a "negative" option. This makes it equivalent to /not/ specifying "-c".
The compile time default is /not/ to have the NFSMNT_NOCONN flag set, so
"-o conn" should never be needed---truly a deprecated option :-).
PR: 6905.
with export lines where the same hostname was specified more than once
(this happens a lot with netgroups sometimes). Recently I discovered
that it needs to be hacked to deal with multiple instances of the
same IP address too.
I've been using this modification locally for several months with no
hassles.
(a) Note that the default securelevel value is -1, in -current and -stable.
(b) Mention kernel sysctl variable that controls securelevel.
(c) Add warning the `fsck' will fail if securelevel >= 2.
(d) Suggest end of /etc/rc as the right place to raise securelevel.
and one spelling fix.
PR: 2850
for filesystems with almost the maximum number of sectors. The maxiumum
is 2^31, but overflow is common for that size, and overflow normally
occurred here at size (2^31 - 4096).
Move a.out libraries to /usr/lib/aout to make space for ELF libs.
Make rtld usr /usr/lib/aout as default library path.
Make ldconfig reject /usr/lib as an a.out library path.
Fix various Makefiles for LIBDIR!=/usr/lib breakage.
This will after a make world & reboot give a system that no
longer uses /usr/lib/*, infact one could remove all the old
libraries there, they are not used anymore.
We are getting close to an ELF make world, but I'll let this
all settle for a week or two...
Fixes bin/6649 and removes the last abusive signal handler.
Use SO_TIMESTAMP to get the kernel to timestamp packets on reception.
Fixes bin/5658 and provides slightly better accuracy.
Explicitly zero and terminate the IP options when using -R.
PR: bin/5658
PR: bin/6649
syndrome avoidance. The combination of SWS avoidance and ack-every-other
causes low throughput if the block size divided by the MSS is odd (which
is true with the default block size and MSS).
Turning on TCP_NODELAY disables the Nagle algorithm and sender SWS avoidance.
The rdump request/response protocol can not invoke Nagle and cannot cause
SWS, so this has no negative effects.
are unaligned for access by the alpha, so copy the value to a variable
that is aligned.
When checking the returned data, be careful to avoid confusing the
size of the icmp header with the size of a timeval. On i386 these
are both 8, but on alpha, a timeval is 16 bytes. This means that
a packet sent from an alpha contains 48 bytes of data, not 56 like
on i386.
umount() was trying to stat() the mountpoint, this would fail if the
mountpoint was a NFS mountpoint, and the fallback code would try and pass
a hostname:/dir path as the mountpoint to unmount(2), which would fail.
This whole stat() of the name supplied on the command line business is
trouble as it'll wedge on a hung NFS mount.
I'm not entirely sure why we are not simply looking up both arguments
in the mount table and doing the right thing without accessing the
filesystem. It seems that we're going to a lot of trouble to allow
mountpoints on symlinks and other wierd things.
PR: 1607
not reinitialized to 1 after calling getopt. This results in parsing
errors on all but the first rule. An added patch also allows '#'
comments at the end of a line.
PR: 6379
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Neal Fachan <kneel@ishiboo.com>
routed discards the first character of the network address.
Example: "subnet=10.0.0.0/24,1"
The network address is interpreted as 0.0.0.0/24,1.
PR: 4825
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Mike E. Matsnev <mike@azog.cs.msu.su>
that `fsck -p' doesn't check multiple slices on the same drive
concurrently. Don't invoke undefined behaviour when searching for
the drive number in strange device names.
PR: 6129
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Yuichi MATSUTAKA <matutaka@osa.att.ne.jp>, but rewritten
by me.
Add "." at the end of some sentances.
Also print "flag 80" in English.
Give hint that "sysid" for FreeBSD is 165 decimal.
Ensure active partition specified by user is 1-4.
with a blocksize smaller than the tape block size. The problem
seems to be most easily fixed by changeing where fssize is set.
PR: 5704
Submitted by: David Malone <dwmalone@maths.tcd.ie>
something that might refer to the compatability slice rather than the
correct slice entry, try all the possible slice entries first.
This is a compatability hack to deal with the case where the kernel has
correctly mounted the root filesystem out of its slice, but the user
has not updated their /etc/fstab file to reflect this. A diagnostic
is emitted if the mount succeeds, indicating that the file should be
updated.
This is a prelude to fixing the kernel to behave as alluded to above.
Reviewed by: (discussed with) julian, phk
offset is non-zero:
- Do not match fragmented packets if the rule specifies a port or
TCP flags
- Match fragmented packets if the rule does not specify a port and
TCP flags
Since ipfw cannot examine port numbers or TCP flags for such packets,
it is now illegal to specify the 'frag' option with either ports or
tcpflags. Both kernel and ipfw userland utility will reject rules
containing a combination of these options.
BEWARE: packets that were previously passed may now be rejected, and
vice versa.
Reviewed by: Archie Cobbs <archie@whistle.com>
real path here for the mount device (or path). This fixes difficulties
unmounting devices that are actually symlinks to real devices.
Also, print the original path instead of the real path in early error
messages. nfs path handling and later error messages may still be wrong,
probably only in silly cases where the original path is both a symlink
and a remote path.
PR: 5208
size was rounded up to a multiple of the fragment size, but this
gave invalid file systems when the fragment size was > SBSIZE (fsck
aborts early on them). Now a fragment size of 32768 seems to work
(too-simple tests with fsck and iozone worked).
superblock is invalid, fsck looks at the label to help guess where
the next superblock should be. If the partition type is 4.2BSD,
fsck assumed that the block size was valid and divided by it, so
it dumped core if the size was 0.
Initialization of the label was broken almost 3 years ago in rev.1.9
of newfs/newfs.c. Newfs does not change the label at all, so there
is no problem (except the breakage of the automatic search for
backup superblocks) unless something else sets the partition type
to 4.2BSD. However, it is too easy to set partition types to
4.2.BSD by copying an old label or by using a disktab entry to
create the label.
PR: 2537