ways of 386BSD, and one in stdlib, which is from Lite-2. The former was
picked up by the build process and has seen a little more maintenance
while the latter's location is "right", so bring the latter up to par
with the former and dispose of the (now) latter.
Reported by David A. Holland in PR lib/25160, which is worded in a
far less mind-boggling fashion than the above.
peer, we have to copy the "master" rate table to the faked-up node's
rate table, or else ath0 will complain, "ath0: bogus xmit rate
0x0". Thank you Konstantin KABASSANOV for reporting this problem.
peer, we have to copy the "master" rate table to the faked-up node's
rate table, or else ath0 will complain, "ath0: bogus xmit rate
0x0". Thank you Konstantin KABASSANOV for reporting this problem.
1. ifdef out the restriction that the SiS 900 has only one PHY
This is demonstrably false; the SiS 960 super south bridge in
PR 18590 has a SiS 900 rev 1 core in it.
2. bitbang the MII for all versions of the SiS 900; this is the
only way that the PHYs on this system answer.
Also, I suspect that SIS900_REV_960 constant in if_sipreg.h is
incorrectly labelled - there were later revisions of the super
south bridge (e.g. the 961, 962, and 963), and I suspect the
SiS 900 revision code there refers to one of those.
tool compiles on non-NetBSD now.
Note: We're not actually using BFD, just two header files that are
more conveniently laid out than our native header. There is no GPL
infection from using the BFD headers.
In XNS5, and subsequently in POSIX-2001 it was changed to socklen_t.
To accomodate for this while preserving binary compatibility with the
old interface, prepend or append 32 bits of padding, depending on
the (LP64 data model) architecture's endianness. Fixes PR
standards/21411 from Ben Harris.
This should be deleted the next time the libc major number is
incremented.
Also, update getnetbyaddr(3)'s `net' argument accordingly.
Some controllers/drives (e.g. SataLink 3114 with WD Raptor) require
it. Should fix kern/23808 by Chris Gilbert, patch suplied by Chris Gilbert
on tech-kern, extended to all places enabling interrupts by me.