this bug and submitted these patches to dunstan@. He sent them to me
to test, and I discovered they were needed for the atmel kernel config
files. Since we were playing with them in the terminal room after the
developer's summit today, I thought I'd go ahead and commit them to
allow those folks that now have atmel hardware (thanks Andre) a chance
to try it out w/o my help. Since dunstan@ is asleep right now, risk
stepping on his toes a little by going ahead and committing this
change.
Submitted by: dunstan@, bde@
Tested by: bde@
operating with the "-b basedir" option would not correctly update files
which had flags set or were hardlinked.
Submitted by: Karsten Schmidt
Pointy hat to: cperciva
MFC after: 1 week
is caused by my latest changes to config(8). You're supposed to install new
config(8) in order to prevent yourself from seeing a warning about old
version of that tool.
You should configure the kernel with a new config(8) then.
Oked by: rwatson, cognet (mentor)
Remember about tricky cases, where options contain unfriendly characters,
from the ANSI-C string point of view ('"' in this case). The x09 build
breakage was caused by SC_CUT_SEPCHARS options.
I did test this patch number of times; each time unprofessionally and
inappropriately.
OKed by: cognet (mentor)
This change will let us to have full configuration of a running kernel
available in sysctl:
sysctl -b kern.conftxt
The same configuration is also contained within the kernel image. It can be
obtained with:
config -x <kernelfile>
Current functionality lets you to quickly recover kernel configuration, by
simply redirecting output from commands presented above and starting kernel
build procedure. "include" statements are also honored, which means options
and devices from included files are also included.
Please note that comments from configuration files are not preserved by
default. In order to preserve them, you can use -C flag for config(8). This
will bring configuration file and included files literally; however,
redirection to a file no longer works directly.
This commit was followed by discussion, that took place on freebsd-current@.
For more details, look here:
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2007-March/069994.htmlhttp://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2007-May/071844.html
Development of this patch took place in Perforce, hierarchy:
//depot/user/wkoszek/wkoszek_kconftxt/
Support from: freebsd-current@ (links above)
Reviewed by: imp@
Approved by: imp@
Not because I admit they are technically wrong and not because of bug
reports (I receive nothing). But because I surprisingly meets so
strong opposition and resistance so lost any desire to continue that.
Anyone who interested in POSIX can dig out what changes and how
through cvs diffs.
traceroute6(8) force -w flag (wait time) to be > 1 sec. Make it
possible to use 1 sec wait time.
PR: bin/110933
Submitted by: Dmitry Marakasov
Reviewed by: freebsd-net (silence)
MFC after: 1 month
- Allow the "-t" option to take a regular expression naming command
line processes to attach process PMCs to.
- Update the manual page and add an example showing the use of the
new functionality.
- Update the (c) year on the affected source files.
that the MSI mapping window is fixed at 0xfee00000 and the capability
does not include two more dwords used to program the address. Supporting
this mostly results in quieting spurious warnings during boot about
non-default MSI mapping windows.
- HT 2.00b also added a new HT capability type, so support that in pciconf.
MFC after: 3 days
Tested by: jmg
- The '-c' option now takes a comma-separated list of CPU
numbers, or a literal '*' denoting all CPUs in the system.
Subsequent system PMCs are allocated on the CPUs so specified.
Change the default behaviour to allocate system PMCs on all CPUs,
not just CPU 0.
Update the manual page and add an example of how to use the new
functionality.
- Attach PMCs to a (commandline) child process more reliably. This
fixes a long standing bug in counting events incurred by short-lived
processes.
1) The man page should describe the code, not the other way around.
2) Internal variables should not be documented or exposed, except in
controlled circumstances (i.e. - That's what the -C flag is for).
The variable should have been saved to the config file in save_config().
3) The next available userid doesn't get automatically updated. The
end-result is the same (user gets added with the correct uid),
but in an interactive session the default uid doesn't get updated in
the display.
So,
o Use the uidstart variable instead of uuid (bug #3)
o Actually save the variable to adduser.conf (bug #2)
o (bug #1 to be fixed in an upcomming commit to adduser.conf.5)
MFC After: 2 weeks
* Build with or without INET, INET6, or KVM features.
* When built without KVM, the sysctl-based getifmaddrs() function
is used as the back-end for the utility.
* Reflect the fact that FreeBSD now uses the in_multi refcount as
a true refcount.
* Style.
The utility may now be run without super-user privilege, albeit with
a less detailed display, equivalent to that of the soon-to-be-retired
netstat -g host-mode output.
MFC after: 3 weeks
unmount jail-friendly file systems from within a jail.
Precisely it grants PRIV_VFS_MOUNT, PRIV_VFS_UNMOUNT and
PRIV_VFS_MOUNT_NONUSER privileges for a jailed super-user.
It is turned off by default.
A jail-friendly file system is a file system which driver registers
itself with VFCF_JAIL flag via VFS_SET(9) API.
The lsvfs(1) command can be used to see which file systems are
jail-friendly ones.
There currently no jail-friendly file systems, ZFS will be the first one.
In the future we may consider marking file systems like nullfs as
jail-friendly.
Reviewed by: rwatson