from 1 megabyte of ram per user to 2 megabytes of ram per user, and
reduce the cap from 512 to 384. 512 leaves around 240 MB of KVM available
while 384 leaves 270 MB of KVM available. Available KVM is important
in order to deal with zalloc and kernel malloc area growth.
Reviewed by: mckusick
MFC: either before 4.5 if re's agree, or after 4.5
very first thing immediately following opielookup() does being entered, i.e.
look at this:
int opielookup FUNCTION((opie, principal), struct opie *opie AND char
*principal
)
{
int i;
memset(opie, 0, sizeof(struct opie));
...
usb.c: -r1.35 - 1.37
usb_port.h: tiny bit of -r1.26 + an extra bit in the FreeBSD config section.
revision 1.37
date: 2000/01/24 18:35:51; author: thorpej; state: Exp; lines: +7 -1
Use config_pending.
----------------------------
revision 1.36
date: 1999/12/22 23:54:09; author: augustss; state: Exp; lines: +2 -2
Use the flags `locator' to govern if devices are detected early or
late during cold boot.
----------------------------
revision 1.35
date: 1999/12/20 02:12:23; author: augustss; state: Exp; lines: +8 -5
Make sure tsleep() is not called during cold boot.
doesn't really make any difference, except it matches wtmp(5) better.
Don't do anything in pam_sm_close_session(); init(8) will take care of
utmp and wtmp when the tty is released. Clearing them here would make it
possible to create a ghost session by logging in, running 'login -f $USER'
and exiting the subshell.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs (but the bugs are all mine)
Chain caching is a feature of Linux-PAM, where pam_authenticate() and
pam_open_session() "freeze" the chain so that their companion
primitive (pam_setcred() and pam_close_session() respectively) will
call the exact same modules, skipping those that failed in the
previous call.
There are several reasons not to do this, the most prominent of which
is that it makes it impossible to call pam_setcred() without first
calling pam_authenticate() - which is perfectly valid according to
DCE/RFC 86.0 and XSSO, and is necessary to make 'login -f' work.
Instead of chain caching, implement something similar to the way
Solaris' libpam behaves: pam_setcred treats "sufficient" modules as if
they were "required", i.e. does not break the chain when they succeed.
PAM modules whose pam_sm_setcred() should not be called unless their
pam_sm_authenticate() succeeded can simply set a state variable using
pam_set_data() in pam_sm_authenticate(), and use pam_get_data() to
check it in pam_sm_setcred().
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
stead of after
2) Honour NO_TEST_UNIT_READY quirk for atapi devices as well
3) Actually support FujiFilm FinePix 6800 camera's. Will very likely also
work for other FinePix models.
Based on a debug session about half a year ago with Nik Hibma.
MFC after: 2 weeks
and sbrk's prototype from char *sbrk(int) to void *sbrk(intptr_t).
This makes us more consistant with NetBSD and standards which include
these functions. Bruce pointed out that ptrdiff_t would probably
have been better than intptr_t, but this doesn't match other
implimentations.
Also remove local declarations of sbrk and unnecessary casting.
PR: 32296
Tested by: Harti Brandt <brandt@fokus.gmd.de>
MFC after: 1 month
megabytes of additional space on the install CD. Given our premium
for space, I don't think this is a wise use of 30MB. HFS support was
not provided on the FreeBSD 4.4 CDs and I received a grand total of 0
complaints.
getpid, getuid, getgid and pipe, since they bootstrapped from
OSF/1 and never cleaned up. Switch to the native syscalls
on alpha so that the above functions work
MFC after: 7 days