gateway=server:255.255.255.0 because that is the perferred format,
and the sys/libsa code already knows how to parse that format.
(Copied ip_convert here from the libsa code.)
the case mentioned in the PR was fixed as part of PR/2582. There was a similar
case though that was not handled as part of my initial fix, which was fixed
in FreeBSD. I applied the remaining part from FreeBSD and the code matches
now the FreeBSD respective version. [this probably should be pulled up for 1.3]
performance hit, and on an 80386 processor, it most certainly is. Pull it
from the GENERIC (and DISKLESS "generic") kernels--configure it in
yourself if you actually need it.
16M, thus eating up all candidate bounce pages, which are not allocated
until autoconfiguration runs, by deferring allocation of the buffer
cache pages until after autoconfiguration has run.
XXX This is safe because the i386 port doesn't read any disklabels
XXX during autoconfiguration.
ourselves, but this can still happen on a 386 in copyout & friends.
Fixes pmap_changebit panics seen on 386s. Thanks to Juergen Hannken-Illjes
for providing detailed info on bug occurances.
to the TLB dump routines arguements. Machines would die horibbly when
trying to dump the TLB entries in DDB. Also don't explicitly "page" the
output, since db_printf takes care of that.
causes the MI interrupt handler to barf when we get a 5380 RST interrupt
while probing. Worse, the VIA latches the interrupt, so simply having
all interrupts disabled during autoconfig doesn't resolve the problem.
[I demonstrated the latter on a IIci, which erroneously reports a
reselection attempt(!) after autoconfig is complete. The latched
interrupt results from the SCSI bus reset we do when initializing the
bus.]
Since interrupts must be enabled during autoconfig anyway (sigh), test
to see if autoconfig has completed in sbc_irq_intr(). If not, we don't
pass the interrupt up to the MI interrupt handler. Also, make sure to
clear the VIA interrupt if we're servicing an unclaimed 5380 RST
interrupt.
Thanks to Bill Studenmund for providing the key insight needed to unlock
this problem.
- allow get/set of enums SUNAUDIO_SOURCE and SUNAUDIO_OUTPUT rather
than returning EINVAL
- add missing SUNAUDIO_MONITOR_CLASS case in query_devinfo
- convert SUNAUDIO_MONITOR case from a MIXER_CLASS to a MIXER_VALUE
like it is supposed to be
- the labels for outputs/record class were swapped: fix it
this patch allows "mixerctl" to work properly on a sparc
interrupt properly on a SuperMac Spectrum/8 Series III, and thanks
to Dan McMahill for loaning the card to Paul.
I modified Paul's patch somewhat to change grfmv_intr_generic_{1,4}
to grfmv_intr_generic_write{1,4} and added grfmv_intr_generic_or4 to
handle this card.
- Closing the audio device should stop recording.
- Manipulating the pause function could accidentally start playing or recording.
- AUDIO_FLUSH could accidentally start playing or recording.
- guard against synchronous I/O completion
- avoid race conditions
- use bgetvp/brelvp to properly maintain the vnode holdcount
and clean/dirty buffer lists.
the historical link? flags for media select)
XXX No pullup request for this. But if sysinst supports explicit media
XXX selection in 1.3, this should be in 1.3 as well.
does a "restore data pointers" when reselected after disconnecting in
the middle of a DMA transfer). The driver needs a different way to know
which script to continue the DMA transfer. The message-in for the "restore
data pointers" loses the original "resume" script, and the driver would
attempt to continue the DMA transfer at the beginning of the current DMA
chunk, rather than at the point the disconnect occured. The result was a
spurious console message, and a trashed filesystem.
"struct cpu_cpuid_family", so that we can have a cpu_setup function per
known cpu type. For now use it only for cyrix 6x86 to enable suspend-on-halt
and implement cyrix's workaround to the "coma bug".
to be of type size_t; since this imposes an interface change on the Alpha
(sizeof(int) != sizeof(size_t)), allocate a new system call number and make
the previous version a compatibility system call.
We play mono samples on all 4 channels.
However, we get the volume settings for mono samples as a symmetic two-channel
setting... the other two channels used to stay at max volume...
I believe that something else is wrong here, but dont want to change MI
code (which in turn influences a couple of MD driver) thus late in the release
cycle.
memory-mapped device access (manifested by an apparent wedging of the
PCI bus):
- If cpu_class == CPUCLASS_486, disable memory-mapped PCI device access,
leaving only i/o-mapped access enabled.
- Provide a patchable kernel variable (i486_pci_mem_enabled) and a kernel
option (I486_PCI_MEM_ENABLED) to re-enable it.
whether we get it off the wire. An nfsiod might have been busy with
it, and finished while we were waiting for it in nfs_getcacheblk, so
we need to check for EOF again no matter what.
clobbers my SMC. Now I can really use a generic kernel with my SMC @0x300.
This change has been tested on various machines with ne2000 and 3c509 baords.
XXX All these probes sould be reordered after the release, with invasive
XXX probes at the end.
case. Sending an RST to ourselves is a little silly, considering that
we'll just attempt to remove a non-existent compressed state entry and
then drop the packet anyway.
socket:
- If we received a SYN,ACK, send an RST.
- If we received a SYN, and the connection attempt appears to come from
itself, send an RST, since it cannot possibly be valid.
stripclose(). In strip_watchdog(), make abort if the line has been closed.
This fixes kern/4470 (Wolfgang Rupprecht), which was a bad pointer passed
to b_to_q() from strip_proberadio() called via strip_watchdog(); the tty
hadn't yet been attached to the strip interface.
to be reloaded every time it is checked. This avoids a condition where
it can be cached in a register in such a way that updates to the flags in
an interrupt handler to not be noticed, which in turn causes the process
doing the i/o to sleep forever. Bug report and suggested fix from
Hiroshi HORIMOTO <horimoto@cs-yuugao.cs.sist.ac.jp>, PR $4460.