as sparc64/sparc64/dump_machdep.c a while back).
Other than ia64 (which uses ELF), sparc64 uses a homegrown format for
the dumps (headers are required because the physical address and size of
the tsb must be noted, and because physical memory may be discontiguous);
ELF would not offer any advantages here.
Reviewed by: jake
for defining vectors. As a result, each vector will be a global
function with unwind directives to notify the unwinder that we're
in an interrupt handler. In the debugger this will show up something
like:
Debugger(0xe000000000a211d8, 0xe000000000748960) at Debugger+0x31
panic(0xe000000000a36858, 0xe0000000021d32d0, 0xe000000000ae42e8, ...
trap(0x14, 0x100000, 0xe0000000021d32d0, 0x0, 0xa0000000002095f0, ...
ivt_Data_TLB(0x14, 0x100000, 0xe0000000021d32d0) at ivt_Data_TLB+0x1f0
compile fail. MAC_MAX_POLICIES should always be defined, or we have
bigger problems at hand.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
Clarify that the USSR no longer exists, but some of the holidays are
celebrated anyway.
Reviewed in part by: ru
Remove Jewish and most Muslim holidays. They're all wrong, since they
don't apply to the Western calendar. The much more complete Jewish
holidays are in calendar.judaic. The Muslim holidays need to be
collected into a file, but there's not much point in having the wrong
date.
Remove many Fiji holidays. They change every year by Government
decree, and some were duplicated as a result.
Remove some duplicates.
There's still a lot to be done; in particular, I think the Japanese
and British holidays are very inaccurate. This file needs checking by
people who know the details.
before referencing object's DAG. This makes it possible for
C++ exceptions to work across shared libraries and brings
us closer to the search order used by Solaris/Linux.
Reviewed by: jdp
Approved by: obrien
MFC after: 1 month
This is for the not-quite-ready signal/fpu abi stuff. It may not see
the light of day, but I'm certainly not going to be able to validate it
when getting shot in the foot due to syscall number conflicts.