I noticed a small inconsistency in delete and insert line between xterm
and libteken. libteken allows these actions to happen while the cursor
is placed outside the scrolling region, while xterm does not.
This behaviour seems to be VT100-like. Confirmation:
http://www.vt100.net/docs/vt102-ug/chapter5.html
"This sequence is ignored when cursor is outside scrolling region."
MFC after: 1 month
check if there are readers blocked by us via URWLOCK_WRITE_WAITERS flag,
and resume the readers. The error must be EAGAIN, otherwise there must
have memory problem, and nobody can rescue the buggy application.
The revision 197445 might be reverted.
This means we can finally do things like VT100 box drawing when using
Syscons (8-bit characters). As far as I know, the only remaining issue
is the absense of proper escape sequences for special keyboard
characters (cursor, F1 to F12, etc) and xterm emulation should be ready
for general use.
Enabling xterm would have the following advantages:
- Easier possible migration to Unicode. cons25 termcap entries are very
8-bit centric. They use things like CP437 characters for box drawing,
etc.
- Better support for SSH'ing to other operating systems/devices. Most
switches use VT100-style admin interfaces.
- Reduced bandwidth, because applications can now use things like
scrolling regions.
- You can finally use applications like dtach(1) on both the console and
inside an xterm.
Also align setup descriptor on 32 bytes boundary. Tx buffer have no
alignment limitation so create dmamap without alignment
restriction[1]. Rx buffer still seems to require 4 bytes alignment
limitation but we can simply use MCLBYTES for size to map the
buffer instead of TULIP_DATA_PER_DESC as the buffer is allocated
with m_getcl(9).
de(4) supports up to TULIP_MAX_TXSEG segments for Tx buffers,
increase maximum dma segment size to TULIP_MAX_TXSEG * MCLBYTES.
While I'm here remove TULIP_DATA_PER_DESC as it is not used anymore.
This should fix de(4) breakage introduced after r176206.
Submitted by: jhb [1]
Reported by: WATANABE Kazuhiro < CQG00620 <> nifty dot ne dot jp >
Tested by: WATANABE Kazuhiro < CQG00620 <> nifty dot ne dot jp >,
Takahashi Yoshihiro < nyan <> jp dot freebsd dot org >
driver load. This fixes crash on atapicam module load on systems,
where some ata channels (usually ata1) was probed, but failed to attach.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp
Tested by: many
following vnops will fail. This is very important, because without this change
vnode could be reclaimed at any point, even if we increased usecount. The only
way to ensure that vnode won't be reclaimed was to lock it, which would be very
hard to do in ZFS without changing a lot of code. With this change simply
increasing usecount is enough to be sure vnode won't be reclaimed from under
us. To be precise it can still be reclaimed but we won't be able to see it,
because every try to enter ZFS through VFS will result in EIO.
The only function that cannot return EIO, because it is needed for vflush() is
zfs_root(). Introduce ZFS_ENTER_NOERROR() macro that only locks
z_teardown_lock and never returns EIO.
MFC after: 3 days
o introduce PCIE_REGMAX and use it instead of ad-hoc constant
o where 'reg' parameter/variable is not already unsigned, cast it to
unsigned before comparison with maximum value to cut off negative
values
o use PCI_SLOTMAX in several places where 31 or 32 were explicitly used
o drop redundant check of 'bytes' in i386 pciereg_cfgread() - valid
values are already checked in the subsequent switch
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
query umtx also if the shared waiters bit is set on a shared lock.
The writer starvation avoidance technique, infact, can lead to shared
waiters on a shared lock which can bring to a missed wakeup and thus
to a deadlock if the right bit is not checked (a notable case is the
writers counterpart to be handled through expired timeouts).
Fix that by checking for the shared waiters bit also when unlocking the
shared locks.
That bug was causing a reported MySQL deadlock.
Many thanks go to Nick Esborn and his employer DesertNet which provided
time and machines to identify and fix this issue.
PR: thread/135673
Reported by: Nick Esborn <nick at desert dot net>
Tested by: Nick Esborn <nick at desert dot net>
Reviewed by: jeff
save/clear/restore flags but emulated flags have no effect on the host.
I believe BIOS writers never meant to run their code in emulated
environment with interrupt enabled. :-)
- Use memcpy(3) instead of copying individual members. I believe struct
x86regs was intentionally copied from the first half of struct x86emu_regs
for this very purpose.
- Fix some style nits and consistencies.
Reviewed by: delphij, paradox (ddkprog yahoo com)
startup and genericize it so it can be reused to map other tables as well:
- Add a routine to walk a list of ACPI subtables such as those used in the
APIC and SRAT tables in the MI acpi(4) driver.
- Move the routines for mapping and unmapping an ACPI table as well as
mapping the RSDT or XSDT and searching for a table with a given signature
out into acpica_machdep.c for both amd64 and i386.
Find the most recently merged svn revision, too. If we get a svn revision
that matches HEAD use rXXX=GIT otherwise use rXXX+GIT.
Submitted by: avg
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC: not stable/8 before 8.0
gid to set group ownership and not process gid.
This was overlooked during v6 -> v13 switch.
PR: kern/139076
Reported by: Sean Winn <sean@gothic.net.au>
MFC after: 3 days
than references to objects. In that case, simply use the Package directly.
I think a recent change to ACPI-CA is causing the interpreter to
automatically expand these references.
Reported by: Olivier Smedts olivier gid0 org
MFC after: 3 days