EC occasionally times out and provides bogus values (3000C). This change
prevents those systems from prematurely shutting down while we work on the
underlying problem. Also, bump the sanity value to 0...200C from 0...150C.
poll(2) or kqueue(2). Previously we rejected fd's higher than FD_SETSIZE
for kevent(2), and larger than sysconf(_SC_OPEN_MAX) for poll(2). However,
the check for poll(2) wasn't really needed. open(2) and socket(2) won't
return an fd you can't pass to either poll(2) or kevent(2). This fixes
a but where gethostbyname() would fail if you had more than 1023 files
open in a process.
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: ume
Found by: ps
paper over catching an error as the case was already handled, albeit
in a somewhat surprising way (the caller received zero'd data)
Submitted by: sephe
MFC after: 2 weeks
by any code in the tree[1] and are close enough for common values
that this change is a noop
[1] ath uses one macro to calculate a value that is not used
Submitted by: sephe
MFC after: 1 week
child thread goes back to system scope rather than process
scope. This allows an ensuing exec() to actually work.
This change was made a year ago here, but I "forgot" to
commit it :(
Approved by: deischen
MFC after: 3 weeks
This is for better compatibility with other environments (Linux, Solaris,
HP-UX, AIX and Tru64 support these options).
PR: bin/109924
MFC after: 1 week
- Remove also "MP SAFE" after prior "MPSAFE" pass. (suggested by bde)
- Remove extra blank lines in some cases.
- Add extra blank lines in some cases.
- Remove no-op comments consisting solely of the function name, the word
"syscall", or the system call name.
- Add punctuation.
- Re-wrap some comments.
to problems when the geli device is used with file system or as a swap.
Hopefully will prevent problems like kern/98742 in the future.
MFC after: 1 week
Add IMPLEMENTATION NOTES section explaining in detail the effect this
system call has in common use cases involving PF_INET and PF_INET6 sockets.
PR: kern/84761
MFC after: 2 days
While here, remove Xrefs to all other wlan drivers except the Intel ones,
these often get confused. Also remove pointers to the old ipw and iwi webpages,
they don't include any useful information that's not in the manpages yet.
Reviewed by: flz, ru
RTC state, then it may clobber the RTC index register, so the index
register must be restored before using it to restore control registers
in rtc_restore().
The following problems remain:
- rtc_restore() is only called if pmtimer is configured. Buggy
suspend/resumes are more likely to clobber the index register than
a control register, so pmtimer is more needed than it used to be.
- pmtimer doesn't exist for amd64.
- Restoring of the RTC state may race with rtcintr(). If an RTC
interrupt is handled before the state is restored, then rtcin(RTC_INTR)
in rtcintr() may read from the wrong register, so rtcintr() may spin
forever. This may be mitigated by the most common state clobbering
being to turn off RTC interrupts.
system calls now enter without Giant held, and then in some cases, acquire
Giant explicitly.
Remove a number of other MPSAFE annotations in the credential code and
tweak one or two other adjacent comments.
Add some comments to explain how 10 was picked. 20 was completely
arbitrary, at least 10 has some reasoning behind it.
Also, update the comments about how long we sleep to reflect the new,
shorter timeout we use.
behind _FREEFALL_CONFIG). This is done mainly to make NIS even more
resistant to packet loss.
This is not enabled by default for "normal" FreeBSD since it might cause
the server providing the RPC service to be hit heavily with RPC traffic
in case of problems. freefall.FreeBSD.org and hub.FreeBSD.org have been
running with a patch similar to this for a couple of weeks.
MFC after: 1 week
Discussed with: peter
- Remove unnecessary findcpuspeed() function.
- Initialize the timer_freq in i8254_init().
- Fix inittodr() and resettodr(). These are broken by rev.1.154.
packet loss when talking to a NIS server.
- Set 1 second retry timeout to further realistically handle UDP
packet loss for yp_next packet bursts. If the packet hasn't come
back within 1 second its rather unlikely to come back at all. There
is still back-off mechanism in RPC so if there is another reason
than packet loss for the lack of response within 1 second, the NIS
server will not be totally bombarded with requests.
This reduces the risk of NIS failing with:
yp_next: clnt_call: RPC: Timed out
considerably. This is mainly a problem if you have larger NIS maps
(like at FreeBSD.org) since enumerations of the lists will cause a UDP
packet bursts where a few packets being lost once in a while do
happen.
MFC after: 1 week
Discussed with: peter
Problem mainly diagnosed by: peter