the most-recently archived logfile and use its mtime to determine whether
or not to rotate, as in the non-timestamped case.
Previously we would just try to use the mtime of <logfile>.0, which always
results in a rotation since it generally doesn't exist in the -t case.
PR: bin/166448
Approved by: emaste (co-mentor)
Tested by: Marco Steinbach <coco executive-computing.de>
MFC after: 2 weeks
don't carp about the watchdog command taking too long until after the
watchdog has been patted, and don't carp via warnx(3) unless -S is set
since syslog(3) already logs to standard error otherwise.
Discussed with: alfred
Reviewed by: alfred
Approved by: emaste (co-mentor)
size and usage in hrStorageAllocationUnits. If the file system has
more than 2^31 allocations it can not be shown correctly and the
meters are useless.
In such cases follow net-snmp behaviour and increase
hrStorageAllocationUnits so the values fit under INT_MAX.
PR: bin/177183
Submitted by: Eugene Grosbein egrosbein rdtc.ru
MFC after: 2 weeks
command line option "-m <memsize in MB>" to specify the memory size.
Prior to this change the user needed to explicitly specify the amount of
memory allocated below 4G (-m <lowmem>) and the amount above 4G (-M <highmem>).
The "-M" option is no longer supported by 'bhyveload' and 'bhyve'.
The start of the PCI hole is fixed at 3GB and cannot be directly changed
using command line options. However it is still possible to change this in
special circumstances via the 'vm_set_lowmem_limit()' API provided by
libvmmapi.
Submitted by: Dinakar Medavaram (initial version)
Reviewed by: grehan
Obtained from: NetApp
- Fix a compile warning where the return value of a call
to a write() function was ignored.
- Remove redundant include files from userland USB header files.
- Add some now needed include files to various C-files.
into the MSI-X table before using it to calculate the table index.
In the common case where the MSI-X table is located at the begining of the
BAR these two offsets are identical and thus the code was working by accident.
This change will fix the case where the MSI-X table is located in the middle
or at the end of the BAR that contains it.
Obtained from: NetApp
Only look for boostrap useful options:
- PACKAGESITE
- ABI
- MIRROR_TYPE
- ASSUME_ALWAYS_YES
While here makes PACKAGESITE expand the ${ABI} variable.
Allow to deactivate any SRV record look up (MIRROR_TYPE=none)
Use the same mechanism as for pkgng itself: first get configuration out of
environment variable and fallback on pkg.conf if exists.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Adds "pkgExt=" variable to set if pkgs are .tbz or .txz or other.
Auto-detects if packages are PKGNG or old PKG format.
Auto-bootstrap of PKGNG for the new installed environment.
Fixes issues with installing packages from local media, such as DVD/USB.
Switch to using a space-delimiter for installPackages, since a number
of packages use a "," in their version string.
Fix pc-sysinstall to ignore install scripts, and not hang on
user interaction prompts when installing pkgs.
Add pkg2ng command as apart of pkgng bootstrap process.
Obtained from: PC-BSD
This seems prudent to do in its own right but it also opens up the possibility
of not having to mmap the entire guest address space in the 'bhyve' process
context.
Discussed with: grehan
Obtained from: NetApp
The following support was added to watchdog(4):
- Support to query the outstanding timeout.
- Support to set a software pre-timeout function watchdog with an 'action'
- Support to set a software only watchdog with a configurable 'action'
'action' can be a mask specifying a single operation or a combination of:
log(9), printf(9), panic(9) and/or kdb_enter(9).
Support the following in watchdogged:
- Support to utilize the new additions to watchdog(4).
- Support to warn if a watchdog script runs for too long.
- Support for "dry run" where we do not actually arm the watchdog,
but only report on our timing.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
MFC after: 1 month
accessing files from various types of media nice and abstracted away from
the wet-work involved in preparing, validating, and initializing those
types of media. This will be used for the package management system module
and other modules that need access to files and want to allow the user to
decide where those files come from (either in a scripted fashion, prompted
fashion, or any combination thereof).
Heavily inspired by sysinstall and even uses the same reserved words so
that scripts are portable. Coded over months, tested continuously through-
out, and reviewed several times.
Some notes about the changes:
- Move network-setting acquisition/validation routines to media/tcpip.subr
- The options screen from sysinstall has been converted to a dialog menu
- The "UFS" media choice is renamed to "Directory" to reflect how sysinstall
treats the choice and a new [true] "UFS" media choice has been added that
acts on real UFS partitions (such as external disks with disklabels).
- Many more help files have been resurrected from sysinstall (I noticed that
some of the content seems a bit dated; I gave them a once-over but they
could really use an update).
- A total of 10 media choices are presented (via mediaGetType) including:
CD/DVD, FTP, FTP Passive, HTTP Proxy, Directory, NFS, DOS, UFS, Floppy, USB
- Novel struct/device management layer for managing the issue of passing
more information than can comfortably fit in an argument list.
These set of ranges will be looked at if a standard memory
range isn't found, and won't be installed in the cache.
Use this to implement the memory behaviour of the PCI hole on
x86 systems, where writes are ignored and reads always return -1.
This allows breakpoints to be set when issuing a 'boot -d', which
has the side effect of accessing the PCI hole when changing the
PTE protection on kernel code, since the pmap layer hasn't been
initialized (a bug, but present in existing FreeBSD releases so
has to be handled).
Reviewed by: neel
Obtained from: NetApp