Translate getdate.y into C for portability. Make the get_date()
function easier to test as well:
* Have it accept a time_t "now" to use as a reference so that test
code can verify relative time specifications against known starting
points.
* Set up default date after parsing the string so that we
can use the specified timezone (if any) instead of the local
default. Otherwise, local DST makes it almost impossible to
reliably test time specifications such as "sunday UTC"
archive_read_disk API to pull metadata off of disk. This
removes a lot of platform-specific knowledge of things like
ACLs, file flags, and extended attributes from bsdtar.
privilege grants so that dtrace can be more easily used to monitor
the security decisions being generated by the MAC Framework following
policy invocation.
Successful access control checks will be reported by:
mac_framework:kernel:<entrypoint>:mac_check_ok
Failed access control checks will be reported by:
mac_framework:kernel:<entrypoint>:mac_check_err
Successful privilege grants will be reported by:
mac_framework:kernel:priv_grant:mac_grant_ok
Failed privilege grants will be reported by:
mac_framework:kernel:priv_grant:mac_grant_err
In all cases, the return value (always 0 for _ok, otherwise an errno
for _err) will be reported via arg0 on the probe, and subsequent
arguments will hold entrypoint-specific data, in a style similar to
privilege tracing.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: Google, Inc.
are not currently owned by userspace before clearing or rotating them.
Otherwise we may not play by the rules of the shared memory protocol,
potentially corrupting packet data or causing userspace applications
that are playing by the rules to spin due to being notified that a
buffer is complete but the shared memory header not reflecting that.
This behavior was seen with pflogd by a number of reporters; note that
this fix is not sufficient to get pflogd properly working with
zero-copy BPF, due to pflogd opening the BPF device before forking,
leading to the shared memory buffer not being propery inherited in the
privilege-separated child. We're still deciding how to fix that
problem.
This change exposes buffer-model specific strategy information in
reset_d(), which will be fixed at a later date once we've decided how
best to improve the BPF buffer abstraction.
Reviewed by: csjp
Reported by: keramida
the disklabel in the 2nd sector for boot code. Even with both UFS1
and UFS2 supported, there's enough bytes left that we don't have to
nibble from the disklabel.
Thus, the entire 2nd sector is now reserved for the disklabel, which
makes the bootcode compatible again with disklabels that have more
than 8 partitions -- such as those created and supported by gpart.
i386: 135 bytes available
amd64: 151 bytes available
Ok'd by: jhb
Tested on an HD3850 (RV670) on loan from Warren Block.
Currently, you need one of the following for this to be useful:
x11-drivers/xf86-video-radeonhd-devel (not tested)
xf86-video-ati from git (EXA works, xv is too fast)
xf86-video-radeonhd from git (EXA works, xv works)
There is no 3d support available from dri just yet.
MFC after: 2 weeks
o add Transaction Translator support (still missing ISOC xfers)
o add EHCI_SCFLG_BIGEMMIO flag to force big-endian byte-select to be
set in USBMODE
o split reset work into new public routine ehci_reset so bus shim drivers
can force big-endian byte-select before ehci_init
o enable TT and big-endian MMIO
o force a reset before ehci_init to get byte-select setup
Also go back to using USB_EHCI_BIG_ENDIAN_DESC at compile time to enable the
byteswapping and reduce diffs to the original commits.
This fixes the new USB stack on the Cambria board.
o implement URB_FUNCTION_ABORT_PIPE handling.
o remove unused code related with canceling the timer list for USB
drivers.
o whitespace cleanup and style(9)
Obtained from: hps's original patch
conditioning tests on HAVE_ZLIB, etc, just ask libarchive for the
service and handle the failure coming back from libarchive. This
gives us better test coverage of common client usage where clients
simply try to use libarchive services and handle the errors coming
back instead of trying to second-guess which libarchive services are
compiled in.
Refactor the read_compression_program to add two new abilities:
* Public API: You can now include a signature string when you
register a program; the program will run only on input that
matches the signature string.
* Internal API: You can use the init() function to instantiate
an external program as part of a filter pipeline. This
can be used for graceful fallback (if zlib is unavailable, use
external gzip instead) and to use external programs with
bidders that are more sophisticated than a static signature check.
Support Joliet extensions. This currently ignores Rockridge extensions
if both exist on the same disk unless the '!joliet' option is provided.
e.g.: tar -xvf example.iso --options '!joliet'
Thanks to: Andreas Henriksson