you encrypt all traffic routinely, and is also useful for debugging.
Also, (properly) set SUID bit on relevant apps - opieinfo and
opiepasswd, which need it to mess with /etc/opiekeys.
language-dependant SGML catalogs (in ${LANG_CODE}/share/sgml) and also
use a default.dsl stylesheet similar to what the rest of the DocProj
documents use.
Requested by: hrs, Alex Kapranoff <kapr@acm.org>
Reviewed by: hrs, dd
MFC after: 2 days
Despite of a few cosmetic things like adding ``irritating silly
parentheses'' around all return values, this mainly improves FDC reset
handling by no longer gratuitously resetting the FDC all the time
(which causes it to lose the notion of the current track) but only in
case of errors, and it sanitizes the block and offset calculations in
fdstrategy() and fdstate(). Some additional cleanup added by me, in
particular the large switch in fdstate() now always uses return to
break out, and no branch falls off the end of the switch statement
anymore. Per Bruce's suggestion, removed M_NOWAIT from the malloc()s
to simplify things.
Submitted by: bde (mostly)
until a 20ms select(2) timeout occurs, but if there is a continuous
stream of movement events, button events can be delayed indefinitely
because the select never has to wait long enough for a timeout.
The delay and mouse event reordering that result are very noticable
and sometimes quite frustrating when dragging windows etc. in X.
Add a simple mechanism that avoids this re-ordering. While a button
event is deferred, we discard up to 3 movement events to allow for
mouse jitter. If more movement events occur, then we immediately
timeout the deferred button event and let the movement proceed.
This change only affects the 3-button emulation case.
Previously, I had the MODE_1000 bit in the global config register set
unconditionally, which was wrong: we have to turn it off if we have
a 10/100 link. This is now handled in the nge_miibus_statchg() routine.
Discovered by: Nathan Binkert <binkertn@eecs.umich.edu>
(Note: this commit is being done from JFK airport. :P )
generation scheme. Users may now select between the currently used
OpenBSD algorithm and the older random positive increment method.
While the OpenBSD algorithm is more secure, it also breaks TIME_WAIT
handling; this is causing trouble for an increasing number of folks.
To switch between generation schemes, one sets the sysctl
net.inet.tcp.tcp_seq_genscheme. 0 = random positive increments,
1 = the OpenBSD algorithm. 1 is still the default.
Once a secure _and_ compatible algorithm is implemented, this sysctl
will be removed.
Reviewed by: jlemon
Tested by: numerous subscribers of -net
tries to free uninitialized mbuf.
This was my mistake during recent KAME merge. This part is for
*BSD other than FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Alexander N. Kabaev <ak03@gte.com>
The original code was certainly broken; it knows that whereto is
to be used for a sockaddr_in, so it should be declared as such.
To support multiple protocols, there is also a sockaddr_storage
struct that can be used; I don't think struct sockaddr is supposed
to be used anywhere other than for casts and pointers.
Submitted by: Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>
MFC after: 3 weeks