sockets placed into prisons from the host environment get clobbered
by the prison's instance of cleanvar. (assuming /etc/rc is run in
the prison).
Discussed with: pjd, green, cperciva
MFC after: 1 week
period value. I suppose the BT adapter driver should be
fixed, but more importantly we should protect against
dividing by zero.
PR: kern/75603
MFC after: 1 week
of the kernel address space already. Intel recommend this anyway, because
using a non-4GB limit adds an additional clock cycle to address generation.
We were able to install 4GB segments into the LDT, so any limits we imposed
on %cs and %ds were academic anyway. More importantly, this allows us to
make a page in the kernel readable to user applications, for holding things
like the signal trampoline and other fun things.
Move the user %cs/%ds segments from the LDT to the GDT. There was no good
reason for them to be there anyway. The old LDT entries are still there
but we can now relax the restriction that prevented users from emptying
the default LDT entries.
Putting user and kernel %cs and %ds together allows us to access the fast
sysenter/sysexit/syscall/sysret instructions. syscall/sysret in particular
require that the user/kernel segments be laid out this way. Reserve a slot
specifically for NDIS while here.
Create two user controllable slots in the GDT that are context switched
with the (kernel) thread. This allows user applications to set two
user privilige selectors to arbitary values. Create
i386_set_fsbase(void *base) and friends. (get/set, fs/gs). For i386,
%gs is used by tls and the thread libraries and this means that user
processes no longer have to have the cost of having a custom LDT, and
we will no longer to do a ldt switch when activating a kthread/ithread in
the usual case any more.
In other words, we can now set the base address for %fs and %gs to arbitary
addresses without the pain of messing with ldt segments.
order. Put some strategic comments in about how much storage is
necessary and a longer explanation on the top.
It is now pretty trivial to put nanoBSD on as little as a 64MB CF card.
Sponsored by: Soekris Engineering.
of the __pcb_spare longs. Except that fields were changed and one of the
spare values was used and the __pcb_spare field was reduced from two to one
long. Now VM86 bios calls can trash the first 4 bytes of the next page
following the kernel stack/pcb. This Is Bad(TM). This bug has been
present in 5.2-release and onwards, and is still in RELENG_5.
Instead of tempting fate and trying to use "spare" fields, explicitly
reserve them.
pcib_route_interrupt interface. Since there's only one interrupt pin
in the CardBus form factor, everybody gets to share it. Implement
cbb_route_interrupt to return the interrupt we have.
Suggested by: bms
Otherwise, busses that implement the pcib interface that forget to
implement pcib_route_interrupt would return EIO, which the caller
interprets as 'use interrupt 6'. This is likely the cause of much of
the grief that we had when I enabled power modes for the cardbus
bridge, since the card needed to reroute the interrupt to it and it
was getting 6 which was d by the pccbb sanity checks.
Also, move the -I stuff to the centralized kern.pre.mk. However, it
might be better to add these flags to files.conf. This is a short
term fix to fix the broken builds on my machine (I don't have a valid
/sys link).
guard against NULL t_modem entry. Otherwise, driver doesn't have t_modem
callback implemented(such like sys/dev/usb/ucycom.c) would panic when
someone opens the driver's associated tty device.
Reviewed by: phk, sam (mentor)
of flags originally passed to VarFind(). This eliminates the code by
removing a bunch of tests.
Patch: 7.173
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
case. There are bugs in some which didn't unlock in the ISDOTDOT case
to begin with that need to be addressed seperately. This simplifies
things anyway.
- Fix relookup() to prevent it from vrele()'ing the dvp while the vp
is locked. Catch up to other lookup changes.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems, Inc.
Reported by: Peter Wemm