options one would normally expect to set the realm, enable encryption,
and whatnot, but this actually is able to contact the remote server,
so at least it's a start. (As a bonus, the stripped static binary is
unquestionably exportable.)
now by default mount the last data track (thus last session), as
opposed to the very first session it has been mounting previously.
This is consistent with the ISO9660 multi-session idea, and the way
other operating systems are working.
There's support to mount arbitrary sessions using the -s option. This
way, you can simulate multi-session CDs on something like vn devices
that don't support CDIO* ioctl commands. You can also force the
historic behaviour with
mount -t cd9660 -o -s=0 /dev/cd0a /cdrom
nfs requests from non-privileged ports.
Change mountd such that it does never set this variable, but only clears
it when run with -n. Also document this in the man page.
a reserved port, so why not the nfs rpc's themselves?
With user allowed mounts, this perhaps needs a closer look, but
on the other hand, a user could already specify the flag.
If normal users should not be able to use resserved ports, the kernel
should check for the flag at mount time.
(presumably because the kernel is old). Moved the declaration of a
variable realated to this sysctl outside of an unrelated ifdef.
Not fixed:
- this sysctl is badly named (nfs occurs twice).
- it's silly to have for FreeBSD in FreeBSD code, especially when
only half of the FreeBSD-dependent code is ifdefed.
in uu_lock(). Add uu_lockerr() for turning the results of
uu_lock into something printable. Remove bogus section in man page
about race conditions allowing both processes to get the lock.
Include libutil.h and use uu_lock() correctly where it should.
Suggested by: ache@freebsd.org
it's internal malloc() implementation to try and avoid overstepping it's
resource limits (yuk!). Remain using libc's malloc(), but check the
resource limits right before trying to malloc the ramdisk space and leave
some spare memory for libc. In Andrey's words, the internal malloc
was "true evil".. Among it's sins is it's ability to allocate less memory
than asked for and still return success. stdio would just love that. :-)
Reviewed by: ache
I was not sure whether the fs_id fields should be printed in the clear
in case of sniffing over a network login etc. It might be an idea
to have somebody with spare time go through and find any other missing
fields that should be reported.
Definate 2.2.x/2.1.x candidate since it breaks the build.
automatically have random generation numbers. The kenel way of handling those
also changed. Further it is advised to run fsirand on all your nfs exported
filesystems. the code is mostly copied from OpenBSD, with the randomization
chanegd to use /dev/urandom
Reviewed by: Garrett
Obtained from: OpenBSD
something closer to how we used to do it. The Lite2 way is to check the
"fsclean" flag in the superblock and stop there if so (during preen).
We now do the various superblock sanity checks that we used to do before
since it's cheap. We now get the filesystem state summary again instead
of "FILESYSTEM CLEAN; CHECKING SKIPPED" (or whatever).