page directory.
- Use these instead of the magic constants 1 or PAGE_SIZE where appropriate.
There are still numerous assumptions that the page directory is exactly
1 page.
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
without waiting, since they are called from a system-call context only.
This appears to fix all sorts of problems with open("/dev/dsp", O_WRONLY)
randomly returning ENXIO.
Found by: cognet
Security improvements:
- Increase the size of each syncookie secret from 32 to 128 bits
in order to make brute force attacks on the secrets much more
difficult.
- Always return the lowest order dword from the MD5 hash; this
allows us to expose 2 more bits of the cookie and makes ACK
floods which seek to guess the cookie value more difficult.
Performance improvements:
- Increase the lifetime of each syncookie from 4 seconds to 16
seconds. This increases the usefulness of syncookies during
an attack.
- From Yahoo!: Reduce the number of calls to MD5Update; this
results in a ~17% increase in cookie generation time here.
Reviewed by: hsu, jayanth, jlemon, nectar
MFC After: 15 seconds
in massive locking issues on diskless systems.
It is also not clear that this sysctl is non-dangerous in its
requirements for locked down memory on large RAM systems.
into a child process. Rather than closing the discriptors manually,
mark all discriptors as close-on-exec.
PR: 47694
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
we don't leak memory. Only one of these two cases (reconfig) actually
causes a leak because the other is usually followed by an exec.
PR: 46845
Reviewed by: David Wang <dsw@juniper.net>
MFC after: 2 weeks
type M_STRING, now defined in malloc.h. Useful when string parsing
must occur using the kernel strsep() and we want to avoid toasting
the source string.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
should be done in crypto_done rather than in the callback thread
o use this flag to mark operations from /dev/crypto since the callback
routine just does a wakeup; this eliminates the last unneeded ctx switch
o change CRYPTO_F_NODELAY to CRYPTO_F_BATCH with an inverted meaning
so "0" becomes the default/desired setting (needed for user-mode
compatibility with openbsd)
o change crypto_dispatch to honor CRYPTO_F_BATCH instead of always
dispatching immediately
o remove uses of CRYPTO_F_NODELAY
o define COP_F_BATCH for ops submitted through /dev/crypto and pass
this on to the op that is submitted
Similar changes and more eventually coming for asymmetric ops.
MFC if re gives approval.
branch targets that are too far apart for the BRADDR relocation.
This is caused by the branch prediction optimizationi in the atomic
inlines here, because they jump across sections.
The workaround is to suppress jumping to a different section when
compiling LINT. To generate correct code in that case, the section
directives are replaced by a branch and a label to deal with the
fall-through case. Reasonably good C compilers will optimize this
away anyway, so the end result isn't really that bad.