to not just do it. It is his new code that is being actively
developed so he has say over it. ru's direct changes were premature
as they occurred less than 4 hours after it was committed to the tree.
Xircom CreditCard Netwave cnw
Intel PRO/Wireless 2011 (PRISM II) wi
3COM 3CRWE737A (PRISM II) wi
Note: I've had some reports that the latter two cards work, but I've not
been able to get them to work for me.
supports Xircom netwave series of cards. I have one of these cards
(but am trying to find one or two to test with), but it compiles and
aizu-san says it works.
I don't know if this supports 802.11 or not. I've seen conflicting
information on this.
Submitted by: Hiroyuki Aizu <aizu@jaist.ac.jp>
Obtained from: NetBSD
killing ipv6 and some other things.
This makes GENERIC and NEWCARD the same, with OLDCARD stuff commented
out and the NEWCARD stuff included. For the moment, pcic is commented
out (which has a old). Plus invariants. Plus ddb.
is currently set to 10000. This is intended to prevent glob from running
amok when a highly recursive path is provided (such as "../*/../*/../*/...")
Reviewed by: Diane Bruce <db@db.net>, jhb
see atacontrol(8) for more.
Also the ATA_ENABLE_ATAPI_DMA, ATA_ENABLE_WC and ATA_ENABLE_TAGS
options are gone, use the tuneables listed in ata.4 instead from
the loader (this makes it possible to switch off DMA before the
driver has to touch the devices on broken hardware).
A route generated from an RTF_CLONING route had the RTF_WASCLONED flag
set but did not have a reference to the parent route, as documented in
the rtentry(9) manpage. This prevented such routes from being deleted
when their parent route is deleted.
Now, for example, if you delete an IP address from a network interface,
all ARP entries that were cloned from this interface route are flushed.
This also has an impact on netstat(1) output. Previously, dynamically
created ARP cache entries (RTF_STATIC flag is unset) were displayed as
part of the routing table display (-r). Now, they are only printed if
the -a option is given.
netinet/in.c, netinet/in_rmx.c:
When address is removed from an interface, also delete all routes that
point to this interface and address. Previously, for example, if you
changed the address on an interface, outgoing IP datagrams might still
use the old address. The only solution was to delete and re-add some
routes. (The problem is easily observed with the route(8) command.)
Note, that if the socket was already bound to the local address before
this address is removed, new datagrams generated from this socket will
still be sent from the old address.
PR: kern/20785, kern/21914
Reviewed by: wollman (the idea)
A depends on dependency B then dependency A will be in all cases listed
before B, so ``pkg_add -r'' will fetch/install packages in the correct order.
Previously dependencies were sorted just by its names, which is why
``pkg_add -r'' never actually worked properly.
To be usefull, hovewer, this fix requires that all packages have been
rebuilt, so it will take some time until users would be able to feel
posititive improvements. For the same reasons it is desirable to propagate
these changes to the 4-stable package building cluster *before* 4.3 ports
freeze, so packages for 4.3-RELEASE would be properly prepared.
Prompted by: kris
Insanely appreciated by: obrien
Silently approved by: jkh, -ports
remove the concept of a 'maintainer' of our make. there really isn't a
need for any one committer to hold an exclusive lock or serve as a filter
for this code.
src/sys/modules/if_ef and possibly other things. I tested the build with
a make based on rev. 1.26, and it worked fine. Since I'm not particularly
inclined to figure out what's going on with this, it's probably prudent
just to back it out for now.
Found by: jkh
Suggested by: jhay
This file is already off the vendorbranch, nonetheless it needs to be
submitted back to the OpenSSH people.
PR: 25743
Submitted by: David Wolfskill <dhw@whistle.com>
interface on this chip is compatable with the PIIX4. The catch is that
this interferes with isab0 which wants to attach to the same PCI node.
It seems to work, but we only tested it on systems with no ISA cards.
For UP, we were using $tmp_stk as a stack from the data section. If the
kernel text section grew beyond ~3MB, the data section would be pushed
beyond the temporary 4MB P==V mapping. This would cause the trampoline
up to high memory to fault. The hack workaround I did was to use all of
the page table pages that we already have while preparing the initial
P==V mapping, instead of just the first one.
For SMP, the AP bootstrap process suffered the same sort of problem and
got the same treatment.
MFC candidate - this breaks on 4.x just the same..
Thanks to: Richard Todd <rmtodd@ichotolot.servalan.com>