Now the NDISulator supports NDIS USB drivers that it've tested with
devices as follows:
- Anygate XM-142 (Conexant)
- Netgear WG111v2 (Realtek)
- U-Khan UW-2054u (Marvell)
- Shuttle XPC Accessory PN20 (Realtek)
- ipTIME G054U2 (Ralink)
- UNiCORN WL-54G (ZyDAS)
- ZyXEL G-200v2 (ZyDAS)
All of them succeeded to attach and worked though there are still some
problems that it's expected to be solved.
To use NDIS USB support, you should rebuild and install ndiscvt(8) and
if you encounter a problem to attach please set `hw.ndisusb.halt' to
0 then retry.
I expect no changes of the NDIS code for PCI, PCMCIA devices.
Obtained from: //depot/projects/ndisusb/...
Disable some unneeded pathes in overcomplicated input mixer to help parser
to handle the rest better. This gives mic input boost control in some
configurations and just more predictable operation in others.
In particular, point out that string comparison can only use != and ==
(how weird, given that the underlying call to strcmp returns more
information), that floating point values are correctly interpreted
as numbers, and that the left-hand side must be a variable expansion.
MFC after: 3 weeks
1. The "route" command allows route insertion through the interface-direct
option "-iface". During if_attach(), an sockaddr_dl{} entry is created
for the interface and is part of the interface address list. This
sockaddr_dl{} entry describes the interface in detail. The "route"
command selects this entry as the "gateway" object when the "-iface"
option is present. The "arp" and "ndp" commands also interact with the
kernel through the routing socket when adding and removing static L2
entries. The static L2 information is also provided through the
"gateway" object with an AF_LINK family type, similar to what is
provided by the "route" command. In order to differentiate between
these two types of operations, a RTF_LLDATA flag is introduced. This
flag is set by the "arp" and "ndp" commands when issuing the add and
delete commands. This flag is also set in each L2 entry returned by the
kernel. The "arp" and "ndp" command follows a convention where a RTM_GET
is issued first followed by a RTM_ADD/DELETE. This RTM_GET request fills
in the fields for a "rtm" object, which is reinjected into the kernel by
a subsequent RTM_ADD/DELETE command. The entry returend from RTM_GET
is a prefix route, so the RTF_LLDATA flag must be specified when issuing
the RTM_ADD/DELETE messages.
2. Enforce the convention that NET_RT_FLAGS with a 0 w_arg is the
specification for retrieving L2 information. Also optimized the
code logic.
Reviewed by: julian
the following operations, e.g.:
1) ifconfig tun0 create
2) ifconfig tun0 10.1.1.1 10.1.1.2
3) route add -net 192.103.54.0/24 -iface tun0
4) ifconfig tun0 destroy
If cv wait on the TUN_CLOSED flag, then the last operation (4) will
block forever.
Revert the previous changes and fix the mtx_unlock() leak.
invariants and approach for protocol switch methods in protsw_init(),
and also some KASSERT's for non-domain init entries in protocol
switch tables: pru_abort and pru_send must both be implemented.
For now, leave those assertions #if 0'd, since there are a few
protocols that violate them in non-harmful ways. Whether or not we
should enforce pru_abort being implemented for non-stream protocols
is an interesting question: currently abort is only invoked on stream
sockets in situations where un-accepted sockets must be abruptly
closed (i.e., close() on a listen socket with pending connections),
but in principle it is useful for datagram sockets and most datagram
socket types implement it.
MFC after: 3 weeks
by adding a separate TUN_CLOSED flag that is set after tunclose is done referencing it.
- drop the tun_mtx after the flag check to avoid holding it across if_detach which can recurse in to
if_tun.c
regenerated in libugidfw) rather than simply printing that the rule was
added with only the number. This makes ugidfw(8) behave a bit more like
ipfw(8), and also means that the administrator sees how the rule was
interpreted once uids/gids/etc were processed.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
FPA floating-point format is identical to the VFP format,
but is always stored in big-endian.
Introduce _IEEE_WORD_ORDER to describe the byte-order of
the FP representation.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc
looked up would have v_dd set to a non-NULL value. This fixes a panic
seen when running installworld on a diskless system with a separate /usr
file system.
Submitted by: cracauer
Approved by: kib