isascan (__BROKEN_INDIRECT_CONFIG), and attempt multiple match/attach
of cloning devices in isasearch(). (If a match/attach succeeds for
a cloning device, try it again.)
EINVAL, that error code is ignored, leaving whatever other meaningful
error code that might have previously been returned intact. Stand-alone
file system implementations return EINVAL typically when the file system
is not recognized (i.e. cd9660_open on a UFS file system, ufs_open on a
cd9660 file system, etc.). This meant that if you had multiple file
systems in a file system switch, the first returned ENOENT (because
it recognized the file system type, but the file wasn't there) and
the second returned EINVAL (because it didn't recognize the file system
type), errno would be set to EINVAL. Now it'll be set to ENOENT.
It would probably make sense to have file systems return a special
error code to indicate "this file system is unrecognized," which
could then be special-cased, but that's a fair bit more invasive.
- fix the parser so that non-compliant isapnp devices work, and we
give up when there are too many errors (some on-board pnp sound/atapi/game
soundblaster compatible card). reported by chuck cranor
- fix the parser so that configuration tags that come after the
end-dependencies tag or before the begin-dependencies tag are merged
in properly (gravis ultrasound). reported by gary duzan
We now build a tree of card -> logical-dev -> conf, and in the end we
convert it to a list of conf...
- if aal5 frame has a CRC error then the length field in the aal5 trailer
may not be valid, so we can not use it [and we must dump the frame]
[Yuhang Sun <sunyh@dworkin.wustl.edu> & chuck@ccrc.wustl.edu]
set -- ""; echo ${1:-wwww} works.
- when expanding arithmetic, discard previous ifs recorded regions, since we
are doing our own scanning. x=ab; echo $((${#x}+1)) now works.
- in ${var#word} fix two bugs:
* if there was an exact match, there was an off-by-one bug in the
comparison of the words. x=abcd; echo ${x#abcd}
* if there was no match, the stack region was not adjusted and the rest
of the word was getting written in the wrong place. x=123; echo ${x#abc}X