Recycle the vm object's "pg_color" field to represent the color of the
first virtual page address at which the object is mapped instead of the
color of the object's first physical page. Since an object may not be
mapped, introduce a flag "OBJ_COLORED" that indicates whether "pg_color"
is valid.
mounted FS' problems. These are more along the lines of 'avoiding an
avoidable panic' than a complete solution to removable devices. We
now close the barn door after the horse has gotten lose and has been
hit by a truck, as it were. The barn no longer catches fire in this
case, but the horse is still dead :-).
The vfs_bio.c fix causes us not to put a failed write back into the
dirty pool if the error returned was ENXIO. In that case, the buffer
is treated like any other clean buffer that's being retured. ENXIO
means the device isn't there anymore and will never be there again in
the future, so retrying is futile.
The vfs_mount.c fix treats 'ENXIO' as success for unmounting a file
system. If the device is gone, retrying later won't help and we'll
never be able to unmount the device.
These two are part of a larger patch set submitted by the author. The
other patches will be forth coming. I added comments to these two
patches.
Submitted by: Henrik Gulbrandsen
Reviewed by: phk@
PR: usb/46176 (partial)
Due to a typo, setting NANO_DATASIZE=-1 resulted in the data slice
being the same size as entire image instead of the size of the
remaining space on the image.
- Fix detection of overcommit of the slices.
This fix mainly result in a nicer error than when newfs etc. tries to
write beyond the end of the disk image.
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC after: RELENG_7 is open again
and follow the letter of the POSIX specification.
- Moving a directory to an existing non-empty directory will now fail,
as required.
- Improve consistency and remove some style bugs of earlier versions.
This version passes all tests of tools/regression/bin/mv/regress.sh 1.6
Reviewed by: bde
MFC after: 1 month
functions. It is easily triggered by running routed, and, I expect, by
running any other daemon that uses routing sockets.
Reviewed by: net@
MFC after: 1 week
- Use the correct offsets when copying out the results of PCIOCGETCONF_OLD.
This happened to not affect the 64-bit architectures because there the
addition of pc_domain to struct pcisel didn't change the overall size of
struct pci_conf. [1]
- Always copy the name and unit information to conf_old so it's also part
of the output once this information is cached in dinfo.
- Use the correct type for flags in struct pci_match_conf_old. This
change is more or less cosmetic though.
Reported and tested by: bde [1]
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 3 days
Committed from: 24C3
If a mouse has both a wheel and a Z direction we report both.
XXX Due to tradition the wheel is reported as the Z direction (and the Z
direction as W).
Now Apple's Mighty Mouse is fully supported, except the X11 mouse driver
doesn't know what to do with the new coordinate.
MFC after: 3 months
Approved by: njl (mentor), imp
some stock formulas for use.
Update ddb(4) to reference the textdump(4) page, list the textdump
commands, and suggest using them with scripts and output capture.
Update HISTORY section.
Hook up textdump(4) to build.
MFC after: 3 months
dump using mechanically generated/extracted debugging output rather than
a simple memory dump. Current sources of debugging output are:
- DDB output capture buffer, if there is captured output to save
- Kernel message buffer
- Kernel configuration, if included in kernel
- Kernel version string
- Panic message
Textdumps are stored in swap/dump partitions as with regular dumps, but
are laid out as ustar files in order to allow multiple parts to be stored
as a stream of sequentially written blocks. Blocks are written out in
reverse order, as the size of a textdump isn't known a priori. As with
regular dumps, they will be extracted using savecore(8).
One new DDB(4) command is added, "textdump", which accepts "set",
"unset", and "status" arguments. By default, normal kernel dumps are
generated unless "textdump set" is run in order to schedule a textdump.
It can be canceled using "textdump unset" to restore generation of a
normal kernel dump.
Several sysctls exist to configure aspects of textdumps;
debug.ddb.textdump.pending can be set to check whether a textdump is
pending, or set/unset in order to control whether the next kernel dump
will be a textdump from userspace.
While textdumps don't have to be generated as a result of a DDB script
run automatically as part of a kernel panic, this is a particular useful
way to use them, as instead of generating a complete memory dump, a
simple transcript of an automated DDB session can be captured using the
DDB output capture and textdump facilities. This can be used to
generate quite brief kernel bug reports rich in debugging information
but not dependent on kernel symbol tables or precisely synchronized
source code. Most textdumps I generate are less than 100k including
the full message buffer. Using textdumps with an interactive debugging
session is also useful, with capture being enabled/disabled in order to
record some but not all of the DDB session.
MFC after: 3 months
to identify textdumps in the swap/dump partition. While textdumps
aren't really an architecture, they are architecture-neutral and so
don't really correspond to any existing architecture.
Define a version number for textdumps, KERNELDUMP_TEXT_VERSION, of 1.
MFC after: 3 months
managed from userspace. It is largely a wrapper for sysctl()
calls, but because the sysctls for adding and removing scripts
are awkward to use directly, this provides an easier-to-use
interface.
MFC after: 3 months
define a set of named scripts. Each script consists of a list of DDB
commands separated by ";"s that will be executed verbatim. No higher
level language constructs, such as branching, are provided for:
scripts are executed by sequentially injecting commands into the DDB
input buffer.
Four new commands are present in DDB: "run" to run a specific script,
"script" to define or print a script, "scripts" to list currently
defined scripts, and "unscript" to delete a script, modeled on shell
alias commands. Scripts may also be manipulated using sysctls in the
debug.ddb.scripting MIB space, although users will prefer to use the
soon-to-be-added ddb(8) tool for usability reasons.
Scripts with certain names are automatically executed on various DDB
events, such as entering the debugger via a panic, a witness error,
watchdog, breakpoint, sysctl, serial break, etc, allowing customized
handling.
MFC after: 3 months
(dummynet), ipsec_filter() would return the empty error code and the ipsec code
would continue to forward/deference the null mbuf.
Found by: m0n0wall
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 3 days
captured to a memory buffer for later inspection using sysctl(8), or in the
future, to a textdump.
A new DDB command, "capture", is added, which accepts arguments "on", "off",
"reset", and "status".
A new DDB sysctl tree, debug.ddb.capture, is added, which can be used to
resize the capture buffer and extract buffer contents.
MFC after: 3 months
kern.console format as is. Thus, no difference in output format should
appear after this commit.
Reviewed by: cognet@ (mentor)
Approved by: cognet@ (mentor)
for that argument. This will allow DDB to detect the broad category of
reason why the debugger has been entered, which it can use for the
purposes of deciding which DDB script to run.
Assign approximate why values to all current consumers of the
kdb_enter() interface.
manual's Appendix D ("Old Features Supported but not Encouraged") in
the Seventh Edition Unix Programmer's Manual (January, 1979) by
retiring the " = {" method of of action specification in favor of a
plain "{". It is no longer necessary for this bootstrap program to
be compatible with 6th Edition systems. Some yaccs in the wild do not
support this old syntax any more, and compatibility with those systems
is more important these days (as there are easily 7 orders of magnitude
more of them than real v6 systems today).
Reviewed by: jhb@ and dds@ (the latter gave the reference).
unused in one go.
From the original PR:
I've observed that linux apps running under the linuxulator
have a habit of leaving behind shared memory segments which
are unused, but which eventually cause the system to run
out of free segments and these apps will stop working.
ipcrm(1) currently only allows removal of unused message
queues, shared memory segments and semaphores on an individual
basis, or those having a matching (non-zero) key. However
it would often be convenient to just do a complete cleanup
of everything, usually as root.
PR: bin/118292
Submitted by: Callum Gibson <callumgibson@optusnet.com.au>
Not reviewed by: grog@
Approved by: grog@
warning is given when the directory doesn't exist.
PR: bin/50656
Submitted by: Edwin Groothuis <edwin@mavetju.org>
Approved by: grog@
Not reviewed by: grog@