While hacking on TTY code, I often miss a small utility to revoke my own
(pseudo-)terminals. This small utility is just a small wrapper around
the revoke(2) call, so you can destroy your very own login sessions.
Approved by: re
The chpass Makefile tried to set the fschg flag on the binaries, even if
NO_FSCHG was passed to the installworld. This meant that if I installed
FreeBSD into a Jail, I couldn't installworld from within the Jail
anymore.
Now that it listens to NO_FSCHG, we can just make it bail out when it
fails, just like PRECIOUSPROG does.
The code that was in place in exit1() was mainly based on code from the
old TTY layer. The main reason behind this, was because at one moment I
ran a system that had two TTY layers in place at the same time. It is
now sufficient to do the following:
- Remove references from the session structure to the TTY vnode and the
session leader.
- If we have a controlling TTY and the session used by the TTY is equal
to our session, send the SIGHUP.
- If we have a vnode to the controlling TTY which has not been revoked,
revoke it.
While there, change sys/kern/tty.c to use s_ttyp in the comparison
instead of s_ttyvp. It should not make any difference, because s_ttyvp
can only become null when the session leader already left, but it's
nicer to compare against the proper value.
any open file descriptors >= 'lowfd'. It is largely identical to the same
function on other operating systems such as Solaris, DFly, NetBSD, and
OpenBSD. One difference from other *BSD is that this closefrom() does not
fail with any errors. In practice, while the manpages for NetBSD and
OpenBSD claim that they return EINTR, they ignore internal errors from
close() and never return EINTR. DFly does return EINTR, but for the common
use case (closing fd's prior to execve()), the caller really wants all
fd's closed and returning EINTR just forces callers to call closefrom() in
a loop until it stops failing.
Note that this implementation of closefrom(2) does not make any effort to
resolve userland races with open(2) in other threads. As such, it is not
multithread safe.
Submitted by: rwatson (initial version)
Reviewed by: rwatson
MFC after: 2 weeks
by if_free (w/o doing if_attach); move ifq_attach to if_alloc and
rename ifq_attach/detach to ifq_init/ifq_delete to better identify
their purpose
Reviewed by: jhb, kmacy
Right now the only way to make tcsetsid(3)/TIOCSCTTY work, is by
ensuring the session leader is dead. This means that an application that
catches SIGHUPs and performs a sleep prevents us from assigning a new
session leader.
Change the code to make it work on revoked TTYs as well. This allows us
to change init(8) to make the shutdown script run in a more clean
environment.
parameter "vnet" when it is created, a new vnet instance will be created
along with the jail. Networks interfaces can be moved between prisons
with an ioctl similar to the one that moves them between vimages.
For now vnets will co-exist under both jails and vimages, but soon
struct vimage will be going away.
Reviewed by: zec, julian
Approved by: bz (mentor)
we were not able to change c_fmt without breaking these utilities. Since
ache fixed all known issues 8 years ago, now we make ko_KR more usable.
Better late than never...
DP83065 Saturn Gigabit Ethernet controllers. These are the successors
of the Sun GEM controllers and still have a similar but extended transmit
logic. As such this driver is based on gem(4).
Thanks to marcel@ for providing a Sun Quad GigaSwift Ethernet UTP (QGE)
card which was vital for getting this driver to work on architectures
not using Open Firmware.
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 2 weeks
sanitization broke sysinstall on some disks. This was due to the disks
reporting a geometry that was incorrectly sanitized by sysinstall. This makes
the sanitization consistent with fdisk.
Tested by: randi
variables set via the getcredhostid() function. I also changed the type
of ci_hostid to "unsigned long" so that it matches what is returned by
getcredhostid(). Although "struct svc_rpc_gss_clientid" goes on the wire
during RPCSEC_GSS, it is just a variable # of opaque bytes to the client,
so it doesn't matter how much storage ci_hostid uses.
Approved by: kib (mentor)
allocated. MSI have strict vectors allocation requirements, which are not
satisfied now during reallocation. This is not the best possible solution,
but better then just broken, as it was.
No objections: current@, arch@, jhb@
FEEDER_RATE_PRESET "OVERSAMPLING_FACTOR:X .. .." where
X = log2(oversampling factor).
- Lower down default filter oversampling factor from 128
(log2 = 7) to 32 (log2 = 5), saving worth of 80 Kb.
The use of better polynomial interpolator will raise
its conversion quality/accuracy to match (or slightly
better) with previous settings.
- Bump driver version.
coefficients quality:
- Linear interpolator for oversampling factor larger and equal
than 4096 (log2 = 12).
- Quadratic interpolator for oversampling factor larger and equal
than 256 (log2 = 8).
Default oversampling factor (128 ~ log2 = 7) will use OPT32X, which
provides better accuracy.
vt220 will not work better. Even though it probably will remove warnings
about unknown terminal types, a cons25 emulator is not compatible with
vt220 at all.
memory with 4MB pages was added to pmap_object_init_pt(). This code
assumes that the pages of a OBJT_DEVICE object are always physically
contiguous. Unfortunately, this is not always the case. For example,
jhb@ informs me that the recently introduced /dev/ksyms driver creates
a OBJT_DEVICE object that violates this assumption. Thus, this
revision modifies pmap_object_init_pt() to abort the mapping if the
OBJT_DEVICE object's pages are not physically contiguous. This
revision also changes some inconsistent if not buggy behavior. For
example, the i386 version aborts if the first 4MB virtual page that
would be mapped is already valid. However, it incorrectly replaces
any subsequent 4MB virtual page mappings that it encounters,
potentially leaking a page table page. The amd64 version has a bug of
my own creation. It potentially busies the wrong page and always an
insufficent number of pages if it blocks allocating a page table page.
To my knowledge, there have been no reports of these bugs, hence,
their persistance. I suspect that the existing restrictions that
pmap_object_init_pt() placed on the OBJT_DEVICE objects that it would
choose to map, for example, that the first page must be aligned on a 2
or 4MB physical boundary and that the size of the mapping must be a
multiple of the large page size, were enough to avoid triggering the
bug for drivers like ksyms. However, one side effect of testing the
OBJT_DEVICE object's pages for physical contiguity is that a dubious
difference between pmap_object_init_pt() and the standard path for
mapping devices pages, i.e., vm_fault(), has been eliminated.
Previously, pmap_object_init_pt() would only instantiate the first
PG_FICTITOUS page being mapped because it never examined the rest.
Now, however, pmap_object_init_pt() uses the new function
vm_object_populate() to instantiate them all (in order to support
testing their physical contiguity). These pages need to be
instantiated for the mechanism that I have prototyped for
automatically maintaining the consistency of the PAT settings across
multiple mappings, particularly, amd64's direct mapping, to work.
(Translation: This change is also being made to support jhb@'s work on
the Nvidia feature requests.)
Discussed with: jhb@
In the past there have been some reports of PRINTF_BUFR_SIZE not
functioning correctly. Instead of having garbled console messages, we
should just see whether the issues are still there and analyze them.
Approved by: re
compiler doing argument type checking. Since the prototypes in
kgss_if.h used the generic gss_ctx_id_t for the context argument,
but the functions in sys/kgssapi/krb5/krb5_mech.c used the
KerberosV specific context argument, the file would no longer build.
This patch fixes it so it will build by replacing the argument with
a gss_ctx_id_t one and setting a local "struct krb5_context *" variable
to it for use by the function.
Reviewed by: dfr
Approved by: kib (mentor)
queue was drained. It will never fire for a directly dispatched packet.
You will most likely never want to use this for any ordinary netisr usage
and you will never blame netisr in case you try to use it and it does
not work as expected.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Even though I thought this bug was somewhere in the TTY layer, it turns
out init(8) doesn't make sure /dev/console is opened initially properly.
I've added revoke() to two pieces of code:
- death(): Apart from killing the gettys on shutdown, this doesn't
guarantee the TTY to be closed immediately.
- runshutdown(): Just like setctty(), we should revoke /dev/console.
Applications like syslogd may have file descriptors to the console.
also be able to print information about...
- length of the terminal capabilties
- dump of one terminal definition
- relationship overview for a terminal definition