't fix the locking issues that bruce also submitted.
loader parameter. This allows us to more easily boot on big memory
configuration machines. hw.pccbb.start_mem. Reflect this in a sysctl
so we can read it from userland.
# Note: we need a TUNABLE_ULONG to do this right. I'll add that to
# kernel.h soon.
request to one that's supported by the bridge. I'm not 100% sure this
is correct, but it makes it easier for the cardbus bridge to allocate
its memory.
Similar code is needed for the I/O range. Also, I'm not sure if I
should be doing this based on memory or pmemory (but likely should do
it based on some flag that tells us to prefetch or not).
Talked about a long time ago with: msmith
NEWCARD. Other patches may be reqiured to sio to prevent a hang on
eject. Also add commented out entries for sio_pccard.c in files.pc98
to match other architectures.
Submitted by: yamamoto shigeru-san
changing. Also change it from 0x44000000 to 0x84000000 for large memory
machines.
# the PCI bus code should do this for us. This is a bandaide, not a
# solution.
click) do not include newline into the buffer. This is exacly how
things worked before my recent changes to the cut'n'paste code and
how they work in 4-STABLE.
pathconf() variables for directories, and set st_size and st_blocks
(of struct stat) for directories as appropriate. Note that st_size is
always set to DEV_BSIZE, since the size of the directories is not
currently kept.
Reviewed by: phk, bde
For an object type, we maintain a variable mb_mapfull. It is 0 by default
and is only raised to 1 in one place: when an mb_pop_cont() fails for
the first time, on the assumption that the reason for the failure is
due to the underlying map for the object (e.g. clust_map, mbuf_map) being
exhausted.
Problem and Changes:
Change how we define "mb_mapfull." It now means: "set to 1 when the first
mb_pop_cont() fails only in the kmem_malloc()-ing of the object, and
only if the call was with the M_TRYWAIT flag." This is a more conservative
definition and should avoid odd [but theoretically possible] situations
from occuring. i.e. we had set mb_mapfull to 1 thinking the map for the
object was actually exhausted when we _actually_ failed in malloc()ing
the space for the bucket structure managing the objects in the page
we're allocating.
card is ejected while we're in this routine.
yamamoto-san's original patch had a small race window for AX88190
chips, which I corrected by limiting the number of iterations we'd try
to reset the bits to be about 15ms rather than forever. This seems to
work for me, but I don't have a large collections of cards based on
this chipset.
Submitted by: YAMAMOTO Shigeru
snooped on. This causes all kinds of Bad Things(tm) to happen since
closing one session will clobber state that's needed for the other
one. This could theoretically be supported if the code was careful,
but until somebody implements that, preventing this will stop people
from unknowingly shooting themselves in the foot.
device cloned, and assign all further devices to depend on it. This
allows us to call dev_depends() on it at module unload time to get rid
of /dev/snp* (in the devfs case, anyway). For this to work, we must
not destroy the device at close time. [Idea stolen from if_tun.]
The above has the following sideaffects: (a) The snp device used by
watch(8) will remain after watch(8) exits. This is probably how it
should have been all along, and how it was before devfs came along.
(b) Module unload doesn't panic if there are any /dev/snp* devices
which haven't been used (and thus previously destroyed). Thus, we can
reenable the unload functionality disabled in rev. 1.65.
PR: 32012
MFC after:3 days
- Add memory barrier definition for sparc64.
Patch sent by David E. O'Brien, approved by maintainer.
- Fix an endianization error of a bus physical address used from SCRIPTS
that made the driver fail on big endian machines as sparc64.
The kernel certainly doesn't use _PATH_DEV or even /dev/ to find the device.
It cannot, since "/" has not been mounted. Maybe the only affect of using
/dev/ is that it gets put in the mounted-from name for "/", so that mount(8),
etc., display an absolute path before "/" has been remounted. Many have
never bothered typing the full path, and code that constructs a path in
rootdevnames[] never bothered to construct a full path, so the example
shouldn't have it.
Submitted by: bde
signature, but otherwise behaves just like a normal USB mass-storage
device. Add a new quirk to cover this case, and enable it for C-1
cameras. The quirk enables translation from the C-1 signature to
the normal CSWSIGNATURE value.
Reviewed by: n_hibma
to be followed by nfsnodehashtbl, so bzeroing callouts beyond the end of
tcp_syncache soon caused a null pointer panic when nfsnodehashtbl was
accessed.
Actually this porting supports Pegasus II chip so I guess some other
devices supported by NetBSD also work. But the devices list are not
included because I cannot confirm if they work.
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 3 weeks
Alpha can verify that it compiles fine there, too, this should be moved
to the MI section (or that problem fixed); I've only had x86 hardware to
est with.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs (CBOSS project)
On OFW based machines, it is just too confusing having the firmware and
OS loader giving the same prompt. This is a nice compromise that 99% of the
users on non-OFW platforms will probably not even notice.