RPC clients hanging. The real problem turned out to be missing
cleanup code; this was fixed in clnt_vc.c r1.5 and clnt_dg.c r1.4.
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
that actually conforms to the Porters Handbook.
Add a -t option to pkg_version(1) for doing comparison testing.
Add a script (and make test target) to do some regression tests on
the package number comparison routine, to help debug future revisions.
Submitted by: knu
Procrastination by: bmah
stylistic.
# Yes, this break K&R, but this file already used so many gcc extensions
# keeping K&R support seemed too anachronistic for me.
Didn't fix the bug where functions that can only be used in the kernel
are exported to userland.
BSDPAN is the collection of modules that provides tighter than ever
integration of Perl into BSD Unix.
Currently, BSDPAN does the following:
o makes p5- FreeBSD ports PREFIX-clean;
o registers Perl modules in the FreeBSD package database with a
package name derived from the module name.
The name is of the form: bsdpan-ModuleName-V.VV.
Anyone interested in where BSDPAN is developing should read Anton's
message to the ports mailling list:
Message-ID: <20010105040828.A26011@heechee.tobez.org>
Submitted by: Anton Berezin <tobez@tobez.org>
that people use from userland in C++ programs. I've had this in my
tree for ages and just got bit by it not being in the real tree again.
This is a MFC candidate.
The mbuf and mcluster free lists now each "own" a condition variable,
m_starved.
- Clean up minor indentention issues in sys/mbuf.h caused by previous
commit.
to not using IO_SYNC. Expose a sysctl (debug.ufs_extattr_sync) for
enabling the use of IO_SYNC.
- Use of IO_SYNC substantially degrades ACL performance when a
default ACL is set on a directory, as there are four synchronous
writes initiated to define both supporting EAs for new
sub-directories, and to set the data; two for new files. Later, this
may be optimized to two writes for sub-directories, one for new
files.
- IO_SYNC does not substantially improve consistency properties due
to the poor consistency properties of existing permissions (which
ACLs are a superset of), due to interaction with soft updates,
and due to differences in handling consistency for data and file
system meta-data.
- In macro-benchmarks, this reduces the overhead of setting default
ACLs down to the same overhead as enabling ACLs on a file system
and not using them. Enabling ACLs still introduces a small
overhead (I measure 7% on a -j 2 buildworld with pre-allocated
EA backing store, but this is not rigorous testing, nor in any way
optimized).
- The sysctl will probably change to another administration method
(or at least, a better name) in the near future, but consistency
properties of EAs are still being worked out. The toggle is defined
right now to allow easier performance analysis and exploration
of possible guarantees.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Don't use atomic operations for the stats updating, instead protect
the counts with the mbuf mutex. Most twiddling of the stats was
done right before or after releasing a mutex. By doing this we
reduce the number of locked ops needed as well as allow a sysctl
to gain a consitant view of the entire stats structure.
In the future...
This will allow us to chain common mbuf operations that would
normally need to aquire/release 2 or 3 of the locks to build an
mbuf with a cluster or external data attached into a single op
requiring only one lock.
Simplify the per-cpu locks that are planned.
There's also some if (1) code that should check if the "how"
operation specifies blocking/non-blocking behavior, we _could_ make
it so that we hold onto the mutex through calls into kmem_alloc
when non-blocking requests are made, but for safety reasons we
currently drop and reaquire the mutex around the calls.
Also, note that calling kmem_alloc is rare and only happens during
a shortage so drop/re-getting the mutex will not be a common
occurance.
Remove some #define's that seemed to obfuscate the code to me.
Remove an extranious comment.
Remove an XXX, including mutex.h isn't a crime.
Reviewed by: bmilekic
avoid silly lock contention on sched_lock since in 2 out of the 3 places
that we call stop(), we get sched_lock right after calling it and we were
locking sched_lock inside of stop() anyways.
failures in MOD_LOAD.
Dodge duplicate make_dev() calls by (ab)using dev->si_drv2 to
remember if we created the device node via a dev_clone callback
before the d_open call.
default first, then network-specific files, then host-specific files.
I think this was the original intent, as Matt indicated the previous
code appeared to be a bug.
Without this, ifpromisc() always fails (after setting the IFF_PROMISC
bit in ifp->if_flags) and bpf never bothers to turn promiscuous mode off.
PR: 20188
so that the underscored versions of the pthread functions get
declared. This removes around 300 lines of 'implicit declaration
of XXX' warnings from the output of a libc build with -Wall.
Reviewed by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>, alfred
Fix ABOUT.TXT to be consistent with LAYOUT.TXT with respect to
the size of an unpacked ports collection (the stated 100MB
is a bit of an overestimate, but better to be conservative).
PR: 22778
Submitted by: David <ddavid@ican.net>
SIGCHLD to our parent process. Otherwise, we could block while obtaining
the process lock for our parent process and switch out while we were
in SSTOP. Even worse, when we try to resume from the mutex being blocked
on our p_stat will be SRUN, not SSTOP.
- Fix a comment above stop() to indicate that it requires that the proc lock
be held, not a proctree lock.
Reported by: markm
Sleuthing by: jake