actually in the kernel. This structure is a different size than
what is currently in -CURRENT, but should hopefully be the last time
any application breakage is caused there. As soon as any major
inconveniences are removed, the definition of the in-kernel struct
ucred should be conditionalized upon defined(_KERNEL).
This also changes struct export_args to remove dependency on the
constantly-changing struct ucred, as well as limiting the bounds
of the size fields to the correct size. This means: a) mountd and
friends won't break all the time, b) mountd and friends won't crash
the kernel all the time if they don't know what they're doing wrt
actual struct export_args layout.
Reviewed by: bde
Add new PRC_UNREACH_ADMIN_PROHIB in sys/sys/protosw.h
Remove condition on TCP in src/sys/netinet/ip_icmp.c:icmp_input
In src/sys/netinet/ip_icmp.c:icmp_input set code = PRC_UNREACH_ADMIN_PROHIB
or PRC_UNREACH_HOST for all unreachables except ICMP_UNREACH_NEEDFRAG
Rename sysctl icmp_admin_prohib_like_rst to icmp_unreach_like_rst
to reflect the fact that we also react on ICMP unreachables that
are not administrative prohibited. Also update the comments to
reflect this.
In sys/netinet/tcp_subr.c:tcp_ctlinput add code to treat
PRC_UNREACH_ADMIN_PROHIB and PRC_UNREACH_HOST different.
PR: 23986
Submitted by: Jesper Skriver <jesper@skriver.dk>
case there is nothing to do. This happens normally when the card shares
the interrupt line with other devices.
This code saves a couple of microseconds per interrupt even on a
fast CPU. You normally would not care, except under heavy tinygram
traffic where you can have some 50-100.000 interrupts per second...
On passing, correct a spelling error.
lookup vop so that it defaulted to using vop_eopnotsupp for strange
lookups like the ones for open("/dev/null/", ...) and stat("/dev/null/",
...). This mainly caused the wrong errno to be returned by vfs syscalls
(EOPNOTSUPP is not in POSIX, and is not documented in connection with
specfs in open.2 and is not documented in stat.2 at all). Also, lookup
vops are apparently required to set *ap->a_vpp to NULL on error, but
vop_eopnotsupp is too broken to do this.
current_file_name and current_link_name sometimes point into the
middle of malloc()ed memory and sometimes point to alloca()ed memory,
but free() is sometimes called on them. This seems to be harmless
for the usual tar operations, but it is usually fatal for `tar -W'.
E.g., for `cd /etc; tar Wcf /tmp/foo rc', at the start of
verify_volume(), current_file_name points to alloca()ed memory, and
tar attempts to free it.
"FreeBSD.pfa" - the (postscript) font used to write "FreeBSD".
"beastie.fig" - a 4.3 BSD style Daemon in vector graphic.
"beastie.eps" - same converted to encapsulated postscript.
"poster.sh" - an example how to use this stuff.
"README" - the full story.