Do a little mbuf rework while here. Change all uses of MGET*(*, M_WAIT, *)
to m_get*(M_WAIT, *). These are not performance critical and making them
call m_get saves considerable space. Add m_clget analogue of MCLGET and
make corresponding change for M_WAIT uses.
Modify netinet, gem, fxp, tulip, nfs to support MBUFTRACE.
Begin to change netstat to use sysctl.
add a flag that specify if the file can be truncated safely or not
to nfsm_loadattr and friends. when it isn't safe, just mark the nfsnode
as "should be truncated later".
ok'ed by Frank van der Linden and Chuck Silvers.
close kern/18036.
set via NFSV3SATTRTIME_TOSERVER and not NFSV3SATTRTIME_TOCLIENT,
add VA_UTIMES_NULL to the va_vflags. This reflects our policy
where we're much more liberal about who can set a & m times to 'now'
than we are about who can set them to a specific time.
Should close PR 15597 from Martin Husemann. Patch is based on the
one Matthias Drochner gave in the PR.
In readdirplus, don't keep such pointers but store the file attributes
in a variable instead until they are needed. Change nfsm_loadattr*
a bit so it can accept a direct pointer to an nfs_fattr structure.
date: 1997/02/10 18:41:15; author: cp; state: Exp; lines: +8 -2
Make nfs_realign go away on sparc and add functionality to nfsm_disct.
===
[XXX this introduces an ifdef __i386__, see the comment. Should be changed]
struct member cn_nameptr 'const', since they should never be used to
modify the path name. (Only the pathname buffer, cn_pnbuf, should be
modified.) Propagate the const poisoning to code that uses the namei
and componentname structs.
John Woods, jfwfrom: @ksr.com. also, fixes the following problems:
the va_gen field is in a similar position
(Suns are going to be reporting the change-date microseconds as their
"generation"), I've supplied my own set of diffs below for your inspection.
Note these aren't even compiled, but they're pretty similar to what I had
to do to our older version of OSF/1 here. (There's also an unrelated change
supplied for xdr_subs.h; the pointer types supplied to the fxdr_time() and
txdr_time() macros are not, in fact, both struct timevals. That turns out
to be one of many tips-of-the-iceberg facing those porting the (old) Berkeley
NFS code to 64-bit machines...)