allocate a blank cred first, lock the process, perform checks on the
old process credential, copy the old process credential into the new
blank credential, modify the new credential, update the process
credential pointer, unlock the process, and cleanup rather than trying
to allocate a new credential after performing the checks on the old
credential.
- Cleanup _setugid() a little bit.
- setlogin() doesn't need Giant thanks to pgrp/session locking and
td_ucred.
FIFO or the in-RAM descriptors it will switch to RX_IDLE from where it
is not restarted.
We used to deal with RX_IDLE by doing a total reinit but this lost
our link and caused a potential 30sec autonegotiation against
switches. This was changed to a less heavyhanded approach, but this
failed to restart the receiver it it were in the RX_IDLE state.
This change adds the RX_IDLE and the RX_FIFO_OFLOW conditions as
triggers for interrupts and receive side processing, and restarts
the receiver when it is RX_IDLE.
Remove the #ifdef notyet'ed nge_rxeoc() function.
Sponsored by: Cybercity Internet, Denmark.
MFC after: 7 days
and acquire the proctree_lock if needed first. Then we lock the process
if necessary and fiddle with it as appropriate. Finally we drop locks and
do any needed copyout's. This greatly simplifies the locking.
belong to a user virtual address; while this happens to work on some
architectures, it can't on sparc64, since user and kernel virtual
address spaces overlap there (the distinction between them is done via
separate address space identifiers).
Instead, look up the page in the vm_map of the process in question.
Reviewed by: jake
(apparently by markus@, at least committed by him). This has the
advantage of not using the bad IV's from Fluhrer/Mantin/Shamir as well
as bringing the drivers a little closer together.
Also use a few constants in place of magic numbers in one place.
Obtained from: OpenBSD 1.25, 1.28, 1.36, 1.38, 1.42
time we tell CAM to rescan the bus. Together with the previous patch
this should avoid the problem where the devices would wedge because they
got spoken to over two different pipes.
Tested by: Tomas Pluskal <plusik@pohoda.cz>
up the module_path string, we would walk one past the end of the buffer.
This hurting ia64 originally, but it was probably also happening on i386
occasionally as well. The effects were usually harmless, it would add
bogus "binary" search directories to the places it actually looked for
files.
the S_IFREG bit for regular files. This caused the path search code to
skip it when it finally did find the kernel (after the common/module.c
buffer overrun bug was fixed)