If set to 1, no ABORT is sent back in response to an incoming
INIT. If set to 2, no ABORT is sent back in response to
an out of the blue packet. If set to 0 (the default), ABORTs
are sent.
Discussed with rrs@.
MFC after: 1 month.
- Use Elf32_Addr as default, the only field that is
64 bitw wide is R_MIPS_64
- Add R_MIPS_HIGHER and R_MIPS_HGHEST handlers
- Handle R_MIPS_HI16 and R_MIPS_LO16 for both .rel and
.rela sections
The effect of this was, for clients mounted via inet6 addresses,
that the DRC cache would never have a hit in the server. It also
broke NFSv4 callbacks when an inet6 address was the only one available
in the client. This patch fixes the above, plus deletes opt_inet6.h
from a couple of files it is not needed for.
MFC after: 2 weeks
seem to be used elsewhere.
Since UFS_ACL is enabled by default for GENERIC kernels, this shouldn't
break anything - but please beat me to fix things if it does.
This reduces the footprint of the kernel on small embedded systems
(think <1MB flash for the compressed kernel image) just enough to
actually fit.
From the NetBSD bug:
The way how hexdump(1) parses escape sequences has some bugs.
It shows up when an escape sequence is used as the non-last character
of a format string.
PR: bin/144722
Submitted by: gcooper
Approved by: rpaulo
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 1 week
where they've disabled all the wireless devices/framework.
This is just a build workaround. If you're actively using wireless,
you must still define AH_SUPPORT_AR5416 as I'm not sure what else
will break!
The real solution is to make the module build depend if AH_SUPPORT_AR5416
is defined, as well as make the 11n code in if_ath_tx.c and if_ath_tx_ht.c
completely optional (maybe depend upon ATH_SUPPORT_11N.)
revision 1.170
date: 2011/10/30 23:04:38; author: mikeb; state: Exp; lines: +6 -7
Allow setting big MTU values on the pfsync interface but not larger
than the syncdev MTU. Prompted by the discussion with and tested
by Maxim Bourmistrov; ok dlg, mpf
Consistently use sc_ifp->if_mtu in the MTU check throughout the
module. This backs out r228813.
This was preventing the ath driver from being loaded at runtime.
It worked fine when compiled statically into the kernel but not when
kldload'ed after the system booted.
The root cause was that PCIR_INTLINE (register 60) was being
overwritten by zeros when register 62 was being written to.
A subsequent read of this register would return 0, and thus
the rest of the PCI glue assumed an IRQ resource had already
been allocated. This caused the device to fail to attach at
runtime as the device itself didn't contain any IRQ resources.
TODO: go back over the ar71xx and ar724x PCI config read/write
code and ensure it's correct.
value used in sys/ofed/include/linux/netdevice.h), so there will be no
buffer overruns in the rest of the inline functions in this file.
Reviewed by: kmacy
MFC after: 1 week
The wrong structure happened to work since the only argument used was
the vnode which is in the same place in both VOP_SETATTR() and the two
extattr VOPs.
MFC after: 3 days
I was thinking by myself, if the new code doesn't work with GCC 4.2, why
not simply turn it into an efficient version for C11 compilers? By
changing the code to use _Generic() directly in that case, I can build
the tgmath regression test in a matter of milliseconds with Clang,
instead of the 8 seconds it used to take.
So by the time C11 becomes the default, it will pick up the new code
automatically. And now I will refrain from making more changes to
<tgmath.h>.
Instead of using an exponential number of cases with respect to the
number of arguments, this version only uses a linear number.
Unfortunately, it works with Clang, GCC 4.6 and GCC 4.7, but not GCC
4.2. Therefore, leave it commented out.
consequence sbuf_len() will return -1 for buffers which had the error
status set prior to sbuf_finish() call. This causes a problem in
pfs_read() which purposely uses a fixed size sbuf to discard bytes which
are not needed to fulfill the read request.
Work around the problem by using the full buffer length when
sbuf_finish() indicates an overflow. An overflowed sbuf with fixed size
is always full.
PR: kern/163076
Approved by: des
MFC after: 2 weeks