Fix panic on tcpdump being attached to interface being removed (introduced by r233937, pointed by hrs@ and adrian@)
Protect most of bpf_setf() by BPF global lock
Add several forgotten assertions (thanks to adrian@)
Document current locking model inside bpf.c
Document EVENTHANDLER(9) usage inside BPF.
Approved by: kib(mentor)
Tested by: gnn
MFC in: 4 weeks
to the build system. FreeBSD written scripts are stored in
src/share and the toolkit scripts are brought from the cddl directory
into a working tree via install.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The NAND Flash environment consists of several distinct components:
- NAND framework (drivers harness for NAND controllers and NAND chips)
- NAND simulator (NANDsim)
- NAND file system (NAND FS)
- Companion tools and utilities
- Documentation (manual pages)
This work is still experimental. Please use with caution.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Supported by: FreeBSD Foundation, Juniper Networks
"bsdsort" and GNU sort will be the default "sort". When WITH_BSD_SORT
is set, BSD sort will be the default "sort" and GNU sort will be installed
as "gnusort".
This catches up with the year-old change to default blocksizes. Also
reduce the variants of spelling gigabyte from 3 down to 2 (GB and GiB).
Suggested by: arundel (about a year ago now ...)
Use MADT to match ACPI Processor objects to CPUs. MADT and DSDT/SSDTs may
list CPUs in different orders, especially for disabled logical cores. Now
we match ACPI IDs from the MADT with Processor objects, strictly order CPUs
accordingly, and ignore disabled cores. This prevents us from executing
methods for other CPUs, e. g., _PSS for disabled logical core, which may not
exist. Unfortunately, it is known that there are a few systems with buggy
BIOSes that do not have unique ACPI IDs for MADT and Processor objects. To
work around these problems, 'debug.acpi.cpu_unordered' tunable is added.
Set this to a non-zero value to restore the old behavior.
Many thanks to jhb for pointing me to the right direction and the manual
page change.
Reported by: Harris, James R (james dot r dot harris at intel dot com)
Tested by: Harris, James R (james dot r dot harris at intel dot com)
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 month
list CPUs in different orders, especially for disabled logical cores. Now
we match ACPI IDs from the MADT with Processor objects, strictly order CPUs
accordingly, and ignore disabled cores. This prevents us from executing
methods for other CPUs, e. g., _PSS for disabled logical core, which may not
exist. Unfortunately, it is known that there are a few systems with buggy
BIOSes that do not have unique ACPI IDs for MADT and Processor objects. To
work around these problems