There are several reasons why it didn't work:
- It was missing <sys/cdefs.h> for __BEGIN_DECLS.
- It uses various primitive types that were not declared.
using the new option numbers, IP_FW3 and IP_DUMMYNET3.
Right now the modules return an error if called with those arguments
so there is no danger of unwanted behaviour.
MFC after: 3 days
- directly print mca information in case we fail to allocate memory
for a record
- include bank number into mca record
- print raw mca status value for extended information
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 10 days
No functional differences.
- use the div64() macro to wrap 64 bit divisions
(which almost always are 64 / 32 bits) so they are easier
to handle with compilers or OS that do not have native
support for 64bit divisions;
- use a local variable for p_numbytes even if not strictly
necessary on HEAD, as it reduces diffs with FreeBSD7
- in dummynet_send() check that a tag is present before
dereferencing the pointer.
- add a couple of blank lines for readability near the end of a function
MFC after: 3 days
It fixes the issue which keep-alive doesn't work for an IPv6.
PR: kern/117234
Submitted by: mlaier, Joost Bekkers <joost__at__jodocus.org>
MFC after: 1 month
priority for such important information as MASTER/BACKUP state change,
and used a normal logging priority for such innocent messages as receiving
short packet (which is a normal VRRP packet between some other routers) or
receving a CARP packet on non-carp interface (someone else running CARP).
This commit shifts message logging priorities to a more sane default.
so the size and alignment of the ipfw_insn is not compiler dependent.
No changes in the code generated by gcc.
There was only one instance of this kind in our entire source tree,
so i suspect the old definition was a poor choice (which i made).
MFC after: 3 days
When the termios CREAD flag is not set, it makes little sense to
allocate an input buffer. Just set the size to 0 in this case to reduce
memory footprint.
Disallow CREAD to be disabled for pseudo-devices to prevent
foot-shooting.
copied from NetBSD's manpage, and it also matches the behavior
described by the Open Group's online copy of setpgid.2 at
http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/setpgid.html
Obtained from: NetBSD
Submitted by: Petros Barbayiannis <petrosbarbayiannis@yahoo.gr>
MFC after: 1 week
**environ entries. This puts non-getenv(3) operations in line with
getenv(3) in that bad environ entries do not cause all operations to
fail. There is still some inconsistency in that getenv(3) in the
absence of any environment-modifying operation does not emit corrupt
environ entry warnings.
I also fixed another inconsistency in getenv(3) where updating the
global environ pointer would not be reflected in the return values.
It would have taken an intermediary setenv(3)/putenv(3)/unsetenv(3)
in order to see the change.
config(8) doesn't parse parantheses and instead treated them as being
part of the device driver name (e.g. '(u3g' vs 'u3g'). While here, fix the
style of these long lines to match the wrapping used for other long lines
in this file.
Submitted by: Brett Glass
MFC after: 1 week
The hardware is compliant with WDRT specification, so I originally
considered including generic WDRT watchdog support, but decided
against it, because I couldn't find anyone to the code for me.
WDRT seems to be not very popular.
Besides, generic WDRT porbably requires a slightly different driver
approach.
Reviewed by: des, gavin, rpaulo
MFC after: 3 weeks
related to DNSSEC validation on a resolving name server that allows
access to untrusted users. If your system does not fall into all 3 of
these categories you do not need to update immediately.
- Redirecting fds that were not open before kept two copies of the
redirected file.
sh -c '{ :; } 7>/dev/null; fstat -p $$; true'
(both fd 7 and 10 remained open)
- File descriptors used to restore things after redirection were not
set close-on-exec, instead they were explicitly closed before executing
a program normally and before executing a shell procedure. The latter
must remain but the former is replaced by close-on-exec.
sh -c 'exec 7</; { exec fstat -p $$; } 7>/dev/null; true'
(fd 10 remained open)
The examples above are simpler than the testsuite because I do not want to
use fstat or procstat in the testsuite.
baseline subtraction, and are very temperature sensitive, so would slowly
drift out of a calibrated state when under load. Escape this by taking
the last frame before we decide that the pad is idle as a finger-free
baseline.
Tested on: iBook G4
the compression was useless as well. Make sure to not update the data
and return, else we would waste resources when decompressing.
This also avoids the copyback() changing data other consumers like
xform_ipcomp.c would have ignored because of no win and sent out without
noting that compression was used, resulting in invalid packets at the
receiver.
MFC after: 5 days
payload size. Before we had always added the header, no matter if we
actually send out compressed data or not.
With this, after the opencrypto/deflate changes, IPcomp starts to work
apart from edge cases. Leave it disabled by default until those are
fixed as well.
PR: kern/123587
MFC after: 5 days
The <sys/termios.h> header file is hardlinked to <termios.h>. It
contains both the structures and the flag definitions, but also the C
library interface that's implemented by the C library.
This header file has the typical problem of including too many random
things and being badly ordered. Instead of trying to fix this, decompose
it into two header files:
- <sys/_termios.h>, which contains struct termios and the flags.
- <termios.h>, which includes <sys/_termios.h> and contains the C
library interface.
This means userspace has to include <termios.h> for struct termios,
while kernelspace code has to include <sys/tty.h>. Also add a
<sys/termios.h>, which prints a warning message before including
<termios.h>. I am aware that there are some applications that use this
header file as well.