Devices that don't implement param() (which means they don't support
hardware parameters such as flow control, baud rate) hardcode the baud
rate to TTYDEF_SPEED. This means the buffer size cannot be configured,
which is a little inconvenient when using canonical mode with big lines
of input, etc.
Make it adjustable, but do clamp it between B50 and B115200 to prevent
awkward buffer sizes. Remove the baud rate assignment from
/etc/gettytab. Trust the kernel to fill in a proper value.
Reported by: Mikolaj Golub <to my trociny gmail com>
MFC after: 1 month
It turned out I did add the code to use the init state devices to set
the termios structure when opening the device, but it seems I totally
forgot to add the bits required to force the actual locking of flags
through the lock state devices.
Reported by: ru
MFC after: 1 week (to be discussed)
compiled to use the Medium/Low code model, which we currently default
to for the userland. GNU/Linux has moved their default to Medium/Middle
some time ago, which probably explains why the current GNU ld(1) uses
a base in the range between 32 and 44 bits instead.
Submitted by: kib
and do not relocate the binary to ET_DYN_LOAD_ADDR. This allows for the
binary author to influence address map of the process. In particular,
when the binary is actually an interpeter, this allows to have almost
usual process address map.
Communicate the relocation bias of the mapping for interpeter-less
ET_DYN binary, that is interperter itself, in AT_BASE aux entry. This
way, rtld is able to find its dynamic structure and relocate itself.
Note that mapbase in the rtld is still wrong and requires further
fixing.
Reported and tested by: rwatson
Discussed with: kan
MFC after: 3 days
Call priv_check(PRIV_VM_SWAP_NORLIMIT) only when per-uid limit is
actually exceed.
Both changes aim at calling priv_check(9) only for the cases when
privilege is actually exercised by the process.
Reported and tested by: rwatson
Reviewed by: alc
MFC after: 3 days
was major changes to initialize RF chipset and set H/W registers and
removed a lot of magic numbers on code. Details are as follows:
- uses the endpoint 0x89 to get TX status information which used to
get TX complete or retry numbers or get a beacon interrupt. It's
only valuable for RTL8187B.
- removes urtw_write[8|16|32]_i functions that it's useless now.
- uses ic->ic_updateslot to set SLOT, SIFS, DIES, EIFS, CW_VAL
registers that doesn't set these whenever the channel is changed.
- code for initializing RF chipset for RTL8187B changed a lot that
there was many problems on TX transfers so it doesn't work properly
even if just for a ping/pong. Now it becomes more stable than
before that TX throughputs using netperf(1) were about 15 ~ 17Mbps/s
though sometimes it encounters packet losses.
- removes a lot of magic numbers that in the previous all of
representing RX and TX descriptors were consisted of magic numbers
and structures. It'd be more readable rather than before.
- calculates TX duration more accurately for urtw(4) devices.
- style(9)
Applications like shells expect EOF to give no graphical output, while
our implementation prints ^D by default (tunable with stty echoctl).
Make the new implementation behave like the old TTY code. Print two
backspaces afterwards.
Reported by: koitsu
MFC after: 1 month
the error and assume that the file doesn't exist. Touch could return
success with -c option even if the file existed and time was not set.
- If the first utimes_f() call fails with -A option, give up and don't
continue trying to set times to current time. [1]
- Set exit status to 1 when setting of timestamps fails for a directory
or symbolic link even though lstat()/stat() would succeed.
- Don't print bogus error message when rw() succeeds.
PR: bin/112213
Submitted by: jilles [1]
Reviewed by: jilles
Approved by: trasz (mentor)
Specifically, clients only trust -ve cache entries while the directory
remains unchanged and discard any -ve cache entries for a directory when
they notice that the modification time of a directory entry changes. The
race involves two concurrent lookups as follows:
- Thread A does a lookup for file 'foo' which sends a lookup RPC to the
server. The lookup fails and the server replies.
- The 'foo' file is created (either by the same client or a different
client) updating the modification time on the parent directory of 'foo'.
- Thread B does a lookup for a different file 'bar' which updates the
cached attributes of the parent directory of 'foo' to reflect the new
modification time after 'foo' was created.
- Thread A finally resumes execution to parse the reply from the NFS
server. It adds a -ve cache entry and sets the cached value of the
directory's modification time that is used for invalidating -ve cached
lookups to the new modification time set by thread B.
At this point, future lookups of 'foo' will honor the -ve cached entry
until the cached entry is pushed out of the name cache's LRU or the
modification time of the parent directory is changed again by some other
change. The fix is to read the directory's modification time before
sending the lookup RPC and use that cached modification time when setting
the directory's cached modification time. Also, we do not add a -ve cache
entry if another thread has added -ve cache entry that set the directory's
cached modification time to a newer value than the value we read before
sending the lookup RPC.
Reviewed by: rmacklem
MFC after: 1 week
the line number where the command substitution started.
This applies to both the $() and `` forms but is most useful for ``
because the other line number is relative to the enclosed text there.
(For older versions, -v can be used as a workaround.)
all host controllers at the same time, we avoid problems where the BIOS will
actually write to the USB registers of all the USB host controllers every time
we handover one of them, and consequently reset the OS programmed values.
Submitted by: avg
Reviewed by: jhb
netsend 127.0.0.1 6666-7777 [payloadsize] [packet_rate] [duration]
This is useful to test the behaviour of systems that do some kind
of flow classifications and so exhibit different behaviour depending
on the number of flows that hit them.
I plan to add a similar extension to sweep on a range of IP addresses,
so we can issue a single command to flood (obviously, for testing
purposes!) a number of different destinations.
When there is only one destination, we do a preliminary connect()
of the socket so we can use send() instead of sendto().
When we have multiple ports, the socket is not connect()'ed and we
do a sendto() instead. There is a performance hit in this case,
as the throughput on the loopback interface (with a firewall rule
that blocks the transmission) goes down from 900kpps to 490kpps on
my test machine.
If the number of different destinations is limited, one option to
explore is to have multiple connect()ed sockets.
MFC after: 1 month
handlers. This is primarily intended as a way to allow devices that use
multiple interrupts (e.g. MSI) to meaningfully distinguish the various
interrupt handlers.
- Add a new BUS_DESCRIBE_INTR() method to the bus interface to associate
a description with an active interrupt handler setup by BUS_SETUP_INTR.
It has a default method (bus_generic_describe_intr()) which simply passes
the request up to the parent device.
- Add a bus_describe_intr() wrapper around BUS_DESCRIBE_INTR() that supports
printf(9) style formatting using var args.
- Reserve MAXCOMLEN bytes in the intr_handler structure to hold the name of
an interrupt handler and copy the name passed to intr_event_add_handler()
into that buffer instead of just saving the pointer to the name.
- Add a new intr_event_describe_handler() which appends a description string
to an interrupt handler's name.
- Implement support for interrupt descriptions on amd64 and i386 by having
the nexus(4) driver supply a custom bus_describe_intr method that invokes
a new intr_describe() MD routine which in turn looks up the associated
interrupt event and invokes intr_event_describe_handler().
Requested by: many
Reviewed by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
(hardwired to once every 20us at most).
I found out that on many machines round here, i could only get
300-400kpps with netsend even on loopback and a 'deny' rule in
the firewall, while reducing the number of calls to gettimeofday()
brings the value to 900kpps and more.
This code is just a quick fix for the problem. Of course it could be
done better, with proper getopt() parsing and the like, but since
this applies to the entire program i'll postpone that to when i have
more time.
Reviewed by: rwatson
MFC after: 1 month
otherwise sign extension leads to unlikely values when in the negative
range of the signed short structure fields that hold the statistics.
The type used to hold routing statistics is arguably also incorrect.
MFC after: 3 days
1. There is a regression issue in the ARP code. The incomplete
ARP entry was timing out too quickly (1 second timeout), as
such, a new entry is created each time arpresolve() is called.
Therefore the maximum attempts made is always 1. Consequently
the error code returned to the application is always 0.
2. Set the expiration of each incomplete entry to a 20-second
lifetime.
3. Return "incomplete" entries to the application.
Reviewed by: kmacy
MFC after: 3 days
short read requests, so the result was that a /boot.config smaller than 512
bytes was ignored. boot2 uses fsread() instead of xfsread() to read
/boot.config already, so this makes zfsboot more like boot2.
Submitted by: Johny Mattsson johny-freebsd of earthmagic org
Reviewed by: dfr
MFC after: 3 days