64 bit systems, years roughly -2^31 through 2^31 can be represented in
time_t without any trouble. 32 bit time_t systems only range from
roughly 1902 through 2038. As a consequence, none of the date munging
code for all the various calendar tweaks before then is present. There
are other problems including the fact that there was no 'year zero' and
so on. So rather than get excited about trying to figure out when the
calendar jumped by two weeks etc, simply disallow negative (ie: prior to
1900) years.
This happens to have an important side effect. If you bzero a 'struct
tm', it corresponds to 'Jan 0, 1900, 00:00 GMT'. This happens to be
representable (after canonification) in 64 bit time_t space. Zero tm
structs are generally an error and mktime normally returns -1 for them.
Interestingly, it tries to canonify the 'jan 0' to 'dec 31, 1899', ie:
year -1. This conveniently trips the negative year test above, which
means we can trivially detect the null 'tm' struct.
This actually tripped up code at work. :-/ (Don't ask)
the arguments to bus_dmamap_load, so don't use '...' but list the
actual args. '...' usually means a variable number of args (cf
printf(3)), but bus_dmamap_load takes a fixed number of arguments.
to just before bus_dmamem_free, which is (a) more logical; (b) likely
what was originally intended and (c) matches the order in the NAME and
FUNCTIONS sections.
We were obtaining different spin mutexes (which disable interrupts after
aquisition) and spin waiting for delivery. For example, KSE processes
do LDT operations which use smp_rendezvous, while other parts of the
system are doing things like tlb shootdowns with a different mutex.
This patch uses the common smp_rendezvous mutex for all MD home-grown
IPIs that spinwait for delivery. Having the single mutex means that
the spinloop to aquire it will enable interrupts periodically, thus
avoiding the cross-ipi deadlock.
Obtained from: dwhite, alc
Reviewed by: jhb
the geometry code to grab a mutex that prohibits any driver on the
stack below it from sleeping, it's not safe to allow anything in
the top half of isp to sleep (excepting the thread that Fibre Channel
instances use to re-scan loops/fabrics).
the time being. Also add a note that says we are going to remove the
band-aides for 4.early -> 6.0 after 5.3-RELEASE so people get used to
the idea, even though it has been planned since before 5.0 was
released.
hold its own values, pass them up to the parent (acpi0) and merge/uniq them
on the way. After the namespace evaluation, acpi will reserve these
resources and manage them via rman before bus_generic_probe() and
bus_generic_attach(). This is necessary because some systems specify
conflicting resources in separate sysresource objects. It's also cleaner
in that the interface between sysresource and acpi is now merely the parent's
resource list. This code handles the following cases:
1. Unique resource: add it to the parent via bus_set_resource().
2. New wholly contained in old: discard new.
3. New tail overlaps old head: grow old head downward.
AND/OR
4. New head overlaps old tail: grow old tail upward.
Tested by: Pawel Worach <sajd_at_telia.com>
Tested by: Radek Kozlowski <radek_at_raadradd.com>
MFC after: 5 days
Doug Rabson <dfr@nlsystems.com>
Message-Id: <200408220940.18504.dfr@nlsystems.com>
Size does matter for the alpha loader. The firmware gives it 256k
of address space which we overflowed many years ago. I extended it
in sys/boot/alpha/common/main.c:extend_heap() by adding 512k to the
loader's mapped address space.
with VmWare 4.x. At least with VmWare version 4.5.2, i386 version of
atomic_cmpset_int() is about 30 times slower than non-i386 version. It
makes this delta a good 5.3 MFC candidate, since otherwise it will
mislead users who run FreeBSD under modern VmWare otherwise.
valid; otherwise a caller could trick us into changing any 32-bit word
in kernel memory to LINUX_SOL_SOCKET (0x00000001) if its previous value
is SOL_SOCKET (0x0000ffff).
MFC after: 3 days
The prefix management code currently resides in nd6, leaving only the
unused router renumbering capability in the in6_prefix files. Removing
it will make it easier for us to provide locking for the remainder of
IPv6 by reducing the number of objects requiring synchronized access.
This functionality has also been removed from NetBSD and OpenBSD.
Submitted by: George Neville-Neil <gnn at neville-neil.com>
Discussed with/approved by: suz, keiichi at kame.net, core at kame.net
deal with 24-bit addresses. While the two other attachments, namely
isa and cbus, do it properly, the PCI attachment was passing
BUS_SPACE_MAXADDR instead of BUS_SPACE_MAXADDR_24BIT. This bug
became apparent with the new contigmalloc() code.
This fixes the problem reported with lnc(4) interfaces inside VMWare,
and should theoritically also fix any user of a PCI lnc(4) card. It
is a RELENG_5 MFC candidate.
Tested by: Florian Le Goff <madflo@beertech.org>
position that is 64-bit aligned and makes sure that the valid and
dirty fields are also 64-bit aligned. This means that if PAGE_SIZE
is 32K, the size of the vm_page structure is only increased by 8
bytes instead of 16 bytes. More importantly, the vm_page structure
is either 120 or 128 bytes on ia64. These are "interesting" sizes.
before returning. Device nodes are created via the "taste" mechanism,
so this is necessary in order to make sure that devfs entries are
created before mdconfig(8) returns.
This may be a MFC candidate for 5.3.
Suggested by: phk
allocation. Notably, in this case, the driver tries to allocate several
pieces of memory and then fails if the pieces allocated after the first
do not come after it physically, and within a specific range (8MB I
believe). Of course, this could just as easily fail for any number of
reasons, but it almost always fails now that contiguous allocations start
at the end of possible specified memory locations rather than the beginning.
Allocate all the possibly-needed memory up front, even though it's a waste,
to get around this. The least bogus solution would be to take the physical
address from the first allocation and create a new tag that specified that
further allocations must follow it within that 8MB window, then use that
when allocating new channels, but that's left for anyone else that really
feels like doing it.
Tested by: Erwin Lansing <erwin@lansing.dk>
Previously the early drop was disabled unconditionally for ALTQ-enabled
kernels.
This should give some benefit for the normal gateway + LAN-server case with
a busy LAN leg and an ALTQ managed uplink.
Reviewed and style help from: cperciva, pjd
verification of regular data when device is in complete state.
On verification error, EIO error is returned for the bio and sysctl
kern.geom.raid3.stat.parity_mismatch is increased.
Suggested by: phk