- /0 if matches ::/128
- /64 if matches 2000::/3 and lowermost 64 bit is all 0
- /128 if matches 2000::/3 and lowermost 64 bit is non-zero 0
Obtained from: KAME/NetBSD
IFS had its fingers deep in the belly of the UFS/FFS split. IFS
will be reimplemented by the maintainer at a later date once the UFS
implementation is in place.
Requested by: adrian (maintainer)
am fairly certain that this should do it and that I may now remove the
UM_ macros from port.h. I will, however, wait a few days to ensure
that these can be safely removed.
/etc/exports. Oversized lines were unlikely due to the large 10k
limit, but any found would cause mountd to exit with an error. Also
fix one or two compiler warnings.
fields as discussed in the commit to ip_fw.c:1.186
On top of this, a ton of non functional changes to clean up the code,
write functions to replace sections of code that were replicated
multiple times (e.g. the printing or matching of flags and options),
splitting long sections of inlined code into separate functions,
and the like.
I have tested the code quite a bit, but some typos (using one variable
in place of another) might have escaped.
The "embedded manpage" is a bit inconsistent, but i am leaving fixing
it for later. The current format makes no sense, it is over 40 lines
long and practically unreadable. We can either split it into sections
( ipfw -h options , ipfw -h pipe , ipfw -h queue ...)
or remove it altogether and refer to the manpage.
+ setting a bandwidth too large for a pipe (above 2Gbit/s) could
cause the internal representation (which is int) to wrap to a
negative number, causing an infinite loop in the kernel;
+ (see PR bin/35628): when configuring RED parameters for a queue,
the values are not passed to the kernel resulting in panics at
runtime (part of the problem here is also that the kernel does
not check for valid parameters being passed, but this will be
fixed in a separate commit).
These are both critical fixes which need to be merged into 4.6-RELEASE.
MFC after: 1 day
- reimplement -z
- use syslog()
- improve consistancy of messages
- allow -f to recover cleared dumps
- return bufsize to 1024 * 1024
- return the ability to write sparse files
- update man page
- fix minfree to require 2k for info file instead of the kernel size
- include Berkeley copyright too due to amount of old code copied
Submitted by: Chad David <davidc@acns.ab.ca>
restores the check_space() function with small modifications
to make it work with the current code. The patch was slightly
modified by Bill Fenner to handle error messages better.
Reviewed by: fenner
fatal if the declaration of strdup() isn't in scope. The upper 32 bits
of the pointer are lost since it defaults to returning "int". Fix some
warnings while here, including trying to make gcc-3.1 happy.
more on how ipfw(8) deals with tiny fragments. While we're at it, add
a quick log message to even let people know we dropped a packet. (Note
that the second FINE POINT is somewhat redundant given the first, but
since the code is there, leave the docs for it.)
MFC after: 1 day
around. If the kernel boots successfully, the record of this kernel
is erased, it is intended to be a one-shot option for testing
kernels.
This could be improved by having the loader remove the record of
the next kernel to boot, it is currently removed in /etc/rc immediately
after disks are mounted r/w.
I'd like to MFC this before the 4.6 freeze unless there is violent
objection.
Reviewed by: Several on IRC
MFC after: 4 days
Use only one filedescriptor. Open in R/O or R/W based in the '-N' option.
Make the filedescriptor a global variable instead of passing it around
as semi-global variable(s).
Remove the undocumented ability to specify type without '-T' option.
Replace fatal() with straight err(3)/errx(3). Save calls to strerror()
where applicable. Loose the progname variable.
Get the sense of the cpgflag test correct so we only issue warnings if
people specify cpg and can't get that. It can be argued that this
should be an error.
Remove the check to see if the disk is mounted: Open for writing
would fail if it were mounted.
Attempt to get the sectorsize and mediasize with the generic disk
ioctls, fall back to disklabel and /etc/disktab as we can.
Notice that on-disk labels still take precedence over /etc/disktab,
this is probably wrong, but not as wrong as the entire concept of
/etc/disktab is.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.