* The existing radio config code was for the AR5416/AR9160 and missed out
on some of the AR9280 specific stuff. Include said stuff from ath9k.
* Refactor out the gain control settings into a new function, again pilfered
from ath9k.
* Use the analog register RMW macro when touching analog registers.
Obtained from: Linux ath9k
calling thread's unique integral ID, which is similar to AIX function of
the same name. Bump __FreeBSD_version to note its introduction.
Reviewed by: kib
BUFSIZ. Use LINE_MAX * 2 as the buffer size (BSIZE).
- Error out if we encounter a line longer than LINE_MAX. The previous
behavior was to silently split long lines and produce corrupted
output.
PR: bin/151384
* Store the flowid when receiving an SCTP/IPv6 packet.
* Store the flowid when receiving an SCTP packet with wrong CRC.
* Initilize flowid correctly.
* Put test code under INVARIANTS.
MFC after: 3 months.
Clear the padding when returning context to the usermode, for
MI ucontext_t and x86 MD parts.
Kernel allocates the structures on the stack, and not clearing
reserved fields and paddings causes leakage.
pins to determine whether there's a high register set or not. This
allows platform_gpio_init() to work without duplicating the work
done in the attach method.
All 9.6 users with DNSSEC validation enabled should upgrade to this
version, or the latest version in the 9.7 branch, prior to 2011-03-31
in order to avoid validation failures for names in .COM as described
here:
https://www.isc.org/announcement/bind-9-dnssec-validation-fails-new-ds-record
In addition the fixes for this and other bugs, there are also the
following:
* Various fixes to kerberos support, including GSS-TSIG
* Various fixes to avoid leaking memory, and to problems that could
prevent a clean shutdown of named
o) Have mips_wblush just do syncw, not sync on Cavium Octeon.
o) Add support for reading and writing some Octeon-specific registers.
NB: Some of these are not entirely Octeon-specific.
Submitted by: Bhanu Prakash
This fixes two problems -
* All packets need to be processed here, not just aggregate ones - as any
received frames (AMPDU or otherwise) in the given TID (traffic class id)
will update the sequence number and, implied with that, update the window;
* It seems there's situations where packets aren't matching a current node but
somehow need to be tracked. Thus just tag them all for now; I'll figure out
the why later.
Whilst I'm here, bump the stats counters whilst I'm at it.
This fixes AMPDU RX in my tests; the main problems now stem from what look
like PHY level error/retransmits which are impeding general throughput, incl.
AMPDU.
In the dec.2009 rewrite I introduced a bug, using for the
computation the arrival time instead of the time the packet
has exited from the queue.
The bandwidth computation was still correct because it is
computed elsewhere, but traffic was sent out in bursts.
The bug is also present in RELENG_8 after dec.2009
Thanks to Daikichi Osuga for investingating, finding and fixing the
bug with detailed graphs of the behaviour before and after the fix.
Submitted by: Daikichi Osuga
MFC after: 2 weeks
we need to set TARGET and TARGET_ARCH to get a correct WMAKEENV.
I am setting both to i386 since this is what picobsd is used for,
though there might be a better fix.
Add initial support for parallel make. This is disabled right now,
because there are incorrect dependencies somewhere which require
to run picobsd 2-3 times to complete a build.
MFC after: 2 weeks
TX chainmask.
since the upper layers don't (yet) know about the active TX/RX chainmasks,
it can't tell the rate scenario functions what to use. I'll eventually sort
this out; this restores functionality in the meantime.
incorrectly calling vm_object_page_clean(). They are passing the length of
the range rather than the ending offset of the range.
Perform the OFF_TO_IDX() conversion in vm_object_page_clean() rather than the
callers.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 weeks
MI ucontext_t and x86 MD parts.
Kernel allocates the structures on the stack, and not clearing
reserved fields and paddings causes leakage.
Noted and discussed with: bde
MFC after: 2 weeks
* In {(...) <redir1;} <redir2, do not drop redir1.
* Maintain the difference between (...) <redir and {(...)} <redir:
In (...) <redir, the redirection is performed in the child, while in
{(...)} <redir it should be performed in the parent (like {(...); :;}
<redir)