the same as when initializing the in-core copies. Adjust checksums in
labels after adjusting labels. This finishes fudging the on-disk label to
make it coherent with the in-core label.
Handle EIO during initialization better.
Initialize the compatibility slice to the whole disk If there are no real
slices.
Don't warn about adjusting offsets in the label to make the 'c' partition
start at 0. The 'c' offset is now always absolute on-disk and 0 in-core
so an adjustment is usually required.
Don't confuse LABEL_PART with RAW_PART so much.
Check for partitions being within slices differently.
pager(). Almost completely rewrote vm_mmap(); when John gets done with
the bottom half, it will be a complete rewrite. Deprecated most use of
vm_object_setpager(). Removed side effect of setting object persist
in vm_object_enter and moved this into the pager(s). A few other
cosmetic changes.
returned to user mode without enabling ASTs. The problem fixed itself
at the next syscall or non-FPU trap, if any. It hung the system for
a test process that masked SIGFPE's and divided by zero. The faulting
division was returned to endlessly and this gave plently of opportunities
for the swi_ast_phantom case to be reached; after it was reached the
system hung because the ASTs for preemption and SIGINT handling were
disabled.
via sysctl(8). The initial value of maxprocperuid is maxproc-1,
that of maxfilesperproc is maxfiles (untill maxfile will disappear)
Now it is at least possible to prohibit one user opening maxfiles
-Guido
Submitted by:
Obtained from:
Slight change to reverse collapsing so that vm_object_deallocate doesn't
have to be called recursively.
Removed half of a previous fix - the renamed page during a collapse doesn't
need to be marked dirty because the pager backing store pointers are copied
- thus preserving the page's data. This assumes that pages without backing
store are always dirty (except perhaps for when they are first zeroed, but
this doesn't matter).
Switch order of two lines of code so that the correct pager is removed
from the hash list. The previous code bogusly passed a NULL pointer to
vm_object_remove(). The call to vm_object_remove() should be unnecessary
if named anonymous objects were being dealt with correctly. They are
currently marked as OBJ_INTERNAL, which really screws up things (such as
this).
requires complications to adjust the offsets to relative when a block
containing the label is read and back to absolute when such a block is
written. The adjustment is not made on the whole disk slice.
Don't allow setting the offset of partition C to nonzero in in-core labels.
This will cause some (nonstandard) disktab entries to fail. They will
need to be changed to have relative offsets (and no partitions outside
of the slice).
Don't write protect the (nonexistent) label on the whole disk slice.
Writing labels and bootstraps should work right now (except if there is
no DOSpartition table).
just thinking about it.
Two changes need to be made to allow 'config kernel swap generic' to
work properly without requiring any compile-time flags:
/usr/src/usr.sbin/config/mkswapconf.c: we need to define a dummy stub
for the setconf() function to replace the one in swapgeneric.c that
isn't available in non-generic configurations.
/usr/src/sys/i386/i386/autoconf.c: the -a boot flag causes setroot()
to be skipped and lets setconf() prompt the user for a root device.
If you skip setroot() in a non-generic kernel, you could get severely
hosed. To avoid this, we silently ignore the -a flag if rootdev != NODEV.
(rootdev is always initialized to NODEV in swapgeneric.c, so if
we find that rootdev is something other than NODEV, we know we're
not using a generic configuration.)
2) bump reference counts by 2 instead of 1 so that an object deallocate
doesn't try to recursively collapse the object.
3) mark pages renamed during the collapse as dirty so that their contents
are preserved.
Submitted by: John and me.
Test for correct execution of cache test script by NCR,
and give meaningful error description if it fails.
(A cache problem was reported before.)
Don't wait forever for cache test to complete (to protect
against faulty hardware).
Submitted by: wolf
briefly over it, and see some serious architectural issues in this stuff.
On the other hand, I doubt that we will have any solution to these issues
before 2.1, so we might as well leave this in.
Most of the stuff is bracketed by #ifdef's so it shouldn't matter too much
in the normal case.
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: HOSOKAWA, Tatsumi <hosokawa@mt.cs.keio.ac.jp>
Slice 0 is now for the first BSD slice. The first BSD slice is
the first DOSpartition with id 0xa5 or the whole disk if their
are no DOSpartitions (except the latter is not yet implemented).
Existing partitions on it work the same as in 2.0 except the
'd' partition is no longer special and partitions are relative
to the skice.
Slice 1 is now for the whole disk and gets a read-only label
describing the disk. Previously, slice 0 was for the whole disk
and there was no label on it.
Slices 2-31 are for DOSpartitions. Slice 0 is an alias for one
of these if there is a BSD slice. Previously, slices 1-31 were
for DOSpartitions.
diskslice_machdep.c:
Expand whole disk slice to include all DOSpartitions. More work
is required for >1024 cylinders and to rewrite the label iff the
driver is unsure about the geometry.
subr_diskslice.c:
New function dsisopen() to help handle media changes.
mapping from numbers to names is messy for backwards compatibility.
E.g., for driver "sd", unit "0":
slice 0: omit the slice number for compatibility; names are sd0[a-h].
slice 1: omit the partition letter 'c' because the whole disk device
shouldn't have anything to do with partitions; sd0 is the
only name.
slices 2-31: subtract 1 from slice number to compensate for the
compatibility slice 0; names are sd0s[1-30][a-h].