multicast group memberships. This is not actually operative
at the moment (a lot of other code still needs to be changed), but
this seemed like a useful reference point to check in so that
others (i.e. Bill Fenner) have fair warning of where we are going.
> <sys/param.h> doesn't include <sys/time.h>
>
> I removed the NAPM check since it's wasteful to check twice. apmprobe()
> checks the unit number, and that's the right check.
Submitted by: bde
swapgeneric.c hasn't had anything to do with swapping for some time.
It just makes the -a boot option actually work, and breaks the static
configuration of rootdev and dumpdev. It should be reorganized to
only support -a.
etc..), plus add a better display suspend function.
- Changed the Copyright's to reflect the new 'jp.FreeBSD.org' email
address.
Submitted by: nate & HOSOKAWA, Tatsumi <hosokawa@jp.FreeBSD.org>
NCR driver dies when "xmcd" accesses the CD-ROM drive
Restrict cacheing of INQUIRY results to LUN 0.
Thanks to Dave Huang <khym@bga.com> for reporting the problem
and suggesting a fix, though I chose a slightly different one.
- the operands for bt, bts, arpl and `enter' were reversed.
- btr was reported as bts (with the correct operand order).
- cmpxchg was misplaced. It was misplaced differently in the
comments. It is misplaced differently again in the i486 manual.
I put it where the i586 manual and gas say it is.
- fucompp was misplaced.
- the rr table for(s) some versions of fstp, fcom and fcomp was non-null.
This caused some invalid opcodes to be reported as "" instead of as
"<bad instruction>".
- the word and long versions of the fi* instructions were reversed.
- aaa and daa were reversed.
Fixed bugs involving unusual operand sizes:
- 32-bit registers weren't always forced for bswap or for moves to and
from special registers.
- the operand sizes weren't reported for [l]call or [l]jmp.
- displacements weren't truncated mod 2^16 when the operand size was
16-bit.
- too-large displacements and offsets were fetched, and too-large
offsets were reported, when the operand size was 16-bit.
- sign extended immediate bytes were extended too far when the operand
size was 16-bit.
Fixed bugs involving usual operand sizes:
- 8-bit source registers weren't forced for mov[sz]b[wl].
- 16-bit source registers weren't forced for mov[sz]w[wl].
- immediate bytes were sometimes reported as sign extended even for
byte operations. Same for immediate words in word operations.
- the immediate byte was not reported as sign extended for `push'.
Finished Pentium support:
- cpuid, cmpxchg8b and rsm were missing.
Finished i287 support:
- fneni, fndisi and fsetpm were missing. These are harmless nops on
later FPUs.
Improvements:
- report invalid opcodes 0xd6 and 0xf1 using .byte. They are special
in not causing invalid operand exceptions when executed.
- report the immediate byte for unusual aam and aad instuctions.
Immediate bytes other than 0x0a always worked and are documented to
work on Pentiums.
wdparams from short into u_short. If wdp_cylinders is short, it
overflows and cause serious sign extension bug when large IDE HDD is
used. These members are only used for initialization of u_long
variables in both 3.0-current and RELENG_2_2 branch.
I believe this should be in 2.2.
Reviewed by: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
address+0x1000) into 0xdc000 (BIOS ROM base address).
(2) Add sample line for Logitec LHA-20x SCSI card.
(3) Change I/O port address of ed8 (C-NET(98) card) from 0x00d0 into
0x03d0 (vendor default).
Submitted by: Michio "Karl" Jibo <karl@marcer.nagaokaut.ac.jp>
This code was sent to me by Bruce Evans, and seems to fix some
possible kernel panic in case of an execution error. It did not
cause any problems on my system, but I did never observe the
problem this patch is supposed to fix, anyway.
This patch is a NOP, unless the kernel is built with "options
USER_LDT", and doesn't affect the GENERIC kernel for this reason.
I want to have it in 2.2: it fixes a bug ...
Submitted by: bde
anymore with the "full" collapse fix that we added about 1yr ago!!! The
code has been removed by optioning it out for now, so we can put it back
in ASAP if any problems are found.
and objects. Previously, "fancy" memory management techniques
such as that used by the M3 RTS would have the tendancy of chopping
up processes allocated memory into lots of little objects. Alan
has come up with some improvements to migtigate the sitution to
the point where even the M3 RTS only has one object for bss and
it's managed memory (when running CVSUP.) (There are still cases where the
situation isn't improved when the system pages -- but this is much much
better for the vast majority of cases.) The system will now be able
to much more effectively merge map entries.
Submitted by: Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
if you do:
% cd /nfsdir
% mkdir -p foo/foo
% mv foo/foo .
nfs_sillyrename() self-destructs if you try to sillyrename a directory,
however nfs_rename() can be coerced into doing just that by the above
sequence of commands. To avoid this, nfs_rename() now checks that
v_type of the 'destination' vnode != VDIR before attempting the
sillyrename. The server correctly handles this particular situation
by returning ENOTEMPTY on the rename() attempt.
I asked if this was the correct fix for this on -hackers but nobody
ever answered.
This is a 2.2 candidate.
taken from the voxware-3.5 distribution. Also some changes to the SB
and MPU IRQs to reflect more common/default settings.
Submitted-By: Brian Campbell <brianc@netrover.com>
at device attach time, instead of allocating and freeing buffers as
necessary. But he or she forgot to remove the line that invalidated
the buffer when the device is closed. Therefore, after using the
device for the first time, the buffer was incorrectly invalidated and
that caused a page fault on the second, and subsequent uses.
Closes PR # kern/2319: Using Genius GS-4500 scanner...
Submitted by: jmrueda@diatel.upm.es (Javier Martmn Rueda)
suffering a bad case neglect for the last few years.
- Add full prototypes, including to function pointers.
- Make the wire protocols 64-bit type safe, eg: 32 bit quantities are
int32_t, not long. The orginal rpc code was implemented when an int
could be 16 bits.
Obtained from: a diff of FreeBSD vs. OpenBSD/NetBSD rpc code.
also implies VM_PROT_EXEC. We support it that way for now,
since the break system call by default gives VM_PROT_ALL. Now
we have a better chance of coalesing map entries when mixing
mmap/break type operations. This was contributing to excessive
numbers of map entries on the modula-3 runtime system. The
problem is still not "solved", but the situation makes more
sense.
Eventually, when we work on architectures where VM_PROT_READ
is orthogonal to VM_PROT_EXEC, we will have to visit this
issue carefully (esp. regarding security issues.)
maps. Additionally, eliminate the map->hint distortion
associated with useracc. That may/may-not be the "right"
thing to do -- but time will tell.
Submitted by: Partially by Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
Firstly, now our read-ahead clustering is on a file descriptor basis and not
on a per-vnode basis. This will allow multiple processes reading the
same file to take advantage of read-ahead clustering. Secondly, there
previously was a problem with large reads still using the ramp-up
algorithm. Of course, that was bogus, and now we read the entire
"chunk" off of the disk in one operation. The read-ahead clustering
algorithm should use less CPU than the previous also (I hope :-)).
NOTE: THAT LKMS MUST BE REBUILT!!!
Firstly, now our read-ahead clustering is on a file descriptor basis and not
on a per-vnode basis. This will allow multiple processes reading the
same file to take advantage of read-ahead clustering. Secondly, there
previously was a problem with large reads still using the ramp-up
algorithm. Of course, that was bogus, and now we read the entire
"chunk" off of the disk in one operation. The read-ahead clustering
algorithm should use less CPU than the previous also (I hope :-)).
vm_map_simplify and vm_map_simplify_entry. Make vm_map_simplify_entry
handle wired maps so that we can get rid of vm_map_simplify. Modify
the callers of vm_map_simplify to properly use vm_map_simplify_entry.
Submitted by: Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
has the negative effect of disabling some map optimizations. This
patch defers the creation of the object until it needs to be at fault time.
Submitted by: Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
is still broken - it doesn't restore the floating point state.
2.2-BETA users should disable it using npx0 flags 0x04 the same as
2.2-ALPHA users should have.
successful write. Only do it for the IO_SYNC case (like ufs). On
one of my systems, this speeds up `iozone 24 512' from 32K/sec
(1/128 as fast as ufs) to 2.8MB/sec (7/10 as fast as ufs).
Obtained from: partly from NetBSD
the START UNIT command before testing whether the device is ready.
Maybe it should be done even earlier, i'm not 100 % sure.
Again, CD changers will most likely benefit from it.
While i was at it, also made the debugging case a little more verbose
about why the cdopen() yielded an ENXIO. (Only in effect when
SCSIDEBUG is specified.)
Should eventually also go into 2.2.
error code with ASC/ASCQ 4/1 (``Logical unit is in the process of
becoming ready'') non-fatal. Retry the operation until it will
eventually either yield a real error condition, or finally succeed.
Devices like CD changers or tape drives with a freshly inserted
cartridge should benefit from this.
Should go into 2.2 after some testing in -current. I'd like to see
this in the release if possible.
Closes PR # kern/1065.
While i was at it, also reject IO requests that are not an integer
multiple of the device blocksize.
Submitted by: vak@crox.net.kiae.su (Serge V.Vakulenko)
Confirmed by: Georg-W. Koltermann (gwk@cray.com)
workings of #error in particular. He also broke the 2.2 build with this
change, leading me to wonder whether or not the changes were ever even
tested. Folks, I'm happy to see people work directly on 2.2 like
this and will continue to encourage Nate to make direct commits, but
please TEST before committing! I think that's a more than reasonable
prerequisite, and this code could never have worked at all, leading me to
believe that Nate skipped this most basic of steps.
Don't allow people to use the 'dedicated' drivers at the same time as
the generic support code, as it can cause all sorts of problems
including kernel crashes.
[ definite 2.2 material ]
after the first found, if multiple LUNs are tried.
Change probe message to just the SCSI chip id,
similar to what the NCR driver prints.
Change the driver name to "amd" in all places.
Thanks to Nick Sayer <nsayer@quack.kfu.com> for
doing some debugging, for sending a boot message
log that shows the driver is functional, and for
pointing out there still were places that needed
the driver name to be corrected.
Broke locking on named pipes in the same way as locking on non-vnodes
(wrong errno). This will be fixed later.
The fix involves negative logic. Named pipes are now distinguished from
other types of files with vnodes, and there is additional code to handle
vnodes and named pipes in the same way only where that makes sense (not
for lseek, locking or TIOCSCTTY).
fcntl() and EOPNOTSUPP for flock(). POSIX specifies the weaker EINVAL
errno and the man page agrees.
Not fixed:
deadfs: always returns wrong EBADF
devfs, msdosfs: always return sometimes-wrong EINVAL
cd9660, fdesc, kernfs, portal: always return sometimes-wrong EOPNOTSUPP
procfs: always returns wrong EIO
mfs: panic?!
nfs: fudged
NetBSD uses a generic file system genfs to do return the sometimes-wrong
EOPNOTSUPP more consistently :-)(.
Found by: NIST-PCTS
- C++ should be supported for application functions (use __BEGIN_DECLS,
etc.).
- prototypes should be sorted.
- comments on #endif's should spell identifiers the same as the code.
- comments on #endif's should have the same sense as the code (use `!'
to match ifndef, etc.).
> wollman 96/12/10 09:19:15
>
> Modified: lib/libc/net ether_addr.c ethers.3
> Log:
> Get struct ether_addr directly from <net/ethernet.h> rather than pulling
> in lots of unrelated junk from <net/if.h> and <net/if_ether.h>. These
> functions still aren't prototyped anywhere (but should be in
> <net/ethernet.h>---got that, Bill?).
(Note that this file has no copyright header; one should probably
be added.)
This makes unexpected faults (in an interrupt handler) more likely
to crash properly. It could be done even better (more robustly and
more efficiently) using lazy fault handling.
They were garbage that happened to be 0 in many cases. (real_to_prot()
happens to leave the value of the real-mode %cr0 in %eax and the
memory-size BIOS calls usually don't touch the upper bits of %eax.
The upper 16 bits of %cr0 are usually 0 at boot time, at least on
486's.
Should be in 2.2.
configure() where it always belonged. It was originally slightly
misplaced after configure(). Rev.138 left it completely misplaced
before the DEVFS, DRIVERS and CONFIGURE sysinits by not moving it
together with configure().
Restored the printing of bootinfo.bi_n_bios_used now that it can
be nonzero.
was found, or if there was a checksum mismatch.
This patch should allow the driver to be used with any AMD 53c974
based SCSI card, or with the AMD SCSI+Ethernet Combo Chip found on
some motherboards.
Use the interface MTU instead of the constant when deciding what
packets to accept.
Allow using the SIOCSIFMTU ioctl (e.g. "ifconfig tun0 mtu XXX") to
set the MTU.