available to the user. Should be applicable to all branches and versions
where est(4) exists.
thanks to gjb for reviewing and suggesting nits
Reviewed by: gjb@
MFC after: 2 weeks
local.9600. Whilst the actual binary termios(4) definitions and preceeding
comments for local.9600 indicate that parity is disabled, getty(8)
internally simulates parity based on the presence or absence of the 'np'
flag.
PR: conf/76226
Submitted by: peter
Approved by: grog (co-mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
improve upon the system by giving the user a "Help" button instead of requiring
the user to press F1.
NOTE: In FreeBSD-9 and higher, dialog(1) does not support the F1 hook, so the
mechanism for providing help to the user had to be changed to a button.
This now means we can resurrect *.hlp files from usr.sbin/sysinstall/help/ as-
is and reusing them as-needed in bsdconfig (holding to the goal of losing as
little functionality from sysinstall as possible).
Reviewed by: adrian (co-mentor)
Approved by: adrian (co-mentor)
system mtree files via a LOCAL_MTREE variable which contains a list of
mtree files to be applyed along with the base mtree files to the tmp root
and DESTDIR.
GIANT from VFS. In addition, disconnect also netsmb, which is a base
requirement for SMBFS.
In the while SMBFS regular users can use FUSE interface and smbnetfs
port to work with their SMBFS partitions.
Also, there are ongoing efforts by vendor to support in-kernel smbfs,
so there are good chances that it will get relinked once properly locked.
This is not targeted for MFC.
doesn't automatically clear when VDD rises above Vlow again and needs to be
cleared manually. However, apparently this needs all of the time registers
to be set, i.e. pcf8563_settime(), and not just PCF8563_R_SECOND in order
for PCF8563_R_SECOND_VL to stick. Thus, we just issue a warning during
pcf8563_attach() rather than failing with ENXIO in case it is set.
MFC after: 3 days
This eliminates the need to manage queue depth at the nvd(4) level for
Chatham prototype board workarounds, and also adds the ability to
accept a number of requests on a single qpair that is much larger
than the number of trackers allocated.
Sponsored by: Intel
nvme_ctrlr_submit_io_request().
While here, also fix case where a uio may have more than 1 iovec.
NVMe's definition of SGEs (called PRPs) only allows for the first SGE to
start on a non-page boundary. The simplest way to handle this is to
construct a temporary uio for each iovec, and submit an NVMe request
for each.
Sponsored by: Intel
from an NVMe consumer.
This allows us to mostly build NVMe command buffers without holding the
qpair lock, and also allows for future queueing of nvme_request objects
in cases where the submission queue is full and no nvme_tracker objects
are available.
Sponsored by: Intel
This simplifies the driver significantly where it is constructing
commands to be submitted to hardware. By reducing the number of
PRPs (NVMe parlance for SGE) from 128 to 32, it ensures we do not
allocate too much memory for more common smaller I/O sizes, while
still supporting up to 128KB I/O sizes.
This also paves the way for pre-allocation of nvme_tracker objects
for each queue which will simplify the I/O path even further.
Sponsored by: Intel