freebsd with flexible iflib nic queues
a32661a6c9
RPM version 4.9.0 has been observed to generate extra debug messages in certain cases. These debug messages prevent us from cleanly acquiring the architecture. This is clearly an upstream RPM bug which will get fixed. But until then a safe solution is to pipe the result through 'tail -1' to just grab the architecture bit we care about. Example 'rpm -qp spl-0.6.0-rc4.src.rpm --qf %{arch}' output: Freeing read locks for locker 0x166: 28031/47480843735008 Freeing read locks for locker 0x168: 28031/47480843735008 x86_64 |
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cmd | ||
config | ||
include | ||
lib | ||
module | ||
patches | ||
scripts | ||
.gitignore | ||
AUTHORS | ||
autogen.sh | ||
ChangeLog | ||
configure | ||
configure.ac | ||
COPYING | ||
DISCLAIMER | ||
INSTALL | ||
Makefile.am | ||
Makefile.in | ||
META | ||
README.markdown | ||
spl_config.h.in | ||
spl-modules.spec.in | ||
spl.spec.in |
The Solaris Porting Layer (SPL) is a Linux kernel module which provides many of the Solaris kernel APIs. This shim layer makes it possible to run Solaris kernel code in the Linux kernel with relatively minimal modification. This can be particularly useful when you want to track upstream Solaris development closely and don’t want the overhead of maintaining a large patch which converts Solaris primitives to Linux primitives.
To build packages for your distribution:
$ ./configure
$ make pkg
Full documentation for building, configuring, and using the SPL can be found at: http://zfsonlinux.org