- More code cleanups
- #ifdef DEBUG debugging code
- More consistant printfs
- Better handling of the apm_int() assembly code (mostly from Bruce Evans)
Reviewed by: bde
1) Require all callers to pass a valid route pointer to ip_output()
so that we don't have to check and allocate one off the stack
as was done before. This eliminates one test and some stack
bloat from the common (UDP and TCP) case.
2) Perform the IP header checksum in-line if it's of the usual length.
This results in about a 5% speed-up in my packet-generation test.
3) Use ip_vhl field rather than ip_v and ip_hl bitfields.
DITEM_FAILURE - formerly they would simply act as an implicit "continue",
but this is wrong. If you want this behavior, you should now return
with the DITEM_CONTINUE flag set.
Also make the semantics of DITEM_RESTORE quite a bit different - rather
than restore the screen back to pre-menu state, we restore the menu
itself. This is more correct for a variety of reasons when dealing with
nested menus (whoops!).
Check devices too, follow original BSD intention
Find only executable files with s-bits, close PR bin/1022
Reset locale to C to have equal results in any case
forked child to be dissociated from the parent).
Cleanup fork1(), implement vfork() and fork() in terms of rfork() flags.
Remove RFENVG, RFNOTEG, RFCNAMEG, RFCENVG which are Plan9 specific and cannot
possibly be implemented in FreeBSD.
Renumbered the flags to make up for the removal of the above flags.
Reviewed by: peter, smpatel
Submitted by: Mike Grupenhoff <kashmir@umiacs.umd.edu>
robust. The new "fire" actions, while affording signficantly more
interactivity to libdialog, come at a cost - if the fire action trashes
the screen then you're not going to be in Kansas anymore when you
come back to the menu and there had better be considerable extra
smarts in place for coping with such a situation. These changes are my
attempt to do just that.
pwd_mkdb.c:
- Don't save the PLUSCNT and MINUSCNT tokens: we don't need them anymore.
- Count the + and - entires for NIS together instead of counting + and -
entries seperately. Index all special NIS entries using new _PW_KEYYPBYNUM
token.
pwd.h:
- Remove the PLUSBYNUM, MINUSBYNUM, PLUSCNT and MINUSCNT tokens and replace
then with a single _PW_KEYYPBYNUM token.
getnetgrent.c:
- Catch one bogon that snuck by: in _listmatch(), check for '\0'
rather than '\n'; strings returned from yp_match() are terminated
with a nul, not a newline.
getpwent.c:
- Rip out all of the +inclusion/-exclusion stuff from before and
replace it with something a little less grotty. The main problem
with the old mechanism was that it wasted many cycles processing
NIS entries even after it already knew they were to be exlcuded
(or not included, depending on your pointof view). The highlights
of these changes include:
o Uses an in-memory hash database table to keep track of all the
-@netgroup, -user, and -@group exclusions.
o Tries harder to duplicate the behavior normally obtained when using
NIS inclusions/exclusions on a flat /etc/passwd file (meaning things
come out in much the same order).
o Uses seperate methods for handling getpwent() and getpwnam()/getpwuid()
operations instead of trying to do everything with one general
function, which didn't work as well as I thought it would.
o Uses both getnetgrent() and innetgr() to try to save time where
possible.
o Use only one special token in the local password database
(_PW_KEYYPBYNUM) instead of seperate tokens to mark + and -
entries (and stop using the counter tokens too). If this new
token doesn't exist, the code will make due with the standard
_PW_KEYBYNUM token in order to support older databases that
won't have the new token in them.
All this is an attempt to make this stuff work better in environments
with large NIS passwd databases.
- Clear the _yp_innetgr flag immediately after calling setnetgrent() from
innetgr(). We only need the flag set to temporarily alter setnetgrent()'s
behavior. Previously, it was being cleared too late.
- When in NIS-only mode, innetgr() was wasting time doing unecessary
extra processing after it had already found a match.
- Remember to free memory allocated by the NIS functions during innetgr()
searches.
1) Set the persist timer to help time-out connections in the CLOSING state.
2) Honor the keep-alive timer in the CLOSING state.
This fixes problems with connections getting "stuck" due to incompletion
of the final connection shutdown which can be a BIG problem on busy WWW
servers.
- always use pci_conf_read() and pci_conf_write(). (This is required to
simulate non-existant devices in my system for PCI bridge code tests.)
- reorder some functions (put the main functions at the end).
- correct off by one bug in the code dealing with unitialized PCI to PCI
bridge chips. (Bug found by ASAMI Satoshi.)
- print function number for multi-function devices.
to int32_t. I only fixed the ones that I noticed the warnings for.
Perhaps most of the format strings are correct now because they were
wrong before. Except of course if int32_t isn't compatible with `int'.
assignment to avoid one bug and several pessimizations.
In the old version, gcc-2.6.3 (i386 version) generates 16 bytes
of static data and copies it using 4 4-byte load-stores. gcc-2.7.2
generates 2 1-byte stores and calls memset() to zero 14 bytes.
Linking fails because memset() doesn't exist in the kernel.
In both versions, the 2 bytes stored directly are all that is
actually used unless the null padding at the end is used, since
the 3 4-byte words in the middle are initialized again by struct
assignment. These words are misaligned. gcc generates misaligned
load-stores for (small) misaligned struct copies.
Submitted by: Bruce Evans
an application #defines `noreturn'.
Changed one instance of `const' similarly. This is less like to be a
problem since applications shouldn't #define `const', and the common
hack of #defining `const' as nothing gives harmless (?) null attributes
instead of syntax errors.
Fixed comments on #endifs to match code.