- Allow to shrink ARC down to 16MB (instead of 64MB).
- Set arc_max to 1/2 of kmem_map by default.
- Start freeing things earlier when low memory situation is detected.
- Serialize execution of arc_lowmem().
I decided to setup minimum ZFS memory requirements to 512MB of RAM and 256MB of
kmem_map size. If there is less RAM or kmem_map, a warning will be printed.
World is cruel, be no better. In other words: modern file system requires
modern hardware:)
From ZFS administration guide:
"Currently the minimum amount of memory recommended to install a Solaris
system is 512 Mbytes. However, for good ZFS performance, at least one
Gbyte or more of memory is recommended."
tolerance. This driver allows aggregation of multiple network interfaces as
one virtual interface using a number of different protocols/algorithms.
failover - Sends traffic through the secondary port if the master becomes
inactive.
fec - Supports Cisco Fast EtherChannel.
lacp - Supports the IEEE 802.3ad Link Aggregation Control Protocol
(LACP) and the Marker Protocol.
loadbalance - Static loadbalancing using an outgoing hash.
roundrobin - Distributes outgoing traffic using a round-robin scheduler
through all active ports.
This code was obtained from OpenBSD and this also includes 802.3ad LACP support
from agr(4) in NetBSD.
* Build with or without INET, INET6, or KVM features.
* When built without KVM, the sysctl-based getifmaddrs() function
is used as the back-end for the utility.
* Reflect the fact that FreeBSD now uses the in_multi refcount as
a true refcount.
* Style.
The utility may now be run without super-user privilege, albeit with
a less detailed display, equivalent to that of the soon-to-be-retired
netstat -g host-mode output.
MFC after: 3 weeks
the args for hash32_stre and hash32_strne but there are no consumers in the
base system and openbgpd does not use it which the initial import was for.
Silence on: hackers
[Since the change to strict refcounting for in_multi objects, this test
began to fail; formerly the refcount was a count of the number of requests
for a given address, NOT a count of pointers to the object.]
UUID and stores it in /etc/hostid ($hostid_file) as well as sets kern.hostuuid
and kern.hostid sysctls on every boot.
Hostid can be reset using '/etc/rc.d/hostid reset' command.
Hostid generation and setting can be turned off by setting variable
hostid_enable to "NO" in /etc/rc.conf.
Reviewed by: mlaier, rink, brooks, rwatson