method allows schemes to reject the ctl request, pre-check
the parameters and/or modify/set parameters. There are 2
use cases that triggered the addition:
1. When implementing a R/O scheme, deletes will still
happen to the in-memory representation. The scheme is
not involved in that operation. The pre-check method
can be used to fail the delete up-front. Without this
the write to disk will typically fail, but at that
time the delete already happened.
2. The EBR scheme uses a linked list to record slices.
There's no index. The EBR scheme defines the index
as a function of the start LBA of the partition. The
add verb picks an index for the range and then invokes
the add method of the scheme to fill in the blanks. It
is too late for the add method to change the index.
The pre-check is used to set the index up-front. This
also (silently) overrides/nullifies any (pointless)
user-specified index value.
Works fine with AHCI and theoretically other MSI capable devices.
At this moment support disabled by default. To enable it, set
"hint.atapci.X.msi=1" device hint.
* Retire the old 'ifmcstat <kernel>' usage.
* Print AF_LINK records even if run against KVM.
This makes the KVM backend consistent with the sysctl backend.
* Suppress printing of link-layer group records by default.
* Add a -v switch to allow link-layer groups to be printed.
* If compiled without INET6 support, actually work.
* If compiled with INET6 support, print the scope ID of
all IPv6 addresses in both backends.
* Update man page.
* Update copyrights.
With this change, it is now reasonable to retire netstat -g.
Most of the SSM related gunk in this file will require later refactoring.
MFC after: 2 weeks
again in case the connection is interrupted and csup have to reconnect. The
lists will be freed after the collection has been completely processed.
PR: bin/131477
Tested by: dchagin
to print the network-layer endpoint address of the
group membership, rather than its link-layer mapping
as intended.
The KVM path is not affected.
MFC after: 1 week
been extensively tested. And the ELF64 stuff likely is not quite
right...
# There's a lot of cut-n-paste code here that could easily be
# refactored, at least for FreeBSD syscalls.
Add two new functions to the libusb20 API and required kernel ioctls.
- libusb20_dev_get_iface_desc
- libusb20_dev_get_info
New command to usbconfig, "show_ifdrv", which will print out the kernel driver
attached to the given USB device aswell.
See "man libusb20" for a detailed description.
Some minor style corrections long-line wrapping.
Submitted by: Hans Petter Selasky
- specification claims that 1 second is just a maximum controller reset time;
implement controller reset properly to save almost 1 second of boot, and
about half second of resume time;
- enable channel interrupts only after channel status reset to fix duplicate
device creation on resume due to unwanted device connection event;
- as described in specification, wait for disk ready status after channel
power-up; it is not so important when disk already touched by BIOS, but
solves device not ready problems on resume and probably some other cases.
- uncomment channel stop/start on soft-reset as it is declared mandatory by
specification; it was commented due to some random drive detection problems
on VIA and JMicron controllers, but I hope it is fixed by previous point.