work. The interface was gleaned from the Linux driver. Currently only
one RX & one TX buffer are used. Firmware support is not tested so for the
MPI-350 so it is disabled. Signal cache and monitor mode are not supported
yet. Signal cache is not supported since in encapsulation mode ethernet
frames are returned by the chip. LAN monitor mode support will be added
shortly. Thanks to Warner for the MPI-350 card he sent me.
Add support for RSSI map from PR kern/32880 which was incomplete. Enhanced
with the ability to select the cache mode of raw, dbm or per-cent.
Clean up Signal/Noise/Quality structures and units with help from
Marco Molteni.
Change flash to use a malloc'ed buffer when needed.
PR: kern/32880
Submitted by: Douglas S. J. De Couto decouto@pdos.lcs.mit.edu,
Marco Molteni
MFC: 3 weeks
i386, remove the seatbelt preventing users from setting the UFS2 flag
on the root file system on i386. This seatbelt did not exist on
other platforms.
MFC candidate.
argument, leading whitespace and empty lines be ignored, and
the `#' character marks the rest of the line as a comment.
PR: bin/45958
MFC after: 3 days
RSDP. Scan the first 1MB on i386 if the sysctl fails,
o Extend struct ACPIrsdp with the ACPI 2.0 fields which involves
changing a prior reserved field into the ACPI revision,
o Only calculate the RSDP checksum on the first 20 bytes to remain
compatible with ACPI 1.0 tables; we don't check the extended
checksum covering the whole table,
o Use the length field in the RSDP to map the RSDP into the address
space so that we don't have to know about future extensions here.
from "unix" back to "local". Add some compat stuff so both
ways work for some time.
Reviewed by: phk
Approved by: imp (UPDATING)
Requested by: iedowse, lukem@netbsd.org
`J' flag means that newsyslog should wait for previously started compression
jobs to complete before starting a new one for this entry. When it is used
along with the `G' flag, in the case when several logfiles match the pattern
and should be compressed, the newsyslog will compress logs one by one,
ensuring that only one compression job is running at a time.
This prevents newsyslog(8) from overloading system by starting several
compression jobs on big files simultaneously.
Sponsored by: Porta Software Ltd
MFC after: 2 weeks
a nonexistant target, in addition to the FTS_SL previously, so e.g.
setfmac -h sebsd/system_u:object_r:malloc_conf_t /etc/malloc.conf
succeeds.
Approved by: re
type of new slices and to change the type of existing slices. This also
has the advantage of moving a few #ifdef PC98's up to where the macros
are defined instead of in the middle of the code.
- Change the behavior of the 'T' option in the slice editor so that the
default value in the dialog box is the current type of the existing
slice rather than defaulting to changing the slice to a FreeBSD slice as
this is more intuitive.
Approved by: re
editor, in order to support specifying UFS2 as a newfs option.
(1) Support three different newfs types: NEWFS_UFS, NEWFS_MSDOS, and
NEWFS_CUSTOM. Don't mix up the arguments to them: you can't use
soft updates on an msdos file system.
(2) Distinguish adding new arguments to the newfs command line from
replacing it. Permit the addition of new arguments by the user for
NEWFS_UFS. If we entirely replace the command line provided by
sysinstall, call it NEWFS_CUSTOM. 'N' will now add additional
arguments; 'Z' will opt to replace the newfs command line entirely,
but will prompt the user with their current command line as a
starting point.
(3) Construct the newfs command line dynamically based on the options
provided by the user at label-time. Right now, this means selecting
UFS1 vs. UFS2, and the soft updates flag. Drop in some variables
to support ACLs and MAC Multilabel in the future also, but don't
expose them now.
This provides sysinstall with the ability to do more "in band" editing
of the newfs command line, so we can provide more support for the user,
but doesn't sacrifice the ability to entirely specify the newfs command
line of the user is willing to give up on the cushiness factor. It
also makes it easier for us to specify defaults in the future, and
define conditional behavior based on user configuration selections.
For now, we default to UFS1, and permit UFS2 to be used as the root
only on non-i386 systems.
While I was there, I dropped the default fragment and block sizes,
since newfs has much more sensible defaults now.
Reviewed by: jhb, marcel
Approved by: re
ia64 bits from: marcel