Yes this really is rather silly and the implementation is overkill given
that you are only allowed one of them, but NetBSD implements cloning on
this device and it's a less cluttered example of cloning then most.
Note ALL MODULES MUST BE RECOMPILED
make the kernel aware that there are smaller units of scheduling than the
process. (but only allow one thread per process at this time).
This is functionally equivalent to teh previousl -current except
that there is a thread associated with each process.
Sorry john! (your next MFC will be a doosie!)
Reviewed by: peter@freebsd.org, dillon@freebsd.org
X-MFC after: ha ha ha ha
Allow non-superuser to open, listen to, and send safe commands on the
routing socket. Superuser priviledge is required for all commands
but RTM_GET.
Lose `setuid root' bit of route(8).
Reviewed by: wollman, dd
into sadb_x_sa2_sequence from sadb_x_sa2_reserved3 in the sadb_x_sa2
structure. Also the output of setkey is changed. sequence number
of the sadb is replaced to the end of the output.
Obtained from: KAME
particularly nice that IPSEC inserts a zero-length mbuf into the
chain, and that bug should be fixed too, but interfaces should be
robust to bad input.
Print the interface name when TUNDEBUG()ing about dropping an mbuf.
This is to be friendly with non-IPv6 peer (If the peer complains due to
lack of IPv6CP, drop IPv6CP). This basically implements "RXJ+" state
transition in the RFC.
Obtained from: NetBSD
effect, which would cause unnecessary route deletion:
* Unfortunately, this has the obnoxious
* property of also triggering for insertion /above/ a pre-existing network
* route and clones. Sigh. This may be fixed some day.
The effect has been even worse, because recent versions of route.c set
the parent rtentry for cloned routes from an interface-direct route.
For example, suppose that we have an interface "ne0" that has an IPv4
subnet "10.0.0.0/24". Then we may have a cloned route like 10.0.0.1
on the interface, whose parent route is 10.0.0.0/24 (to the interface
ne0). Now, when we add the default route (i.e. 0.0.0.0/0),
rt_fixchange() will remove the cloned route 10.0.0.1. The (bad) effect
also prevents rt_setgate from configuring rt_gwroute, which would not
be an intended behavior.
As suggested in the comments to rt_fixchange(), we need stricter check
in the function, to prevent unintentional route deletion.
This fix also solve the "IPV6 panic?" problem in nd6_timer().
Submitted by: JINMEI Tatuya <jinmei@isl.rdc.toshiba.co.jp>
MFC after: 4 days
vlan_unconfig()-ing an interface on which multicast groups have been
joined. Instead, keep the list of groups around (and, in fact, allow
changing of the membership list) and re-join them when the vlan interface
is reassociated with a lower level interface.
of tunclose() rather than the end, and tunopen() grabbed that unit
before tunclose() finished (one process is allocating it while another
is freeing it!).
It may be worth hanging some sort of rw mutex around all specinfo
calls where d_close and the detach handler get a write lock and all
other functions get a read lock. This would guarantee certain levels
of ``atomicity'' (is that a word?) that people may expect (I believe
Solaris does something like this).
requirements(RFC1573, interface MIB). This change for 4.4BSD was
first introduced in if_ethersubr.c:1.17->1.18.
BTW, iflastchange on all of IFs are inconsistent. e.g.
ether, tun: update
fddi, tokenring, ppp: not update
I'll make patch later.
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 2 weeks
This work was based on kame-20010528-freebsd43-snap.tgz and some
critical problem after the snap was out were fixed.
There are many many changes since last KAME merge.
TODO:
- The definitions of SADB_* in sys/net/pfkeyv2.h are still different
from RFC2407/IANA assignment because of binary compatibility
issue. It should be fixed under 5-CURRENT.
- ip6po_m member of struct ip6_pktopts is no longer used. But, it
is still there because of binary compatibility issue. It should
be removed under 5-CURRENT.
Reviewed by: itojun
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 3 weeks
around, use a common function for looking up and extracting the tunables
from the kernel environment. This saves duplicating the same function
over and over again. This way typically has an overhead of 8 bytes + the
path string, versus about 26 bytes + the path string.