Commit Graph

363 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Robert Watson
c47257370f Hook up kernel options and build information for mac_lomac.
Approved by:	re
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2002-11-26 17:32:39 +00:00
Juli Mallett
5f07565bcb Move SHOW_BUSYBUFS and PANIC_REBOOT_WAIT_TIME into the MI options file, since
MI code uses them, and every platform provides them (except x86_64 whose
options file was lacking one).

Reviewed by:	bde, rwatson
2002-11-18 06:17:07 +00:00
Matthew N. Dodd
1c54ff3315 Convert kernel compile option PCI_ALLOW_UNSUPPORTED_IO_RANGE to
a loader tunable hw.pci.allow_unsupported_io_range.

Submitted by:	 Hiten Pandya <hiten@angelica.unixdaemons.com>
Approved by:	 re (murray)
2002-11-13 09:42:25 +00:00
Peter Wemm
23eeeff7be Split 4.x and 5.x signal handling so that we can keep 4.x signal
handling clean and functional as 5.x evolves.  This allows some of the
nasty bandaids in the 5.x codepaths to be unwound.

Encapsulate 4.x signal handling under COMPAT_FREEBSD4 (there is an
anti-foot-shooting measure in place, 5.x folks need this for a while) and
finish encapsulating the older stuff under COMPAT_43.  Since the ancient
stuff is required on alpha (longjmp(3) passes a 'struct osigcontext *'
to the current sigreturn(2), instead of the 'ucontext_t *' that sigreturn
is supposed to take), add a compile time check to prevent foot shooting
there too.  Add uniform COMPAT_43 stubs for ia64/sparc64/powerpc.

Tested on: i386, alpha, ia64.  Compiled on sparc64 (a few days ago).
Approved by: re
2002-10-25 19:10:58 +00:00
Robert Watson
eae2f20c47 Provide kernel options for the various MAC policy modules so that
they may be statically linked into the kernel.  Note that statically
linked modules, unlike dynamically linked modules, get INVARIANTS,
so if there are INVARIANTS failures, you'll bump into them rather
than not.  Add the options to NOTES.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2002-10-24 17:21:40 +00:00
Scott Long
f9d186edc8 After much delay and anticipation, welcome RAIDFrame into the FreeBSD
world.  This should be considered highly experimental.

Approved-by:	re
2002-10-20 08:17:39 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
19b5c7bc4b Add Geom Based Disk Encryption to the tree.
This is an encryption module designed for to secure denial of access
to the contents of "cold disks" with or without destruction activation.

Major features:

   * Based on AES, MD5 and ARC4 algorithms.
   * Four cryptographic barriers:
        1) Pass-phrase encrypts the master key.
        2) Pass-phrase + Lock data locates master key.
        3) 128 bit key derived from 2048 bit master key protects sector key.
        3) 128 bit random single-use sector keys protect data payload.
   * Up to four different changeable pass-phrases.
   * Blackening feature for provable destruction of master key material.
   * Isotropic disk contents offers no information about sector contents.
   * Configurable destination sector range allows steganographic deployment.

This commit adds the kernel part, separate commits will follow for the
userland utility and documentation.

This software was developed for the FreeBSD Project by Poul-Henning Kamp and
NAI Labs, the Security Research Division of Network Associates, Inc.  under
DARPA/SPAWAR contract N66001-01-C-8035 ("CBOSS"), as part of the DARPA CHATS
research program.

Many thanks to Robert Watson, CBOSS Principal Investigator for making this
possible.

Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-19 17:02:17 +00:00
Sam Leffler
b9234fafa0 Tie new "Fast IPsec" code into the build. This involves the usual
configuration stuff as well as conditional code in the IPv4 and IPv6
areas.  Everything is conditional on FAST_IPSEC which is mutually
exclusive with IPSEC (KAME IPsec implmentation).

As noted previously, don't use FAST_IPSEC with INET6 at the moment.

Reviewed by:	KAME, rwatson
Approved by:	silence
Supported by:	Vernier Networks
2002-10-16 02:25:05 +00:00
Mike Barcroft
4275e0d98d Remove the P1003_1B kernel option; it is no longer used. 2002-10-13 16:29:17 +00:00
Mike Barcroft
ce43eaeb32 Remove _KPOSIX_VERSION as a kernel option, nothing uses this any more. 2002-10-13 14:29:04 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
3bd6561289 NB: This commit does *NOT* make GEOM the default in FreeBSD
NB: But it will enable it in all kernels not having options "NO_GEOM"

Put the GEOM related options into the intended order.

Add "options NO_GEOM" to all kernel configs apart from NOTES.

In some order of controlled fashion, the NO_GEOM options will be
removed, architecture by architecture in the coming days.

There are currently three known issues which may force people to
need the NO_GEOM option:

boot0cfg/fdisk:
        Tries to update the MBR while it is being used to control
        slices.  GEOM does not allow this as a direct operation.

SCSI floppy drives:
        Appearantly the scsi-da driver return "EBUSY" if no media
        is inserted.  This is wrong, it should return ENXIO.

PC98:
        It is unclear if GEOM correctly recognizes all variants of
        PC98 disklabels.  (Help Wanted!  I have neither docs nor HW)

These issues are all being worked.

Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-05 16:35:33 +00:00
Scott Long
316ec49abd Some kernel threads try to do significant work, and the default KSTACK_PAGES
doesn't give them enough stack to do much before blowing away the pcb.
This adds MI and MD code to allow the allocation of an alternate kstack
who's size can be speficied when calling kthread_create.  Passing the
value 0 prevents the alternate kstack from being created.  Note that the
ia64 MD code is missing for now, and PowerPC was only partially written
due to the pmap.c being incomplete there.
Though this patch does not modify anything to make use of the alternate
kstack, acpi and usb are good candidates.

Reviewed by:	jake, peter, jhb
2002-10-02 07:44:29 +00:00
Scott Long
1da8092eea Do away with AAC_COMPAT_LINUX option entirely. The functionality will
automatically be enabled if the kernel is compiled with COMPAT_LINUX.

Submitted by:	jhb
MFC after:	3 days
2002-09-25 15:21:50 +00:00
Scott Long
7419815d60 The AAC_COMPAT_LINUX option was really annoying, since it made the
aac driver dependent on the linux emulation module.  This was
especially bad for the release engineers who tried to move the
aac driver from the kernel onto the drivers floppy.  The linux
compat bits for this driver are now in their own driver, aac_linux.
It can be loaded as a module or compiled into the kernel.  For
the latter case, the AAC_COMPAT_LINUX option is needed, along with
the COMPAT_LINUX option.

I've tested this in every configuration I can think of.  This is an
MFC candidate for 4.7.

Idea from:	rwatson
MFC after:	3 days
2002-09-25 05:00:25 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
4b124a4b8e - Add options ALQ and KTR_ALQ. 2002-09-22 07:14:27 +00:00
John Baldwin
0be15dec9a Ahem, actually add the DDB_TRACE option and finish changing DDB_UNATTENDED
to use its own header.
2002-09-19 18:52:37 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
3ffb9fadc8 Regen for added syscalls. 2002-09-19 00:48:57 +00:00
Peter Wemm
e94ecf7338 Move the KSTACK_PAGES option from MD to MI. Although not all platforms
support this, we do have MI code that references it and is otherwise
unaware of an override.  The alternative is to put knowledge in these
MI files about which platforms have the opt_kstack_pages.h option file.
It is more likely that other platforms will gain the ability to tune the
kstack size.
2002-09-07 22:07:11 +00:00
Maxim Sobolev
8e96e13e6a Add a new gre(4) driver, which could be used to create GRE (RFC1701)
and MOBILE (RFC2004) IP tunnels.

Obrained from:  NetBSD
2002-09-06 17:12:50 +00:00
Scott Long
3636639d7b Remove options that don't actually exist (in this form). 2002-09-01 07:13:10 +00:00
Justin T. Gibbs
4e7bbbf96c Add support for ahd/ahc register pretty printing in diagnostics.
This feature can be disabled via the AHD/AHC_REG_PRETTY_PRINT kernel
option.

The ahc driver now uses the same debug options mechanism as ahd:
AHC_DEBUG 	- Compile in debugging code
AHC_DEBUG_OPTS	- String of debug options as listed in aic7xxx.h
2002-08-31 06:55:59 +00:00
Archie Cobbs
901fadf792 New L2TP netgraph node type.
Obtained from:	Packet Design
2002-08-20 21:59:50 +00:00
Robert Watson
f050add5c1 Wrap maintenance of varios nmac{objectname} counters in MAC_DEBUG so we
can avoid the cost of a large number of atomic operations if we're not
interested in the object count statistics.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-16 14:21:38 +00:00
Søren Schmidt
fd4b4ecc73 Add the ability to use ATAPI devices via CAM.
The CAM<>ATAPI layer was submitted by "Thomas Quinot <thomas@cuivre.fr.eu.org>"
changes form the version on the net by me (formatting, ability to be used
alone without the ATAPI native device driver, proper speed reporting...)

See /sys/conf/NOTES for usage.

Submitted by: Thomas Quinot <thomas@cuivre.fr.eu.org>
2002-08-09 20:54:06 +00:00
Warner Losh
073eef8ca2 Add code that will download firmware to a Symbol LA4100-series of CF
cards.  Since the firmware is hard coded into the kernel, I've made it
a kernel option (WI_SYMBOL_FIRMWARE).

Note: This only downloads into the RAM of these cards.  It doesn't
download into FLASH, and is somewhat limited.  There needs to be a
better way to deal, but this works for now.  My Symbol LA4132 CF card
works now.

Obtained from: NetBSD
2002-08-03 00:19:58 +00:00
Robert Watson
12e9f256e3 Kernel options for Mandatory Access Control (MAC).
MAC support will be merged into the main tree over the next week in
reasonable size chunks; much more to follow.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-07-27 19:50:28 +00:00
Warner Losh
a850203de0 Make PCI_ENABLE_IO_MODES a sysctl hw.pci.enable_io_modes. It can also
be set at boot time.  It defaults to 1 now since it can be set in the
boot loader.  If this proves unwise, we can reset it to defaulting to 0.
2002-07-26 07:58:16 +00:00
Peter Wemm
b5d0be8951 Remove dependency on NPCI. Use 'options ATA_NOPCI' to compile without
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
2002-07-21 21:37:09 +00:00
John Baldwin
fbfee3f615 Move SMBFS from i386 and pc98 files and options files to MI files and
options files.
2002-07-15 19:11:21 +00:00
John Baldwin
47a3594e8e The puc(4) driver/bridge is MI, so don't bury it in MD options and files
config files.  It also depends on PCI.
2002-07-15 15:39:10 +00:00
John Baldwin
0b9113359f Sort all the SYSV IPC options. They are still all clumped together, but
at least they are sorted relative to themselves now.
2002-07-15 15:28:16 +00:00
John Baldwin
404b3dcf21 - Properly sort GEOM and NODEVFS.
- GEOM doesn't need to specify a filename, the correct one is chosen by
  default.
2002-07-15 15:25:08 +00:00
John Baldwin
97fef0a119 Make WLCACHE and WLDEBUG MI options. 2002-07-15 15:21:51 +00:00
John Baldwin
7f01180e4e Make NDGBPORTS an MI option since the dgb(4) driver is an MI driver.
Remove comments about NDGBPORTS from the options* files.  Please document
options in NOTES, not in the options* files.
2002-07-15 15:18:34 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
074453c230 Introduce syscall.master option 'COMPAT4' which allows one to wrap
syscalls for FreeBSD 4 compatibility.
Add kernel option COMPAT_FREEBSD4 to enable these syscalls.
2002-07-12 06:38:34 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
2c8f5a28bb Move the MSIZE and MCLSHIFT options out of the undocumented section in
NOTES.  Add some comments about the potential problems associated with NIC
driver modules and changing these options.

Fix sorting problems in sys/conf/options with the MSIZE and MCLSHIFT
options.

Reviewed by:	bde
2002-07-11 04:15:53 +00:00
Mark Peek
b7c5c8fb06 Back out previous TCBHASHSIZE change. This should not be a kernel option.
Pointed out by:	bde
2002-07-08 22:00:43 +00:00
Mark Peek
08d6c46194 Document TCBHASHSIZE in NOTES and add it to the allowable kernel options.
PR:		32912
Submitted by:	Carl Schmidt <carl@slackerbsd.org>
MFC after:	3 days
2002-07-08 02:53:59 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
98cb733c67 At long last, commit the zero copy sockets code.
MAKEDEV:	Add MAKEDEV glue for the ti(4) device nodes.

ti.4:		Update the ti(4) man page to include information on the
		TI_JUMBO_HDRSPLIT and TI_PRIVATE_JUMBOS kernel options,
		and also include information about the new character
		device interface and the associated ioctls.

man9/Makefile:	Add jumbo.9 and zero_copy.9 man pages and associated
		links.

jumbo.9:	New man page describing the jumbo buffer allocator
		interface and operation.

zero_copy.9:	New man page describing the general characteristics of
		the zero copy send and receive code, and what an
		application author should do to take advantage of the
		zero copy functionality.

NOTES:		Add entries for ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS, TI_PRIVATE_JUMBOS,
		TI_JUMBO_HDRSPLIT, MSIZE, and MCLSHIFT.

conf/files:	Add uipc_jumbo.c and uipc_cow.c.

conf/options:	Add the 5 options mentioned above.

kern_subr.c:	Receive side zero copy implementation.  This takes
		"disposable" pages attached to an mbuf, gives them to
		a user process, and then recycles the user's page.
		This is only active when ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS is turned on
		and the kern.ipc.zero_copy.receive sysctl variable is
		set to 1.

uipc_cow.c:	Send side zero copy functions.  Takes a page written
		by the user and maps it copy on write and assigns it
		kernel virtual address space.  Removes copy on write
		mapping once the buffer has been freed by the network
		stack.

uipc_jumbo.c:	Jumbo disposable page allocator code.  This allocates
		(optionally) disposable pages for network drivers that
		want to give the user the option of doing zero copy
		receive.

uipc_socket.c:	Add kern.ipc.zero_copy.{send,receive} sysctls that are
		enabled if ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS is turned on.

		Add zero copy send support to sosend() -- pages get
		mapped into the kernel instead of getting copied if
		they meet size and alignment restrictions.

uipc_syscalls.c:Un-staticize some of the sf* functions so that they
		can be used elsewhere.  (uipc_cow.c)

if_media.c:	In the SIOCGIFMEDIA ioctl in ifmedia_ioctl(), avoid
		calling malloc() with M_WAITOK.  Return an error if
		the M_NOWAIT malloc fails.

		The ti(4) driver and the wi(4) driver, at least, call
		this with a mutex held.  This causes witness warnings
		for 'ifconfig -a' with a wi(4) or ti(4) board in the
		system.  (I've only verified for ti(4)).

ip_output.c:	Fragment large datagrams so that each segment contains
		a multiple of PAGE_SIZE amount of data plus headers.
		This allows the receiver to potentially do page
		flipping on receives.

if_ti.c:	Add zero copy receive support to the ti(4) driver.  If
		TI_PRIVATE_JUMBOS is not defined, it now uses the
		jumbo(9) buffer allocator for jumbo receive buffers.

		Add a new character device interface for the ti(4)
		driver for the new debugging interface.  This allows
		(a patched version of) gdb to talk to the Tigon board
		and debug the firmware.  There are also a few additional
		debugging ioctls available through this interface.

		Add header splitting support to the ti(4) driver.

		Tweak some of the default interrupt coalescing
		parameters to more useful defaults.

		Add hooks for supporting transmit flow control, but
		leave it turned off with a comment describing why it
		is turned off.

if_tireg.h:	Change the firmware rev to 12.4.11, since we're really
		at 12.4.11 plus fixes from 12.4.13.

		Add defines needed for debugging.

		Remove the ti_stats structure, it is now defined in
		sys/tiio.h.

ti_fw.h:	12.4.11 firmware.

ti_fw2.h:	12.4.11 firmware, plus selected fixes from 12.4.13,
		and my header splitting patches.  Revision 12.4.13
		doesn't handle 10/100 negotiation properly.  (This
		firmware is the same as what was in the tree previously,
		with the addition of header splitting support.)

sys/jumbo.h:	Jumbo buffer allocator interface.

sys/mbuf.h:	Add a new external mbuf type, EXT_DISPOSABLE, to
		indicate that the payload buffer can be thrown away /
		flipped to a userland process.

socketvar.h:	Add prototype for socow_setup.

tiio.h:		ioctl interface to the character portion of the ti(4)
		driver, plus associated structure/type definitions.

uio.h:		Change prototype for uiomoveco() so that we'll know
		whether the source page is disposable.

ufs_readwrite.c:Update for new prototype of uiomoveco().

vm_fault.c:	In vm_fault(), check to see whether we need to do a page
		based copy on write fault.

vm_object.c:	Add a new function, vm_object_allocate_wait().  This
		does the same thing that vm_object allocate does, except
		that it gives the caller the opportunity to specify whether
		it should wait on the uma_zalloc() of the object structre.

		This allows vm objects to be allocated while holding a
		mutex.  (Without generating WITNESS warnings.)

		vm_object_allocate() is implemented as a call to
		vm_object_allocate_wait() with the malloc flag set to
		M_WAITOK.

vm_object.h:	Add prototype for vm_object_allocate_wait().

vm_page.c:	Add page-based copy on write setup, clear and fault
		routines.

vm_page.h:	Add page based COW function prototypes and variable in
		the vm_page structure.

Many thanks to Drew Gallatin, who wrote the zero copy send and receive
code, and to all the other folks who have tested and reviewed this code
over the years.
2002-06-26 03:37:47 +00:00
Nick Hibma
d8dbc77c56 Make the speed used by gdb over serial settable in the kernel configuration.
This facilitates the use in circumstances where you are using a serial
console as well. GDB doesn't support anything higher than 9600 baud (19k2
if you are lucky), but the console does.
2002-06-18 21:30:37 +00:00
Robert Watson
1bde53c130 POSIX.1e capabilities aren't here yet, don't put an option for it
in the options file.
2002-06-13 22:41:23 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
11b2dcdbbe Put geom_gpt.c under the GEOM option instead of having a special GEOM_GPT
option for it.
2002-06-10 18:49:41 +00:00
John Baldwin
363ba2bcfd According to Bruce, this file shouldn't have comments to describe what
options do.  Comments should be in NOTES and having the comments in two
places usually means that one place will just bitrot.  Thus, remove the
comment for KTRACE_REQUEST_POOL from the previous revision.

Requested by:	bde
2002-06-07 14:33:23 +00:00
John Baldwin
ea3fc8e4cd Overhaul the ktrace subsystem a bit. For the most part, the actual vnode
operations to dump a ktrace event out to an output file are now handled
asychronously by a ktrace worker thread.  This enables most ktrace events
to not need Giant once p_tracep and p_traceflag are suitably protected by
the new ktrace_lock.

There is a single todo list of pending ktrace requests.  The various
ktrace tracepoints allocate a ktrace request object and tack it onto the
end of the queue.  The ktrace kernel thread grabs requests off the head of
the queue and processes them using the trace vnode and credentials of the
thread triggering the event.

Since we cannot assume that the user memory referenced when doing a
ktrgenio() will be valid and since we can't access it from the ktrace
worker thread without a bit of hassle anyways, ktrgenio() requests are
still handled synchronously.  However, in order to ensure that the requests
from a given thread still maintain relative order to one another, when a
synchronous ktrace event (such as a genio event) is triggered, we still put
the request object on the todo list to synchronize with the worker thread.
The original thread blocks atomically with putting the item on the queue.
When the worker thread comes across an asynchronous request, it wakes up
the original thread and then blocks to ensure it doesn't manage to write a
later event before the original thread has a chance to write out the
synchronous event.  When the original thread wakes up, it writes out the
synchronous using its own context and then finally wakes the worker thread
back up.  Yuck.  The sychronous events aren't pretty but they do work.

Since ktrace events can be triggered in fairly low-level areas (msleep()
and cv_wait() for example) the ktrace code is designed to use very few
locks when posting an event (currently just the ktrace_mtx lock and the
vnode interlock to bump the refcoun on the trace vnode).  This also means
that we can't allocate a ktrace request object when an event is triggered.
Instead, ktrace request objects are allocated from a pre-allocated pool
and returned to the pool after a request is serviced.

The size of this pool defaults to 100 objects, which is about 13k on an
i386 kernel.  The size of the pool can be adjusted at compile time via the
KTRACE_REQUEST_POOL kernel option, at boot time via the
kern.ktrace_request_pool loader tunable, or at runtime via the
kern.ktrace_request_pool sysctl.

If the pool of request objects is exhausted, then a warning message is
printed to the console.  The message is rate-limited in that it is only
printed once until the size of the pool is adjusted via the sysctl.

I have tested all kernel traces but have not tested user traces submitted
by utrace(2), though they should work fine in theory.

Since a ktrace request has several properties (content of event, trace
vnode, details of originating process, credentials for I/O, etc.), I chose
to drop the first argument to the various ktrfoo() functions.  Currently
the functions just assume the event is posted from curthread.  If there is
a great desire to do so, I suppose I could instead put back the first
argument but this time make it a thread pointer instead of a vnode pointer.

Also, KTRPOINT() now takes a thread as its first argument instead of a
process.  This is because the check for a recursive ktrace event is now
per-thread instead of process-wide.

Tested on:	i386
Compiles on:	sparc64, alpha
2002-06-07 05:32:59 +00:00
Justin T. Gibbs
cdd49e97b4 Hook up the ahd driver. 2002-06-06 16:35:58 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
6e330f3e36 bde noticed that SOMAXCONN breaks pretty badly as an option for LINT.
so back it out.
2002-06-02 04:32:52 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
bcd46c600a Add support to GEOM for GUID Partition Tables (GPTs). The support
is currently conditional on both the GEOM and GEOM_GPT options to
avoid getting GPT by default and having the MBR and GPT classes
clash.
The correct behaviour of the MBR class would be to back-off (reject)
a MBR if it's a Protective MBR (a MBR with a single partition of type
0xEE that spans the whole disk (as far as the MBR is concerned).
The correct behaviour if the GPT class would be to back-off (reject)
a GPT if there's a MBR that's not a Protective MBR.

At this stage it's inconvenient to destroy a good MBR when working
with GPTs that it's more convenient to have the MBR class back-off
when it detects the GPT signature on disk and have the GPT class
ignore the MBR.

In sys/gpt.h UUIDs (GUIDs) for the following FreeBSD partitions
have been defined:

GPT_ENT_TYPE_FREEBSD
	FreeBSD slice with disklabel. This is the equivalent of
	the well-known FreeBSD MBR partition type.
GPT_ENT_TYPE_FREEBSD_{SWAP|UFS|UFS2|VINUM}
	FreeBSD partitions in the context of disklabel. This is
	speculating on the idea to use the GPT to hold partitions
	instead if slices and removing the fixed (and low) limits
	we have on the number of partitions.

This commit lacks a GPT image for the regression suite.
2002-05-28 09:04:48 +00:00
John Baldwin
2498cf8c42 Add code to make default mutexes adaptive if the ADAPTIVE_MUTEXES kernel
option is used (not on by default).

- In the case of trying to lock a mutex, if the MTX_CONTESTED flag is set,
  then we can safely read the thread pointer from the mtx_lock member while
  holding sched_lock.  We then examine the thread to see if it is currently
  executing on another CPU.  If it is, then we keep looping instead of
  blocking.
- In the case of trying to unlock a mutex, it is now possible for a mutex
  to have MTX_CONTESTED set in mtx_lock but to not have any threads
  actually blocked on it, so we need to handle that case.  In that case,
  we just release the lock as if MTX_CONTESTED was not set and return.
- We do not adaptively spin on Giant as Giant is held for long times and
  it slows SMP systems down to a crawl (it was taking several minutes,
  like 5-10 or so for my test alpha and sparc64 SMP boxes to boot up when
  they adaptively spinned on Giant).
- We only compile in the code to do this for SMP kernels, it doesn't make
  sense for UP kernels.

Tested on:	i386, alpha, sparc64
2002-05-21 20:47:11 +00:00
Robert Watson
2bab796d96 Remove IFS from 5.0-CURRENT. This facilitates introducing UFS2 as
IFS had its fingers deep in the belly of the UFS/FFS split.  IFS
will be reimplemented by the maintainer at a later date.

Requested by:	adrian (maintainer)
2002-05-19 00:11:08 +00:00
Tom Rhodes
d394511de3 More s/file system/filesystem/g 2002-05-16 21:28:32 +00:00