threatened in rev.1.10 of usr.sbin/kgmon/kgmon.c more than 2 years ago.
kgmon has been recovering from the missing initialization for too
long, but the fixup there is ifdefed for i386's and shouldn't be
needed for other arches.
high resolution kernel profiling (options GUPROF. "U" in GUPROF stands
for microseconds resolution, but the resolution is now smaller than 1
nanosecond on multi-GHz machines and the accuracy is heading towards
1 nanosecond too). Arches that support GUPROF must now provide certain
macros for the calibration. GUPROF is now only supported for i386's,
so the absence of the new macros for other arches doesn't break anything
that wasn't already broken. amd64's have uncommitted support for
GUPROF, and sparc64's have support that seems to be complete except
here (there was an #error for non-i386 cases; now there are undefined
macros).
Changed the asms a little:
- declare them as __volatile. They must not be moved, and exporting a
label across asms is technically incorrect, so try harder to stop gcc
moving them.
- don't put the non-clobbered register "bx" in the clobber list. The
clobber lists are still more conservative than necessary.
- drop the non-support for gcc-1. It just gave a better error message,
and this is not useful since compiling with gcc-1 would cause thousands
of worse error messages.
- drop the support for aout.
followed are: Only 3 functions (pthread_cancel, pthread_setcancelstate,
pthread_setcanceltype) are required to be async-signal-safe by POSIX. None of
the rest of the pthread api is required to be async-signal-safe. This means
that only the three mentioned functions are safe to use from inside
signal handlers.
However, there are certain system/libc calls that are
cancellation points that a caller may call from within a signal handler,
and since they are cancellation points calls have to be made into libthr
to test for cancellation and exit the thread if necessary. So, the
cancellation test and thread exit code paths must be async-signal-safe
as well. A summary of the changes follows:
o Almost all of the code paths that masked signals, as well as locking the
pthread structure now lock only the pthread structure.
o Signals are masked (and left that way) as soon as a thread enters
pthread_exit().
o The active and dead threads locks now explicitly require that signals
are masked.
o Access to the isdead field of the pthread structure is protected by both
the active and dead list locks for writing. Either one is sufficient for
reading.
o The thread state and type fields have been combined into one three-state
switch to make it easier to read without requiring a lock. It doesn't need
a lock for writing (and therefore for reading either) because only the
current thread can write to it and it is an integer value.
o The thread state field of the pthread structure has been eliminated. It
was an unnecessary field that mostly duplicated the flags field, but
required additional locking that would make a lot more code paths require
signal masking. Any truly unique values (such as PS_DEAD) have been
reborn as separate members of the pthread structure.
o Since the mutex and condvar pthread functions are not async-signal-safe
there is no need to muck about with the wait queues when handling
a signal ...
o ... which also removes the need for wrapping signal handlers and sigaction(2).
o The condvar and mutex async-cancellation code had to be revised as a result
of some of these changes, which resulted in semi-unrelated changes which
would have been difficult to work on as a separate commit, so they are
included as well.
The only part of the changes I am worried about is related to locking for
the pthread joining fields. But, I will take a closer look at them once this
mega-patch is committed.
because VLAN hardware features are enabled in em(4) by default.
Note: Currently vlan(4) has a bug that it consults
if_capabilities, not if_capenable. This will be fixed
after all the network drivers set VLAN bits in
if_capenable properly.
- Connect geom_stripe and geom_nop modules to the build.
- Connect STRIPE and NOP classes to the LINT build.
- Disconnect gconcat(8) from the build.
Supported by: Wheel - Open Technologies - http://www.wheel.pl
GEOM classes. CONCAT should be 100% compatible with existing gconcat(8)
utility, which is going to be removed.
Supported by: Wheel - Open Technologies - http://www.wheel.pl
is intend to be fast. Just like CONCAT class it provides manual and
auto configuration methods.
Supported by: Wheel - Open Technologies - http://www.wheel.pl
it is very useful for tests. One is able to destroy its provider
forcibly if wants to test how other class handle such events.
One is also able to specify failure probability to check how other
classes handle I/O errors.
Supported by: Wheel - Open Technologies - http://www.wheel.pl
GEOM classes. It works by loading a shared library via dlopen(3) mechanism
with class-specific code, it is also responsible for communicating with
GEOM via libgeom(3).
Per-class shared libraries are going to be stored in /lib/geom/ directory.
It provides also few standard commands like 'list', 'load' and 'unload'
for existing classes which aren't aware of geom(8).
More info will be send on freebsd-current@ mailing list.
Supported by: Wheel - Open Technologies - http://www.wheel.pl
unless it's in the closed or listening state (remote address
== INADDR_ANY).
If a TCP inpcb is in any other state, it's impossible to steal
its local port or use it for port theft. And if there are
both closed/listening and connected TCP inpcbs on the same
localIP:port couple, the call to in_pcblookup_local() will
find the former due to the design of that function.
No objections raised in: -net, -arch
MFC after: 1 month
1) Missing include for declaration of time conversion functions.
2) Avoid a couple of alignment warnings on 64 bit arches by memcpying the
things pointed to by caddrs into variables of the right type.
Bump WARNS to 6 while I'm here.
man page after Orla, so the mistakes are probably mine. Leave a
note on the door welcoming the mdoc police.
Submitted by: Orla McGann <orly@cnri.dit.ie>
character, as some tar implementations incorrectly include a '/' with
the prefix.
Thanks to: Divacky Roman for the UnixWare 7 tarfile that
demonstrated this issue.