- Introduce MSG_NBIO so that we can turn non blocking i/o on a per call basis
- Use MSG_NBIO to fix the XXX: multi-threaded issues on the fifo sockets.
- Don't set SO_CANTRCVMORE, if we were interrupted (perhaps do it for all
errors?).
ioctl commands.
Tested with "rndctl -ls" using an old 32-bit version of rndctl(8)
(built for NetBSD-5.99.56/i386) and a new 64-bit kernel
(NetBSD-5.99.59/amd64).
it should be:
- stuff for the proplib interface goes in <quota/quotaprop.h>
- stuff for userlevel only goes in <quota/quota.h>
- stuff shared between user and kernel goes in <sys/quota.h>
Note that <quota/quota.h> and <quota/quotaprop.h> are expected to be
moved or removed later on... one thing at a time.
Update include directives in other files as needed.
no longer get it via sys/ucred.h and don't already include it
explicitly. These should in turn be removed when it can be confirmed
that it's safe to do so. (Because sys/param.h is full of things that
are often tested with #if, it's not in general safe to remove it
without checking, as such tests fail silently if the symbol goes
missing.)
returned to userland by read(2) also needs to be converted.
For this, the bpf descriptor is flagged as compat32 (or not) in the
open and ioctl functions (where the user process's pid is also updated
in the descriptor). When the bpf buffer is filled in, the 32bits or native
header is used depending on the information stored in the descriptor.
This won't work if a 64bit binary does the open and ioctls, and then
exec a 32bit program which will do the read. But this is very
unlikely to happen in real life ...
Tested on i386 and loongson; with these changes my loongson can run
dhclient and tcpdump with a n32 userland.
sys/stdarg.h and expect compiler to provide proper builtins, defaulting
to the GCC interface. lint still has a special fallback.
Reduce abuse of _BSD_VA_LIST_ by defining __va_list by default and
derive va_list as required by standards.
structures. (did linux/mips ever support termio?).
the effect of this is that termio linux apps won't have VEOF support.
i can't tell what it should be since that code isn't in linux going
back quite some years.
set close-on-exec on creation (http://udrepper.livejournal.com/20407.html).
- Add F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC to fcntl(2).
- Add MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC to recvmsg(2) for unix file descriptor passing.
- Add dup3(2) syscall with a flags argument for O_CLOEXEC, O_NONBLOCK.
- Add pipe2(2) syscall with a flags argument for O_CLOEXEC, O_NONBLOCK.
- Add flags SOCK_CLOEXEC, SOCK_NONBLOCK to the socket type parameter
for socket(2) and socketpair(2).
- Add new paccept(2) syscall that takes an additional sigset_t to alter
the sigmask temporarily and a flags argument to set SOCK_CLOEXEC,
SOCK_NONBLOCK.
- Add new mode character 'e' to fopen(3) and popen(3) to open pipes
and file descriptors for close on exec.
- Add new kqueue1(2) syscall with a new flags argument to open the
kqueue file descriptor with O_CLOEXEC, O_NONBLOCK.
* Fix the system calls that take socklen_t arguments to actually do so.
* Don't include userland header files (signal.h) from system header files
(rump_syscallargs.h).
* Bump libc version for the new syscalls.