"ipid" options. This feature has been requested by several users.
On passing, fix some minor bugs in the parser. This change is fully
backward compatible so if you have an old /sbin/ipfw and a new
kernel you are not in trouble (but you need to update /sbin/ipfw
if you want to use the new features).
Document the changes in the manpage.
Now you can write things like
ipfw add skipto 1000 iplen 0-500
which some people were asking to give preferential treatment to
short packets.
The 'MFC after' is just set as a reminder, because I still need
to merge the Alpha/Sparc64 fixes for ipfw2 (which unfortunately
change the size of certain kernel structures; not that it matters
a lot since ipfw2 is entirely optional and not the default...)
PR: bin/48015
MFC after: 1 week
policy definition structure; this permits policies to reduce their
number of gratuitous includes for required for entry points they
don't implement. This also facilitates building the MAC Framework
on Darwin.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
Several of the subtypes have an associated vnode which is used for
stuff like the f*() functions.
By giving the vnode a speparate field, a number of checks for the specific
subtype can be replaced simply with a check for f_vnode != NULL, and
we can later free f_data up to subtype specific use.
At this point in time, f_data still points to the vnode, so any code I
might have overlooked will still work.
console, even if there is a TIOCCONS console tty. We were already
doing this after a panic, but it's also useful when entering DDB
for some other reason too.
TIOCCONS console (e.g. xconsole) via a timeout routine instead of
calling into the tty code directly from printf(). This fixes a
number of cases where calling printf() at the wrong time (such as
with locks held) would cause a panic if xconsole is running.
The TIOCCONS message buffer is 8k in size by default, but this can
be changed with the kern.consmsgbuf_size sysctl. By default, messages
are checked for 5 times per second. The timer runs and the buffer
memory remains allocated only at times when a TIOCCONS console is
active.
Discussed on: freebsd-arch
Reorder how the pci probing in handled. before adding devices, check to
see if the slot is a multi-function device to see if we should probe all
the functions.
Original idea by: imp
with a new implementation that has a mostly reentrant "addchar"
routine, supports multiple message buffers in the kernel, and hides
the implementation details from callers.
The new code uses a kind of sequence number to represend the current
read and write positions in the buffer. This approach (suggested
mainly by bde) permits the read and write pointers to be maintained
separately, which reduces the number of atomic operations that are
required. The "mostly reentrant" above refers to the way that while
it is now always safe to have any number of concurrent writers,
readers could see the message buffer after a writer has advanced
the pointers but before it has witten the new character.
Discussed on: freebsd-arch
data access errors when trying to read/write to non-existant PCI devices.
fix the psycho bridge to use peek for probing devices. This no longer
fakes it if the OFW node doesn't exist (and the reg == 0).
Reviewed by: jake, tmm
when serving up more than about 32 active files. For details see
section 6.3 (pg 111) of Daniel Ellard and Margo Seltzer, ``NFS
Tricks and Benchmarking Traps'' in the Proceedings of the Usenix
2003 Freenix Track, June 9-14, 2003 pg 101-114.
Obtained from: Daniel Ellard <ellard@eecs.harvard.edu>
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
causing poor interactive performance while unnice processes were running.
The new scheme still allows nice to have an effect on priority but it is
not as dramatic as the effect of the interactivity score.
- Avoid calling bread() with different sizes on the same blkno.
Although the buffer cache is designed to handle differing size
buffers, it erroneously tries to write the incorrectly-sized buffer
buffer back to disk before reading the correctly-sized one, even
when it's not dirty. This behaviour caused a panic for read-only
NTFS mounts when INVARIANTS was enabled ("bundirty: buffer x still
on queue y"), reported by NAKAJI Hiroyuki.
- Fix a bug in the code handling holes: a variable was incremented
instead of decremented, which could cause an infinite loop.
for vnodes reached through double indirection (i.e. **vpp). This
is worked-around by special-casing the identifier "vpp" (adding one
level of indirection).
The alternative fix mentioned in the PR had required substantial
changes to this script.
In case there are locking violations that had been hidden without
this patch, they may suddenly show up, now ...
This change does not affect code compiled without DEBUG_VFS_LOCKS.
PR: kern/46652
before calling it for bound thread. To avoid this problem, change
thread_schedule_upcall to not put new thread on run queue, let caller
do it, so we can tweak the new thread before setting it to run.
Reported by: pho
threads in the process have already masked the signal, so job control
is delayed. But later a thread unmasking the STOP signal should enable
job control, so in issignal(), scanning all threads in process to see
if we can direct suspend some of them, not just suspend current thread.
we can deadlock because of lock order reversals. This was not
caught because Witness ignores pool mutexes right now.
Diagnosis and help: truckman
Noticed by: pho