if all registers are 0xff.
This allows me to run with flags 0xc0ff on my IBM-DMCA-21440 disk, which
gives 5MB/sec sequential read :-)
If you have a laptop, try adding flag 0x4000 to your disk, and tell me if
it makes any difference for you.
cache lines. Removed the struct ip proto since only a couple of chars
were actually being used in it. Changed the order of compares in the
PCB hash lookup to take advantage of partial cache line fills (on PPro).
Discussed-with: wollman
by bde.
Don't return EPERM in setre[ug]id() just because the caller passes in
the current effective id in the second arg (ie: no change), as suggested
by ache.
uid/gid in question was in the cache, but did not exist
in the password file. This causes the -nouser and -nogroup
options to find(1) to only print the first file owned by
an unknown user/group in some cases.
Use snprintf instead of sprintf to avoid buffer overflows
Use snprintf in uu_lockerr instead of lots of hardcoded constants
and not null-terminated strncpy
Return "" for OK and "device in use" for INUSE, it allows simple
strcpy(buf, uu_lockerr(retcode)) without testing for special OK
case (NULL was there) and obtaining meaningful result for INUSE
("" was there) without special testing for it too.
1) Fix mkdir -p to exit with the proper exit status and issue an error
message if it was unable to create all of the specified directories
and they did not previously exist. POSIX says:
The mkdir utility shall exit with one of the following values:
0 All the specified directories were created successfully or the
-p option was specified and all the specified directories now
exist.
E.g.
% mkdir -p /var/mkdir
mkdir: /var/mkdir: Permission denied
% touch /tmp/file
% mkdir -p /tmp/file/dir
mkdir: /tmp/file: Not a directory
Previously the above examples would exit with a zero exit status
and no error message. Something like the following run as a
normal user will still not produce an error:
% id
uid=629(mpp) gid=629(mpp)....
% mkdir -p /usr/local/etc
% ls -ld /usr/local/etc
drwxr-xr-x 4 bin bin 512 Dec 26 14:55 /usr/local/etc/
2) Cleaned up the mode handling to be more efficient when multiple
directories are being created.
3) Fixed a problem where directories could be created with the wrong mode
if the the -p option was specified and the build() routine returned
and error. It would leave the umask set incorrectly at this point.
4) Removed an unused variable.
Closes PR# 2304.
which don't provide a non-blocking interface.
This is a short term "fix" which changes a half-lose to a half-win.
The thread that accesses a device that does not provide a non-blocking
interface will block for its time slice.
A medium term solution would be to use rfork. A long-term solution
would be some sort of kernel thread/SMP implementation.