disk devices. This fixes the problem with these ioctls returning
EINVAL for plain slice devices with no disklabel on them.
The patch incorporates improvements and style fixes from BDE.
Reviewed by: bde
Approved by: obrien (mentor)
do_sendfile(). This allows us to rearrange an if statement in order to
avoid doing an unnecesary call to vm_page_lock_queues(), and an attempt
at re-wiring the pages (which were wired in the vm_page_alloc() call).
Reviewed by: alc, jhb
o Honor NE2000DVF_{AX88190,DL10019} flags by setting the ED_FLAGS_xxxx
flag.
o Mark linksys combo_ecard as ax88190
o Set the type_str to AX88190 for the ax88190 cards.
This fixes ax88190 based cards, for the most part, but doesn't seem to fix
the mii based dl10019 cards (aka linksys cards).
This is required for some Thinkpad (and maybe VAIO) machines to wake
the system up from sleep.
Currently partially implemented, more complete implementation will come later.
open() of fhopen(). Currently this has no actual affect due to the
treatment of VAPPEND in vaccess() and vaccess_acl() as a subset of
VWRITE, but when MAC comes in, MAC will distinguish the two. Note:
if any file systems are cutting their own permission models, they
may wish to now take this into account.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
the slot info. This brings OLDCARD's API much closer to NEWCARD and
will allow moving more information into the kernel from pccard.conf
for common drivers (ed).
pci support. This really needs to be fixed properly some day, but judging
by the fact that the nopci case hasn't compiled for quite a while, there
does not seem to be much urgency.
Reviewed by: sos
This driver actually works slightly better on -stable than on -current
(the system locks on detach on -current), so it should be MFC'd somewhat
sooner.
This driver currently points out a difficulty in the sound device framework.
The PCM unregister routine is allowed to refuse the detach if the device is
in use. In the case of a USB device, however, this unregistration is much more
mandatory in nature, since the device is *actually* gone when this call is
made. The sound subsystem really should not refuse an unregistration and
should take its own steps to reject further I/O. As a result, if you detach
a USB sound device while it is in use, you can expect a panic shortly
thereafter.
This device cannot currently record audio. Some routines are unwritten as
of yet in uaudio.c to support recording.
This device hangs my -current box on detach. I don't know why. This does
not happen on my -stable machine.
Obtained from: Hiroyuki Aizu
MFC after: 2 weeks
data structures pick up security and synchronization primitives, it
becomes increasingly desirable not to arbitrarily export them via
include files to userland, as the userland applications pick up new
#include dependencies.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
windows. Right now we only support pci chips that are memory mapped.
These are the most common bridges in use today and will help a large
majority of the users.
I/O mapped PCI chips support this functionality in a different way, as
do some of the ISA bridges (but only when mounted on a motherboard).
These chips are not supported by this change.
Bug#1: The GetStatus() function returns radically different pointers that
do not match any packets we transmitted. I think it might be pointing to
a copy of the packet or something. Since we do not transmit more than
one packet at a time, just wait for "anything".
Bug#2: The Receive() function takes a pointer and a length. However, it
either ignores the length or otherwise does bad things and writes outside
of ptr[0] through ptr[len-1]. This is bad and causes massive stack
corruption for us since we are receiving packets into small buffers on
the stack. Instead, Receive() into a large enough buffer and bcopy the
data to the requested area.
handler in the kernel at the same time. Also, allow for the
exec_new_vmspace() code to build a different sized vmspace depending on
the executable environment. This is a big help for execing i386 binaries
on ia64. The ELF exec code grows the ability to map partial pages when
there is a page size difference, eg: emulating 4K pages on 8K or 16K
hardware pages.
Flesh out the i386 emulation support for ia64. At this point, the only
binary that I know of that fails is cvsup, because the cvsup runtime
tries to execute code in pages not marked executable.
Obtained from: dfr (mostly, many tweaks from me).
the loadav. This is not real load. If you have a nice process running in
the background, pagezero may sit in the run queue for ages and add one to
the loadav, and thereby affecting other scheduling decisions.