comes across it, it will turn into a core dump in userland instead of
a kernel panic. I had also inverted the sense of the test, so
Double pointy hat to: mtm
- Make m_prepend use m_gethdr instead of m_get where
appropriate
- Make m_copym use m_gethdr instead of m_get where
appropriate
- Add a call to m_fixhdr in m_defrag; m_defrag can't
deal with corrupted pkthdr.len counts.
MFC after: 3 days
don't probe the server at all for passwd.by* maps. This fixes
interoperability with the Services For UNIX NIS server (which is
really a front end to Captive^WActiveDirectory). This server
incorrectly returns success for all YPPROC_MASTER requests,
even for maps that don't exist, which makes it impossible to
(ab)use it to probe for the existence of the master.passwd.by*
maps.
This is a little kludgey, but basically restores the original
behavior of getpwent.c as it is in -stable, and works around both
the lack of YPPROC_ORDER on NIS+ servers as well as the broken
YPPROC_MASTER on Services For UNIX servers.
Some of the calls to bus_dmamap_sync() were syncing the DMA descriptor
ring maps using the mbuf tag, when they should have been using the
descriptor ring tag instead.
ID for each file system in addition to the normal information.
In umount(8), accept filesystem IDs as well as the usual device and
path names. This makes it possible to unambiguously specify which
file system is to be unmounted even when two or more file systems
share the same device and mountpoint names (e.g. NFS mounts from
the same export into different chroots).
Suggested by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
check for raw IP system management operations is often (although
not always) implicit due to the namespacing of raw IP sockets. I.e.,
you have to have privilege to get a raw IP socket, so much of the
management code sitting on raw IP sockets assumes that any requests
on the socket should be granted privilege.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Product of: France
uma_zalloc) is called with exactly one of either M_WAITOK or M_NOWAIT and
that it is called with neither M_TRYWAIT or M_DONTWAIT. Print a warning
if anything is wrong. Default to M_WAITOK of no flag is given. This is the
same test as in malloc(9).
the scope of operation to the ARP entries on a particular
interface. It should be useful on machines with numerous
network interfaces, e.g., on inter-VLAN routers.
PR: bin/54151
Submitted by: Dmitry Morozovsky <marck at rinet.ru>
Discussed on: -net
MFC after: 2 weeks