if all registers are 0xff.
This allows me to run with flags 0xc0ff on my IBM-DMCA-21440 disk, which
gives 5MB/sec sequential read :-)
If you have a laptop, try adding flag 0x4000 to your disk, and tell me if
it makes any difference for you.
cache lines. Removed the struct ip proto since only a couple of chars
were actually being used in it. Changed the order of compares in the
PCB hash lookup to take advantage of partial cache line fills (on PPro).
Discussed-with: wollman
by bde.
Don't return EPERM in setre[ug]id() just because the caller passes in
the current effective id in the second arg (ie: no change), as suggested
by ache.
The magic number conflicted with the rotting disabled one in ext2fs for
debug.doasyncfree.
Removed messy debugging variable/constant/sysctl debug.doreallocblks.
Lite2 removed it, and we don't use the code that it controls.
defining doff_t both here and in <ufs/ufs/dir.h> so that this file
is independent of <ufs/ufs/dir.h>. It still has old prerequisites
<sys/param.h> and <ufs/ufs/quota.h>, and a new Lite2 prerequisite of
<sys/lock.h>, sigh.
This might fix lsof, which was broken by namespace pollution giving
conflicting definitions of DIRBLKSIZ.
This is valueable for library code which needs to be able to find out
whether the current process is or *was* set[ug]id at some point in the
past, and may have a "tainted" execution environment. This is especially
a problem with the trend to immediately revoke privs at startup and regain
them for critical sections. One problem with this is that if a cracker
is able to compromise the program while it's still got a saved id, the
cracker can direct the program to regain the privs. Another problem is
that the user may be able to affect the program in some other way (eg:
setting resolver host aliases) and the library code needs to know when it
should disable these sorts of features.
Reviewed by: ache
Inspired by: OpenBSD (but with a different implementation)
that allows traditional BSD setuid/setgid behavior.
The only visible difference should be that a non-root setuid program
(eg: inn's "rnews" program) that is setuid to news, can completely
"become" uid news. (ie: setuid(geteuid()) This was allowed in
traditional 4.2/4.3BSD and is now "blessed" by Posix as a special
case of "appropriate privilige".
Also, be much more careful with the P_SUGID flag so that we can use it
for issetugid() - only set it if something changed.
Reviewed by: ache
vector except for the egid in groups[0]. There is a risk that programs
that come from SYSV/Linux that expect this to work and don't check for
error returns may accidently pass root's groups on to child processes.
We now do what is least suprising (to non BSD programs/programmers) in
this scenario, and nothing is changed for programs written with BSD groups
rules in mind.
Reviewed by: ache
to removing the connection from the queue. The problem here is that
falloc() may block and this would allow another process to accept the
connection instead. If this happens to leave the queue empty, then the
system will panic with an "accept: nothing queued".
Also changed a wakeup() to a wakeup_one() to avoid the "thundering herd"
problem on new connections in Apache (or any other application that has
multiple processes blocked in accept() for the same socket).
as shadows of their containing directory. This should solve the problem
of users not being able to delete their symlinks from /tmp once and for
all.
Symlinks do not have modes though, they are accessable to everything that
can read the directory (as before). They are made to show this fact at
lstat time (they appear as mode 0777 always, since that's how the the
lookup routines in the kernel treat them).
More commits will follow, eg: add a real lchown() syscall and man pages.
centric rather than VM-centric to fix a problem with errors not being
detectable when the header is read.
Killed exech_map as a result of these changes.
There appears to be no performance difference with this change.
Use the same value of 512 (ufs actually uses DEV_BSIZE). There are
too many versions of DIRBLKSIZ, one for ufs, one for ext2fs, one for
nfs, one for ibcs2, one for linux, one for applications, ... I think
nfs's DIRBLKSIZ needs to be a divisor of the directory blocks sizes
of all supported file systems. There is also NFS_DIRBLKSIZ, which is
different from nfs's DIRBLKSIZ but is sometimes confused with it in
comments.
Removed a bogus #ifdef KERNEL that hid the tunable constants for nfs.
This came in undocumented with the Lite2 merge although it isn't in
Lite2. It required more-bogus #define KERNEL's in fstat and pstat
to make the constants visible.
Restored a spelling fix from rev.1.17.
Removed duplicate #defines of all the the NFS mount option flags.
they were created later on. This is not the case when processing
syscalls.isc in the ibcs2 area. (It generates no declarations, it's
all either hidden (already prototyped elsewhere) or unimplemented).
Lookup isn't done every time the system goes idle now, but it can still
take > 1800 instructions in the worst case, so if cpu interrupts are kept
disabled then it might lose 20 characters of sio input at 115200 bps.
Fixed style in vm_page_zero_idle().