In practice the old test (using MK_CLANG_IS_CC) is similar, but
COMPILER_FEATURES provides the information we actually want to test.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
advisory lock cannot be obtained, prevent double-close of the vnode in
vn_close() called from the fdrop(), by resetting file' f_ops methods.
Reported and tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Besides not making sense, open(O_EXEC) for fifo creates fifoinfo with
zero readers and writers counts, which causes premature free of pipes.
Reported and tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
callers treat the MSI 'addr' and 'data' fields as opaque and also lets
bhyve implement multiple destination modes: physical, flat and clustered.
Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com)
Reviewed by: grehan@
required in such a case). But don't prevent the user from pointing the
gun at his/her foot -- you can disable 4k alignment after enabling geli).
MFC after: 3 days
and subsequent headaches caused by multiple pools with the same name.
Specifically, blast away any labels on the designated swap partition.
Problem was when you install to a given layout *with* swap and then turn
around and re-install the same layout *without* swap (we weren't doing a
labelclear for the swap device, so would end up with an "UNAVAIL" status
zroot pool that may only exist in the pool cache).
MFC after: 3 days
+ For GPT, always provision zfs# partition after swap [for resizability]
+ For MBR, always use a boot pool to relialy place root vdevs at EOD
NB: Fixes edge-cases where MBR combination failed boot (e.g. swap-less)
+ Generalize boot pool logic so it can be used for any scheme (namely MBR)
+ Update existing comments and some whitespace fixes
+ Change some variable names to make reading/debugging the code easier
in zfs_create_boot() (namely prepend zroot_ or bootpool_ to property)
+ Because zroot vdevs are at EOD, no longer need to calculate partsize
(vdev consumes remaining space after allocating swap)
+ Optimize processing of disks -- no reason to loop over the disks 3-4
separate times when we can logically use a single loop to do everything
Discussed on: -stable
MFC after: 3 days
This allows it to be better tracked as well as being able to leverage
UMA for more interesting/useful behaviour at a later date.
Sponsored by: Netflix, Inc.
+ De-obfuscate debugging to show actual values
+ Change graid(8) syntax; s/destroy/delete/ [destroy is not invalid syntax]
+ Log commands that were previously quiet
+ Added some new comemnts and updated some existing ones
+ Add missing local for `disk' used in zfs_create_boot()
+ Use $disks instead of multiply-expanding $* in zfs_create_boot()
+ Pedantically unset variable holding geli(8) passphrase after use
+ Pedantically add double-quotes around zpool names and zfs datasets
+ Fix quotation expansion for zpool_cache entries of loader.conf(5)
+ Some limited whitespace changes
MFC after: 3 days
https://communities.vmware.com/thread/107230https://communities.vmware.com/docs/DOC-11677
Basically, ignore the ``function 62'' and ``function 63'' interpretations
of the left/right command key when we're in the lengthiest portion of the
installation (initiated by the `auto' module).
The net effect is that you can now (once you've started the installer from
the media) escape the VM without prematurely terminating the current action
due to spurious escape sequence.
MFC after: 3 days
Some Intel XHCI controlles timeout processing so-called "TRBs" when
the final LINK TRB of a so-called "TD" has the CHAIN-BIT set.
MFC after: 1 week
Tested by: glebius @
The stdtime sources were moved from lib/libc to contrib/tzcode, and tzfile.h
is not an installed header, so the man page refers to its location in the
source tree.
The documentation could be more clear about the internal nature of the
header, but those changes should go through upstream tzcode.
PR: docs/176864
Approved by: hrs (mentor)
the TTY. In such a case, ttydev_close() is called multiple times and
each time, t_revokecnt is incremented and cv_broadcast() is called for
both the t_outwait and t_inwait condition variables.
Let's say revoke(2) comes in first and gets to call tty_drain() from
ttydev_leave(). Let's say that the revoke comes from init(8) as the
result of running "shutdown -r now". Since shutdown prints various
messages to the console before announing that the machine will reboot
immediately, let's also say that the output queue is not empty and
that tty_drain() has something to do. Let's assume this all happens
on a 9600 baud serial console, so it takes a time to drain.
The shutdown command will exit(2) and as such will end up closing
stdout. Let's say this close will come in second, bump t_revokecnt
and call tty_wakeup(). This has tty_wait() return prematurely and
the next thing that will happen is that the thread doing revoke(2)
will flush the TTY. Since the drain wasn't complete, the flush will
effectively drop whatever is left in t_outq.
This change takes into account that tty_drain() will return ERESTART
due to the fact that t_revokecnt was bumped and in that case simply
call tty_drain() again. The thread in question is already performing
the close so it can safely finish draining the TTY before destroying
the TTY structure.
Now all messages from shutdown will be printed on the serial console.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
is given to convert uids and gids to user names and group names even when
running in capability mode sandbox.
While here log on stderr when we successfully enter the sandbox.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation