the existence of the __gnuc_va_list type[*] because our compiler is GCC.
[*] __gnuc_va_list is defined in the GCC ginclude/stdarg.h replacement
headerwhich we don't use.
- Only release Giant in trap() if we locked it, otherwise we could release
Giant in a kernel trap if we didn't get it for a page fault and the
previous frame had grabbed the lock.
- Only get Giant for !MP safe syscalls.
Have sys/net/route.c:rtrequest1(), which takes ``rt_addrinfo *''
as the argument. Pass rt_addrinfo all the way down to rtrequest1
and ifa->ifa_rtrequest. 3rd argument of ifa->ifa_rtrequest is now
``rt_addrinfo *'' instead of ``sockaddr *'' (almost noone is
using it anyways).
Benefit: the following command now works. Previously we needed
two route(8) invocations, "add" then "change".
# route add -inet6 default ::1 -ifp gif0
Remove unsafe typecast in rtrequest(), from ``rtentry *'' to
``sockaddr *''. It was introduced by 4.3BSD-Reno and never
corrected.
Obtained from: BSD/OS, NetBSD
MFC after: 1 month
PR: kern/28360
- Report destination address of a P2P link when servicing
routing socket messages.
- Report interface name, address, and destination address
of a P2P link when servicing NET_RT_{DUMP,FLAGS} sysctls.
Part of CSRG revision 8.6 coresponds to revision 1.12.
CSRG revision 8.7 corresponds to revision 1.15.
been misled to believe by unknown parties. It probably *should* be an option,
but the runtime value is controlled by a tunable, which Ought To Be Enough.
Use the normal interrupt handler (npx_intr()) instead of a special
probe-time interrupt handler, although this causes problems due to
the bus_teardown_intr() not actually even tearing down the interrupt
(these problems were avoided by doing interrupt attachment for the
special interrupt handler directly). Fixed minor bitrot in comments.
The reason for the npxprobe()/npxprobe1() split mostly went away at
about the same time it was made (in 1992 or 1993 just before the
beginning of history). 386BSD ran all probes with interrupts completely
masked, and I didn't want to disturb this when I added an irq probe
to npxprobe(). An irq (not necessarily npx) must be acked for at least
external npx's to take the cpu out of the wait state that it enters
when an npx error occurs, so the probe must be done with a suitable
irq unmasked. npxprobe() went to great lengths to unmask precisely
the npx irq.
Running probes with all interrupts masked was never really needed in
FreeBSD, since FreeBSD always masked interrupts well enough using
splhigh(), but it wasn't until rev.1.48 (1995/12/12) of autoconf.c
that all probes were run with CPU interrupts enabled. This permits
npxprobe() to probe its irq using normal interrupt resources. Note
that most drivers still can't depend on this. It depends on the
interrupt handler being fast and the irq not being shared.
lost when the buggy code goes away completely:
- don't assume that the npx irq number is >= 8. Rev.1.73 only reversed
part of the hard-coding of it to 13 in rev.1.66.
- backed out the part of rev.1.84 that added a highly confused comment
about an enable_intr() being "highly bogus". The whole reason for
existence of npxprobe() (separate from the main probe, npxprobe1())
is to handle the complications to make this enable_intr() safe.
- backed out the part of rev.1.94 that modified npxprobe(). It mainly
broke the enable_intr() to restore_intr(). Restoring the interrupt
state in a nested way is precisely what is not wanted here. It was
harmless in practice because npxprobe() is called with interrupts
enabled, so restoring the interrupt state enables interrupts. Most
of npxprobe() is a no-op for the same reason...
argument names match those on Alpha.
o Map the fchown directly to FreeBSD. Since the old version of
fchown is also mapped to the native fchown, give the new one
type NODEF.
Tested by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
to work, but haven't really due to subtle differences in structs etc.
This is still not perfect (some ioctls are still known not to work, while
others haven't been tested at all), but it's enough to get Debian's ifconfig
to produce relatively sane output.
More work will be needed to get all ioctls (or at least a reasonable subset)
working, and to support the Cisco Aironet config tool mentioned in the PR.
PR: 26546
Submitted by: Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.com>