takes care of all the 10/100 and gigE PCI drivers that I've done.
Next will be the wireless drivers, then the USB ones. I may pick up
some stragglers along the way. I'm sort of playing this by ear: if
anyone spots any places where I've screwed up horribly, please let me
know.
u_int64_t flag field, bounding the number of capabilities at 64,
but substantially cleaning up capability logic (there are currently
43 defined capabilities).
o Heads up to anyone actually using capabilities: the constant
assignments for various capabilities have been redone, so any
persistent binary capability stores (i.e., '$posix1e.cap' EA
backing files) must be recreated. If you have one of these,
you'll know about it, so if you have no idea what this means,
don't worry.
o Update libposix1e to reflect this new definition, fixing the
exposed functions that directly manipulate the flags fields.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
in the face of non-stripe-aligned swap areas. The bug could cause a
panic during boot.
Refuse to configure a swap area that is too large (67 GB or so)
Properly document the power-of-2 requirement for SWB_NPAGES.
The patch is slightly different then the one Tor enclosed in the P.R.,
but accomplishes the same thing.
PR: kern/20273
Submitted by: Tor.Egge@fast.no
userland from here; just forward declare struct stat. fhstat.2
(== fhopen.2 == fhstatfs.2) has always specified including
<sys/stat.h> before using any of the fh functions although this is
only necessary for dereferencing the "struct stat *" arg of fhstat(),
so applications should not notice this change.
Fixed unsorting of user prototypes in rev.1.78.
1. Don't include <sys/conf.h> in userland. It is not used, and including it
without including its prerequisite <sys/time.h> should have broken the
world.
2. Don't include <sys/mount.h>. It is not used, except in -current it
bogusly includes <sys/stat.h> which bogusly includes <sys/time.h> and
thus accidentally provides the prerequisite in (1).
3. Cleaned up nearby include messes.
Not approved by despite 5 weeks notice: MAINTAINER
before importing new versions of GCC. This differs from FREEBSD-Xlist
in that this is for use only with anoncvs checkouts, not tarball'ed
releases [snapshots].
This delete list applies to the 3-June-2000 import.
issues that brings, build the non-TLS version of sendmail in
src/usr.sbin/sendmail and the TLS version in src/secure/usr.sbin/sendmail.
This allows the TLS version to be part of the secure distribution when
building a release.
with FreeBSD (not including the MINSIGSTKSZ issue, which belongs to
Marcel). Due to time constraints, I'm going to space them out over a
few days.
This fixes two problems with linux_sigaltstack()
o ss == 0 is perfectly valid use, so do not fail in this case.
o Fix flag handling:
- Our SS_DISABLE is 4, linux's is 2, so we need conversion routines.
These conversion routines will be needed by linux_rt_sendsig()
and linux_rt_sigreturn (forthcoming), so they are not static.
- Linux's flag 0 historically meant SS_ONSTACK according to a comment
in their linux/kernel/signal.c file.
Among other things, this fixes a warning from Sun's JDK 1.3:
"Java HotSpot(TM) Client VM warning: cannot uninstall alt signal stack"
Reviewed by: marcel
Tested by: sto@stat.duke.edu, many others on freebsd-java@
and initialized during boot. This avoids bloating sizeof(struct lock).
As a side effect, it is no longer necessary to enforce the assumtion that
lockinit()/lockdestroy() calls are paired, so the LK_VALID flag has been
removed.
Idea taken from: BSD/OS.