Instead, treat the inability to retrieve a record from the server as a
match failure and let things take its course.
Part of the problem here is that NIS _is_ turned on, however the master
server is actually not an NIS server: it's an NIS+ server. And the client
is bound to an NIS+ replica server that's running in YP compat mode.
The code which tries to figure out of the user is local or NIS gets
confused by this.
peers by ORing the two together and NAKing or REQing
the result rather than allowing seperate local/peer
values.
If the peer REJs our ACCMAP and our ACCMAP isn't 0,
warn about it and ignore the rejection.
already defined. This allows for cross building to work because we
need to lie to make to tell it to use the target names rather than the
host names.
This should have no effect on either architecture. I've confirmed
that the intel build by make buildworld's for the past 3 months.
compiled in default in case it isn't defined. This is needed to make
cross compilation work in some edge cases. It also makes cross
compiling on FreeBSD other BSD's easier as well.
Obtained from: NetBSD, OpenBSD (predates the split)
Unlike the unisex architecutres we've had so far, mips is bisexual.
These tools can produce either byte sex, and the compiler/make
determines the proper gender to use. Otherwise, we'd have to have had
mipsel and mipseb in all the places that we have just mips. And there
are other complications with doing that (binutils doesn't like to
build mips tools without both byte genders, it seems).
Introduced BINUTIL_ARCH so that other bisexual architectures can a
generic mechanism.
We cannot just define MACHINE_ARCH as mips because we need to
differentiate big and little endian types of binaries. Discussions on
freebsd-arch have hashed out this issue (and the parallel libc
issues). NetBSD is moving towards mipsel and mipseb for their two
flavors of mips ports (in time for 1.4, if this change hasn't already
been accomplished).
I've been building i386 worlds with this tree for a three months with
these files in place with no ill effects.
``closing''.
Pointed out by: archie
Don't do a TLF when we get a ``Catastrphic Protocol Reject'' event
in state ``closed'' or ``stopped''.
Pointed out but not suggested by: archie
This makes no difference in the current implementation as
LcpLayerFinish() does nothing but log the event, but I disagree
in principle because it unbalances the TLF/TLS calls which
(IMHO) doesn't fit with the intentions of the RFC.
Maybe the RFC author had a reason for this. It can only happen
in two circumstances:
- if LCP has already been negotiated then stopped or closed and we
receive a protocol reject, then we must already have done a TLF.
Why do one again and stay in the same state ?
- if LCP hasn't yet been started and we receive an unsolicted
protocol reject, why should we TLF when we haven't done a TLS ?
and SHA-1 when OBJFORMAT is not ELF. Add a warning to the man page
about how SHA-1 uses bswapl, which will trap on 80386es (and the kernel
should, but doesn't currently, emulate).
catch a T4000s)
+ Set *some* kind of error at EOM if we're in fixed mode and have pending errs.
Do not clear the ERR_PENDING bit if more buffers are queued.
+ Release the start_ccb in this case also, else we hang forever on rewinding.
+ Any kind of error for load to BOT in samount should then cause an attempt
to use REWIND to come back to BOT. Do the initial load command quietly.
+ In samount, if we succeed, set the relative position markers.
we're already in network phase and our autoload values
are set with no minimum threshold (the default).
Tell the autoload timer that it's ``coming up'' *before*
calling AutoLoadTimeout() directly... not after. This
prevents the very first demand-dial connection from
immediately disconnecting when there are other auto links.
Problem diagnosis: Ted Mittelstaedt <tedm@toybox.placo.com>
build, but broke while doing the aout legacy build). Now using
.p2align instead of .align. Fixes broken buildworld.
Submitted by: John Polstra
Reviewed by: John Polstra
not per-process. Keep it in `switchtime' consistently.
It is now clear that the timestamp is always valid in fork_trampoline()
except when the child is running on a previously idle cpu, which
can only happen if there are multiple cpus, so don't check or set
the timestamp in fork_trampoline except in the (i386) SMP case.
Just remove the alpha code for setting it unconditionally, since
there is no SMP case for alpha and the code had rotted.
Parts reviewed by: dfr, phk
Submitted by: Matthew Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com>
To prevent a deadlock, if we are extremely low on memory, force synchronous
operation by the VOP_PUTPAGES in vnode_pager_putpages.
to calculate a reasonable size for the swap partition).
* Fix a typo in remrq() where a process with idle priority would not be
correctly removed from the relavent queue. Note that realtime and idle
priorities are still not supported since the assembler code in
cpu_switch() does not check the realtime and idle queues.