routed packets. This currently defaults to `drop,' but once we
verify that all applications that rely on determining remote IP
addresses for authentication are dropping the connection when they
see a source route option (not just disabling the source route
option), we can turn this back on and conform with the host
requirements.
MMU in boot0().
This solves the problem of cache hits after the kernel has rebooted the
machine as even with the cache off hits will occur for data/instructions
already in the cache.
Eliminate a nasty race condition in vnode_pager_sync() by making
two passes. First, find all of the objects to be cleaned and reference
them. Second, traverse this list objects, cleaning them if there are
references other than us.
work. Not quite as good as with the Lite2 merges, but it'll do until then.
* dounmount() expects to be called with the mountpoint marked busy
* all callers of dounmount() thus make the call themselves
* if a filesystem was being unmounted, and we're woken up in vfs_busy(),
don't reference the mountpoint struct pointer, as it has very probably
been freed.
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]
date: 1996/07/23 17:14:46; author: donn; state: Exp; lines: +6 -4
Be sure to push out the last page of the file before truncating it.
date: 1996/10/14 22:41:20; author: donn; state: Exp; lines: +2 -2
From Chris: Nfs_link() called vput() on the wrong vnode when aborting
from a cross-device link, which could (and did) lead to crashes.
date: 1996/10/24 16:43:43; author: pjd; state: Exp; lines: +6 -2
Return EOPNOTSUPP when trying to do a setattr with flags.
===
Also (from BSDI too, but the RCS message did not quite describe the change
to this particular file well): move the EROFS a bit further down to
let VOP_ACCESS do it's work and return an 'expected' error value to
a possible layered filesystem.
date: 1995/11/30 20:37:03; author: cp; state: Exp; lines: +25 -14
Change splsoftclock() to splnet();
Make nfsrv_getstream create two copies of data when
splitting up an mbuf rather than two references to the
same external buffer. The symptom this fixes is client
hangs.
date: 1997/02/10 18:41:13; author: cp; state: Exp; lines: +4 -1
Make nfs_realign go away on sparc and add functionality to nfsm_disct.
date: 1996/11/20 20:02:54; author: pjd; state: Exp; lines: +7 -4
In nfsrv_access(), if VOP_ACCESS() returns an error and the
error == EPERM or its not the owner doing the access, return the error.
date: 1995/11/30 20:37:53; author: cp; state: Exp; lines: +3 -3
Change splsoftclock() to splnet();
Make nfsrv_getstream create two copies of data when
splitting up an mbuf rather than two references to the
same external buffer. The symptom this fixes is client
hangs.
date: 1996/10/16 00:06:05; author: ewv; state: Exp; lines: +5 -3
Clear pending signal when an unmount fails, this allows us another chance
at the umount after a short sleep. The fixes a problem where /usr is
mounted via nqnfs and the system hangs on shutdown since the umount()
always fails with EBUSY (inetd is still busy on usr) and since we don't
clear the signal we end up stuck looping and never give inetd a chance to
catch its SIGKILL.
date: 1996/10/23 18:22:14; author: donn; state: Exp; lines: +12 -7
Kirk's changes to prevent races when unmounting. (1) Unmount()
and vfs_unmountall() now call vfs_busy() so that they participates
in the mount structure locking scheme. Dounmount() calls vfs_unbusy()
to unlock things, and makes sure to wake up waiters if there's an
error. (2) The MFS and NQNFS daemons also now use vfs_busy() when
unmounting filesystems. Kirk restructured the code so that a
successful unmount by another process won't leave the possibility
that a daemon might reference a mount structure that has been freed.
date: 1996/09/06 03:00:31; author: donn; state: Exp; lines: +1 -2
Because NFS doesn't implement vnode locking, nfs_inactive() doesn't really
have the vnode locked and hence it can't reliably access the vnode after
it performs a blocking operation. We remove one blocking call and push
the no-op VOP_UNLOCK higher so that we don't access the vnode after we
delete the sillyrename file. This should prevent crashes we've seen in
which the vnode turned into a UFS vnode and caused a panic in ufs_unlock()
when we tried to 'unlock' it.
date: 1996/09/25 19:15:21; author: cp; state: Exp; lines: +4 -0
Kirk's change to not corrupt files after a delete.
date: 1996/11/08 19:53:45; author: donn; state: Exp; lines: +16 -4
Krik's change to solve the paradox that vclean() calls nfs_inactive()
with VXLOCK set on the vnode, and nfs_inactive() was calling vget()
to get a reference on the vnode, which in turn hung on VXLOCK.
Nfs_inactive() now checks v_usecount to make sure that the vnode
is not coming from vclean() before it does a vget().
when paging on Sun4m machines with SuperSPARC processors. Essentially,
the copy/zero operations were done via uncached memory accesses, which
bypassed the snooping logic of the write-back caches, causing stale data
to be copied or generated.
Pointed out by Chris Torek <torek@bsdi.com>
- Implement a simple quirks framework for changers.
- Add a quirk for the Spectra 9000 8mm tape library; it requires a
slightly-longer-than-1-minute delay to take tape inventory. Many
thanks to David Webster at Cygnus Solutions for testing this for me.
to describe here. This should fix the problems with "hanging processes"
people have seen since the original object collapse code was committed.
From Charles Hannum <mycroft@netbsd.org>
Create macros (with names borrowed from Mach 3) to manipulate
object->paging_in_progress, and use them. When decreasing the
paging count, always make sure to wake up anyone waiting.
Fixes `vospgc', `vosca1', and `vosca2' hangs.
to prepare for if_media, and to support EISA 3c59x cards:
* change epconfig() to take a short that encodes the chipset
type (3c509, or Demon/Vortex/Boomerang).
* add distinct 3c509 and Demon/Vortex/Boomerang media-sense
functions to back end.
* Add EISA match/attach support for the 3c592 and 3c597
(Demon) cards as well as the 3c509-comatibl EISA 3c509/3c579.
* Assume that ISA and ISA PnP cards are 3c509-style, until
proof to the contrary (e.g. large packet support).
Tested on 3c595, 3c590, and 3c509b. Not tested on 3c515 or Demon.