* Provide POSIX 1003.1b mlockall(2) and munlockall(2) system calls.
MCL_CURRENT is presently implemented. MCL_FUTURE is not fully
implemented. Also, the same one-unlock-for-every-lock caveat
currently applies here as it does to mlock(2). This will be
addressed in a future commit.
* Provide the mincore(2) system call, with the same semantics as
Solaris.
* Clean up the error recovery in uvm_map_pageable().
* Fix a bug where a process would hang if attempting to mlock a
zero-fill region where none of the pages in that region are resident.
[ This fix has been submitted for inclusion in 1.4.1 ]
contents, a substantial optimization if the work load is right: if enough
empty segments are available, the cleaner never has to read or write *any*
blocks except those on the Ifile. When the cleaner wakes up it marks all
empty segments clean before deciding whether any further segments need to
be cleaned.
Fixed overflow bugs in the cleaner's handling of the cost/benefit metric
for empty segments.
a bug in fragment extension that could run the count negative. Also, don't
overcount for inodes, and don't count segment summaries. Thus, for empty
segments the live bytes count should now be exactly zero.
some internal reference counting on PT pages. We still allocate them
with the page fault routine (a wire-fault, now), but no longer free
PT pages from pmap_pageable().
invoked for (FTP) URLs, this was just a matter of recognizing HTTP URLs
in the places where FTP URLs were recognized (and updating a comment and
the manual page).
is unused in our USB stack.
Once upon a time, when I started writing the USB stack for NetBSD, there
was an effort to make a standard for how USB device drivers should interact
with the rest of the USB stack. This effort had contributors from just
about all Un*x camps (but not Micro$oft :). I based my design on one of their
early proposals since I thought it would be a good idea if we could all
share device drivers with a minimum effort. Shortly after I started my work
all the free Un*x people were thrown out of the USBDI work since we did not
pay the USB membership fee. Well, some time has passed now and the work of
the standardization group is almost public again. But alas, the new standard
has grown to be a monster! I do not want to have this as the basis for the
*BSD USB stack; it is far too complicated.
So, since we are not even close to being compilant with the standard, I've
thrown out some old baggage.