bits but isi_state did not follow; expand it to 32 bits and pad to
maintain alignment. Note this is an incompatible change that
requires rebuilding of user applications.
Submitted by: rpaulo, cbzimmer, avatar
of the DP83861 and DP83891.
- Reset the PHY during attach so it's in a known state.
- Add a comment describing why we hardwire 10baseT support in
the BMSR.
- Always explicitly set IFM_HDX for half-duplex. [1]
Obtained from: OpenBSD [1]
MFC after: 2 weeks
server would crash because the Solaris10 client would attempt to use
Sun's NFSACL protocol, which FreeBSD doesn't support. When the server
generated the error reply via svcerr_noprog(), it would cause a crash
because it would try and wrap a NULL reply. According to RFC2203, no
wrapping is required for error cases. This one line change avoids
wrapping of NULL replies.
Reviewed by: dfr
Approved by: kib (mentor)
pv entries surpasses the high water mark. The problem was that the page
daemon would only be awakened the first time that the high water mark was
surpassed. (The variable "pagedaemon_waken" is a non-working vestige of
FreeBSD 4.x, in which it was external and reset by the page daemon whenever
it ran. This reset allowed subsequent wakeups by the pv entry allocator.)
There is an external use in the opensolaris code.
I am not sure how this ever worked but I have seen two reports of:
link_elf: symbol hardlink_check_uid undefined
lately.
Reported by: Scott Ullrich (sullrich gmail.com), pfsense
Reported by: Mister Olli (mister.olli googlemail.com)
Add a small Unicode-to-CP437 remapping table to at least demonstrate
that the terminal emulator is perfectly capable of handling UTF-8. This
will of course break if the user loads a different font map, but it at
least allows people to give it a try.
I can now see the box drawing in dialog(1) and the arrows in mutt(1)
correctly.
Because our rc scripts also open the /etc/ttyv* nodes, it revokes the
console, preventing startup messages from being displayed.
I really have to think about this. Maybe we should just give the console
its own TTY and let it build on top of other TTYs. I'm still not sure
what to do with input handling there.
actual implementation.
Remove the accessor functions for the compiled out case, just returning
"unavail" values. Remove the kernel conditional from the header file as
it is no longer needed, only leaving the externs.
Hide the improperly virtualized SYSCTL/TUNABLE for the flowtable size
under the kernel option as well.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Even though I thought I fixed the staircase issue (and I was no longer
able to reproduce it), I got some reports of the issue still being
there. It turns out the staircase effect still occurred when
/dev/console was kept open while killing the getty on the same TTY
(ttyv0).
For some reason I can't figure out how the old TTY code dealt with that,
so I assume the issue has always been there. I only exposed it more by
merging consolectl with ttyv0, which means that the issue was present,
even on systems without a serial console.
I'm now marking the console device as being closed when closing the
regular TTY device node. This means that when the getty shuts down,
init(8) will open /dev/console, which means the termios attributes will
always be reset in this case.
so that it isn't exposured unless needed. In particular this means
that it's easier to tune the memory layout based on board details.
While here, remove inclusion of <machine/intr.h> from mvreg.h. This
also contains exposure to SoC specifics in MI drivers, because NIRQ
depends on the SoC.
Thanks to (no special order) Emmanuel Dreyfus (manu@netbsd.org), Larry
Baird (lab@gta.com), gnn, bz, and other FreeBSD devs, Julien Vanherzeele
(julien.vanherzeele@netasq.com, for years of bug reporting), the PFSense
team, and all people who used / tried the NAT-T patch for years and
reported bugs, patches, etc...
X-MFC: never
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: gnn(mentor)
Obtained from: NETASQ
It seems that current code should pass the check.
This commit should not lead to any changes in compiled code.
From now on a warning shall be produced if kobj method implementation
function has a mismatching signature.
Verified by: md5
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
Big thanks to Christoph Mallon for the idea/code!
This construct has benefit of sticking much stricter to C standard and thus
keeping more compilers happy as Clang doesn't like the current construct
because it doesn't treat FUNC != NULL as a compile-time constant.
The checking version is still under 'notyet'.
Pointed out by: ed
Submitted by: Christoph Mallon <christoph.mallon@gmx.de>
Clang help by: rdivacky
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: jhb