just because you leave your session idle.
Also, put in a fix for 64-bit architectures (to be revised).
In detail:
ip_fw.h
* Reorder fields in struct ip_fw to avoid alignment problems on
64-bit machines. This only masks the problem, I am still not
sure whether I am doing something wrong in the code or there
is a problem elsewhere (e.g. different aligmnent of structures
between userland and kernel because of pragmas etc.)
* added fields in dyn_rule to store ack numbers, so we can
generate keepalives when the dynamic rule is about to expire
ip_fw2.c
* use a local function, send_pkt(), to generate TCP RST for Reset rules;
* save about 250 bytes by cleaning up the various snprintf()
in ipfw_log() ...
* ... and use twice as many bytes to implement keepalives
(this seems to be working, but i have not tested it extensively).
Keepalives are generated once every 5 seconds for the last 20 seconds
of the lifetime of a dynamic rule for an established TCP flow. The
packets are sent to both sides, so if at least one of the endpoints
is responding, the timeout is refreshed and the rule will not expire.
You can disable this feature with
sysctl net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_keepalive=0
(the default is 1, to have them enabled).
MFC after: 1 day
(just kidding... I will supply an updated version of ipfw2 for
RELENG_4 tomorrow).
- always reinitialize the rx descriptors, even if the mbuf is kept.
This should fix the hangs on ifconfig that were observed
- on an rx overflow, reinitialize the descriptor so that the interface
will not hang
- correct some bus_dmamap_sync() calls
- correct some debug messages
- some minor nits
1/ don't need to set td_state to TDS_RUNNING in fork_return.
it's already set in choosethread().
2/ Set a child process state to "normal" as opposed to "new"
when we allow it to be put on the run queue.
Allows child to receive signals from the parent if the parent
runs first and tries to immediatly signal he child.
Submitted by: (part 2) Thomas Moestl <tmoestl@gmx.net>
that's binary compatible for -stable. While binary compatibility doesn't
matter much in -current, it is critical for -stable. This change requires
pccardd/pccardc to be recompiled.
formulated. The correct states should be:
IDLE: On the idle KSE list for that KSEG
RUNQ: Linked onto the system run queue.
THREAD: Attached to a thread and slaved to whatever state the thread is in.
This means that most places where we were adjusting kse state can go away
as it is just moving around because the thread is..
The only places we need to adjust the KSE state is in transition to and from
the idle and run queues.
Reviewed by: jhb@freebsd.org
-finstrument-functions instead of -mprofiler-epilogue. The former
works essentially the same as the latter but has a higher overhead
(about 22 more bytes per function for passing unused args to the
profiling functions).
Removed all traces of the IDENT Makefile variable, which had been
reduced to just a place for holding profiling's contribution to CFLAGS
(the IDENT that gives the kernel identity was renamed to KERN_IDENT).
o Assert that the page queues lock is held in vm_page_unwire().
o Make vm_page_lock_queues() and vm_page_unlock_queues() visible
to kernel loadable modules.
(PROFLEVEL) to kern.pre.mk so that it is easier to manage. Bumped config
version to match.
Moved the check for cputype being configured to a less bogus place in
mkmakefile.c.
filedesc is already locked rather than having chroot() unlock the
filedesc so chroot_refuse_vdir_fds() can immediately relock it.
- Reorder chroot() a bitso that we do the namei lookup before checking
the process's struct filedesc. This closes at least one potential race
and allows us to only acquire the filedsec lock once in chroot().
- Push down Giant slightly into chroot().