While there also check for failed device_add_child calls.
Found by: Coventry Analysis tool[1].
Submitted by: sam[1]
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
These are two of the three files that have non-trivial differences from
the vendor branch. minigzip.c is the third, but there were no changes
from ZLib 1.2.1 to ZLib 1.2.2 in that file.
The rest of the files I intend to get reverted back to the vendor
branch (with cooperation of cvsadmin@).
PR: i386/76294
here on in, if_ndis.ko will be pre-built as a module, and can be built
into a static kernel (though it's not part of GENERIC). Drivers are
created using the new ndisgen(8) script, which uses ndiscvt(8) under
the covers, along with a few other tools. The result is a driver module
that can be kldloaded into the kernel.
A driver with foo.inf and foo.sys files will be converted into
foo_sys.ko (and foo_sys.o, for those who want/need to make static
kernels). This module contains all of the necessary info from the
.INF file and the driver binary image, converted into an ELF module.
You can kldload this module (or add it to /boot/loader.conf) to have
it loaded automatically. Any required firmware files can be bundled
into the module as well (or converted/loaded separately).
Also, add a workaround for a problem in NdisMSleep(). During system
bootstrap (cold == 1), msleep() always returns 0 without actually
sleeping. The Intel 2200BG driver uses NdisMSleep() to wait for
the NIC's firmware to come to life, and fails to load if NdisMSleep()
doesn't actually delay. As a workaround, if msleep() (and hence
ndis_thsuspend()) returns 0, use a hard DELAY() to sleep instead).
This is not really the right thing to do, but we can't really do much
else. At the very least, this makes the Intel driver happy.
There are probably other drivers that fail in this way during bootstrap.
Unfortunately, the only workaround for those is to avoid pre-loading
them and kldload them once the system is running instead.
command line) and the device path (what we passed to open()). Use
the former in diagnostics.
- when adding or removing partitions, print a single line to stdout for
each partition that was added or removed, indicating its name.
- add an -a option to 'gpt remove' which must be explicitly specified
to remove all partitions.
Approved by: marcel (in prinicple)
MFC after: 2 weeks
modify-after-free races when the task structure is malloc'd
o shrink task structure by removing ta_flags (no longer needed with
avoid fix) and combining ta_pending and ta_priority
Reviewed by: dwhite, dfr
MFC after: 4 days
Without this flag, if the symlink existed already a new symlink would
be created in the source directory. While harmless if the two symlinks
were the same, it nonetheless caused pointless confusion.
The pathological case is that when there is an existing /etc/namedb
symlink, but named_chrootdir in rc.conf pointed to a different
directory, it was the symlink in /var/named that was getting
updated, not the one in /etc. This led to some difficult to diagnose
problems for users.
(combine with existing seconds-based), treat '-' as punctuation rather
than a negative number indicator (eliminates several special cases),
use a single list of special words instead of several separate lists,
use table-driven abbreviation logic (eliminate duplicate word entries
and special-case abbreviation and plural handling). The result is
shorter, simpler (judging from comments, earlier maintainers didn't
understand the special handling for "negative years"), handles more
cases (e.g., "tu" is now a recognized abbreviation for "tuesday",
"3rd" is now equivalent to "third") and it has 2 fewer shift/reduce
conflicts.
internal error if pax extended attributes were being generated. Being
< 255 characters, the first-pass path editing (to generate a
ustar-compatible name for the main entry) wouldn't occur, and the
second-pass path editing (to generate a ustar name for the pax
attributes entry) assumed the input was already < 245 chars.
The core problem here was using an abbreviated algorithm for the
second pass that relied on the first pass having already run. The
rewritten code is much simpler: It just uses the full path-shortening
algorithm for building both ustar pathnames. This way, the second
ustar pathname will always be short enough.
Thanks to: Mark Cammidge
Related to: bin/74385
inherit signal mask from parent thread, setup TLS and stack, and
user entry address.
Also support POSIX thread's PTHREAD_SCOPE_PROCESS and PTHREAD_SCOPE_SYSTEM,
sysctl is also provided to control the scheduler scope.