o Remove entries for 1510, 152x and 1535. These are supported, for some value
of supported, by the aic driver.
o Add notes about 1542-CP being plug and play, but it can still conflict with
other resources because all the resources it uses are set with the onboard
BIOS.
Comment out rather than totally remove the ipfilter pieces that we need
reconnected some day. This is now only ipnat as it is for configuring NAT.
ipfstat is meant for reporting statistics/filter lists. For /rescue it is
enough to configure lists but not view the installed ones.
signal handling mode, there is no chance to handle the signal, something
must be wrong in the library, just call kse_thr_interrupt to dump its core.
I have the code for a long time, but forgot to commit it.
are zx1 based machines and they don't particularly like it when we
poke at them with PC legacy code. The atkbd and psm devices were
disabled in the hints file so that one could enable them on machines
that support legacy devices, but that's not really something you can
expect from a first-time installer. This still leaves syscons (sc)
and the vga device, which were enabled by default and wrecking havoc
anyway. We could disable them by default like the atkbd and psm
devices, but there's really no point in pretending we're in a better
shape that way.
o pickup Giant in divert_packet to protect sbappendaddr since it
can be entered through MPSAFE callouts or through ip_input when
mpsafenet is 1
o add missing locking on output
o add locking to abort and shutdown
o add a ctlinput handler to invalidate held routing table references
on an ICMP redirect (may not be needed)
Supported by: FreeBSD Foundation
o add assertions in tcp_respond to validate inpcb locking assumptions
o use local variable instead of chasing pointers in tcp_respond
Supported by: FreeBSD Foundation
whether or not the isr needs to hold Giant when running; Giant-less
operation is also controlled by the setting of debug_mpsafenet
o mark all netisr's except NETISR_IP as needing Giant
o add a GIANT_REQUIRED assertion to the top of netisr's that need Giant
o pickup Giant (when debug_mpsafenet is 1) inside ip_input before
calling up with a packet
o change netisr handling so swi_net runs w/o Giant; instead we grab
Giant before invoking handlers based on whether the handler needs Giant
o change netisr handling so that netisr's that are marked MPSAFE may
have multiple instances active at a time
o add netisr statistics for packets dropped because the isr is inactive
Supported by: FreeBSD Foundation
in share/security in the trustedbsd_sebsd branch that are not present
in the main tree. Also, .include Makefile.inc from the parent directory
so that BINDIR is set right.
Pointed out by: bde
manpages: ahd(4), mly(4), vpo(4), rl(4), bktr(4), uscanner(4).
Tweak mlx(4) entry slightly.
Also trim USB hubs, ukbd(4) and ums(4). We can't seriously expect a
device list for these classes of devices that is inclusive enough to
be useful to anybody.
buildworld as src/etc/sendmail/freebsd.mc is missing. That example
was added 3 years ago, before the /etc/mail/ infrastructure was in
place for customized configurations. It is time to remove this example.
Noticed by: Robert Gray <bob@boulderlabs.com> in freebsd-stable
MFC after: 1 day
PALM_4 initialisation hack. I've not confirmed it myself, but
seeing as we already don't use it for the Sony Clie_41, let's drop
it from the Clie_40 also and see what happens.
(Question: What about the Clie_S360 and Clie_NX60 devices? Do we
need to drop Palm4 from those as well? Possibly, but I've not had
any reports about those so I don't know.)
PR: kern/56575
MFC after: 3 days
rm_overwrite() (for rm -P).
2. Print the file name in the error message for (fatal) malloc() failures
in rm_overwrite(). I first thought that malloc() failures should be
non-fatal since they don't prevent proceeding the the next file, but
making them non-fatal would normally give too much output for rm -Pr
on a large tree in the unlikely event that even one occurs, since the
malloc()ed amounts are usually the same. Just print the file name since
the malloc()ed amounts are not always the same and it doesn't hurt to
know where rm was when it quit.
Submitted by: guido ((1) and original version of (2))
is highly MD in an emulation environment since it operates on the host
environment. Although the setregs functions are really for exec support
rather than signals, they deal with the same sorts of context and include
files. So I put it there rather than create yet another file.