Update the description of the "p6-div" and "p6-mul" events according
to the "Intel(r) 64 and IA-32 Architectures Software Developers
Manual Volume 3B: System Programming Guide, Part 2, November 2006".
Reported by: Harald Servat <redcrash at gmail dot com> [1]
1) The man page should describe the code, not the other way around.
2) Internal variables should not be documented or exposed, except in
controlled circumstances (i.e. - That's what the -C flag is for).
The variable should have been saved to the config file in save_config().
3) The next available userid doesn't get automatically updated. The
end-result is the same (user gets added with the correct uid),
but in an interactive session the default uid doesn't get updated in
the display.
So,
o Use the uidstart variable instead of uuid (bug #3)
o Actually save the variable to adduser.conf (bug #2)
o (bug #1 to be fixed in an upcomming commit to adduser.conf.5)
MFC After: 2 weeks
specific nodes when the process exits)
Move the vnode-cache-walking loop which was duplicated in pfs_exit() and
pfs_disable() into its own function, pfs_purge(), which looks for vnodes
marked as dead and / or belonging to the specified pfs_node and reclaims
them. Note that this loop is still extremely inefficient.
Add a comment in pfs_vncache_alloc() explaining why we have to purge the
vnode from the vnode cache before returning, in case anyone should be
tempted to remove the call to cache_purge().
Move the special handling for pfstype_root nodes into pfs_fileno_alloc()
and pfs_fileno_free() (the root node's fileno must always be 2). This
also fixes a bug where pfs_fileno_free() would reclaim the root node's
fileno, triggering a panic in the unr code, as that fileno was never
allocated from unr to begin with.
When destroying a pfs_node, release its fileno and purge it from the
vnode cache. I wish we could put off the call to pfs_purge() until
after the entire tree had been destroyed, but then we'd have vnodes
referencing freed pfs nodes. This probably doesn't matter while we're
still under Giant, but might become an issue later.
When destroying a pseudofs instance, destroy the tree before tearing
down the fileno allocator.
In pfs_mount(), acquire the mountpoint interlock when required.
MFC after: 3 weeks
the following ports tree changes:
- libtool13 removed.
- pkgconfig moved to pkg-config.
- Default dependency for USE_GHOSTSCRIPT changed from
ghostscript-gnu to ghostscript-gpl.
- Also added missing docproj dependencies.
Reported by: Dmitriy Kirhlarov
Submitted by: sem, ru
MFC after: 3 days
a single conditional. The two operations are linked, but since the link
is not very direct, Coverity can't see it. Humans might also miss the
link as well. So, this isn't fixing any actual bugs, just improving
readability.
CID: 1787 (likely others as well)
Found by: Coverity Prevent (tm)
The registration names for 5222(tcp,udp) and 5269(tcp,udp) was changed to
xmpp-client and xmpp-server correspondingly.
This inconsistency causes problems to applications developed on other
systems, as they tries to use port numbers from /etc/services as fallback.
PR: conf/100606
Submitted by: Ralph Meijer <freebsd-gnats2@ralphm.ik.nu>
Approved by: maxim
MFC after: 1 week
directly to a merged model where only one callout, the next to fire,
is registered.
Instead of callout_reset(9) and callout_stop(9) the new function
tcp_timer_activate() is used which then internally manages the callout.
The single new callout is a mutex callout on inpcb simplifying the
locking a bit.
tcp_timer() is the called function which handles all race conditions
in one place and then dispatches the individual timer functions.
Reviewed by: rwatson (earlier version)
Yukon II generated corrupted TCP checksum for short TCP packets
that's less than 60 bytes in size(e.g. window probe packet, pure ACK
packet etc). Padding the frame with zeros to make the frame minimum
ethernet frame size didn't work at all. Instead of dropping Tx
checksum offload support we calculate TCP checksum with S/W method
when we encounter short TCP frames.
Fortunately it seems that short UDP datagrams appear to be handled
correctly by Yukon II.
While I'm here simplify ethernet/VLAN header size calculation logic.
PR: 111384