be used uninitialized when name[0] != PROC_CURPROC and
proclists[0]->pd_list == NULL; actually, this can never happen
(proclists[0] == &allproc), but the compiler can not know this, so it
complains
recover from failures to accept a socket successfully. Problem suggested
by this:
> It would appear (from two "panic: closef: count < 0" failures in less
> than 12 hours) that Darren's fix to accept(2) for lost file descriptors
> isn't quite correct. His fix inserts a call to closef() to handle one
> of several possible error conditions. However everywhere else in the
> socket code in the same file where falloc() cleanup is necessary the
> function used is ffree().
core filename format, which allow to change the name of the core dump,
and to relocate it in a directory. Credits to Bill Sommerfeld for giving me
the idea :)
The default core filename format can be changed by options DEFCORENAME and/or
kern.defcorename
Create a new sysctl tree, proc, which holds per-process values (for now
the corename format, and resources limits). Process is designed by its pid
at the second level name. These values are inherited on fork, and the corename
fomat is reset to defcorename on suid/sgid exec.
Create a p_sugid() function, to take appropriate actions on suid/sgid
exec (for now set the P_SUGID flag and reset the per-proc corename).
Adjust dosetrlimit() to allow changing limits of one proc by another, with
credential controls.
- Call configure() after setting up proc0.
- Call initclocks() from configure(), after cpu_configure(). Once the
clocks are running, clear `cold'. Then run interrupt-driven
autoconfiguration.
Tree structure:
- sys/arch/sh3: sh3 generic code
As commented, in-chip device drivers are put into sys/arch/sh3/dev.
- sys/arch/evbsh3: sh3 evaluation boards (pure sh3 CPU, no fancy external HW)
- sys/arch/mmeye: Brains mmEye, www.brains.co.jp
MI source code includes couple of #ifdef for sh3-coff support.
(sh3 uses coff or elf)
Needs some more improvements, especialy in sys/arch/sh3/conf/files.sh3,
to compile the tree (due to last minute tree structure change).
approximation of reality if the MD code doesn't. This variable is the
equivalent of "tickfix" for the non-NTP path.
This allows an alpha kernel (where hz=1024) with "options NTP" to
synch up quite nicely (as opposed to having an frequency error of
~560ppm, which is outside the capture range of the PLL).
If the entry is found in name cache, cache_lookup() does all the
necessary locking now, simplifying the interface and making the
code easier to follow and maintain.
The code now also removes the entry from cache when it's either invalid
(vget() fails) or the vnode has been recycled while waiting for the lock.
In that case, unlock/relock of the directory vnode has been eliminated too.
Both changes could lead to sligh performace improvement in same cases.
Furthermore, obscure bug has been found and eliminated for ISDOTDOT in the
lockparent && ISLASTCN case: if the vget() succeded and the re-lock
of the directory vnode not, we returned the error with the '..' vnode still
locked.
For simplicity, cache_lookup() now returns 0 if the positive entry was found
in cache, -1 if not found and ENOENT or error returned by the locking
functions in any other case.
Many thanks to Bill Studenmund and especially Charles Hannum
for invaluable advices and code to get this right.
Tested by: jdolecek
Rewieved by: wrstuden, mycroft
detect a little earlier if we've dup-put'd. Otherwise, underflow occurs,
and subsequent allocations simply hang or fail (it thinks the hardlimit
has been reached).
by the Single UNIX Specification version 2, rather than the SVR2-derived
types. While I was here, I did a namespace sweep to expose the constants
and strucutures, and structure members described by SUSv2; documentation
updates coming shortly.
Fixes kern/8158.
that is priority is rasied. Add a new spllowersoftclock() to provide the
atomic drop-to-softclock semantics that the old splsoftclock() provided,
and update calls accordingly.
This fixes a problem with using the "rnd" pseudo-device from within
interrupt context to extract random data (e.g. from within the softnet
interrupt) where doing so would incorrectly unblock interrupts (causing
all sorts of lossage).
XXX 4 platforms do not have priority-raising capability: newsmips, sparc,
XXX sparc64, and VAX. This platforms still have this bug until their
XXX spl*() functions are fixed.
allocations should fail if the pool is at its hard limit.
Document flag in pool(9).
Use it in mbuf.h for the first allocate call for M_GET, M_GETHDR, and
MCLGET, so that m_reclaim gets called even for blocking allocations.