full condition or other error which requires us to purge the
controller's start queue of transactions for a particular device.
We were relying on the NCR CCB's program address to cause the
script engine to skip to the next entry in the queue even though
the CCB is freed (and its program address switched to the idle
loop) by this action. We now set the address in the start queue
to be the "skip" function directly.
minus the NULL pointer dereference in rev. 1.33. Also simplify
things somewhat by eliminating one traversal of the VM map entries.
Finally, eliminate calls to vm_map_{un,}lock_read() which aren't
needed here. I originally took them from procfs_map.c, but here
we know we are dealing only with the map of the current process.
only. Previously, if the device was chmoded 644, someone could open it
with the O_RDONLY flag and issue any ioctl to the device.
Reviewed by: imp, gibbs
segments (except memory-mapped devices) in the ELF core file. This
is really nice. You get access to the data areas of all shared
libraries, and even to files that are mapped read-write.
In the future, it might be good to add a new resource limit in the
spirit of RLIMIT_CORE. It would specify the maximum sized writable
segment to include in core dumps. Segments larger than that would
be omitted. This would be useful for programs that map very large
files read/write but that still would like to get usable core dumps.
Kazu writes:
The VESA support code requires vm86 support. Make sure your kernel
configuration file has the following line.
options "VM86"
If you want to statically link the VESA support code to the kernel,
add the following option to the kernel configuration file.
options "VESA"
The vidcontrol command now accepts the following video mode names:
VESA_132x25, VESA_132x43, VESA_132x50, VESA_132x60, VESA_800x600
The VESA_800x600 mode is a raster display mode. The 80x25 text will
be displayed on the 800x600 screen. Useful for some laptop computers.
vidcontrol accepts the new `-i <info>' option, where <info> must be
either `adapter' or `mode'. When the `-i adapter' option is given,
vidcontrol will print basic information (not much) on the video
adapter. When the `-i mode' option is specified, vidcontrol will
list video modes which are actually supported by the video adapter.
Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA yokota@FreeBSD.ORG