longs larger than 32 bits or strict alignment requirements.
pm_fatmask had type u_long, but it must have a type that has precisely
32 bits and this type must be no smaller than int, so that ~pmp->pm_fatmask
has no bits above the 31st set. Otherwise, comparisons between (cn
| ~pmp->pm_fatmask) and magic 32-bit "cluster" numbers always fail.
The correct fix is to use the C99 type uint_least32_t and mask with
0xffffffff. The quick fix is to use u_int32_t and assume that ints
have
msdosfs metadata is riddled with unaligned fields, and on alphas,
unaligned_fixup() apparently has problems fixing up the unaligned
accesses caused by this. The quick fix is to not comment out the
NetBSD code that sort of handles this, and define UNALIGNED_ACCESS on
i386's so that the code doesn't change on i386's. The correct fix
would define UNALIGNED_ACCESS in a central machine-dependent header
and maybe add some extra cases to unaligned_fixup(). UNALIGNED_ACCESS
is also tested in isofs.
Submitted by: parts by Mark Abene <phiber@radicalmedia.com>
PR: 19086
FAT32 partitions. Unfortunately, we looked around here at
Walnut Creek CDROM for any newer FAT32-supporting versions
of Win95 and we were unsuccessful; only the older stuff here.
So this is untested beyond simply making sure it compiles and
someone with access to an actual FAT32 fs will have
to let us know how well it actually works.
Submitted by: Dmitrij Tejblum <dima@tejblum.dnttm.rssi.ru>
Obtained from: NetBSD
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.