muck up the routing tables. The patch was submitted by Quentin Garnier
<netbsd@quatriemek.com> and tweaked a little after it was reviewed
by Christos Zoulas <christos@netbsd.org>. Final change/commit approved
by Christos.
which is silly. Luckily, it really does return the correct result if
interpreted as an unsigned int. This change lets dump work on 32-bit
systems that have more than 2GB of RAM.
sector information in the kernel. Doing this uncovered some shortcomings
that should have been pretty obvious with the code committed prior, addressing
the major kludge with a new struct - disk_bacsecinfo to be passed into
DIOCBSLIST.
stats after printing them.
(Basically this just calls SIOCZIFDATA instead of SIOCGIFDATA).
Submitted by Jean-Edouard BABIN in PR bin/21078
However, he suggested using -c, and cgd (reasonably) noted that -z for
"zero" was probably more reasonable.
I've also changed the code very slightly.
This was not done, I added the functionality to be able to parse
port=num in the options. While I was there, I added this for all
the other numeric options: rsize, wsize etc.
keygen_iteration to 128. This will not default the iteration count
on a new style parameter file as it is an error in the new style
to fail to specify the iteration count.
Addresses PR: bin/21056
ffs_oldfscompat_write() in the kernel. Use the old totals when
time < old_time (i.e. an old kernel or fsck wrote the filesystem last).
When setting the date back on a new kernel, that works out ok, since
new kernels always update both fields.
* by default, warning messages go to stderr
* if -A or -a is used, send warning messages to stdout instead.
The behaviour in 1.50 meant that
somevar=`sysctl -n machdep.booted_kernel 2>/dev/null`
could end up with $somevar="machdep.booted_kernel: the value is not available"
rather than the more useful $somevar="".
(This way, "sysctl -A | grep ..." is still useful.)
try to quit or stop the program right at the moment after the it
sends a TSTP to init, move the kill(1, TSTP) to right after we
block most signals, instead of doing it just before.
2) To add TSTP to the signals we ignore. Once we start halting, it
really is not safe to try to stop at all. You can't change your
mind halfway through -- init will already be stopped and a TERM
will have been sent to everything on the system within
milliseconds of starting.
3) Adjust one comment for TNF
64 bit block pointers, extended attribute storage, and a few
other things.
This commit does not yet include the code to manipulate the extended
storage (for e.g. ACLs), this will be done later.
Originally written by Kirk McKusick and Network Associates Laboratories for
FreeBSD.
members of the operator group.
Don't install "setgid tty", and remove now unnecessary gid/egid swapping.
Remove utmp trawling code pulled in from usr.bin/who.
The Code is now simpler, and more portable (without the utmp cruft) too.
This is derived from similar work in OpenBSD.
o added new features:
o -G: generate a new paramsfile that produces the same
key as the old paramsfile,
o ffs verify_method,
o multiple keygen methods that are xor'ed together
(for n-factor authentication), and
o calibrating the iteration count of PKCS#5 PBKDF2 to
the current machine's speed.
o changed paramsfile format to allow for the new features.
o replaced open-coded parser with yacc grammar.
o lots of supporting changes.
o updated documentation to reflect new features and new
paramsfile format.
parameter=value pairs normally passed on the command line (# and \
continuation also works, yay fparseln), one per line. now you don't have
to run a program with a password on the command line.
- initialise stp when the bridge is turned up, without this stp will keep
all interfaces disabled in a sequence like:
brconfig bridge0 add if0 add if1 stp if0 stp if1 up
- s/BRDGSPRI/BRDGSIFPRIO in brconfig.c:cmd_ifpriority()
add a command (ifpathcost) to change the stp path cost of the STP path cost of
an interface. Display the interface path cost with the others STP parameters.
and update fsck_lfs and dumplfs to deal with it. Note that while the argument
to -O is given in disk sectors, it must be a multiple of the fragment size,
and although it can be lower than the label or superblock, it can't intersect
either.
superblock. Avoids false positives should fsck_ffs be run on a filesystem
that was created after the UFS2 code has been merged.
This commit is mostly a forward compatibility patch that can be pulled
up in to the 1.6 branch.
From Kirk Mckusick in FreeBSD (setup.c rev. 1.30). Original commit message:
========
When checking the alternate superblock, we used to copy any fields
that might have changed, then did a byte-by-byte comparison with
the alternate. If any unused fields got used, they had to be added
to the exception list. Such changes caused too many false alarms.
So, I have changed the comparison algorithm to compare a selected
set of fields that are not expected to change. This new algorithm
causes far fewer false hits and still does a good job of detecting
problems when they have really occurred. In particular, this change
should ease the transition to kernels supporting UFS2 which make
some significant changes to the superblock.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
========
I didn't have time to clean it up completely before my legal status
w.r.t. open source projects goes into limbo for a while. Other
developers are encouraged to play with the tool and get it into
release-worthy shape.
TODO list (see TODO file)
* verify it builds on -current, put it into release lists/etc. and src/sbin/Makefile
(built & tested on 1.6.1)
* make it ask questions before doing any work (confirm)
* create regression test suite (see discussions on tech-kern and
developers) and fix any bugs
* verify conversion to ANSI C didn't break anything
* port to UFS2
(there are still some details to work out) but expect that to go
away soon. To support these basic changes (creation of lfs_putpages,
lfs_gop_write, mods to lfs_balloc) several other changes were made, to
wit:
* Create a writer daemon kernel thread whose purpose is to handle page
writes for the pagedaemon, but which also takes over some of the
functions of lfs_check(). This thread is started the first time an
LFS is mounted.
* Add a "flags" parameter to GOP_SIZE. Current values are
GOP_SIZE_READ, meaning that the call should return the size of the
in-core version of the file, and GOP_SIZE_WRITE, meaning that it
should return the on-disk size. One of GOP_SIZE_READ or
GOP_SIZE_WRITE must be specified.
* Instead of using malloc(...M_WAITOK) for everything, reserve enough
resources to get by and use malloc(...M_NOWAIT), using the reserves if
necessary. Use the pool subsystem for structures small enough that
this is feasible. This also obsoletes LFS_THROTTLE.
And a few that are not strictly necessary:
* Moves the LFS inode extensions off onto a separately allocated
structure; getting closer to LFS as an LKM. "Welcome to 1.6O."
* Unified GOP_ALLOC between FFS and LFS.
* Update LFS copyright headers to correct values.
* Actually cast to unsigned in lfs_shellsort, like the comment says.
* Keep track of which segments were empty before the previous
checkpoint; any segments that pass two checkpoints both dirty and
empty can be summarily cleaned. Do this. Right now lfs_segclean
still works, but this should be turned into an effectless
compatibility syscall.
compile-time by BRIDGE_IPF, and at runtime by brconfig with the {ipf,-ipf}
option on a per-bridge basis.
As a side-effect, add PFIL_HOOKS processing to if_bridge.
and names a file, use that as a the default kernel, otherwise fall
back to /netbsd.
Makes lkms work *much* better when you're testing kernels that are not
named /netbsd.
effectively making the currently selected configuration the only one
active and removing boot configuration selection menu.
This is accomplished by running 'newbtconf revert'.
From PR bin/17808 by myself. Thanks to gendalia and lukem for the help finding
the right keyword.
Approved by lukem.
for forking the traditional UNIX init(8) and it does the Mach port naming
service. We need mach_init for the naming service, but unfortunately, it
will only act as such if its PID is 1. We introduce a sysctl
(emul.darwin.init_pid) to fool a given process into thinking its PID is 1.
That way we can get mach_init into behaving as the name server.
Typical use:
/sbin/sysctl -w emul.darwin.init_pid=$$ ; exec /emul/darwin/sbin/mach_init
These are of use to userland code which previously depended on the
hard-coded values of LABELSECTOR and LABELOFFSET to figure out the
location of the disklabel for a particular platform.
With the introduction of umbrella ports such as evbarm, evbmips, etc,
the location of the disklabel may vary between kernels for the same
MACHINE. This sysctl will allow userland programs to remain independent
of the particular flavour of MACHINE in such cases.
this one had all the infrastructure of fork/exec/wait, like the
others, but called system instead of exec creating an extra PID
and associated memory usage during the edit.
that can be used to block a process after fork(2) or exec(2) calls. The
new process is created in the SSTOP state and is never scheduled for running.
This feature is designed so that it is esay to attach the process using gdb
before it has done anything.
It works also with sproc, kthread_create, clone...
(which runs rc.shutdown, which might do stuff like, say, save your
ipnat or ipf state for restoration on reboot) can tell machines (sparc
and sun3 machines presently) how to boot.
to reprompt for the passphrase if the key does not meet certain
criteria. The currently implemented methods are ``none'' and
``disklabel''. The first behaves in the original fashion, the
second will scan for a disklabel on the cgd after configuration
and if it does not find a disklabel then it will reprompt for the
password and reconfigure the disk.
alongside the sysid string (instead of just the array index of the
struct part_type they are found in).
Now fdisk -l shows the familiar 169 for NetBSD, 165 for FreeBSD or
386BSD or old NetBSD, and other possibly-familiar (131 for Linux native,
015 for Ext. Partition - LBA) values in with their correct numbers.
Files in subdirectories of directories that have the nodump flag set
are sometimes incorrectly being dumped.
The problem arises because the subdirectory only gets its entry
cleared from usedinomap if it is also present in dumpinomap, and it is
the absence of a directory in usedinomap that internally indicates
that the directory is under the effects of UF_NODUMP (either directly
or inherited).
FreeBSD PR: 32414
Submitted by: David C Lawrence <tale@dd.org>
This is the bulk of PR #17345
The general approach is to use a run time deteriminable value
for DIRBLKSIZ. Additional allowances are included for using
MAXSYMLINKLEN with FS_42INODEFMT and a shift in the cylinder group
cluster summary count array. Support is added for managing
the Apple UFS volume label.
-dynamic-linker=/libexec/ld.elf_so) if the BINDIR of the program being
built is /bin or /sbin.
The reason we do this is because now all programs *except* those in
/bin and /sbin (i.e. the "special cases") match the default the compiler
uses, which is what is used for things in e.g. xsrc, pkgsrc, and other
random 3rd party programs.
* bssid xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx -- set the desired BSSID of an 802.11
interface.
* -bssid -- unset the desired BSSID of an 802.11 interface, so
the interface will choose automatically (default).
* channel x -- set the channel (radio frequency) of an 802.11 interface.
Current BSSID and channel are now reported in the 802.11 status
display, if supported by the interface.
Above changes from David Young <dyoung@ojctech.com>, with some slight
changes by me (use ethers(3) functions rather than hand-parsing/printing
the 802.11 address).
Document bssid/-bssid/channel, and clean up markup of parentheticals
in the manual page.
be changed in the future to "yes".
If MKDYNAMICROOT == "no", there is no change from existing behaviour
of a static /bin and /sbin (and a few programs in elsewhere).
If MKDYNAMICROOT == "yes", the following changes occur:
in <bsd.own.mk>:
SHLIBDIR?= /lib
SHLINKDIR?= /lib
in various Makefiles, the following entry is DISABLED.
LDSTATIC?=-static
This results in all programs (except those "standalone" programs built
in sys/arch/*/stand) are linked dynamically, the shared linker is moved
from /usr/libexec to /lib (with a compat symlink), and the shared
libraries used by /bin and /sbin programs are moved from /usr/lib to
/lib (with compat symlinks).