Fix MOBILE encapsulation. Add many debugging printfs (mainly
concerning UDP mode). Clean up the gre(4) code a bit. Add the
capability to setup UDP tunnels to ifconfig. Update documentation.
In UDP mode, gre(4) puts a GRE header onto transmitted packets,
and hands them to a UDP socket for transmission. That is, the
encapsulation looks like this: IP+UDP+GRE+encapsulated packet.
There are two ways to set up a UDP tunnel. One way is to tell the
source and destination IP+port to gre(4), and let gre(4) create
the socket. The other way to create a UDP tunnel is for userland
to "delegate" a UDP socket to the kernel.
auto flag, which queries all local harddisks for swap partitions/
wedges and adds/removes them as swap device, a -f option to use the
first found swap device as dump device, and a -o option to only
auto-configure the dump device, but leave swap alone.
Add a -n option to make swapctl only say what it would do, but not
change any system state.
struct disklabel.
Functionality lost:
1. struct disklabel used to be updated to contain bsize, fsize, cpg.
This information was used to locate the alternative superblock in
the filesystem if the primary superblock was corrupted. We need
to find a new place to store this information if we need this
functionality.
2. On vax SMD drives that contained bad sector lists, the newfs program
knew how to get the offset and skip to the correct location in order
to place the label.
so that we don't run multiple fsck's on the same spindle at the same time!
- Add some partition getting utilities that are wedge aware (soon to be able
to use the native geometry ioctl), so that we can fsck wedges.
is NOT disarmed when wdogctl closes the watchdog device. The -x
mode protects against the case where the kernel kills wdogctl,
sshd, and other essential userland programs (due to memory exhaustion,
for example), lobotomizing a mission-critical NetBSD system and
necessitating an operator visit to reboot it.
commands to the controller.
Add a amrctl(8) control tool, which for now only allows to get status
from the adapter (status of adapter, logical volumes and and individual
drives).
From FreeBSD, with some adjustements by Andrew Doran and me.
* Add lfs_balloc capability to the lfs library.
* Extend the Ifile if we run out of free inodes when creating lost+found.
* Don't roll forward if we have allocated a lost+found, to avoid
conflicts when adding new files in roll-forward.
* Make some messages slightly more verbose (e.g. include inode number,
and use pwarn() instead of printf() so the messages include the device
name when preening).
* Change superblock detection/avoidance to use the offset table in the
primary superblock, rather than looking at the contents.
* Be more verbose about various operations when passed the -d flag,
especially roll-forward.
* Be more careful about dirops during roll forward, since the cleaner can
sometimes write blocks from dirop vnodes. Detect and avoid this problem.
* Always check the free list, even if given -i; if we're going to write
it we have to check it first.
* Mark inodes dirty when blocks are found during roll forward, so the
inodes are written with the new block locations.
* Update size of inodes if blocks beyond EOF are found during roll
forward.
* Fix segment accounting for blocks and inodes found during roll
forward.
* Report statistics on roll forward: how many new/deleted/moved files
and how many updated blocks (or "nothing new").
* Don't care if the device being checked is really a device, if we have
been passed the -f flag (to facilitate automated testing).
* When writing to the disk, use the current time in the segment headers
rathern than time 0.
* When passed the -i flag, locate the partial segment containing the
Ifile inode and use that to calculate lfs_offset, lfs_curseg,
lfs_nextseg. (Again for automated testing.)
introduce fileassoc(9), a kernel interface for associating meta-data with
files using in-kernel memory. this is very similar to what we had in
veriexec till now, only abstracted so it can be used more easily by more
consumers.
this also prompted the redesign of the interface, making it work on vnodes
and mounts and not directly on devices and inodes. internally, we still
use file-id but that's gonna change soon... the interface will remain
consistent.
as a result, veriexec went under some heavy changes to conform to the new
interface. since we no longer use device numbers to identify file-systems,
the veriexec sysctl stuff changed too: kern.veriexec.count.dev_N is now
kern.veriexec.tableN.* where 'N' is NOT the device number but rather a
way to distinguish several mounts.
also worth noting is the plugging of unmount/delete operations
wrt/fileassoc and veriexec.
tons of input from yamt@, wrstuden@, martin@, and christos@.
if the kernel does not set the interface up after we set an address,
do it explicitly, unless we (previously) set it down on user request.
This will allow the network drivers to be "fixed" while keeping visible
behaviour the same. Part of fixing PR 30694.
- note that ifconfig(8) create subcommand is required before slattach(8)
- network addresses aren't defined by slattach(8) but ifconfig(8)
- Add a BUGS section in slattach(8) to note that currently there is no way to
specify/see an interface name to be attached
- move description about link[0-2] flags from slattach(8) to sl(4)
(rather than adding a new description...)
- move description about SLIP limitations to a new BUGS section in sl(4)
- remove inappropriate MLINKS of slip.8 to slattach.8
- create MLINKS of slip.4 to sl.4 instead
- add some more xrefs
Ok'ed by christos, and closes PR kern/33672 and PR bin/33923.
particular, the caller can now choose whether to wait for the condition
to be met, and if the caller of LFCNWRAPSTOP dies or otherwise closes
the descriptor, the filesystem is started again. Updated the ckckp
regression test to use the new semantics.
dump_lfs(8) now uses the fcntls to implement LFS-style snapshotting through
the -X flag, addressing PR#33457 albeit not using fss(4). Fixed a couple
other problems with dump_lfs that manifested themselves during testing.
NetBSD Foundation Membership still pending.) This stack was written by
Iain under sponsorship from Itronix Inc.
The stack includes support for rfcomm networking (networking via your
bluetooth enabled cell phone), hid devices (keyboards/mice), and headsets.
Drivers for both PCMCIA and USB bluetooth controllers are included.
ifconfig(8) from printing errors like "ifconfig: socket: Address
family not supported by protocol family" when examining the status
of a network interface.
because it tries to set the tty not to print kerninfo. Change it
to only only play with the tty when ping is running in the foreground
(and will not stop when calling tcsetattr()). In my opinion, it is
preferable to print the kerninfo line with the ping info message
rather than to mess with the tty, but that's just me.
for non-related samples. There are several websites that explain why we
should use this form instead of the normal formula to compute the std. dev.
(Wikipedia is one of them).
Also, ping(8) (where this "new" formula came from) already does it this way
so, I'm trying to score some extra points by making both utilities behave
the same way.
Thanks to wrtstuden@ for the initial clarification.
- fix a couple of entries in struct lfs lfs_default:
- in a comment, it's called dlfs_freehd now
- dlfs_inodefmt comes after dlfs_tstamp. fortunately for this
one, LFS_44INODEFMT is also 0 so the right thing was happening.
* RFC 3542 isn't binary compatible with RFC 2292.
* RFC 2292 support is on by default but can be disabled.
* update ping6, telnet and traceroute6 to the new API.
From the KAME project (www.kame.net).
Reviewed by core.
so the reads don't always fail, and also be more careful not to read off
the end of the disk. If a read does fail, error out instead of silently
leaving the loop early (and possibly dividing by zero seconds), because
it means our idea of the disk size is wrong, or worse.
This fixes PR bin/33199.
How it works:
- after successful execution of /etc/rc, check the value of "init.root"
sysctl node, if it's different than "/", chroot() into its value and run
/etc/rc inside the chroot(),
- in single-user, return back to the original / file system.
Allows running with / file system on e.g., cgd(4), vnd(4) or ccd(4) volumes.
Idea first discussed with Matt Thomas, implemented by Jachym Holecek <freza
(at) liberouter.org> with some nitpicks by me. Successfully used by me for
almost a year with / on a cgd(4) volume (for more information about the setup
check ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/misc/salo/init-chroot/ ).
the list in order (ordering it on mount).
Regularize error messages: these are now all in ALL CAPS, with all hex
numbers (not reported in caps) prefixed by 0x. (The non-fsck-specific
messages are an exception to this all-caps rule.)
ERANGE has been raised. Just remove the extra checks, which were incorrect
anyway in almost all calls because they did not match their corresponding
strto*l function.
This caused mount_tmpfs to not catch some error cases in, e.g., i386, as
strtoll was returning LLONG_MAX instead of LONG_MAX, which are different
in this platform (but not on 64-bit ones).
Problem found by martin@; thanks!