either what's in NVRAM or what the safe defaults would be if we lack NVRAM.
Then we rename cur_XXXX to actv_XXXX (these are the currently active settings)
and the dev_XXX settings to goal_XXXX (these are the settings which we want
cur_XXXX to converge to).
This probably isn't entirely final as yet- but it's a lot closer to now
being what it should be, including allowing camcontrol to actually set
specific settings.
either what's in NVRAM or what the safe defaults would be if we lack NVRAM.
Then we rename cur_XXXX to actv_XXXX (these are the currently active settings)
and the dev_XXX settings to goal_XXXX (these are the settings which we want
cur_XXXX to converge to).
Roll core minor.
either what's in NVRAM or what the safe defaults would be if we lack NVRAM.
Then we rename cur_XXXX to actv_XXXX (these are the currently active settings)
and the dev_XXX settings to goal_XXXX (these are the settings which we want
cur_XXXX to converge to).
Handle both old and new TARGIOALLOCUNIT/TARGIOFREEUNIT cases- the new
one allows us to specify inquiry data we want to use.
Handle more of the CAM_DIS_DISCONNECT case.
Move TARGCTLIOALLOCUNIT to OTARGCTLIOALLOCUNIT, TARGCTLIOFREEUNIT
to OTARGCTLIOFREEUNIT and redefine old associated structure to be
old_ioc_alloc_unit- deprecation but preservation of binaries.
Add new structure for same- but this one contains a pointer to
user defined INQUIRY data so you can define what the target
device looks like to the outside world.
1. If we get frozen, unfreeze for disable disconnects.
2. Put CAM_DIS_DISCONNECT commands at the head of the work queue
(we have a target still connected and we can't run anything else
until this command completes).
If we had an error sending the last CTIO, unfreeze the queue anyway.
resources it is attempting to assign to a child object. This should
help people track down mysterious resource allocation problems more
easily.
# Unfortunately, it is harder to do the conflict check and report which
# resource failed if the driver itself doesn't.
because it shares ufs code. In ufs_fhtovp(), the test on i_effnlink
is invalid because ext2fs does not maintain this field. In ufs_close(),
i_effnlink is also tested, to determines whether or not to call
vn_start_write(). The ufs_fhtovp issue breaks NFS exporting of
ext2fs filesystems; I believe the other is harmless.
Fix both cases by checking um_i_effnlink_valid in the ufsmount
struct, and use i_nlink if necessary.
Noticed by: bde
Reviewed by: mckusick, bde
size (previously, the transfer size would be rounded up to a multiple of
the block size, which would overflow the buffer).
This fixes panics when doing things like trying to mount audio CD's.
PR: kern/21946
Review Timeout: sos
with NetBSD and OpenBSD. glob(3) will now return GLOB_NOSPACE with
errno set to 0 instead of GLOB_LIMIT when we match more than `gl_matchc'
patterns. GLOB_MAXPATH has been left as an alias of GLOB_LIMIT to
maintain backwards compatibility.
Reviewed by: sheldonh, assar
Obtained from: NetBSD/OpenBSD
proxy specification, which seems to be valid according to the man page.
Change the logic to consider "hostname:port" a hostname and port instead
of a file URL.
Approved by: des
already allow this for NFS swap configured via BOOTP, so it is
known to work fine.
For many diskless configurations is is more flexible to have the
client set up swapping itself; it can recreate a sparse swap file
to save on server space for example, and it works with a non-NFS
root filesystem such as an in-kernel filesystem image.
However, there's still a bug in login.c
because you copy the environment *before* the call to pam_open_session,
which won't set the necessary variables set by /usr/ports/security/pam_ssh.
Submitted by: Volker Stolz <stolz@hyperion.informatik.rwth-aachen.de>
I didn't do this when I merged the delta to RELENG_4 because I thought
&merged; didn't apply to contributed software since there is one entry
per application which gets updated with the new version number, as
opposed to all the other programs, which get one entry per update.
However, the previous commit removed &merged; from the IPFilter entry,
so perhaps I just didn't look long enough when I did the tcpdump
merge.