the devfs clone handler to open the (invisible) devices on the fly.
The /dev entries are layed out as follows,
/dev/usbctl = master device
/dev/usb/0.1.0.5 = usb device, (<bus>.<dev>.<iface>.<endpoint>)
/dev/ugen0.1 -> usb/0.1.0.0 = ugen link to ctrl endpoint
This also removes the custom permissions model from USB. Bump
__FreeBSD_version to 800066.
Submitted by: rink (earlier version)
The function pow() in libmp(3) clashes with pow(3) in libm. We could
rename this single function, but we can just take the same approach as
the Solaris folks did, which is to prefix all function names with mp_.
libmp(3) isn't really popular nowadays. I suspect not a single
application in ports depends on it. There's still a chance, so I've
increased the SHLIB_MAJOR and __FreeBSD_version.
Reviewed by: deischen, rdivacky
values like 0x80 or 0x40 into a uint8_t foo:1 bitfield. This would
result in the bit always being 0. One of these caused a warning for
overflow (one that was 0x80), but the other didn't. They were both
wrong.
This is why I hate code that mixes c struct bitfields and #defines.
The rest of the fields accessed by the program should be audited.
struct passwd. This is not the case when sizeof(unsigned long) !=
sizeof(time_t). Write a dinky function to do the assignment instead
of relying on the punning. This does slow things down a little (1
extra function call, 11 pointer or int assignments), but is much safer
and machines have been fast enough since the mid 1990s that nobody
will notice the difference.
time_t is a 64-bits int on arm and mips. Before this change, arm was
silently broken. I guess there aren't that many ARM machines running
master YP domain servers. :)
The client side doesn't assume this type punning, so it doesn't need
to be fixed.
* Retire the old 'ifmcstat <kernel>' usage.
* Print AF_LINK records even if run against KVM.
This makes the KVM backend consistent with the sysctl backend.
* Suppress printing of link-layer group records by default.
* Add a -v switch to allow link-layer groups to be printed.
* If compiled without INET6 support, actually work.
* If compiled with INET6 support, print the scope ID of
all IPv6 addresses in both backends.
* Update man page.
* Update copyrights.
With this change, it is now reasonable to retire netstat -g.
Most of the SSM related gunk in this file will require later refactoring.
MFC after: 2 weeks
to print the network-layer endpoint address of the
group membership, rather than its link-layer mapping
as intended.
The KVM path is not affected.
MFC after: 1 week
Add two new functions to the libusb20 API and required kernel ioctls.
- libusb20_dev_get_iface_desc
- libusb20_dev_get_info
New command to usbconfig, "show_ifdrv", which will print out the kernel driver
attached to the given USB device aswell.
See "man libusb20" for a detailed description.
Some minor style corrections long-line wrapping.
Submitted by: Hans Petter Selasky
Just like the old TTY layer, the current MPSAFE TTY layer does not make
any attempt to serialize calls of write(). Data is copied into the
kernel in 256 (TTY_STACKBUF) byte chunks. If a write() call occurs at
the same time, the data may interleave. This is especially likely when
the TTY starts blocking, because the output queue reaches the high
watermark.
I've implemented this by adding a new flag, TTY_BUSY_OUT, which is used
to mark a TTY as having a thread stuck in write(). Because I don't want
non-blocking processes to be possibly blocked by a sleeping thread, I'm
still allowing it to bypass the protection. According to this message,
the Linux kernel returns EAGAIN in such cases, but I think that's a
little too restrictive:
http://kerneltrap.org/index.php?q=mailarchive/linux-kernel/2007/5/2/85418/thread
PR: kern/118287
When we leave the console TTY constantly open, we never reset the
termios attributes. This causes output processing, echoing, etc. not to
be reset to the proper values when going into single user mode after the
system has booted. It also causes nl-to-crnl-conversion not to take
place during shutdown, which causes a `staircase effect'.
This patch adds a new TTY flag, TF_OPENED_CONS, which is set when the
TTY is opened through /dev/console. Because the flags are only used by
the kernel and the pstat(8) utility, I've decided to renumber the TTY
flags. This shouldn't be an issue, because the TTY layer is not yet part
of a stable release.
Reported by: Mark Atkinson <atkin901 yahoo com>
Tested by: sepotvin
device. The details include the current value of the BAR (including all
the flag bits and the current base address), its length, and whether or not
it is enabled. Since this operation is not invasive, non-root users are
allowed to use it (unlike manual config register access which requires
root). The intention is that userland apps (such as Xorg) will use this
interface rather than dangerously frobbing the BARs from userland to
obtain this information.
- Add a new sub-mode to the 'list' mode of pciconf. The -b flag when used
with -l will now list all the active BARs for each device.
MFC after: 1 month
This ensures that the value written is both compatible with
older mtree versions (which expect the value after the period
to be an integer count of nanoseconds after the whole second)
and is a correct floating-point value.
Leave the parsing code unchanged so it will continue to read
older files.
Bluetooth Network Access Point (NAP), Group Ad-hoc Network (GN) and
Personal Area Network User (PANU) profiles.
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 1 month