the limit is only the number of meaningful graph symbols available.
Statistical comparison is performed between the first dataset and
any further datasets.
No objection by: phk
intended to verify that SIGPIPE is delivered to a process writing or
sending on a socket that has been shut down for write. If available,
SO_NOSIGPIPE is also tested.
This regression test is currently passed by RELENG_4, but not by HEAD or
RELENG_5, due to a bug in the write() code for sockets. SO_NOSIGPIPE is not
present in RELENG_4, however, so is not tested there.
Reported by: Mikko Tyolajarvi <mbsd at pacbell dot net>
PR: 78478
native and foreign architectures and comparing products).
They eliminate most of the differences caused by different
object directory paths, timestamping, and identification.
(Note WORLDTMP was renamed to ${OBJTREE}${.CURDIR}/tmp.)
and adjust the path in the Makefile for the upgrade_checks target.
These checks are really feature upgrade checks that should be fast
and just find out whether we need to build a new make before
proceeding with other targets like buildworld. This makes the
place free for a real regression test suite in the old place.
http://www.ambrisko.com/doug/listio_kqueue/listio_kqueue.patch
Note: it is a good idea to run this against a physical drive to
exercise the physio fast path (ie. lio_kqueue /dev/<something safe>)
This will ensure op's counting per LIO request is correct. It is
currently broken the above patch fixes it.
Sponsored by: IronPort
against a disk as the argument. If you don't it will use a temp file.
The raw disk will use the kernel physio fast path method until the
max number of pending op's is reached then it will queue them. File
system op's are always queued. This is more important with LIO since
operation can get split across and accounting of op's is broken with LIO.
Note that this was broken when locking was added to kqueue (ie. 5.3)
My fix needs to be better integrated with FreeBSD.
Next is an LIO test and implementation.
Sponsored by: IronPort
modules to rip out the available sysctls. It will then produce a manual
page which may be installed with 'make install'. Currently typing 'make'
in the directory uses the default /boot/kernel files. To use a specific
directory, run sysdoc -k [location].
- Use fesetround() instead of fpsetround(), and add tests for
various rounding modes.
- Test that all NaNs generated are quiet.
Some of these tests won't pass until problems in vendor sources
(gdtoa and gcc) are fixed and new versions imported, but I
want to get these changes into the tree before I accidentally
blow them away again. :-(
tests. (Buy 10, get one free!) The separate categories were
already there; they just weren't labeled.
- Use fesetround() instead of fpsetround(), since the former is
standard and implemented on all supported architectures. Add
tests for each rounding mode.
- Add additional tests for subnormals.
Some of these tests won't pass until problems in vendor sources
(gdtoa and gcc) are fixed and new versions imported, but I
want to get these changes into the tree before I accidentally
blow them away.
introducing the disk formats for _RuneLocale and friends.
The disk formats do not have (useless) pointers and have 32-bit
quantities instead of rune_t and long. (htonl(3) only works
with 32-bit quantities, so there's no loss).
Bootstrap mklocale(1) when necessary. (Bootstrapping from 4.x
would be trivial (verified), but we no longer provide pre-5.3
source upgrades and this is the first commit to actually break
it.)
bind()/connect() system calls, which is intended to confirm that the
right successes and errors occur when rendezvousing via the file system
name space.
and as long as we're not compiling with IPA, gcc(1) won't optimize
the call away. The whole purpose of using memcpy(3) is to avoid
misaligned loads and stores when we need to read or write the value
in the unaligned memory location. But if gcc(1) optimizes the call
to memcpy(3) away, it will typically introduce misaligned loads and
stores. In this context that's not a good idea.