Submitted by: Randall Hopper <rhh@ct.picker.com>
The patch supports using the X10 Mouse Remote in both stand-alone and
pass-through configurations, so you can plug your mouse and remote into the
same serial port, use the mouse for X, and use the remote for other apps
like Fxtv. For instance, we can now control fxtv via the remote control
just like a TV : change channels, mute, increase volume, zoom video,
freeze frame 8)
The mouse events are channeled through the syscons/sysmouse I/F like
normal, and the remote buttons are "syphoned off" to a UNIX-domain stream
socket (defined as _PATH_MOUSEREMOTE in <machine/mouse.h>) for a
remote-aware app to grab and use.
For further info on the X10 Mouse Remote see:
http://www.x10.com/products/x10_mk19a.htm
Submitted by: Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.NoDak.edu>
This change will allow a PPP host enabled with the "-alias" option to
run mrouted. This does not intend to forward the IGMP nor tunneled packets
to another host on the far side if the tun0 interface.
sl_uncompress_tcp() and drop packets with
slot numbers that are out of range.
o Drop packets that want to use a slot that still
has an IP header length of 0 (ie, the requested
slot number is bogus again).
Without this code, if the other side mis-behaves (and
sends us garbage slot numbers), we happily ``adjust''
a memset(..., '\0', ...) TCP/IP header and promptly
cr*p all over the stack before returning.... quickly
followed by a SIGBUS.
Dodgy ISP used by, and help locating the problem from: jmz
Problem also seen by: Mourad de Riche <omnibus@image.dk>
There's still a link lockup after this happens, but my
bets are on the other side (who has already started sending
rubbish) being to blame.
for all datalinks in a bundle. Ppp now deals correctly
with link types that are changed while open
o When changing the type of the last AUTO link, only clear
the interface if we're not in PHASE_NETWORK. This allows
us to switch to -ddial mode while we have a connection
without suddenly unexpectedly throttling ourselves by
clearing the interface configuration.
Problem area noted by: Aaron Jeremias Luz <aaron@csh.rit.edu>
category.
e.g. separate out ipfw entries to a separate file.
Reviewed by: (briefly) phk
Submitted by: archie@whistle.com
Obtained from: Whistle source tree
a buffer overflow, but might negatively impact those hosts who have
enough aliases to fill MAXHOSTNAMELEN * 2 characters in them.
Good candidate for merging back into -stable. Lightly tested by me, but
it came from OpenBSD a while ago.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
use strncat correctly
check buffer size in graph_name
Change paths from /tmp to /var/run for server sockets
This has been building in my tree for ages, but has remained lightly
tested.
Reviewed by: jkh ages ago
*after* shuffling fragments from the IP queue into the
individual link queues.
This fixes a latency problem pointed out by: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
to be created if it's missing, otherwise completely ignore it's modes and
owners. Primary intended targets: /usr/src and /usr/obj.
Adjust the 'not created: File exists' message to mention that it's a
directory that's the problem, otherwise it doesn't make sense.
I had created chown-style -L and -P flag to control logical/physical mode
(ie: whether symlinks were followed), but the nochange flag is enough to
get the blasted thing out of my hair so I took them back out.
-current branch. I mistakenly checked out the 2.2.x rpc.ypxfrd into my
-current working directory. No harm done, but I got really confused
when I went to check out rpc.ypxfrd again and found the changes I
wanted to make were already there. (I'm going to fix the other 2.2.x
versions of the other programs in a minute.)
Anyway: protect errno in the signal handler, in the -current version
of rpc.ypxfrd this time.