when looking into an already hashed archive, the code tried to use
the name shortened to the maximum length allowed for the archive.
Unfortunately it passed a buffer of junk to the hashing routine when
the name actually wasn't too long. Theoretically this could lead to
a false positive.
it to recognise what ABI to use on amd64 (and possibly others) platform.
Display PID and process name as a part of the 'info threads' output, TIDs
alone are too confusing. Introduce new commmands 'tid <tid>' and 'proc <pid>'
to accompany gdb's default 'thread <thread num>' to make the task of switching
between different contexts easier.
bind()/connect() system calls, which is intended to confirm that the
right successes and errors occur when rendezvousing via the file system
name space.
on the previous generation of Pentium-M processors (Banias). Support for
Dothan and later processors involves working with acpi_perf(4) to extract
information about supported states. This driver should work on MP systems
including HTT. It is experimental and may have a few bugs but has been
tested to not crash at least.
Thanks to Colin Percival for his initial work on this driver.
Short list of changes:
* SIGINT termination from auto-fetch.
* Less trusting of remote filenames during auto mgets.
* Improved RFC2616 compliancy.
* Fix globs when using ftp reget (from mat@).
* Limit send buffer size.
only call the protocol's pru_rcvd() if the protocol has the flag
PR_WANTRCVD set. This brings that instance of pru_rcvd() into line with
the rest, which do check the flag.
MFC after: 3 days
affect the largest file size that is allowed by the file system.
On the other hand, when creating a snapshot, the snapshot file will
appear as it is as big as the file system itself. Hence we will not
be able to create a snapshot on large file systems with small block
sizes.
Add a warning about this, and gives some hints to correct the issue.
Reviewed by: mckusick
MFC After: 1 week
very slow process, especially for large file systems that is just
recovered from a crash.
Since the summary is already re-sync'ed every 30 second, we will
not lag behind too much after a crash. With this consideration
in mind, it is more reasonable to transfer the responsibility to
background fsck, to reduce the delay after a crash.
Add a new sysctl variable, vfs.ffs.compute_summary_at_mount, to
control this behavior. When set to nonzero, we will get the
"old" behavior, that the summary is computed immediately at mount
time.
Add five new sysctl variables to adjust ndir, nbfree, nifree,
nffree and numclusters respectively. Teach fsck_ffs about these
API, however, intentionally not to check the existence, since
kernels without these sysctls must have recomputed the summary
and hence no adjustments are necessary.
This change has eliminated the usual tens of minutes of delay of
mounting large dirty volumes.
Reviewed by: mckusick
MFC After: 1 week
binaries, sk(4) ALTQ and jumbo frames on Yukons, cd9660 less chatty,
burncd(8) fixate eject works, mknod(8) deprecated, NOFOO -> NO_FOO,
ppp(8) echo, tcpdrop(8), whois(1) -k.
Modified release note: In netcat note, provide cross-reference to
nc(1) manpage.
Just another random walk through the commit messages...
affect the largest file size that is allowed by the file system.
On the other hand, when creating a snapshot, the snapshot file will
appear as it is as big as the file system itself. Hence we will not
be able to create a file system on large file systems with small
block sizes.
Add a warning about this, and gives some hints to correct the issue.
Reviewed by: mckusick
MFC After: 1 week
of the global UNIX domain socket mutex: no protection is needed that
early in the setup of the UNIX domain socket and socket structures.
MFC after: 3 days