Some of new features:
- New readers: RAR, LHA/LZH, CAB reader, 7-Zip
- New writers: ISO9660, XAR
- Improvements to many formats, especially including ISO9660 and Zip
- Stackable write filters to write, e.g., tar.gz.uu in a single pass
- Exploit seekable input; new "seekable" Zip reader can exploit the Zip
Central Directory when it's available; the old "streamable" Zip reader
is still fully supported for cases where seeking is not possible.
Full release notes available at:
https://github.com/libarchive/libarchive/wiki/ReleaseNotes
unp->unp_vnode pointer to detect if there is a vnode associated with
(binded to) this socket and does necessary cleanup if there is.
The issue is that after forced unmount this check may be too late as
the unp_vnode is reclaimed and the reference is stale.
To fix this provide a helper function that is called on a socket vnode
reclamation to do necessary cleanup.
Pointed by: kib
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
RTL810x family , RTL8139 has different register map for Config
registers.
While here, follow the lead of re(4) in WOL configuration.
- Disable WOL_UCAST and WOL_MCAST capabilities by default.
- Config5 register write does not need to unlock EEPROM access
on RTL8139 family but unlocking EEPROM access does not affect
its operation and make it consistent with re(4).
Reported by: Matt Renzelmann mjr <> cs dot wisc dot edu
according to POSIX document, the clock ID may be dynamically allocated,
it unlikely will be in 64K forever. To make it future compatible, we
pack all timeout information into a new structure called _umtx_time, and
use fourth argument as a size indication, a zero means it is old code
using timespec as timeout value, but the new structure also includes flags
and a clock ID, so the size argument is different than before, and it is
non-zero. With this change, it is possible that a thread can sleep
on any supported clock, though current kernel code does not have such a
POSIX clock driver system.
call in an #if 0 section.
In in6_selecthlim() optimize a case where in6p cannot be NULL due to an
earlier check.
More consistently use u_int instead of int for fibnum function arguments.
Sponsored by: Cisco Systems, Inc.
MFC after: 3 days
bridge, this allows us to have more than one independent bridge in the same
STP domain.
PR: kern/164369
Submitted by: Nikos Vassiliadis (earlier version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
1) _x=$((_x + 1)) does not work while x=$((x + 1)) does.
2) Parameter Expansion, esp. "${x%%bar}" does not work if quoted.
Correct typos and improve some details forwarding.sh already
had in initiator, esp. related to ipfw accepting if the default
is deny.
Add an extra stat call to the "delay" function in addition to the
touch which together is still a lot faster than sleep 1 but seems
to help a lot more to mitigate the unrelated kernel race seen.
Sponsored by: Cisco Systems, Inc.
If a utility called by xargs exits with status 255 or because of a signal,
POSIX requires writing an error message.
PR: 165155
Submitted by: Matthew Story matthewstory gmail com
It doesn't _really_ help all that much, I'll commit something to
sys/net/if.c at some point explaining why, but the lock should be held
when checking/manipulating/branching because of said lock.
comlock, I'd like to find and analyse these cases to see if they
really are valid.
So, throw in a lock here and wait for the (hopefully!) inevitable
complaints.
- As it turns out, MSI-X is broken for at least LSI SAS1068E when passed
through by VMware so blacklist their PCI-PCI bridge for MSI/MSI-X here.
Note that besides currently there not being a quirk type that disables
MSI-X only and there's no evidence that MSI doesn't work with the VMware
pass-through, it's really questionable whether MSI generally works in
that setup as VMware only mention three know working devices [1, p. 4].
Also not that this quirk entry currently doesn't affect the devices
emulated by VMware in any way as these don't claim support MSI/MSI-X to
begin with. [2]
While at it, make the PCI quirk table const and static.
- Remove some duplicated empty lines.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
PR: 163812, http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=27899 [2]
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 3 days
[1]: http://www.vmware.com/pdf/vsp_4_vmdirectpath_host.pdf
- Remove all attempts to guess physical temperature using DiodeOffset.
There are too many reports that it varies wildly depending on motherboard.
Instead, if it is known to scale well and its offset is known from other
temperature sensors on board, the user may set "dev.amdtemp.0.sensor_offset"
tunable to compensate the difference. Document the caveats in amdtemp(4).
- Add a quirk for Socket AM2 Revision G processors. These processors are
known to have a different offset according to Linux k8temp driver.
- Warn about Family 10h Erratum 319. These processors have broken sensors.
- Report temperature in more logical orders under dev.amdtemp node. For
example, "dev.amdtemp.0.sensor0.core0" is now "dev.amdtemp.0.core0.sensor0".
- Replace K8, K10 and K11 with official processor names in amdtemp(4).
v_writecount. Keep the amount of the virtual address space used by
the mappings in the new vm_object un_pager.vnp.writemappings
counter. The vnode v_writecount is incremented when writemappings gets
non-zero value, and decremented when writemappings is returned to
zero.
Writeable shared vnode-backed mappings are accounted for in vm_mmap(),
and vm_map_insert() is instructed to set MAP_ENTRY_VN_WRITECNT flag on
the created map entry. During deferred map entry deallocation,
vm_map_process_deferred() checks for MAP_ENTRY_VN_WRITECOUNT and
decrements writemappings for the vm object.
Now, the writeable mount cannot be demoted to read-only while
writeable shared mappings of the vnodes from the mount point
exist. Also, execve(2) fails for such files with ETXTBUSY, as it
should be.
Noted by: tegge
Reviewed by: tegge (long time ago, early version), alc
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 3 weeks
add support for "-t <datatype>" argument to zfs get
References:
https://www.illumos.org/issues/1936
Update zfs(8) manpage in respect of [1].
Fix typo in zfs(8) manpage.
Obtained from: illumos (issue #1936)
MFC after: 1 week
a new jail parameter node with the following parameters:
allow.mount.devfs:
allow mounting the devfs filesystem inside a jail
allow.mount.nullfs:
allow mounting the nullfs filesystem inside a jail
Both parameters are disabled by default (equals the behavior before
devfs and nullfs in jails). Administrators have to explicitly allow
mounting devfs and nullfs for each jail. The value "-1" of the
devfs_ruleset parameter is removed in favor of the new allow setting.
Reviewed by: jamie
Suggested by: pjd
MFC after: 2 weeks
at which the lle_tbl pointer points to freed memory and the llt_free pointer is no longer
valid.
Move the free pointer in to the llentry itself and update the initalization sites.
MFC after: 2 weeks
"panic in 8.3-PRERELEASE" on Feb. 22, 2012. This panic was caused
by use of a mix of tsleep() and msleep() calls on the same event
in the new NFS server DRC code. It did "mtx_unlock(); tsleep();"
in two places, which kib@ noted introduced a slight risk that the
wakeup() would occur before the tsleep(), resulting in a 10sec
delay before waking up. This patch fixes the problem by replacing
"mtx_unlock(); tsleep();" with mtx_sleep(..PDROP..). It also
changes a nfsmsleep() call to mtx_sleep() so that the code uses
mtx_sleep() consistently within the file.
Tested by: hrs (in progress)
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 5 days
to the debugger. When reparenting for debugging, keep the child in
the new orphan list of old parent. When looping over the children in
kern_wait(), iterate over both children list and orphan list to search
for the process by pid.
Submitted by: Dmitry Mikulin <dmitrym juniper.net>
MFC after: 2 weeks
I'm not sure _why_ the ic is NULL here, but I've seen it occasionally do
this after I've been tinkering with things for a while. It ends up
crashing in a call to ath_chan_set() via the net80211 scan code and scan
task.
don't give RX path more priority than TX path.
Also remove infinite loop in interrupt handler and limit number of
iteration to 32. This change addresses system load fluctuations
under high network load.