MFC after:3 days
- Add memory barrier definition for sparc64.
Patch sent by David E. O'Brien, approved by maintainer.
- Fix an endianization error of a bus physical address used from SCRIPTS
that made the driver fail on big endian machines as sparc64.
The kernel certainly doesn't use _PATH_DEV or even /dev/ to find the device.
It cannot, since "/" has not been mounted. Maybe the only affect of using
/dev/ is that it gets put in the mounted-from name for "/", so that mount(8),
etc., display an absolute path before "/" has been remounted. Many have
never bothered typing the full path, and code that constructs a path in
rootdevnames[] never bothered to construct a full path, so the example
shouldn't have it.
Submitted by: bde
signature, but otherwise behaves just like a normal USB mass-storage
device. Add a new quirk to cover this case, and enable it for C-1
cameras. The quirk enables translation from the C-1 signature to
the normal CSWSIGNATURE value.
Reviewed by: n_hibma
up in the same way that we expect them to be when we read them.
This is a no-op on i386 and probably on alphas, as we currently
only support AF_INET and AF_INET6.
of 0.0.0.0.
The OpenBSD PF_ROUTE/NET_RT_DUMP sysctl is sending back routes with
RTAX_NETMASK set, but the corresponding sockaddr being 4 zero bytes
(with an address family of zero). ppp was getting confused by this
and ending up interpreting it as a 0.0.0.0/32 routing table
destination and subsequently failing to do anything with the route.
Specifically, after this fix, ppp under OpenBSD can successfully
change and delete the default route again !
ncprange structure.
Don't write() the netmask for IPv6 sockaddrs to the routing socket if
the prefixlen is 128.
It seems that messages written to the routing socket with the scopeid
set for link local addresses are not understood. Instead, we have to
put the scopeid in the 5th and 6th bytes of the address (see
adjust_linklocal() in ncpaddr.c). I think this may be a bug in the
KAME implementation - it should really understand both forms.
to be followed by nfsnodehashtbl, so bzeroing callouts beyond the end of
tcp_syncache soon caused a null pointer panic when nfsnodehashtbl was
accessed.
This file is now generated using src/tools/tools/pciid/mk_pci_vendors.pl,
which merges the Boemler and Heckenbach lists used for rev 1.2.
For now, mk_pci_vendors.pl is called with the -l option, which uses
the entry with the longer description where the same device or vendor
is found in both lists.
If it turns out that this causes to much "back-and-forth" in future
deltas, we can drop the use of the -l option.
The script written and used originally by msmith has been lost.
This version takes the Boemler and Heckenbach lists and produces merged
output. It defaults to ignoring any entries from Heckenbach already
found in Boemler but the -l option causes it to take the entry with the
longest description where an entry appears in both lists.
If this script is replaced, care should be taken to
1) Always use upper-case hexidecimal tokens in device ids.
2) Always keep device lists sorted within vendor lists, which must also
be sorted.
3) Do not try to include input from the previous pci_vendors file, since
bogus ids seem to be removed from both the Boemler and Heckenbach
lists from time to time.