"A sequence step of 0 after a select with ATN can be a selection
timeout, or it can also indicate the target did not respond with
a message out phase. The latter will occur on very old SCSI
devices which do not respond to the ATN signal and go directly to
the command phase".
Should prevent problems during daylight savings changeover (which is usually
between 01:00 -> 03:00, depending upon the region) where the cronjobs
may be executed twice, or never at all...
* Check for a disklabel matching the known values in an install diskimage.
If found, update incore disklabel's RAW_PART with the size reported
by the disk, clobbering the size used by vnd(4).*
* If geometry info is bogus or /missing, supply a fake geometry
(as in sd.c). Saves readdisklabel() and sysinst from divide-by-zero errors.
* lint: RAWPART -> RAW_PART.
Gcc used to create code to create trampolines (for nested functions) for
m68k without properly flushing the caches, leading to segmentation violations
on 68040/68060 systems.
Fixed by:
- importing the gcc 2.7.2.3 trampoline creation code into arch/m68k/m68k.h
- adding the OS-specific code for this into arch/m68k/netbsd.h
These changes have been reflected in gcc2netbsd.
overflow (always hated that).
replaced "/m" flag with:
/a == show process address info
/n == show normal process info [currently the default]
/w == show process wait/emul info
floating point stuff removed].
the new kprintf replaces the 3 different (and buggy) versions of
printf that were in the kernel before (kprintf, sprintf, and db_printf),
thus reducing duplicated code by 2/3's. this fixes (or adds) several
printf formats. examples:
%#x - previously only supported by db_printf [not printf/sprintf]
%8.8s - printf would print "000chuck" for "chuck" before
%5p - printf would print "0x 1" for value 1 before
XXX: new kprintf still supports several non-standard '%' formats that
are supposed to eventually be removed:
%: - passes an additional format string and argument list recursively
%b - used to decode error registers
%r - int, but print in radix "db_radix" [DDB only]
%z - 'signed hex' [DDB only]
%n - unsigned int, but print in radix "db_radix" [DDB only]
note that DDB's "%n" conflicts with standard "%n" which takes the
number of characters written so far and stores it into the integer
indicated by the "int *" pointer arg. yuck!
while here, add comments for each function explaining what it is
supposed to do.