Notice that 'unit' wasn't defined once I changed the parameters of the func.
These things make me feel like wading in with a flamethrowr or something.
Too much cruft!
</rant>
if_init_f_t is passed void * containing the address of ifp->if_softc
not the unit number.
Someone tell me if these things don't work as I don't have the hardware
needed to test them. (thats a first.)
I'll get if_ze and if_zp later.
Pointed out by: Kazutaka YOKOTA <yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp>
test does not change undefined flag like Cyrix CPUs. Another is that
5/2 test changes undefined flag like Intel CPUs. Latter one could not
be detected and was recognized 486DX CPU. To solve this,
finishidentcpu() calls identblue() when cpu_vendor is null string
(that is, CPUID instruction is not supported) and cpu == CPU_486.
Tests have been done on IBM BlueLightning CPUs, i486SX and i486DX.
- increase the default timeout from 10 seconds to 60 seconds
- add a new kernel option, SCSI_PT_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT, that lets users specify
the default timeout for the pt driver to use
- add two new ioctls, one to get the timeout for a given pt device, the
other to set the timeout for a given pt device. The idea is that
userland applications using the device can set the timeout to suit their
purposes. The ioctls are defined in a new header file, sys/ptio.h
PR: 10266
Reviewed by: gibbs, joerg
to achieve a delay is pretty mean.
Andrew reports:
"The tulip_delay_300ns() is, well, bloody stupid on machines with a
heavily loaded PCI bus. It tries to do a delay by assuming PCI reads
will take a certain amount of time & issues a large amount of
(expensive, 5% CPU when your PCI bus is heavily loaded) pci reads.
Locally, we've replaced the calls to tulip_delay_300ns(sc) in the EMIT
macros with a simple DELAY(1) and not seen any problems. Plus we've
gained about 50Mb/sec throughput on our gigabit network cards because
of the added PCI bus bandwidth available."
Also, I do not understand why, but this change appears to stop the
Transmit Fifo underrun on one of my systems (but not the Alpha PC164SX).
This shouldn't make that much of a difference since the mii bus isn't
touched all that often, but perhaps when it does get accessed and hence
hammers the register, it was causing the chip to get upset.
Submitted by: Andrew Gallatin <gallatin@cs.duke.edu>
into two parts - one to do the bsfl and the other to convert the result
(base 0) to ffs()-like (base 1) in inline C. This enables the optimizer
to be a lot smarter in certain cases, like where it knows that the argument
is non-zero and we want ffs(known non zero arg) - 1. This appears to
produce identical code to the old inline when the argument is unknown.
works correctly in if/else etc. egcs had probably picked up most of the
problems here before with "ambiguous braces" etc, but this should
increase the robustness a bit. Based on an idea from Eivind Eklund.
out of the asm code, and as a bonus implements rtprio and idprio for the
Alpha. Previously if you ran an idprio process, you were assured of a
deadlock.
drop any segment arriving at a closed port.
tcp.blackhole=1 - only drop SYN without RST
tcp.blackhole=2 - drop everything without RST
tcp.blackhole=0 - always send RST - default behaviour
This confuses nmap -sF or -sX or -sN quite badly.
that goes to opt_dontuse.h is so an opt_*.h file doesn't get created even
though an option may be used for bringing stuff in via files[.*].
Pointed out by: bde
that are linked into the kernel. The KLD compilation options are
changed to call these functions, rather than in-lining the
atomic operations.
This approach makes atomic operations from KLDs significantly
faster on UP systems (though somewhat slower on SMP systems).
PR: i386/13111
Submitted by: peter.jeremy@alcatel.com.au
When you use pty(N) it creates pty(N+1) ready for your use in the DEVFS,
so DEVFS is not cluttered up with hundreds of ptys you are never going to
use.
about a dev_t.
printf("%x", dev) now becomes printf("%s", devtoname(dev)) because
printing actual information about the device is much more useful then
printing a pointer to an address that would never help the developer debug.
Submitted by: phk, bde
sysctl knobs.
With these knobs on, refused connection attempts are dropped
without sending a RST, or Port unreachable in the UDP case.
In the TCP case, sending of RST is inhibited iff the incoming
segment was a SYN.
Docs and rc.conf settings to follow.