support for relocating the port address if the isa hints specify a
different address from the address the chipset currently has.
Submitted by: Andrew M. Miklic <miklic@ibm.net>
strdup()) rather than pointing it at something that's free()d
(via freeaddrinfo(res)) before the function returns.
I appreciate that this is an API change, but it's the only way
(AFAIK) of doing this without breaking existing code that uses
rcmd{,_af}().
Pointed out by: phkmalloc
This should cause -w's argument not to be ignored in the usermod case,
so it will affect modification of the user's password instead of using
the pw.conf (or internal default=no '*') password method.
PR: bin/11168
kernel config file.
- Add WORLD_FLAGS and KERNEL_FLAGS so you can build world and kernel with
extra make options such as -jX to speed up release builds.
- When building kernels, allow their hints to tag along, and use this to
install hints onto the boot floppy. Since the boot floppy doesn't load
loader.4th, we have to change device.hints to strip comments and change
each line to an explicit set command.
- if the dates didn't match, fetch would append the received file to the
existing file instead of replacing it.
- if the local file was complete and up-to-date, fetch would miscalculate
the expected size and report a failure instead of a success, because it
had no way of knowing that the server was actually resending the entire
file since the requested offset was invalid.
than requested. Instead, inform the caller of the real offset by modifying
the offset field in the original struct url, and let him decide how to handle
the situation.
otherwise, the ng_ether.ko KLD will never be unloadable after
all Ethernet interfaces are detached, as it should be, because
of the lingering extra reference.
Submitted by: "Yevmenkin, Maksim N, CSCIO" <myevmenkin@att.com>
due to a paucity of IRQs. I have some reservations about this, so I'm
not going to MFC this just yet. I'm doing this to see how many
problems it causes so we can do this in 4.2. I've been seeing hangs
on my laptop from time to time, but sometimes it was not in polling
mode, other tmies it was. Don't know if this is one problem or more
than one.
Requested by: Sean O Connell
lock up under moderate to heavy load.
The status & command fields share a 32-bit longword. The programming
API of the eepro apparently requires that you update the command field
of a transmit slot that you've already given to the card. This means
the card could be updating the status field of the same longword at
the same time. Since alphas can only operate on 32-bit chunks of
memory, both the status & command fields are loaded from memory &
operated on in registers when the following line of C is executed:
sc->cbl_last->cb_command &= ~FXP_CB_COMMAND_S;
The race is caused by the card DMA'ing up the status at just the wrong
time -- after it has been loaded into a register & before it has been
written back. The old value of the status is written back, clobbering
the status the card just DMA'ed up. The fact that the card has sent
this frame is missed & the transmit engine appears to hang.
Luckily, as numerous people on the freebsd-alpha list pointed out, the
load-locked/store-conditional instructions used by the atomic
functions work with respect changes in memory due to I/O devices. We
now use them to safely update the command field.
Tested by: Bernd Walter <ticso@mail.cicely.de>