in_pcbconnect() called in_pcbconnect_setup(). This version performs
all of the functions of in_pcbconnect() except for the final
committing of changes to the PCB. In the case of an EADDRINUSE error
it can also provide to the caller the PCB of the duplicate connection,
avoiding an extra in_pcblookup_hash() lookup in tcp_connect().
This change will allow the "temporary connect" hack in udp_output()
to be removed and is part of the preparation for adding the
IP_SENDSRCADDR control message.
Discussed on: -net
Approved by: re
which may surprise developers coming from Solaris, or other platforms
which have a similar interface, but slightly different rules.
Reviewed by: jhb, ru
and save/restore during a context switch.
The USER_SR could be overwritten when the current thread was switched
out with a faulting copyin/copyout.
Approved by: Benno
memory while mapping a virtual address to a physical address.
This allows us to work with virtual addresses for page tables,
provided it doesn't cause infinite recursion. Currently all
page tables are direct mapped.
instead of the default biba/high, mls/low, making it easier to use
ptys with these policies. This isn't the final solution, but does
help.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
to bring in the new MAC label management API. With the new API
revision, we have only policy-agnostic code in libc and the base
kernel.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
We are seeing "/usr/libexec/ld-elf.so.1: groff: too few PT_LOAD segments",
however it appears that there really is only one PT_LOAD segment in the groff
binary. It is unclear if `rtld' or `ld' is at fault here -- but using an
RELENG_4 `ld' binary allows one to build a working dynamic groff binary.
Submitted by: gallatin
pointer to a dumperinfo instead of di. A brainfart, surely. This
bug went unnoticed for all this time because the pointer is only
used by buf_write() when it can write a completely filled buffer
to the dump device. This depends on the number of memory chunks
that needs to be dumped. This has apparently been low enough that
it has never happened up until this point.
contents. The code was subtracting two unsigned ints, stored the
result in a log and expected it to be the same as of a signed
subtraction; this does only work on platforms where int and long
have the same size (due to overflows).
Instead, cast to long before the subtraction; the numbers are
guaranteed to be small enough so that there will be no overflows
because of that.
Remove the never completed _IP_VHL version, it has not caught on
anywhere and it would make us incompatible with other BSD netstacks
to retain this version.
Add a CTASSERT protecting sizeof(struct ip) == 20.
Don't let the size of struct ipq depend on the IPDIVERT option.
This is a functional no-op commit.
Approved by: re
creation by GCC-2.6.3. Casting pointers to unsigned char
to volatile pointers to unsigned char seemed to produce
better results on the ia32 architecture with old versions
of GCC.
The current FreeBSD system compiler GCC-3.2.1 emits
better sign extension code for non-volatile variables:
volatile char c;
int i = c;
is compiled to:
...
movb -1(%ebp), %al
movbsl %al, %eax
movl %eax, -8(%ebp)
...
char c;
int i = c;
is compiled to:
...
movbsl -1(%ebp), %eax
movl %eax, -8(%ebp)
...
The same holds for zero-extension of dereferenced pointers
to volatile unsigned char.
When compiled on alpha or sparc64, the code produced for the
two examples above does not differ.
labeling checks and operations as with other network interfaces.
Eventually, if it proves desirable, we might want to offer special
casing of this or other tunnel interfaces where we have an existing
label of interest, rather than treating it as though it's an
entirely fresh mbuf in the incoming/outgoing encapsulation directions.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories