a 82557 (e.g.: a newer chip) then:
+ enable MWI, if the PCI configuration indicates the system supports it
+ enable usage of extended TxCB, for better performance
+ enable hardware flow control. FC frames will be passed up to the
host only if promiscuous mode is enabled.
actually triggered a match and which did not, and add patterns that didn't
into resulting list, so caller will have a chance to notify user that package
isn't installed. This should fix current, POLA-breaking behaviour when user
doesn't receive a notification if he specifies several packages, some of which
aren't installed.
IOMEGA deserves a medal for making the most nonstandard ATAPI
devices, if they are ignorant or just not smart enough I don't
know, but somebody should help them out of their misery...
Proberly fail outstanding bio requests on devices that are detached.
This makes it possible to change between disk/cdrom/dvd/whathaveyou
in a notebook, just by suspending it, changing the device in the
bay (or what you model calls it), unsuspend and the ATA driver
will figure out what disappeared and properly fail those, and attach
any new devices found.
programs. There is a case during a fork() which can cause a deadlock.
From Tor -
The workaround that consists of setting a flag in the vm map that
indicates that a fork is in progress and using that mark in the page
fault handling to force a revalidation failure. That change will only
affect (pessimize) page fault handling during fork for threaded
(linuxthreads style) applications and applications using aio_*().
Submited by: tegge
call is correct, but it interferes with the massive hack called
vm_map_growstack(). The call will be returned after our stack handling
code is fixed.
Reported by: tegge
"options FFS_EXTATTR". When extended attribute auto-starting
is enabled, FFS will scan the .attribute directory off of the
root of each file system, as it is mounted. If .attribute
exists, EA support will be started for the file system. If
there are files in the directory, FFS will attempt to start
them as attribute backing files for attributes baring the same
name. All attributes are started before access to the file
system is permitted, so this permits race-free enabling of
attributes. For attributes backing support for security
features, such as ACLs, MAC, Capabilities, this is vital, as
it prevents the file system attributes from getting out of
sync as a result of file system operations between mount-time
and the enabling of the extended attribute. The userland
extattrctl tool will still function exactly as previously.
Files must be placed directly in .attribute, which must be
directly off of the file system root: symbolic links are
not permitted. FFS_EXTATTR will continue to be able
to function without FFS_EXTATTR_AUTOSTART for sites that do not
want/require auto-starting. If you're using the UFS_ACL code
available from www.TrustedBSD.org, using FFS_EXTATTR_AUTOSTART
is recommended.
o This support is implemented by adding an invocation of
ufs_extattr_autostart() to ffs_mountfs(). In addition,
several new supporting calls are introduced in
ufs_extattr.c:
ufs_extattr_autostart(): start EAs on the specified mount
ufs_extattr_lookup(): given a directory and filename,
return the vnode for the file.
ufs_extattr_enable_with_open(): invoke ufs_extattr_enable()
after doing the equililent of vn_open()
on the passed file.
ufs_extattr_iterate_directory(): iterate over a directory,
invoking ufs_extattr_lookup() and
ufs_extattr_enable_with_open() on each
entry.
o This feature is not widely tested, and therefore may contain
bugs, caution is advised. Several changes are in the pipeline
for this feature, including breaking out of EA namespaces into
subdirectories of .attribute (this is waiting on the updated
EA API), as well as a per-filesystem flag indicating whether
or not EAs should be auto-started. This is required because
administrators may not want .attribute auto-started on all
file systems, especially if non-administrators have write access
to the root of a file system.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
the target mode code or outer layers.
Increase cd_tagval to be 32 bits since it will have to now carry 16
bits of parallel SCSI ATIO handle as well as a normal tag (if any).
Solaris (which, for reasons unknown to me, chokes on u_int16_t
as a typedef of unsigned short if used in a transitional (mixed K&R
and ANSI) way), we'll go the extra mile and fully ANSIfy things.
offset is set to 0.
Re-arrange the DT limiting code so that we don't end up setting the period
to 0xa if the user really wants async. The previous behavior seemed to
confuse the aic(4) driver.
PR: kern/22733
Reviewed by: gibbs
devices. opening /dev/{dsp,dspW,audio}0 and then opening a different device
from that list and closing it resulted in a panic when any operation is
performed on the first fd.
we prevent this happening by denying the second open unless it uses the same
minor device as the first.
PR: kern/25519
is transmitted as all ones". This got broken after introduction
of delayed checksums as follows. Some guys (including Jonathan)
think that it is allowed to transmit all ones in place of a zero
checksum for TCP the same way as for UDP. (The discussion still
takes place on -net.) Thus, the 0 -> 0xffff checksum fixup was
first moved from udp_output() (see udp_usrreq.c, 1.64 -> 1.65)
to in_cksum_skip() (see sys/i386/i386/in_cksum.c, 1.17 -> 1.18,
INVERT expression). Besides that I disagree that it is valid for
TCP, there was no real problem until in_cksum.c,v 1.20, where the
in_cksum() was made just a special version of in_cksum_skip().
The side effect was that now every incoming IP datagram failed to
pass the checksum test (in_cksum() returned 0xffff when it should
actually return zero). It was fixed next day in revision 1.21,
by removing the INVERT expression. The latter also broke the
0 -> 0xffff fixup for UDP checksums.
Before this change:
: tcpdump: listening on lo0
: 127.0.0.1.33005 > 127.0.0.1.33006: udp 0 (ttl 64, id 1)
: 4500 001c 0001 0000 4011 7cce 7f00 0001
: 7f00 0001 80ed 80ee 0008 0000
After this change:
: tcpdump: listening on lo0
: 127.0.0.1.33005 > 127.0.0.1.33006: udp 0 (ttl 64, id 1)
: 4500 001c 0001 0000 4011 7cce 7f00 0001
: 7f00 0001 80ed 80ee 0008 ffff
1. Has a time-stamp to show when it was created
2. Sorts and uniq's the output to only contain single instances of a
given setting. This doesn't mean you still can't have settings which
override one another, that's still possible since it's too much
trouble to do the redundancy checking here.
Requested by: lots of people