version called the higher-level archive_read_data and
archive_read_data_skip functions, which screwed up state management of
those functions. This bit of mis-design has existed for a long time,
but became a serious issue with the recent changes to the
archive_read_data APIs, which added more internal state to the
high-level archive_read_data function. Most common symptom was a
failure to correctly read 'L' entries (long filename) from GNU-style
archives, causing the message ": Can't open: No such file or
directory" with an empty filename.
Pointed out by: Numerous port build failures
Thanks to: Kris Kennaway
called ttyldoptim().
Use this function from all the relevant drivers.
I belive no drivers finger linesw[] directly anymore, paving the way for
locking and refcounting.
exactly as done in the cmi driver. I am quite confident this is
safe since I'm runing this for more than two weeks now, on an SMP
box. A few people tested this patch for me successfully as well.
<sys/linedisc.h> (repocopied).
Temporarily use a nested include from <sys/tty.h> to get <sys/linedisc.h>
into relevant source files.
Introduce a set of inline functions named ttyld_...() to invoke
linedisc methods instead of groping around in the linesw array.
that as end-of-archive. Otherwise, a short read at this point
generates an error. This accomodates broken tar writers (such as the
one apparently in use at AT&T Labs) that don't even write a single
end-of-archive block.
Note that both star and pdtar behave this way as well.
In contrast, gtar doesn't complain in either case, and as a
result, will generate no warning for a lot of trashed archives.
Pointed out by: shells/ksh93 port (Thanks to Kris Kennaway)
class variables in addition to per-device variables. In plain English,
this means that dev.foo0.bar is now called dev.foo.0.bar, and it is
possible to to have dev.foo.bar as well.
instances of 64-bit arithmetic were costing 775 bytes, and the
inlining offered no benefit. Moreover, ambiguity as to the argument
types led to the introduction of a bug (see rev 1.56).
Also, remove some casts that are now clearly redundant.
Inspired by: 67467
- In subr_ndis.c, my_strcasecmp() actually behaved like my_strncasecmp():
we really need it to behave like the former, not the latter. (It was
falsely matching "RadioEnable", which defaults to 1 with "RadioEnableHW"
which the driver creates itself and to 0, because we were using
strlen("RadioEnable") as the length to test. This caused the radio to
always be turned off. :( )
- In if_ndis.c, only set IEEE80211_CHAN_A for channels if we actually
set any IEEE80211_MODE_11A rates. (ieee80211_attach() will "helpfully"
add IEEE80211_MODE_11A to ic_modecaps for you if you initialize any
802.11a channels. This caused "ndis0: 11a rates:" to erroneously be
displayed during driver load.)
- Also in if_ndis.c, when using TESTSETRATE() to add in any missing 802.11b
rates, remember to OR the rates with IEEE80211_RATE_BASIC, otherwise
comparing against existing basic rates won't match. (1, 2, 5.5 and
11Mbps are basic rates, according to the 802.11b spec.) This erroneously
cause 11Mbps to be added to the 11b rate list twice.