the BMSR contains any media at all to mii_phy_add_media(). The majority
of the drivers currently using mii_phy_add_media() were missing such a
check anyway though.
MFC after: 2 weeks
take place if IFM_AUTO is selected. This allows drivers like nsphy(4),
which need to force writing the ANAR according to the BMSR, to take
advantage of mii_phy_setmedia(). [1]
- In mii_phy_reset() once the current media is set don't isolate the PHY
corresponding to the instance of the currently selected media rather
than unconditionally not isolating the PHY corresponding to instance 0.
This saves a isolation-unisolation-cycle of the PHY corresponding to
the currently selected media for the case were it isn't instance 0.
- Fix some whitespace nits. [1]
Obtained from: NetBSD [1]
MFC after: 2 weeks
have to explicitly acquire Giant (although they need to be aware of this and
not hold any locks at that point). Remove the acquisitions of Giant in the
NFS client wrapping tprintf().
has items with CONSUMER page. For now only check for items with KEYBOARD page.
This should prevent bthidd(8) from allocating vkbd(4) keyboard for Microsoft
Bluetooth Explorer mouse.
Reported by: Eric Anderson
MFC after: 3 days
The policy is that the WARNS level should characterize the
quality of a piece of code irrespective of any conditions.
Otherwise the code doesn't deserve the WARNS level assigned.
Requested by: ru
Add two linprocfs entries for Linux IPC:
/proc/sys/kernel/msgmni -> kern.ipc.msgmni
/proc/sys/kernel/sem -> kern.ipc.semmsl
kern.ipc.semmns
kern.ipc.semopm
kern.ipc.semmni
This fixes msgget03 and semget05 from Linux Test Project (LTP) test suite.
msgctl08 and msgctl09 also use /proc/sys/kernel/msgmni but another fix is
required from p4 (Change 110179).
Requested by: netchild
file. Leave the loser's lock(s) initialized, so the reclaim logic can
unconditionally destroy them when that race occurs (or if the vfs hash
insert happened to fail for some other reason). Thanks to ups@ for a
careful review of the code.
Reported by : Kris Kennaway
an URQ_REQUEST when DMA segments are passed to usbd_start_transfer();
when the request doesn't include the optional data buffer the size of
the transfer (xfer->length) is 0, in which case usbd_transfer() won't
create a DMA map but call usbd_start_transfer() with no DMA segments.
With the previous change this could result in the bus_dmamap_sync()
implementation dereferencing the NULL-pointer passed as the DMA map
argument.
While at it fix what appears to be a typo in usbd_start_transfer();
in order to determine wheter usbd_start_transfer() was called with
DMA segments check whether the number of segments is > 0 rather than
the pointer to them being > 0.
OK'ed by: imp
- Move mentionings of required drivers to the SYNOPSIS where they belong
- Remove cruft (XiG, sheesh) from the EXAMPLES section and re-arrange things to make
somewhat more sense
- Fix an Xref to manpage from ports to mention the corresponsing port
- Remove commented out HISTORY section header
MFC after: 3 days
for catching general regressions in future. Unfortunately,
it still displays some problems at WARNS=6 on architectures
with stricter alignment requirements, e.g., ia64.
we set and use xtp; if idx is 1, we set and use xip; the other cases
are impossible. However, GCC cannot see that xip and xtp are always
initialized before use because they are initialized and used in
different if/else blocks. So setting them to NULL at the very
beginning won't hurt.
* Correct a signed/unsigned problem that broke handling of files >2G.
* Implement "skip" support for much faster "tar -t".
Thanks to: Robert Sciuk for sending me a DVD that illustrated the first problem
ULLONG_MAX is not less than 2^64-1; and uintmax_t
cannot be more narrow than unsigned long long.
This allows for scale factors up to Exa inclusively.
Use plain int for the scale index to be consistent
with ifcmds.c and enum.
- use flags rather than sperate ioctls for edge, p2p
- implement p2p and autop2p flags
- define large pathcost constant as ULL
- show bridgeid and rootid in ifconfig
Obtained from: Reyk Floeter <reyk@openbsd.org>