vm_offset_t is currently unsigned long but should probably be plain
unsigned for i386's to match the choice of minimal types to represent
for fixed-width types in Lite2. Anyway, it shouldn't be assumed
to be unsigned long.
I only fixed the type mismatches that were detected when I changed
vm_offset_t to unsigned. Only pointer type mismatches were detected.
device have reference count problems. We mark the underlying object
ono-persistent, and account for the reference count that the VM system
maintainsfor the special device close. This should fix the removable
device problem.
isn't supplying all the proper header info here! Last commit of fe0
entry should have had the following Submitted by line also).
Submitted-by: Masahiro SEKIGUCHI <seki@sysrap.cs.fujitsu.co.jp>
1. Create 2 x 8k transmit buffer blocks in place of the 16k block previously.
With this change the speed as tested with ttcp on a 2Mbit link went up
from 206kbyte/s to 236kbyte/s.
2. Change the rest of the functions to also have the definition of the
return value on a sepperate line.
3. Remove some unused variables.
4. Add code to recover from DMA underruns.
5. Reorder ar_get_packets() to handle errors better.
6. Only allocate a mbuf cluster if the data is more than the mbuf.
(and in a second diff in addition to the above)
7. Stops the occasional DMA underruns that occurred when 2 channels
are running at 2Mbit/s.
Submitted by: John Hay <jhay@mikom.csir.co.za>
but didn't actually do anything with it (*blush*).
This should fix bde's test case where the test program set SA_RESETHAND
and when reading it back, it was gone.
Tweak/optimize SA_NODEFER so that the implementation is a little simpler
and does not incur (slight) overhead for every signal at delivery time.
between ignoring options specified in the setsockopt call if IP_HDRINCL is set
(the UCB choice when VJ's code was brought in) vs allowing them (what everyone
else did, and what is assumed by programs everywhere...sigh).
Also perform some checking of the passed down packet to avoid running off
the end of a mbuf chain.
Reviewed by: fenner
regarding the "real" problem with maps that we have been having
over the last few weeks. He noted that the first_free pointer was
left dangling in certain circumstances -- and he was right!!! This
should fix the map problems that we were having, and also give us the
advantage of being able to simplify maps more aggressively.
loader is also present in the coff loader. It was possible to get one
more page allocated than needed, which would cause brk()/malloc()/etc
to fail with ENOMEM when it tried to re-allocate the space.
Also, change a bcopy() from kernel to user space to a copyout().
just in case a connection already existed.
Also, a minor optimization in the code which determins if a APM BIOS exists.
Reviewed by: phk
This is based on the APM-0.5 patch for Linux, but written entirely by me.
files are off the vendor branch, so this should not change anything.
A "U" marker generally means that the file was not changed in between
the 4.4Lite and Lite-2 releases, and does not need a merge. "C" generally
means that there was a change.
[note new unused (in this form) syscalls.conf, to be 'cvs rm'ed]
files are off the vendor branch, so this should not change anything.
A "U" marker generally means that the file was not changed in between
the 4.4Lite and Lite-2 releases, and does not need a merge. "C" generally
means that there was a change.
files are off the vendor branch, so this should not change anything.
A "U" marker generally means that the file was not changed in between
the 4.4Lite and Lite-2 releases, and does not need a merge. "C" generally
means that there was a change.
files are off the vendor branch, so this should not change anything.
A "U" marker generally means that the file was not changed in between
the 4.4Lite and Lite-2 releases, and does not need a merge. "C" generally
means that there was a change.
[new sys/syscallargs.h file, to be "cvs rm"ed]
- Do not enable tagged commands by default
- Probe only 1 LUN
- Do not negotiate sync. transfer with CDROM drives
Defining FAILSAFE will result in a driver that will tolerate
marginal hardware for the price of a slight loss of performance
It is intended for use in install kernels.
files are off the vendor branch, so this should not change anything.
A "U" marker generally means that the file was not changed in between
the 4.4Lite and Lite-2 releases, and does not need a merge. "C" generally
means that there was a change.
files are off the vendor branch, so this should not change anything.
A "U" marker generally means that the file was not changed in between
the 4.4Lite and Lite-2 releases, and does not need a merge. "C" generally
means that there was a change.
[two new auxillary files in miscfs/union]
files are off the vendor branch, so this should not change anything.
A "U" marker generally means that the file was not changed in between
the 4.4Lite and Lite-2 releases, and does not need a merge. "C" generally
means that there was a change.
files are off the vendor branch, so this should not change anything.
A "U" marker generally means that the file was not changed in between
the 4.4Lite and Lite-2 releases, and does not need a merge. "C" generally
means that there was a change.
[note, new file: cd9660_mount.h]
files are off the vendor branch, so this should not change anything.
A "U" marker generally means that the file was not changed in between
the 4.4Lite and Lite-2 releases, and does not need a merge. "C" generally
means that there was a change.
[note, new file: cd9660_mount.h]
files are off the vendor branch, so this should not change anything.
A "U" marker generally means that the file was not changed in between
the 4.4Lite and Lite-2 releases, and does not need a merge. "C" generally
means that there was a change.
Make a copy of the header of a packet that gets queued due to
lack of forwarding cache entry, so that nobody else can step
on it. Thanks to Mike Karels <karels@bsdi.com> for pointing
this one out.
the obsolete soqinsque and soqremque functions as well as collapsing
so_q0len and so_qlen into a single queue length of unaccepted connections.
Now the queue of unaccepted & complete connections is checked directly
for queued sockets. The new code should be functionally equivilent to
the old while being substantially faster - especially in cases where
large numbers of connections are often queued for accept (e.g. http).
Note: Lite2 struct sysent changes need to go in FreeBSD sysent.h instead.
Leave out prototype for nosys() until convert makesyscalls.sh
over to Lite2 format, if we ever do so.
Reviewed by: davidg & bde
remove bogus function prototype for issig()---no such function
fix comment
Lite2 changed type of ps_code from int to long. We change it to u_long
to make it consistent w/ its usage in kern_sig.c.
Did not accept type change to ps_addr field. Delete it instead as it is
not used anywhere.
Reviewed by: davidg & bde
Did not accept changes to types of off_t and pid_t. See
<machine/ansi.h> for explanation.
Did not accept changes to major and minor macros upon bde's review.
These changes are unnecessary.
Did not accept type change to fd_mask upon bde's review.
This change is unnecessary as long as sizeof(fd_mask) divides FD_SETSIZE.
Reviewed by: davidg & bde
are bigger than the size of ints
add function prototypes
reorder some fields
Did not add prototype for m_reclaim(). It's only used in kern/uipc_mbuf.c and
is declared static there.
Reviewed by: davidg & bde
add comments
Did not accept change of second argument of ioctl prototype from int to u_long.
Did not merge in changes to fields in bdevsw and cdevsw.
Reviewed by: davidg & bde
Did not accept prototypes for unp_attach(), unp_bind(), unp_connect(),
unp_detach(), unp_discard(), unp_disconnect(), unp_drop(),
np_gc(), unp_mark(), unp_scan(), and unp_shutdown().
They are used only in uipc_usrreq.c and declared static there.
Reviewed by: davidg & bde
To complete this, some extra state has to be kept somewhere so that the
B38400 flag in Linux can be correctly translated to/from either 38400,
57600 or 115200.
Submitted by: Robert Sanders <rsanders@mindspring.com>
this code was not quite right (linux has a readdir and getdents syscall,
with the same args. readdir only returns one entry and uses a mutant
dirent structure. This code was also returning the mutant form for
getdents as well. My fault for missing this before.)
Compile and link a new kernel, that will give native ELF support, and
provide the hooks for other ELF interpreters as well.
To make native ELF binaries use John Polstras elf-kit-1.0.1..
For the time being also use his ld-elf.so.1 and put it in
/usr/libexec.
The Linux emulator has been enhanced to also run ELF binaries, it
is however in its very first incarnation.
Just get some Linux ELF libs (Slackware-3.0) and put them in the
prober place (/compat/linux/...).
I've ben able to run all the Slackware-3.0 binaries I've tried
so far.
(No it won't run quake yet :)
Cleanse the SCSI subsystem of its internally defined types
u_int32, u_int16, u_int8, int32, int16, int8.
Use the system defined *_t types instead.
aic7870.c:
Handle Seeprom data a little better.
Cleanse the SCSI subsystem of its internally defined types
u_int32, u_int16, u_int8, int32, int16, int8.
Use the system defined *_t types instead.
aic7xxx.c:
Fix the reset code.
Instead of queing up all of the SCBs that timeout during timeout
processing, we take the first and have it champion the effort.
Any other scbs that timeout during timeout handling are given
another lifetime to complete in the hopes that once timeout
handing is finished, they will complete normally. If one of
these SCBs times out a second time, we panic and Justin tries
again.
The other major change is to queue flag aborted SCBs during timeout
handling, and "ahc_done" them all at once as soon as we have the
controller back into a sane state. Calling ahc_done any earlier
will cause the SCSI subsystem to toss the command right back at
us and the attempt to queue the command will conflict with what
the timeout routine is trying to accomplish.
The aic7xxx driver will now respond to bus resets initiated by
other devices.
Cleanse the SCSI subsystem of its internally defined types
u_int32, u_int16, u_int8, int32, int16, int8.
Use the system defined *_t types instead.
eisaconf.c:
Cosmetic formatting chagnes.
iterations of 30uS so that really fast systems stop getting
timeout messages from the Riscom driver.
Reviewed by: ache, peter@nmti.com (Peter da Silva)
handled correctly. Fix some incorrect code that was included
to improve performance. Significantly simplify the pmap_use_pt and
pmap_unuse_pt subroutines. Add some more diagnostic code.
The pmap_remove in vm_map_clean incorrectly unmapped the entire
map entry.
The new vm_map_simplify_entry code had an error (the offset
of the combined map entry was not set correctly.)
Submitted by: Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
residing in a buffer that had been dirtied by a process was being
handled incorrectly. The pages were mistakenly placed into the
cache queue. This would likely have the effect of mmaped page modifications
being lost when I/O system calls were being used simultaneously to
the same locations in a file.
Submitted by: davidg
Story so fr:
1) PPP on-demand with static IP works.
2) PPP on-demand with dynamic IP says "Host is down" on any IP request
The problem is that tun driver check its READY state by *first* ifconfig address.
i.e.:
set ifaddr <addr> <addr2>
works (static IP) and
set ifaddr 0 <addr2>
not works (dynamic IP) because first address is equal 0.
Since tun is always POINTOPOINT interface, dst address is more meaningfull.
I change checking to second (dst) address in READY test.
PPP on-demand finally works.
is defined and FORCE_COMCONSOLE isn't defined.
Don't compile any keyboard probing code if PROBE_KEYBOARD isn't defined.
Makefile:
Removed -I paths. They weren't used, and the one to /sys hasn't worked
since the source directory was moved down one level.
counter instead of the BIOS time call to save space.
Reworked the anti-noise timeout to avoid duplicating code. The timeout
in the outer loop is now restarted after every noise timeout, so it is
now possible for the total timeout to be infinite; previously, the maximum
total timeout was 150000 seconds.
must have limit 0xffff and attribute G = 0 (byte granularity) as well
as other properties that they already had (see e.g., the Intel i486
manual section 22.5). Not restoring them broke Ctrl-Alt-Del in the
bootstrap for my ASUS P55TP4XE system, probably because the Award BIOS
does anti-tracing stuff involving inaccessible %esp's.
asm.S:
Don't use lret in prot_to_real(). This reduces the risk of using an
incompletely intialized stack segment and saves space.
Submitted by: "K.Higashino" <a00303@cc.hc.keio.ac.jp> (on 13 Jan 1995!)
reworked by me
were paged in under low swap space conditions to both loose their
backing store and their dirty bits. This would cause pages to
be demand zeroed under certain conditions in low VM space conditions
and consequential sig-11's or sig-10's. This situation was made
worse lately when the level for swap space reclaim threshold was
increased.
on in the FreeBSD development, I had made a global lock around the
rlist code. This was bogus, and now the lock is maintained on a
per resource list basis. This now allows the rlist code to be used for
almost any non-interrupt level application.
linux binaries from the *BSD a.out loader. This is a hack, but lets me run
static NetBSD binaries. Dynamic binaries are a much bigger problem because
the shared libraries would conflict with our native libraries, so a
/compat/netbsd alternate namespace and translation would be needed.
Also, LINUX_POSIX_VDISABLE is \0, FreeBSD's is 0xff. Convert between them.
This enables some more programs to run, including the Livingston Portmaster
utilities (PMtools).
Submitted by: Robert Sanders <rsanders@mindspring.com>
since that's the only other USER_LDT using code that I know of.
Submitted by: Gary Jennejohn <Gary.Jennejohn@munich.netsurf.de>
Obtained from: {Origin of diffs may be someone else - I only rec'd them from
Gary}
netscape-2.0 for Linux running all the Java stuff. The scrollbars are now
working, at least on my machine. (whew! :-)
I'm uncomfortable with the size of this commit, but it's too
inter-dependant to easily seperate out.
The main changes:
COMPAT_LINUX is *GONE*. Most of the code has been moved out of the i386
machine dependent section into the linux emulator itself. The int 0x80
syscall code was almost identical to the lcall 7,0 code and a minor tweak
allows them to both be used with the same C code. All kernels can now
just modload the lkm and it'll DTRT without having to rebuild the kernel
first. Like IBCS2, you can statically compile it in with "options LINUX".
A pile of new syscalls implemented, including getdents(), llseek(),
readv(), writev(), msync(), personality(). The Linux-ELF libraries want
to use some of these.
linux_select() now obeys Linux semantics, ie: returns the time remaining
of the timeout value rather than leaving it the original value.
Quite a few bugs removed, including incorrect arguments being used in
syscalls.. eg: mixups between passing the sigset as an int, vs passing
it as a pointer and doing a copyin(), missing return values, unhandled
cases, SIOC* ioctls, etc.
The build for the code has changed. i386/conf/files now knows how
to build linux_genassym and generate linux_assym.h on the fly.
Supporting changes elsewhere in the kernel:
The user-mode signal trampoline has moved from the U area to immediately
below the top of the stack (below PS_STRINGS). This allows the different
binary emulations to have their own signal trampoline code (which gets rid
of the hardwired syscall 103 (sigreturn on BSD, syslog on Linux)) and so
that the emulator can provide the exact "struct sigcontext *" argument to
the program's signal handlers.
The sigstack's "ss_flags" now uses SS_DISABLE and SS_ONSTACK flags, which
have the same values as the re-used SA_DISABLE and SA_ONSTACK which are
intended for sigaction only. This enables the support of a SA_RESETHAND
flag to sigaction to implement the gross SYSV and Linux SA_ONESHOT signal
semantics where the signal handler is reset when it's triggered.
makesyscalls.sh no longer appends the struct sysentvec on the end of the
generated init_sysent.c code. It's a lot saner to have it in a seperate
file rather than trying to update the structure inside the awk script. :-)
At exec time, the dozen bytes or so of signal trampoline code are copied
to the top of the user's stack, rather than obtaining the trampoline code
the old way by getting a clone of the parent's user area. This allows
Linux and native binaries to freely exec each other without getting
trampolines mixed up.
that Bruce asked for.
These still are not quite perfect, and in particular, it can get
upset on extreme boundary cases (addr = 0xfff, len = 0xffffffff,
which would end up mapping a single page rather than failing), but
this is better code that I committed before.
(note, the VM system does not (apparently) support single mmap segment
sizes above 0x80000000 anyway)
the S-Video input. It also has code in the driver for the meteor RGB support
and some other bug fixes. I don't have a meteor RGB but I have been told
that it works.
Submitted by: Jim Lowe <james@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
queue type is not set to QUEUE_NONE. This appears to have
caused a hang bug that has been lurking.
2) Fix bugs that brelse'ing locked buffers do not "free" them, but the
code assumes so. This can cause hangs when LFS is used.
3) Use malloced memory for directories when applicable. The amount
of malloced memory is seriously limited, but should decrease the
amount of memory used by an average directory to 1/4 - 1/2 previous.
This capability is fully tunable. (Note that there is no config
parameter, and might never be.)
4) Bias slightly the buffer cache usage towards non-VMIO buffers. Since
the data in VMIO buffers is not lost when the buffer is reclaimed, this
will help performance. This is adjustable also.
- split driver into FreeBSD specific and camera specific portions
(qcamio.c can run in user mode, with a Linux "driver top" etc,
and qcam.c should be trivial to port to NetBSD and BSDI.)
- support for 4bppand bidirectional transfers working better
- start of interleaved data-transfers byte-stream decodes (some of this
stuff has been pulled out for the moment to make it easier to debug)
At this point, anyone who wants to port it to other platforms should feel
free to do so. Please feed changes directly back to me so that I can produce
a unified distribution.
doesn't break support for the older models (tested with my 3C589B).
Reviewed by: Joshua Gahm <jgahm@BBN.COM>
Submitted by: hosokawa@mt.cs.keio.ac.jp (HOSOKAWA Tatsumi)
prevent it from conflicting with other drivers (like the aic7xxx driver).
Most of the work was in spliting out common portions of the driver and
making them generic enough to be called from the eisaconf probe.
The eisaconf probe for the 3Com 3c579 and the 3c509 when in eisa
configuration mode.
aha1742.c aic7770.c bt74x.c:
Only call eisa_registerdev after the probe is successfully.
eisaconf.c:
Increase kdc->kdc_datalen during the eisa_reg* functions instead of
in the eisa_add* functions since eisa_registerdev has already been
called and we have a kdc to manipulate.
is <sys/unistd.h>, with the prototype in <unistd.h>. sys/unistd.h
is visible to the kernel compile, and is #included by unistd.h.
Also, I missed a reference to a static int in the midst of my other diffs.
kern_fork.c: add the tiny bit of code for rfork operation.
kern/sysv_*: shmfork() takes one less arg, it was never used.
sys/shm.h: drop "isvfork" arg from shmfork() prototype
sys/param.h: declare rfork args.. (this is where OpenBSD put it..)
sys/filedesc.h: protos for fdshare/fdcopy.
vm/vm_mmap.c: add minherit code, add rounding to mmap() type args where
it makes sense.
vm/*: drop unused isvfork arg.
Note: this rfork() implementation copies the address space mappings,
it does not connect the mappings together. ie: once the two processes
have split, the pages may be shared, but the address space is not. If one
does a mmap() etc, it does not appear in the other. This makes it not
useful for pthreads, but it is useful in it's own right for having
light-weight threads in a static shared address space.
Obtained from: Original by Ron Minnich, extended by OpenBSD
Close the ip-fragment hole.
Waste less memory.
Rewrite to contemporary more readable style.
Kill separate IPACCT facility, use "accept" rules in IPFIREWALL.
Filter incoming >and< outgoing packets.
Replace "policy" by sticky "deny all" rule.
Rules have numbers used for ordering and deletion.
Remove "rerorder" code entirely.
Count packet & bytecount matches for rules.
Code in -current & -stable is now the same.
systems (my last change did not mix well with some firewall
configurations). As much as I dislike firewalls, this is one thing I
I was not prepared to break by default.. :-)
Allow the user to nominate one of three ranges of port numbers as
candidates for selecting a local address to replace a zero port number.
The ranges are selected via a setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_PORTRANGE, &arg)
call. The three ranges are: default, high (to bypass firewalls) and
low (to get a port below 1024).
The default and high port ranges are sysctl settable under sysctl
net.inet.ip.portrange.*
This code also fixes a potential deadlock if the system accidently ran out
of local port addresses. It'd drop into an infinite while loop.
The secure port selection (for root) should reduce overheads and increase
reliability of rlogin/rlogind/rsh/rshd if they are modified to take
advantage of it.
Partly suggested by: pst
Reviewed by: wollman
to help diagnose a problem on wcarchive (where the kernel stack was
sometimes not present), but is useful in its own right since swapping
actually reduces performance on some systems (such as wcarchive).
Note: swapping in this context means making the U pages pageable and has
nothing to do with generic VM paging, which is unaffected by this option.
Reviewed by: <dyson>
port addresses (even though the PC architecture doesn't support them).
Add code to limit the I/O map size based on the lowest set bit of the
address. This cures the problem with the BT946C only having a 16 bit
map register, in voiolation of the PCI specs, without giving up the
general support of >65K port regions.
DEVFS filesystems..
- if ( error = dev_add_name(child->name,parent->dnp
+ if ( error = dev_add_name(child->name,falias->dnp
Ok bruce, this is the one you were seeing..
- Optimise the linux a.out loading and uselib system calls so they
take advantage of some of John's recent interface improvements.
Basically, this means they make far less map changes than before.
- Attempt to plug some potentially nasty kernel_map memory leaks..
- Improve support for QMAGIC libs (I only use QMAGIC (ie: a.out libraries from
the slackware 3.0 dist) but this depends on other changes to enhance
the /compat/linux support)
- uselib goes out through a single exit as part of the resource tracking
that I did when closing the resource leaks on errors. This could be
cleaner than what I did, but making a 30-deep nested if/else was not my
idea of fun, neither did I want to repeat the same code 30 times over for
each failure possibility. I guess this function needs to be split into
smaller functions to solve this.
I've been running the Linux Netscape-2.0 (with Java) to test this, and apart
from the long-standing problem with the missing scrollbars, it appears to
still work as before with ZMAGIC libs (and the leaks).. However, I've
been using it with mods for the signal trampoline code for native linux stack
frames on signals and exterminated the blasted sigreturn printf() problem,
so I can't be certain that there is not a dependency on something else.
- Clean up the access to our ifnet structure by caching a pointer
to it instead of always digging through our softc structure.
Submitted by: Watchdog fixes by Serge A. Babkin <babkin@hq.icb.chel.su>
exactly as I did (should have checked there first I guess) except my
macro for TAILQ_INSERT_BEFORE took an unneeded arg. We now match 4.4Lite2.
Suggested by: Jeffrey Hsu <hsu@FreeBSD.org>
- fill in and use ifp->if_softc
- use if_bpf rather than private cookie variables
- change bpf interface to take advantage of this
- call ether_ifattach() directly from Ethernet drivers
- delete kludge in if_attach() that did this indirectly
and rmx_recvpipe. This has no demonstrable effect on performance.
(ttcp reports about 44 Mbit/s for all the buffer sizes I tried between
16384 and 65536.)
pmap_activate since it's not used anymore. Changed cpu_fork so that
it uses one line of inline assembly rather than calling mvesp() to
get the current stack pointer. Removed mvesp() since it is no longer
being used.
fixes for previous version of new pipes from Bruce Evans. This
new version:
Supports more properly the semantics of select (BDE).
Supports "OLD_PIPE" correctly (kern_descrip.c, BDE).
Eliminates incorrect EPIPE returns (bash 'pipe broken' messages.)
Much faster yet, currently tuned relatively conservatively -- but now
gives approx 50% more perf than the new pipes code did originally.
(That was about 50% more perf than the original BSD pipe code.)
Known bugs outstanding:
No support for async io (SIGIO). Will be included soon.
Next to do:
Merge support for FIFOs.
Submitted by: bde
for me, but has gotten a bit flakey in bidirectional parallel port mode.
Fix a bug in bidirectional parallel port transfers, more work is still
needed here (testers welcome).
Minor cleanup.
drives require ST_Q_SNS_HLP, they also wrongly accept a blocksize of
1024 in the first place (for a QIC-150 cartridge), but complain later
about it. The hack is to only probe for 512 for them.
Reorder the entries in st_decide_mode() so that QIC >= 525 is properly
accepted as variable blocksize.
vs unidirectional transfer modes. The kernel handles hardware, user mode
programs shouldn't get in the way.
This cleans up some really ugly grots that I hated too. :-)
Suggested by: Sujal Patel <smpatel@wam.umd.edu>
* this is my unoptimized driver, it works fine, it's not as fast as it
* could be (yet) -- I have yet to merge in ideas from other QuickCam
* developers.
* warning: this user interface is still in flux pending negotiations
* with other quickcam driver authors. It is _not_ compatible with the
* original linux interface due to the fact that it was too restrictive.
that don't announce support for command queues.
SCSI_NCR_DFLT_TAGS can be specified in the kernel config file
and sets the default number of tags per disk drive.
A value of 0 means "no tags".
Minor correction in debug messages: Values from the msg_in
buffer were being printed in the msg_out trace message ...
The code outputs the dc then calls the device specific externalize
routines to fill in the dc_data area. The old code assumed that dc_data
started one byte from the end of the dc, but with the compiler optimizing
alignment and padding, this isn't always the case. Do an explicit
&(dc.dc_data) - &dc. This fixes lsdev -c which must have been broken
for some time.
- Call eisa_registerdev as soon as we have a device match. This allows the
"eisa_add_*" routines to tweak kdc_datalen as the kdc grows and shrinks.
eisaconf.c
- externalize the linked lists that hold our ioaddrs and maddrs.
caused by a different reason):
. #ifndef __FreeBSD__ around check for negative size, FreeBSD size_t is
unsigned
. Disable mirror/parity if interleave size is 0 (i.e., serial concatenation).
when a connection enters the ESTBLS state using T/TCP, then window
scaling wasn't properly handled. The fix is twofold.
1) When the 3WHS completes, make sure that we update our window
scaling state variables.
2) When setting the `virtual advertized window', then make sure
that we do not try to offer a window that is larger than the maximum
window without scaling (TCP_MAXWIN).
Reviewed by: davidg
Reported by: Jerry Chen <chen@Ipsilon.COM>
(1) The reads are always done from the first n/2 disks.
(2) Each write is done twice, to the "data" disk (in the first half) and
the "mirror" disk (in the second half).
ccdbuffer() now takes an extra argument (struct ccdbuf **) and stores
the pointer to ccdbuf in there. In case of a mirrored write, it
allocates and stores two pointers. The "residual" is also doubled
for mirrored writes so that ccdiodone() can correctly tell when all
the writes are done.
clock interrupts.
Keep a 1-in-16 smoothed average of the length of each tick. If the
CPU speed is correctly diagnosed, this should give experienced users
enough information to figure out a more suitable value for `tick'.