Unfortunately, the QUEUE FULL event only tells you Bus && Target.
It doesn't tell you lun. In order for the XPT_REL_SIMQ action to
work, we have to have a real lun. But which one? For now, just
iterate over MPT_MAX_LUNS.
Practically speaking, this is only going to be happening for lower
quality SAS or SATA drives behind the SAS controller, which means
only lun 0, so it's not so bad.
Helpful Reminder Nagging from: John Baldwin, Fred Whiteside
MFC after: 5 days
of directory reading system calls.
Respell a mis-spelled event name.
Clean up white space/line wraps in a couple of places.
Assign event numbers to some new system call entries that have turned
up in the list since audit support was added.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
returns the previous value that the "add" effected (In
this case we are adding -1), afterwhich we compare it
to '0'... to see if we free the mbuf... we should
be comparing it to '1'... Note that this only effects
when there is contention since there is a first part
to the comparison that checks to see if its '1'. So
this bug would only crop up if two CPU's are trying
to free the same mbuf refcount at the same time. This
will happen in SCTP but I doubt can happen in TCP or
UDP.
PR: N/A
Submitted by: rrs
Reviewed by: gnn,sam
Approved by: gnn,sam
notes since the last import:
OpenBSM 1.0 alpha 11
- Reclassify certain read/write operations as having no class rather than the
fr/fw class; our default classes audit intent (open) not operations (read,
write).
- Introduce AUE_SYSCTL_WRITE event so that BSD/Darwin systems can audit reads
and writes of sysctls as separate events. Add additional kernel
environment and jail events for FreeBSD.
- Break AUDIT_TRIGGER_OPEN_NEW into two events, AUDIT_TRIGGER_ROTATE_USER
(issued by the user audit(8) tool) and AUDIT_TRIGGER_ROTATE_KERNEL (issued
by the kernel audit implementation) so that they can be distinguished.
- Disable rate limiting of rotate requests; as the kernel doesn't retransmit
a dropped request, the log file will otherwise grow indefinitely if the
trigger is dropped.
- Improve auditd debugging output.
- Fix a number of threading related bugs in audit_control file reading
routines.
- Add APIs au_poltostr() and au_strtopol() to convert between text
representations of audit_control policy flags and the flags passed to
auditon(A_SETPOLICY) and retrieved from auditon(A_GETPOLICY).
- Add API getacpol() to return the 'policy:' entry from audit_control, an
extension to the Solaris file format to allow specification of policy
persistent flags.
- Update audump to print the audit_control policy field.
- Update auditd to read the audit_control policy field and set the kernel
policy to match it when configuring/reconfiguring. Remove the -s and -h
arguments as these policies are now set via the configuration file. If a
policy line is not found in the configuration file, continue with the
current default of setting AUDIT_CNT.
- Fix bugs in the parsing of large execve(2) arguments and environmental
variable tokens; increase maximum parsed argument and variable count.
- configure now detects strlcat(), used by policy-related functions.
- Reference token and record sample files added to test tree.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
interface is an IPv6 interface.
Use this method to decide if we should attempt to configure an interface
with an IPv6 address in pccard_ether. The mechanism pccard_ether uses
to do this is unsuited to the task because it assumes the list of
interfaces it is passed is the full list of IPv6 interfaces and makes
decissions based on that. This is at least a step in the right
direction and is probably about as much as we can MFC safely.
PR: conf/103428
MFC after: 3 days
current implementation of df(1) is does not properly format the output under
certain conditions. Right now -kP and -Pk are not the same thing. Further,
when we set the BLOCKSIZE environment variable, we use "1k" instead of "1024",
making the header display incorrectly.
To quote the specification:
"When both the -k and -P options are specified, the following header line
shall be written (in the POSIX locale):
"Filesystem 1024-blocks Used Available Capacity Mounted on\n"
- If -P has been specified, check to make sure that -k has not already been
specified, if so, simply break instead of clobbering the previous blocksize
- Use 1024 instead of 1k to make the header POSIX compliant
Reported by: Andriy Gapon
Discussed with: bde, ru
MFC after: 1 week
of the chip to let ASF/IPMI firmware to respond to IPMI after attaching
and when the chip is down. David looked at it but could really say
what they right minimal config. stuff would be. It's not documented.
I figured this out via trial and error.
Reviewed by: davidch