pipes, since open pipes are linked off a usbd_interface structure
that is free()'d when the configuration index is changed. Attempting
to close or use such pipes later would access freed memory and
usually crash the system.
The only driver that is known to trigger this problem is if_axe,
which is itself at fault, but it is worth detecting the situation
to avoid the obscure crashes that result from this type of easily
made driver mistakes.
behaviour lost in the change from 4.x style netgraph tee nodes.
Alter the tee node to use the new method. Document the behaviour.
Step the ABI version number... old netgraph klds will refuse to load.
Better than just crashing.
Submitted by: Gleb Smirnoff <glebius@cell.sick.ru>
make the key name matching case-insensitive. There are some drivers
and .inf files that have mismatched cases, e.g. the driver will look
for "AdhocBand" whereas the .inf file specifies a registry key to be
created called "AdHocBand." The mismatch is probably a typo that went
undetected (so much for QA), but since Windows seems to be case-insensitive,
we should be too.
In if_ndis.c, initialize rates and channels correctly so that specify
frequences correctly when trying to set channels in the 5Ghz band, and
so that 802.11b rates show up for some a/b/g cards (which otherwise
appear to have no 802.11b modes).
Also, when setting OID_802_11_CONFIGURATION in ndis_80211_setstate(),
provide default values for the beacon interval, ATIM window and dwelltime.
The Atheros "Aries" driver will crash if you try to select ad-hoc mode
and leave the beacon interval set to 0: it blindly uses this value and
does a division by 0 in the interrupt handler, causing an integer
divide trap.
of this micro-optimization occurs when we call pmap_enter() to wire an
already mapped page. Because of the micro-optimization, we fail to
mark the PTE as wired. Later, on teardown of the address space,
pmap_remove_pages() destroys the PTE before vm_fault_unwire() has
unwired the page. (pmap_remove_pages() is not supposed to destroy
wired PTEs. They are destroyed by a later call to pmap_remove().)
Thus, the page becomes lost.
Note: The page is not lost if the application called munlock(2), only
if it relies on teardown of the address space to unwire its pages.
For the historically inclined, this bug was introduced by a
megacommit, revision 1.182, roughly six years ago.
Leak observed by: green@ and dillon independently
Patch submitted by: dillon at backplane dot com
Reviewed by: tegge@
MFC after: 1 week
correct. Instead, check it against the possible settings (_PRS) when
the link is probed. This is important when using APIC mode but link
devices still have PIC mode settings. This is also what Linux does.
Additional prodding by: Len Brown len dot brown at intel dot com
the depth of the current file relative to the starting
point of the traversal is n. The usual +/- modifiers
to the argument apply.
- while I'm here, fix -maxdepth in the case of a depth-first
traversal
Print the top ten maintainers of python module ports
(works with p5-* too):
find /usr/ports -depth 2 \! -name 'py-*' -prune -o \
-depth 3 -name Makefile -execdir make -VMAINTAINER \; \
| sort | uniq -c | sort -nr | head
PR: 66667
Reviewed by: ru, joerg
Approved by: joerg
MFC after: 2 weeks
trying to exclude the top end of the range since it should hurt to overlap
by 4 bytes in the off-chance the RSDP signature appears incorrectly at the
very top of our search space.
based on the destination sleep state. Add a method to restore the old
state on resume. This is needed for the case of suspending to a very low
state disabling a GPE (i.e. S4), resuming, and then suspending to a higher
state (i.e. S3). This case should now keep the proper GPEs enabled.
device can wake the system. For example:
dev.root0.nexus0.acpi0.acpi_lid0.wake: 1
dev.root0.nexus0.acpi0.acpi_button0.wake: 1
dev.root0.nexus0.acpi0.pcib0.wake: 0
dev.root0.nexus0.acpi0.sio0.wake: 0
been developed for use with FreeBSD, version 4.8 and later.
Submitted by: Hema Joyce
Reviewed by: Prafulla Deuskar
Approved by: Prafulla Deuskar
MFC after: 1 week