that this provokes. "Wherever possible" means "In the kernel OR NOT
C++" (implying C).
There are places where (void *) pointers are not valid, such as for
function pointers, but in the special case of (void *)0, agreement
settles on it being OK.
Most of the fixes were NULL where an integer zero was needed; many
of the fixes were NULL where ascii <nul> ('\0') was needed, and a
few were just "other".
Tested on: i386 sparc64
done inside of chroot(2) to chrootdir. Added to help with sysinstall(8)
support of install to alternate root but possibly useful for setting up
jails, etc.
No objection from: portmgr@
Style(9) abuse due to: entire program violates style(9)
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
libexec/ftp-proxy - ftp proxy for pf
sbin/pfctl - equivalent to sbin/ipf
sbin/pflogd - deamon logging packets via if_pflog in pcap format
usr.sbin/authpf - authentification shell to modify pf rulesets
Bring along some altq headers used to satisfy pfctl/authpf compile. This
helps to keep the diff down and will make it easy to have a altq-patchset
use the full powers of pf.
Also make sure that the pf headers are installed.
This does not link anything to the build. There will be a NO_PF switch for
make.conf once pf userland is linked.
Approved by: bms(mentor)
generic watchdoc(9) interface.
Make watchdogd(8) perform as watchdog(8) as well, and make it
possible to specify a check command to run, timeout and sleep
periods.
Update watchdog(4) to talk about the generic interface and add
new watchdog(8) page.
nologin(8), this causes a considerable (100K) increase in the binary size,
so I've added a NO_LOGIN_LOG option which disables this.
While I'm here, s/sizeof(MESSAGE)/sizeof(MESSAGE) - 1/, in order to
avoid writing the string-terminating zero byte.
No complaints from: -current
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
This is the second of two commits; bring in the userland support to finish.
Teach libipsec and setkey about the tcp-md5 class of security associations,
thus allowing administrators to add per-host keys to the SADB for use by
the tcpsignature_compute() function.
Document that a single SPI must be used until such time as the code which
adds support to the SPD to specify flows for tcp-md5 treatment is suitable
for production.
Sponsored by: sentex.net
hostname rather than an IP. The code was copying the pointer to the
IP address instead of the IP address itself. The bug has existed
ever since ypset was first imported in 1994.
PR: bin/62550
Submitted by: aardvark@saintaardvarkthecarpeted.com
MFC after: 1 week
loading on a particular version of Windows. For example, a .INF file
for a Windows 2000 driver may have an empty [foo.NT.5.1] section which
will be ingored on Win2K (whose .INF parser won't look for sections
decorated with .NT.5.1) in favor of a [foo] section. Likewise, a
WinXP file will have an empty [foo] section which will be ignored in
favor of [foo.NT.5.1].
The problem is, we can handle both Win2K and WinXP drivers, and we
don't want to exclude either one.
As a workaround, we try to pretend we are WinXP by default and search
for sections decorated with .NT.5.1, but if we don't turn up any records,
we assume that maybe we're being fooled by a sabotaged .INF file and
make one more pass looking for undecorated sections instead.
This allows us to parse the .INF files for both the Win2K and the WinXP
Centrino wireless drivers.
I'd give anything for 5 minutes alone in a room with whoever wrote
Microsoft's .INF file parser. Just 5 minutes. That's all.
for storing the "diff -n" output. Some files (eg ports/INDEX,v) are too
big nowadays to fit on the stack.
Submitted by: Stephen Montgomery-Smith <stephen@math.missouri.edu>
if the line doesn't match ^<%d>, then treat it as a regular kernel
printf line. Previously if a kernel printf message started with "<"
it would be interpreted as a log message, often with LOG_EMERG
level. This was triggered by some printfs in sys/dev/aic7xxx/, and
can also happen with the partial lines that result if syslogd cannot
keep up with the rate of arrival of kernel messages.
Reviewed by: dwmalone
MFC after: 1 week
their lines.
Properly discard PCMCIA device declarations. I plan to support
PCMCIA cards, but they don't work yet, and it appears some .INF files
declare both PCI and PCMCIA device instances.
instead of creating them by hand and storing them in the CVS tree. Add
gensnmptree to the bootstrap tools (it is used to generated these files).
This simplifies the update procedure.
Submitted by: ru
return for getopt() and comparing to -1, ditto with fgetc() and EOF,
and using the kg_nice value from <sys/user.h>
Submitted by: Stefan Farfeleder <stefan@fafoe.narf.at>
Reviewed by: obrien, bde (a while back)
Tested lightly on: ppc, i386, make universe
life easier" patch: I doubt this will affect anyone else, but the FreeBSD
Update build code was getting very confused by this.
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
PR: bin/61087
Extend libsdp(3) API to allow service registration and removal.
Fix uninitialized variable bug in sdpcontrol(8).
Reviewed by: imp (mentor)
No objection: ru
- Unify the conditional assignments section so that architectural
exclusions come first, then options and !options, sorted by the
option name, also in directory order, then architecture specific
sections, sorted by the architecture name, with i386 being a
traditional exception.
Prodded by: bde
keys, don't just do a substring match on "Ndi\Params". Instead, check
explicitly for strings that begin with "Ndi\Params". Why? Because it's
possible to create your own keys with different paths, like
"PROSetNdi\NdiExt\Params" which is what Intel does in their PRO/1000
driver's .INF file.
SRCS to teach make(1) that many .c sources are dependent on it.
This fixes parallel (-j) builds and makes it possible to build
individual .o files separately.
While here, removed PROG from CLEANFILES -- it's taken care of
already by bsd.prog.mk.
When an NFS server is port-scanned nfsd sometimes exits. This has
happened 3 times the last few weeks.
Nfsd has been written to exit when accept(2) fails. Unfortunately
accept can sometimes make a "normal" return with errno ECONNABORTED
and in this case nfsd exits prematurely.
Solution:
Check for ECONNABORTED (and also EINTR, since nfsd uses signals)
and continue.
Submitted by: Bjoern Groenvall <bg@sics.se>
PR: 61084
sequence when machine is started without attached USB mouse. Only do
repeated attempts to re-open device if the usb module has been actually
loaded. Also fix broken logic in doing delays between open attempts - do
delays between attempts, not after each attempt.
Due to previous behaviour being very annoying for notebook owners this
is a good 5.2 MFC candidate.
MFC after: 2 days
very useful .dot files of your netgraph(4) to quickly visualize the
nodes, hooks and edges. An example of this can be found here:
http://people.freebsd.org/~green/sample-netgraph-dot.ps
If anyone would like to refine the output further, please do so.
In fdformat.c a closing parenthesis is at the wrong place. Instead of
adding sizeof _PATH_DEV + 1 to the length of argv[optind], the length of the
string starting (sizeof _PATH_DEV + 1) characters after argv[optind]'s
beginning (accessing junk memory if we jump over the terminating null
character) is passed to malloc().
PR: bin/60026
Submitted by: Stefan Farfeleder <stefan@fafoe.narf.at>
the NTx86 section decoration).
subr_ndis.c: correct the behavior of ndis_query_resources(): if the
caller doesn't provide enough space to return the resources, tell it
how much it needs to provide and return an error.
subr_hal.c & subr_ntoskrnl.c: implement/stub a bunch of new routines;
ntoskrnl:
KefAcquireSpinLockAtDpcLevel
KefReleaseSpinLockFromDpcLevel
MmMapLockedPages
InterlockedDecrement
InterlockedIncrement
IoFreeMdl
KeInitializeSpinLock
HAL:
KfReleaseSpinLock
KeGetCurrentIrql
KfAcquireSpinLock
Lastly, correct spelling of "_aullshr" in the ntoskrnl functable.
copyrights to the inf parser files.
Add a -n flag to ndiscvt to allow the user to override the default
device name of NDIS devices. Instead of "ndis0, ndis1, etc..."
you can have "foo0, foo1, etc..." This allows you to have more than
one kind of NDIS device in the kernel at the same time.
Convert from printf() to device_printf() in if_ndis.c, kern_ndis.c
and subr_ndis.c.
Create UMA zones for ndis_packet and ndis_buffer structs allocated
on transmit. The zones are created and destroyed in the modevent
handler in kern_ndis.c.
printf() and UMA changes submitted by green@freebsd.org
and list_verbose(), so don't open /dev/pci read-write. This allows
pciconf -l[v] to work for non-root users, assuming the securelevel is
0 or -1.
Problem experienced by: William Michael Grim <wgrim@siue.edu>
case so that if devices need different initialization, we can key off
this in the rc scripts (currently unused). Also update the man page
which is a 100% duplicate of the rc scripts.
snprintf (buf, size, fmt, buf, etc). This only works by chance with our
libc, but fails (with a truncated string) on e.g. glibc.
Okayed by: sobomax
MFC after: 1 week
/libexec to /mnt2/libexec, and execute /mnt2/rescue/ldconfig to add
the /mnt2/lib and /mnt2/usr/lib library directories. Thanks to John Baldwin
for working to track this down.
Submitted by: jhb
than a char array. Emitting the data as a big char array works fine in
the typical case, where a .sys file may be ~50K in size. Unfortunately,
some .sys files can be several hundred Kbytes in size, or even several
megabytes in size. One extreme case is the Intel centrino wireless
driver, which is 2.4MB. This causes us to emit an ndis_driver_data.h
file that's on the order of 15MB in size, and gcc consumes enormous
amounts of virtual memory while trying to compile it. On my laptop,
with 128MB of RAM and 256MB of swap space, gcc consumed all available
VM and crashed without being able to compile if_ndis.o.
By emitting the array as assembler, we bypass the C compiler and consume
much less memory. I was able to easily test compile if_ndis.ko with the
centrino driver on my laptop after this change.
This is merely a convenience, and should not have any operational effect
on the NDISulator itself.
definitions for more than one device (usually differentiated by
the PCI subvendor/subdevice ID). Each device also has its own tree
of registry keys. In some cases, each device has the same keys, but
sometimes each device has a unique tree but with overlap. Originally,
I just had ndiscvt(8) dump out all the keys it could find, and we
would try to apply them to every device we could find. Now, each key
has an index number that matches it to a device in the device ID list.
This lets us create just the keys that apply to a particular device.
I also added an extra field to the device list to hold the subvendor
and subdevice ID.
Some devices are generic, i.e. there is no subsystem definition. If
we have a device that doesn't match a specific subsystem value and
we have a generic entry, we use the generic entry.
mostly used on 80x25 displays, and the actual window is about ten
characters narrower than that, resulting in the need for horizontal
scrolling. No functional change.
RELENG_5_2 candidate.
needed to be statically populated with device nodes. The first two are no
longer true, which makes the third pretty moot. In fact, we don't seem to
put device node bits into the distribution archives at all anymore.
So..... remove the god-aweful nasty hack that force unmounted devfs during
installation so that static device nodes could land in /dev. Now that the
vnode cleaner handles this case better this isn't strictly needed, but
axeing code in sysinstall is almost always benficial. Thanks to Don Lewis
for pointing out this attribute of sysinstall.
the case where there's an entry in the manufacturer's device list but
no corresponding installation section (and hence no AddReg assignments),
i.e. if dev = find_assign(sname, "AddReg"); returns NULL, then
don't try to dereference dev.
There is a fundamental problem with the handling of .INF files that
contain definitions for multiple devices: right now we dump all the
AddReg sections that we find, but don't distinguish what device they
belong to. This often results in duplicate keys.
Yes, it's what you think it is. Yes, you should run away now.
This is a special compatibility module for allowing Windows NDIS
miniport network drivers to be used with FreeBSD/x86. This provides
_binary_ NDIS compatibility (not source): you can run NDIS driver
code, but you can't build it. There are three main parts:
sys/compat/ndis: the NDIS compat API, which provides binary
compatibility functions for many routines in NDIS.SYS, HAL.dll
and ntoskrnl.exe in Windows (these are the three modules that
most NDIS miniport drivers use). The compat module also contains
a small PE relocator/dynalinker which relocates the Windows .SYS
image and then patches in our native routines.
sys/dev/if_ndis: the if_ndis driver wrapper. This module makes
use of the ndis compat API and can be compiled with a specially
prepared binary image file (ndis_driver_data.h) containing the
Windows .SYS image and registry key information parsed out of the
accompanying .INF file. Once if_ndis.ko is built, it can be loaded
and unloaded just like a native FreeBSD kenrel module.
usr.sbin/ndiscvt: a special utility that converts foo.sys and foo.inf
into an ndis_driver_data.h file that can be compiled into if_ndis.o.
Contains an .inf file parser graciously provided by Matt Dodd (and
mercilessly hacked upon by me) that strips out device ID info and
registry key info from a .INF file and packages it up with a binary
image array. The ndiscvt(8) utility also does some manipulation of
the segments within the .sys file to make life easier for the kernel
loader. (Doing the manipulation here saves the kernel code from having
to move things around later, which would waste memory.)
ndiscvt is only built for the i386 arch. Only files.i386 has been
updated, and none of this is turned on in GENERIC. It should probably
work on pc98. I have no idea about amd64 or ia64 at this point.
This is still a work in progress. I estimate it's about %85 done, but
I want it under CVS control so I can track subsequent changes. It has
been tested with exactly three drivers: the LinkSys LNE100TX v4 driver
(Lne100v4.sys), the sample Intel 82559 driver from the Windows DDK
(e100bex.sys) and the Broadcom BCM43xx wireless driver (bcmwl5.sys). It
still needs to have a net80211 stuff added to it. To use it, you would
do something like this:
# cd /sys/modules/ndis
# make; make load
# cd /sys/modules/if_ndis
# ndiscvt -i /path/to/foo.inf -s /path/to/foo.sys -o ndis_driver_data.h
# make; make load
# sysctl -a | grep ndis
All registry keys are mapped to sysctl nodes. Sometimes drivers refer
to registry keys that aren't mentioned in foo.inf. If this happens,
the NDIS API module creates sysctl nodes for these keys on the fly so
you can tweak them.
An example usage of the Broadcom wireless driver would be:
# sysctl hw.ndis0.EnableAutoConnect=1
# sysctl hw.ndis0.SSID="MY_SSID"
# sysctl hw.ndis0.NetworkType=0 (0 for bss, 1 for adhoc)
# ifconfig ndis0 <my ipaddr> netmask 0xffffff00 up
Things to be done:
- get rid of debug messages
- add in ndis80211 support
- defer transmissions until after a status update with
NDIS_STATUS_CONNECTED occurs
- Create smarter lookaside list support
- Split off if_ndis_pci.c and if_ndis_pccard.c attachments
- Make sure PCMCIA support works
- Fix ndiscvt to properly parse PCMCIA device IDs from INF files
- write ndisapi.9 man page
PR:
Submitted by:
Reviewed by:
Approved by:
Obtained from:
MFC after:
such that 'ispcvt' can build. Unforunately 'ispcvt' is needed in order for
/etc/rc.d/syscons to run. This fixes the bug where I could not get my
keymap effective at boot.
it returns. This allows it to connect to the server side again, which
has been listening on IPv6 addresses exclusively for more than 2 years.
PR: 59369
(Lite Edition) respectively. These "lite" packages are streamlined to
provide users with the core essentials for each desktop and to fit on the
release disc 1.
Approved by: re (scottl)
permitting the administrator to select a securelevel top operate
at. Include a helpfile summarizing some of the information from
init(8). This allows for explicit configuration of securelevels,
which was previously implicit in Security Profile selection.
Currently, there are no checkboxes for the active securelevel,
because sysinstall's facilities for deriving "current settings"
from rc.conf may use only one variable, not two, and I opted for
the simplest approach at this point.
Approved by: re (scottl)
selection is used to drive two configuration parameters:
(1) Default enable/disable for sshd
(2) Default enable/disable for securelevels
Replace this with an explicit choice to enable/disable sshd. A
follow-up commit will add a configuration option to the Security
post-install configuration menu to set the securelevel in rc.conf
explicitly. This should reduce the level of foot-shooting associated
with accidental enabling of securelevels, make the nature and
implications of the securelevel configuration options more explicit,
as well as make the choice to enable/disable sshd more explicit.
Approved by: re (scottl)
(1) Document the notion of using jail(8) to run "virtual servers" or
just to constrain specific applications. If only running specific
applications, some configuration steps are unnecessary (such as
editing rc.conf).
(2) Add some more subsection headers to break up the bigger chunks of
text.
(3) Clarify the problems associated with applications binding all IP
addresses in the host, and attempt to be more specific about
potential application problems. Document how to force sshd to
bind the the right socket.
(4) Suggest that in a jailed application scenario, you might want to
have the host syslogd listen on the socket in the jail, rather
than running syslogd in the jail.
(5) Catch another reference to /stand/sysinstall.
Approved by: re (bmah implicitly)
check if it's already loaded or compiled into the kernel, and only try to
load it if it isn't.
PR: bin/59368
Submitted by: Jens Rehsack <rehsack@liwing.de>
is possible for an error to occur while trying to log an error, and
this can result in infinite recursion (or at least until we run out
of stack).
Rather than this, we ignore requests to log an error while logging an
error.
PR: 51253
MFC after: 2 weeks
Avoid implicit function calls by adding the proper include files.
Use const char copyright.
Fix some fprint formatting.
In the manual page:
Use the .Pa macro for filenames and locations.
Kill hard setence breaks.
Make use of the .Tn and .Dq macros.
Add some to text to the otherwise blank HISTORY section (taken from CVS).
constants NG_*SIZ that include the trailing NUL byte. This change
is mostly mechanical except for the replacement of a couple of snprintf()
and sprintf() calls with strlcpy.
- simplify by strdup.
- set ai_protocol in hints to TCP.
- g/c FAITH_NS (no description, not maintained for years)
- warn if connection from IPv4 mapped is reached.
- IPV6_V6ONLY if possible.
- unifdef -UFAITH4.
- drop rsh/rlogin support.
- deal with negative return value from wait3.
Obtained from: KAME
- realloc pedant.
- set sin6_scope_id before sending (link-local/multicast) packets
- removed an incorrect comment
- don't age non-gateway host routes.
- not remove global addresses on loopback interface from routing table
by route aging.
Obtained from: KAME
a SEMICOLON token (a newline or semicolon, or one of these preceded
by a comment and/or whitespace). The input stream was switched too
early and the parser was expecting a SEMICOLON in the included file
instead of after the filename in the include directive.
Submitted by: Stefan Farfeleder <stefan@fafoe.narf.at>
Kept alive by: Adam C. Migus <adam@migus.org>
ums module, and allow for up to five attempts to open the device, with
two-second pauses in between, to allow time for USB controllers and
devices to probe and attach. My Gigabyte P4 Titan 848P motherboard has
a total of 15 ports on four hubs hanging off four controllers, and needs
at least half of that ten-second allowance to get ready.
MFC after: 7 days
deraadt NOTE: -I needs to take an arg (there's no way we can take no
arg/an arg with a single option)
- sscanf overrun
- no variable name on prototype.
- u_int32_t may not be u_long.
- skipped non-host route when printing neighbor cache entries.
- valid and preferred lifetimes are unsigned.
- wording.
Obtained from: KAME
- be more picky about argument parsing - like ERANGE.
- use u_long for args, not to lose accuracy/prevent overflow.
- socklen_t audit.
- Add -I (use icmp) option.
- warn if multiple addresses are present for dest.
- no need to pass tz.
- type pedant. check -p range.
- grab hlim from sysctl.
- typo in port number setting.
Obtained from: KAME
- check for encryption/authentication key together with algorithm.
- warned if a deprecated encryption algorithm (that includes "simple")
is specified.
- changed the syntax how to define a policy of a ICMPv6 type and/or a
code, like spdadd ::/0 ::/0 icmp6 134,0 -P out none;
- random cleanup in parser.
- use yyfatal, or return -1 after yyerror.
- deal with strdup() failure.
- permit scope notation in policy string (-P
esp/tunnel/foo%scope-bar%scope/use)
- simplify /prefix and [port].
- g/c some unused symbols.
Obtained from: KAME
no matter where in the directory structure it may be. Use this and the "-k"
flag in the generated gdbinit files so that the "getsyms" function in gdb
requires no user intervention to run and will find every module if they're
in the kernel build's module directory. This is still quite useful for
cases where gdb knows that the path for some modules is /boot/kernel and
others are in the object directory for /usr/src/sys/$ARCH/compile/kernel.
Approved by: grog
a partition size on ia64. It's not true.
o Ask for a mountpoint for EFI partitions as well and check that it
isn't "/".
o On ia64 we may need to add EFI partitions. Make sure we pass the
right arguments to Create_Chunk_DWIM() in that case.
to better deal with the fact that we need an EFI partition and
that we need to have a mountpoint for it.
o When creating a new partition, add EFI to the list of types
the user can select from. This makes it easy to create an EFI.
o Do not include wizard.c on ia64.
o The user cannot create a partition on ia64 that's a multiple of
the cylinder size. We don't have a notion of cyclinders.
o Also allow swap and filesystem partitions outside a freebsd slice.
This is typically the case for GPT.
o Allow chunks of type "whole" to be displayed at the top. This is
to allow a GPT disk to be labeled. We need a slice out of which we
can make partitions, but a GPT disk doesn't have slices. For GPT
disks a chunk of type "whole" can then be used as a placeholder.
depending on namespace pollution in <sys/stat.h> for the declarations of
struct timeval and utimes().
Fixed some style bugs in rev.1.30 and some nearby style bugs (mainly
unsorting and missing or extra blank lines).
Removed a wrong comment that was obtained from NetBSD in rev.1.14. It said
that chflags() reset the times that were set "above" by utimes(), but
utimes wasn't "above" in FreeBSD until rev.1.30, and chflags() does't
actually reset the times.
if_xname, if_dname, and if_dunit. if_xname is the name of the interface
and if_dname/unit are the driver name and instance.
This change paves the way for interface renaming and enhanced pseudo
device creation and configuration symantics.
Approved By: re (in principle)
Reviewed By: njl, imp
Tested On: i386, amd64, sparc64
Obtained From: NetBSD (if_xname)
names containing glob(3) expressions would appear verbatim in the
output.
If such an mtree file were used by mtree in update mode, wrong things
would happen.
(aka RFC2292bis). Though I believe this commit doesn't break
backward compatibility againt existing binaries, it breaks
backward compatibility of API.
Now, the applications which use Advanced Sockets API such as
telnet, ping6, mld6query and traceroute6 use RFC3542 API.
Obtained from: KAME
dcons(4): very simple console and gdb port driver
dcons_crom(4): FireWire attachment
dconschat(8): User interface to dcons
Tested with: i386, i386-PAE, and sparc64.
stdin and stdout instead of relaying the data. Now it is possible
to say:
nghook -e path: hook /usr/local/bin/foo arg1 arg2
and foo will have the hook to path: at file descriptors 0 and 1.
Add an option to specify control messages to be send to the node before
either executing the program or entering the data relay loop.
character 1 byte past the end of cmdline[] when libedit is being used for
input, and avoid writing a null pointer 1 element past the end of margv[].
Reviewed by: gad
(1) Don't modify the configuration of the NFS server as a result of
selecting a profile. We already explicitly prompt for the NFS
server configuration during install, and the user may not get
much advance notice that we're turning it off again. Instead,
use profiles (for better or for worse) only for security tuning.
(2) Don't modify the sendmail setting as part of the security profile:
use the default from /etc/defaults/rc.conf rather than explicitly
specifying. Note that the default in /etc/defaults/rc.conf is
more conservative than the explicit rc.conf entry added by
sysinstall during install, as it does not permit SMTP delivery.
(3) Update "congratulations on your profile" text to reflect these
changes.
Note that security profiles now affect only the securelevel and sshd
settings. My leaning would be to make sshd an explicit configuration
option, move securelevels to the security menu, and drop security
profiles entirely. However, that requires more plumbing of sendmail
than I'm currently willing to invest.
We may want to add a "permit SMTP delivery" question to the install
process.
Skinny is the protocol used by Cisco IP phones to talk to Cisco Call
Managers. With this code, one can use a Cisco IP phone behind a FreeBSD
NAT gateway.
Currently, having the Call Manager behind the NAT gateway is not supported.
More information on enabling Skinny support in libalias, natd, and ppp
can be found in those applications' manpages.
PR: 55843
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: ru
MFC after: 30 days
"will trim at" message printed when the user requests '-v'. The
previous code would often print the wrong time, such as:
On Sept 22, run: newsyslog -nv /var/log/wtmp
And see: will trim at Mon Sep 1 05:00:00 2003
correct msg: will trim at Wed Oct 1 05:00:00 2003
MFC after: 20 days
archaic at this point in time. Pretend nobody runs FreeBSD 1.x anymore
in order to not confuse people needlessly.
Laplink support probably doesn't even work at this point in time anyway...
would only match a leap year every 400 years. The parseDWM code first
showed up in April 2000, so the first time this bug would cause any
confusion is in Feb 2004.
MFC after: 18 days
only code-change is to add a "next_time" parameter to both routines (and
that is not used yet). A later update will make "next_time" more useful.
MFC after: 20 days
but has invalid 64 bit pointers for FACS and DSDT.
o Finish work to print all of the FADT and FACS.
o Resort the comment generating functions. Submitted by: marcel
Courtesy of: BSDcon back wall
- Add 'enable_exim="YES"' to rc.conf(5)
- Use the default exim configuration file from the port
- When using sendmail, disable some more scripts that use sendmail specific
parameters
- Have sysinstall tweak mailer.conf(5) substitution
- Use 'N' flag for newsyslog(8)
Submitted by: Oliver Eikemeier <eikemeier@fillmore-labs.com>
Reviewed by: sheldonh, simon
Tested by: myself (trhodes) and submitter
written by Stuart Walsh and Duncan Barclay (with some kibbitzing by
me). I'm checking it in on Stuart's behalf.
The BCM4401 is built into several x86 laptop and desktop systems. For the
moment, I have only enabled it in the x86 kernel config because although
it's a PCI device, I haven't heard of any standalone NICs that use it. If
somebody knows of one, we can easily add it to the other arches.
This driver uses register/structure data gleaned from the Linux
driver released by Broadcom, but does not contain any of the code
from the Linux driver itself. It uses busdma.
Update FADT for new fields including pm_profile, pstate_cnt, and cst_cnt.
Add acpi_print_gas() for printing various address formats.
Print FACS contents.
Remove unused code.
debugging options. Initial option is '-D TN=<time>', which can be
used to see how newsyslog would work if run at the specified time.
(time format is ISO 8601, since that is already supported).
MFC after: 23 days
rl(4) driver and put it in a new re(4) driver. The re(4) driver shares
the if_rlreg.h file with rl(4) but is a separate module. (Ultimately
I may change this. For now, it's convenient.)
rl(4) has been modified so that it will never attach to an 8139C+
chip, leaving it to re(4) instead. Only re(4) has the PCI IDs to
match the 8169/8169S/8110S gigE chips. if_re.c contains the same
basic code that was originally bolted onto if_rl.c, with the
following updates:
- Added support for jumbo frames. Currently, there seems to be
a limit of approximately 6200 bytes for jumbo frames on transmit.
(This was determined via experimentation.) The 8169S/8110S chips
apparently are limited to 7.5K frames on transmit. This may require
some more work, though the framework to handle jumbo frames on RX
is in place: the re_rxeof() routine will gather up frames than span
multiple 2K clusters into a single mbuf list.
- Fixed bug in re_txeof(): if we reap some of the TX buffers,
but there are still some pending, re-arm the timer before exiting
re_txeof() so that another timeout interrupt will be generated, just
in case re_start() doesn't do it for us.
- Handle the 'link state changed' interrupt
- Fix a detach bug. If re(4) is loaded as a module, and you do
tcpdump -i re0, then you do 'kldunload if_re,' the system will
panic after a few seconds. This happens because ether_ifdetach()
ends up calling the BPF detach code, which notices the interface
is in promiscuous mode and tries to switch promisc mode off while
detaching the BPF listner. This ultimately results in a call
to re_ioctl() (due to SIOCSIFFLAGS), which in turn calls re_init()
to handle the IFF_PROMISC flag change. Unfortunately, calling re_init()
here turns the chip back on and restarts the 1-second timeout loop
that drives re_tick(). By the time the timeout fires, if_re.ko
has been unloaded, which results in a call to invalid code and
blows up the system.
To fix this, I cleared the IFF_UP flag before calling ether_ifdetach(),
which stops the ioctl routine from trying to reset the chip.
- Modified comments in re_rxeof() relating to the difference in
RX descriptor status bit layout between the 8139C+ and the gigE
chips. The layout is different because the frame length field
was expanded from 12 bits to 13, and they got rid of one of the
status bits to make room.
- Add diagnostic code (re_diag()) to test for the case where a user
has installed a broken 32-bit 8169 PCI NIC in a 64-bit slot. Some
NICs have the REQ64# and ACK64# lines connected even though the
board is 32-bit only (in this case, they should be pulled high).
This fools the chip into doing 64-bit DMA transfers even though
there is no 64-bit data path. To detect this, re_diag() puts the
chip into digital loopback mode and sets the receiver to promiscuous
mode, then initiates a single 64-byte packet transmission. The
frame is echoed back to the host, and if the frame contents are
intact, we know DMA is working correctly, otherwise we complain
loudly on the console and abort the device attach. (At the moment,
I don't know of any way to work around the problem other than
physically modifying the board, so until/unless I can think of a
software workaround, this will have do to.)
- Created re(4) man page
- Modified rlphy.c to allow re(4) to attach as well as rl(4).
Note that this code works for the sample 8169/Marvell 88E1000 NIC
that I have, but probably won't work for the 8169S/8110S chips.
RealTek has sent me some sample NICs, but they haven't arrived yet.
I will probably need to add an rlgphy driver to handle the on-board
PHY in the 8169S/8110S (it needs special DSP initialization).
when reading/writing spool files. I intend to do a more elaborate
version, but I want to get this much in before 4.9-release. As written,
this results in no change to the object code.
Submitted by: John-Mark Gurney
Reviewed by: /sbin/md5
MFC after: 4 days
- Fix up TX speed changes.
- Make mpi-350 cards sort-of work with new firmware. It RXs okay but TXs
only work for about 14 packets then fails to get an interrupt. The
TX watchdog fires. It has been reported that my hack for now doesn't
break cards with the older firmware. It appears my card has lost
the ability to RX or TX at all but other peoples cards work. I assume
it got damaged in tansport.
MFC: 1 week.
was mistakenly calling the standard isnumber() function to find out if
the given 'user' or 'group' were all numeric. This meant that only the
first character of the fields were actually checked, so a username of
(say) '3com' would look like a number, and thus get mapped to uid=3 (bin)
instead of username=3com.
This bug was introduced back in freebsd's v1.1. That initial import
almost matches netbsd's v1.9, except that an internal isnumber()
routine was removed in favor of the standard library version. The thing
is, that internal routine was checking the entire string, and not just
the first digit. In OpenBSD, isnumber() was eventually renamed to
isnumberstr() to make the distinction more obvious, and I'm going to
follow that lead.
I believe this also happens to remove the last references to isnumber()
in the entire freebsd base system.
Obtained from: OpenBSD, by a long circuitous route
MFC after: 5 days
- recover rrt_gw setting for non-p2p case. otherwise, we will not
be able to recover interface route on interface down -> up
transition.
- clarify loop exit condition
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 1 week
the interface wake up. it can be started anytime even when there is
no network interface on the list of intarfaces in the kernel.
- get a correct link ID for each interface at initialization
(using scope libraries if HAVE_SCOPELIB is defined).
- fill in sin6_scope_id correctly before sendmsg().
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 1 week
- deprecate routes#N, as it is hard to keep consistency with
rtprefixN. accept any number of "rtprefix", "rtrefix0",
..., "rtprefix99".
- deprecate "addrs#N", as it is difficult for users to keep
consistency with "addrN".
accept 100 prefix info in maximum - like "addr", "addr0"
... "addr99". WARNS=2 clean on netbsd.
old configuration file should work just fine.
behavior change:
previously, we rejected "addrN" if there's "addr", and we rejected
"addr" if there is "addrN". now we accept both without problem.
- when an advertised prefix configured from the kernel has been added
or invalidated, notice the change in a short delay.
- when invalidating a prefix, do not bark even if there is
inconsistency about prefix lifetimes.
- wrap more specific route info code into ROUTEINFO.
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 1 week
file descriptors that are used for input and output. That allows
one, for example, to use nghook to bi-directionally pipe the
input and output into/from another non-netgraph-aware program.
to acpidb. The same problem exists in iasl. Add JIT patching there
too.
Add a comment to both makefiles to increase the chance that both
kludges are removed when a real solution is committed.
osunixxf.c on the fly. This avoids having to pull it from the vendor
branch or otherwise pollute the repository with new short-lived files.
This should hold until the real fix arrives.
If the value of OtherConfigFlag changes from FALSE to TRUE, the
host should invoke the stateful autoconfiguration protocol,
requesting information.
[RFC 2462 Section 5.5.3]
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 1 week
control whether to accept RAs per-interface basis.
the new stuff ensures the backward compatibility;
- the kernel does not accept RAs on any interfaces by default.
- since the default value of the flag bit is on, the kernel accepts RAs
on all interfaces when net.inet6.ip6.accept_rtadv is 1.
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 1 week
What is the HPET I hear you ask? It is the High Precision Event Timer
that is supposed to supplement and eventually replace the 8254 timer and
the RTC periodic interrupts. Among other things, it is 64 bit (can be
run in 32 bit mode for 32 bit cpus), and is suitable as a replacement for
the ACPI timer on SMP systems (the specs are much better) and as a
replacement for the ITC based synthetic clock for on ia64 systems.
It seems IA64 and AMD64 systems tend to have this. It is likely to start
showing up in i386 systems if it isn't already on some of them.
a constant string of little information these days.
This removes the need to #include <vm/swap_pager.h> which is due to
become a kernel only include file.
incoming remote telephone numbers and subaddresses ignored the configured
list completely since it was always terminated by a break at the end of
the first run (which was a leftover from the implementation of subaddresses).
Submitted by: Christian Ullrich <chris@chrullrich.de>
The output format specifier for the round-trip time in ping6 should be
changed to %.3f instead of %g since %g doesn't accurately represent the
precision of the number being output. In particular, %g truncates trailing
zeroes. 0.01 ms does not mean the same thing as 0.010 ms. Although they
are numerically identical, they do not have the same precision.
PR: bin/52324, bin/52750
Submitted by: dg
MFC after: 1 week
the scope of operation to the ARP entries on a particular
interface. It should be useful on machines with numerous
network interfaces, e.g., on inter-VLAN routers.
PR: bin/54151
Submitted by: Dmitry Morozovsky <marck at rinet.ru>
Discussed on: -net
MFC after: 2 weeks
(or possibly testing) the previous formula worked for the default
constants compiled into inetd, but if you recompiled with different
values of CHTSIZE and CHTGRAN the calculation might not have worked.
PR: 54354
Submitted by: Claus Assmann <ca@sendmail.org>
Submitted by: Jose Marcio Martins da Cruz <Jose-Marcio.Martins@ensmp.fr>
MFC after: 5 days
format of 'sccsid' lines so they consistently match style(9).
A minor Makefile change is needed so lptest.c can find lp.cdefs.h.
Reviewed by: discussed with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
format of 'sccsid' lines so they consistently match style(9)
Also the 'sccsid' line is formatted to match style(9), and
a 'From:' is removed so the sccsid returns to what it was back
in the days of '-r CSRG' (1996).
Reviewed by: discussed with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
programs, minor Makefile changes are needed to find lp.cdefs.h.
For lpf.c, the 'sccsid' line is formatted to match style(9), and
a 'From:' is removed so the sccsid returns to what it was back
in the days of '-r CSRG' (1994).
Reviewed by: discussed with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
format of 'sccsid' lines so they consistently match style(9)
guidelines. Note that this means you will have to add '-a' to
the 'strings' command when searching for rcs ids, eg:
strings -a /usr/sbin/lpc | grep '$FreeBSD'
Reviewed by: discussed on cvs-src & with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
'#ifdef lint/#endif' around the lines should not have been removed.
Also add blank lines where one (per file) was missing.
Reviewed by: First part noticed by bde, blank lines noticed by me
MFC after: 15 days
get from '-r CSRG', instead of having that sccsid as a comment.
(this is the sccsid from 1996 -- there have been many changes to
printcap.c since then!)
MFC after: 15 days
format of 'sccsid' lines so they consistently match style(9)
guidelines. Inspired by recent update to lpd.c by charnier.
Reviewed by: discussed on cvs-src & with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
source to use __FBSDID() for setting rcsids. Also fix the format
of 'sccsid' lines to consistently match style(9) guidelines.
Reviewed by: discussed with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
somewhat easier to build this lpr on other operating systems.
This simply includes <sys/cdefs.h> when that is appropriate,
and then checks for any cdefs-ish macros that lpr uses, and
defines them if they don't already exist. This is only a start
at making freebsd's lpr less of a hassle to port. It is mainly
added so all of lpr can be changed to use the __FBSDID() macro,
without making it *more* of a hassle to build on other OS's.
Reviewed by: discussed with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
I am the maintainer of CTM. There is a problem that when very large deltas
are created, that the program ctm_smail, which is responsible for mailing
the deltas out, will instead create a single message that says the delta
is too large. However, if the -q option is set, instead of placing this
message in the queue (as it would have done with the deltas), it mails it
out directly. This conflicts with the current working of CTM in that the
email address is set as %%REPLACE-ME%% so that the created mailing pieces
can be signed by gnu-pgp, and then have the mailing address changed.
This fix means that if the -q option is set, and the delta is too large,
the "too large" message is placed in the queue.
Also, I made the "too large" message a little more up to date.
Submitted by: Stephen Montgomery-Smith <stephen@math.missouri.edu>
PR: bin/50328
MFC After: 2 weeks
This option adds Postfix and Exim to the list, however, qmail is not added
due to license restrictions.
Collaborated with: Simon L. Nielsen <simon@nitro.dk>
Reviewed by: jhb, re@, -audit.
- Use getifaddrs() instead of rolling our own buggy one. Previously,
rarpd(8) would fail to see some interfaces because of a hardcoded limit.
It now successfully sees any interface in the system, and this also makes
the code _much_ simpler.
- Replace strncpy() calls with strlcpy() calls. Some uses of strncpy()
were bogus ; the code wasn't ensuring that the string was NUL terminated.
- Don't try to guard about select() FD_* macros being undefined.
- Use IF_NAMESIZE and ETHER_ADDR_LEN macros where appropriate.
- Add static keywords to function definitions for consistency, since
the prototypes have it (I wonder why GCC didn't complain about this).
- Remove compat code for very old BSD versions and SunOS.
- Remove code for systems not having the dirent.h header.
- The code is now WARNS=5 clean so mark it as such.
- Don't add -DTFTP_DIR="/tftpboot" to the build command line since it's
the default.
MFC after: 2 weeks
is common in British English, while "toward" is the preferred form in
American English. Use the American form for consistency.
Correct the date on the manual page.
Submitted by: Tom Rhodes <trhodes@freebsd.org>,
underway@comcast.net (Gary W. Swearingen)
executable file even if the specified action/filename does not
contain a '/' character; convert execv() to execvp().
Submitted by: Christian S.J. Peron <maneo@bsdpro.com>
PR: bin/54109
- Reordered #includes
- Only include <sys/types.h>, not it and <sys/cdefs.h>
o style.Makefile(5) fixes
- No SRCS= line when only one src file with same name as program
o Use warn()/errx() instead of fprintf()
- Integrated patch from Philippe Charnier <charnier@xp11.frmug.org>
Approved by: jeff (mentor)
They don't have alot of reason to be in sbin and contribute to library
bloat in the dynamic case. If you are using any of these filesystem
type to hold your /usr, please seek professional help.
The actual code was repo-copied by joe.
o relax some error handling so other drivers (e.g. ath) are usable
o revert ap scanning logic to old scheme
o add to capability info printing for 11a and 11g
tell them that they also need to use devfs rules to prevent
inappropriate devices from appearing in the jail; add an Xref. In
earlier versions of this man page, the user was instructed to use
sh MAKEDEV jail, which only created a minimal set of device nodes.
This commit has two pieces. One half is the watchdog kernel code which lives
primarily in hardclock() in sys/kern/kern_clock.c. The other half is a userland
daemon which, when run, will keep the watchdog from firing while the userland
is intact and functioning.
Approved by: jeff (mentor)
These are probably machine independent, but
there is no way for the developers to test them other than on x86.
They will become MD as testing becomes possible.
- Add a command line switch to trigger POWERSTATECHANGE actions on
un-reported power state changes.
PR: i386/32251
Submitted by: Walter C. Pelissero <walter@pelissero.org>
from .c files. Actually, this is overkill, as the .ln file targets
are assumed from .? (any) files. This is not a problem in practice,
merely a bit untidy, as the linting rules DTRT. See the sys/conf/*
and sys/mk/* files for usage.
Only call pw_mkdb if passfile == _PATH_MASTERPASSWD.
Otherwise, rename master.passwd to a temp filename, rename
the new passwd to master.passwd, and let yppwupdate update
passwd as it sees fit.
Reviewed by: phk
Tested by: genesys
Otherwise, rename master.passwd to a temp filename, rename
the new passwd to master.passwd, and let yppwupdate update
passwd as it sees fit.
PR: 52601, 7968
Reviewed by: des
Submitted by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
and libdevstat, since the new way of doing things is to just list
maintainership in src/MAINTAINERS.
Also, remove duplicate entries in src/MAINTAINERS for those utilities. I
already had entries for them.
using the somewhat more hackish variant on extattr_get_*() to retrieve
the attribute list on an object.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
'use entire disk'. Neither for ia64 while I'm here - it needs a MBR if
its going to use fdisk+disklabel. The ia64 case is mostly academic though
because you'd be creating two partitions (dos + freebsd) rather than
a single freebsd-only partition.
either COMMENT or DESCR from the command line. When a port is
installed, one gets both +COMMENT and +DESCR files with a trailing
'\n' character. However, +COMMENT does not contain a trailing '\n'
when it is installed from a package due to this behavior of pkg_create.
Therefore, make sure it behaves exactly the same regardless of
where got its information; either command line or files. The modified
functions are used by pkg_create.
PR: 52097
Reviewed by: bento, kris,
portmgr, re,
Michael Nottebrock <michaelnottebrock@gmx.net>,
Martin Horcicka <horcicka@FreeBSD.cz>
Approved by: re (scottl)
MFC after: 1 week
error) on amd64 when doing pointer subtraction. This bug is already
fixed in gcc-3.3 (waiting for after the branch), and the hack will be
backed out at the first opportunity. This is in the ipv6 code path.
Approved by: re (scottl)
server, map it to EAGAIN locally rather than EACCES. The NLM spec
indicates the DENIED corresponds to lock contention, not a permission
failure. This fixes O_EXLOCK/O_SHLOCK with O_NONBLOCK, which would
previously give a permission error, which in turn fixes things
like mailq(8) and lockf(1) over NFS.
Approved by: scottl (re)
Reviewed by: truckman, Andrew P Lentvorski, Jr. <bsder@allcaps.org>
Idea from: truckman
has requested the lock in a non-blocking form, instead returning an
immediate failure. This appears to help reduce one of my "locks get
lost" symptoms involving lockf(1), which attempts a non-blocking lock
attempt before actually blocking on the lock. At this point the client
still gets back EACCES, which is an issue we're still working.
Approved by: re (scottl)
Submitted by: Andrew P. Lentvorski, Jr. <bsder@allcaps.org>
from the NFS server, following contention on a lock by this or another
client, immediately notify the waiting process that the lock has been
granted via a wakeup. Without this change, the client rpc.lockd will
not wakeup the waiting process until it next re-polls the lock (sometime
in the next ten seconds), which can lead to marked latency across all
potential lockers, as the lock is held by the client for the duration.
Approved by: re (scottl)
Submitted by: truckman
Reviewed by: Andrew P. Lentvorski, Jr <bsder@allcaps.org>
has been fixed to not need the missing files.
The firmware files themselves still now need to be fetched from the internet.
The README there gives the location.
Approved by: re@ (part of bluetooth upgrade)
rotated and then compressed with bzip2 instead of gzip. Otherwise,
any file which had a time-interval specified for 'when' and also
specified the 'J' flag would be rotated every time newsyslog was run.
(this is a quick-fix, trying to beat the code-freeze for 5.1-release)
PR: bin/51519
MFC after: 1 week
1. Hostnames were not treated case insensitively in all cases.
2. The method for stripping hostnames when reading the syslog.conf
differed from that when finding the hostname of an incoming request.
This lead to a broken match check. In my case, it meant I had to
have '@scooter.smi.example.com.example.com' to have 'logger.example.com'
properly save messages from 'scooter.smi.sendmail.com'.
3. Add paranoia to cfline() such that it doesn't try to access memory
outside of the bounds of the f_host string.
4. While I am here, get rid of an outdated comment, argv[{0,1,2}] are now
checked for NULL after the strdup() calls.
Reviewed by: dwmalone
MFC after: 1 week
* Add a paragraph suggesting that the merge option be used only for
files that users have modified. People have been using this option
for all files that are different, causing unecessary confusion.
The idea for this option came from Marc Schneiders <marc@schneiders.org>
* I've been meaning to remove the code that checked for the existence of
/etc/sysconfig for a while now, since that file was last seen in 2.2.2.
* Replace the above with a check for elements of the old rc system.
Offer to move these files out of DESTDIR/etc for the user's convenience.
* AcpiOsDerivePciId(): finds a bus number, given the slot/func and the
acpi parse tree.
* AcpiOsPredefinedOverride(): use the sysctl hw.acpi.os_name to
override the value for _OS.
Ideas from: takawata, jhb
Reviewed by: takawata, marcel
Tested on: i386, ia64
do not add the "\xFF" "VERSION" key --- it should only be added once
ALL entries have been updated.
While I'm here, correct the logic that detects whether or not the
user-ID has changed so that it works even if all entries have not
yet been updated to the new format.
Users missing-in-action were
Reported by: tjr, Vallo Kallaste <vallo@estcard.ee>,
leafy <leafy@leafy.idv.tw>
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
config file. If the -C option is specified once, then newsyslog will create
any entries which specify the 'C' option. If -C is given twice, then
newsyslog will create all missing log files. Some of this code comes
from NetBSD, although this implementation does not exactly match theirs.
Reviewed by: freebsd-arch
MFC after: 10 days
on valid superblocks instead of issuing the error "not a BSD filesystem".
fs_sblockloc is a byte offset, not a fragment number. This change makes
quot work properly on UFS2 filesystems, which is important now that UFS2
is the default.
the 'N' flag. These were coded in March as revisions 1.55 and 1.56
of newsyslog.c. I intend to MFC all the matching changes next week.
This also reorganizes the description of the 'flags' field to give
list of the valid flags, instead of a long paragraph explaining
each of the possible values.
Obtained from: NetBSD (in spirit at least, for -s and N)
MFC after: 1 week
OBJS list. This is needed to crunch any program that relies on the
correct .CURDIR setting, e.g. src/bin/csh.
Submitted by: Tim Kientzle <kientzle@acm.org>
PC98 boot blocks don't support UFS2. We keep newfs(8) defaulting to
UFS2.
Warn users that FreeBSD can only boot from a root file system smaller
than 1.5TB; hopefully this will get fixed by the patches currently
floating around on -CURRENT.
Reviewed by: nyan
ethernet controller. The driver has been tested with the LinkSys
USB200M adapter. I know for a fact that there are other devices out
there with this chip but don't have all the USB vendor/device IDs.
Note: I'm not sure if this will force the driver to end up in the
install kernel image or not. Special magic needs to be done to exclude
it to keep the boot floppies from bloating again, someone please
advise.
FreeBSD 5.1-RELEASE and later:
- newfs(8) will now create UFS2 file systems unless UFS1 is specifically
requested (-O1). To do this, I just twiddled the Oflag default.
- sysinstall(8) will now select UFS2 as the default layout for new
file systems unless specifically requested (use '1' and '2' to change
the file system layout in the disk labeler). To do this, I inverted
the ufs2 flag into a ufs1 flag, since ufs2 is now the default and
ufs1 is the edge case. There's a slight semantic change in the
key behavior: '2' no longer toggles, it changes the selection to UFS2.
This is very similar to a patch David O'Brien sent me at one point, and
that I couldn't find.
Approved by: re (telecon)
Reviewed by: mckusick, phk, bmah
at least one consumer outside of libc and pwd_mkdb.
Adjust the versioning in libc and pwd_mkdb accordingly.
named was the application affected, and that fact was first
Reported by: Zherdev Anatoly <tolyar@mx.ru>
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
family of functions using the new nsdispatch(3) core. Remove
arbitrary size limits when using the thread-safe versions.
= Re-implement the traditional getpwent(3)/getgrent(3) functions on
top of the thread-safe versions.
= Update the on-disk format of the hashed version of the passwd(5)
databases to allow for versioned entries. The legacy version is
`3'. (Don't ask.)
= Add support for version `4' entries in the passwd(5) database.
Entries in this format are identical to version 3 entries except
that all integers are stored as 32-bit integers in network byte
order (big endian).
= pwd_mkdb is updated to generate both version 3 and version 4
entries.
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
register a list of other packages with which they conflict (via the
-C option to pkg_create), and they will refuse to install (unless -f is
specified) if one of the listed packages is already present.
* Update documentation for the new feature as well as fleshing out some
existing documentation.
* Bump PKG_INSTALL_VERSION so this feature can be tested for.
Submitted by: Sergey Matveychuk <sem@ciam.ru>
PR: bin/47145
MFC after: 2 weeks
Many internal structure changes for the FireWire driver.
- Compute CRC in CROM parsing.
- Add support for configuration ROM build.
- Simplify dummy buffer handling.
- busdma conversion
- Use swi_taskqueue_giant for -current. Mark the interrupt routine as MPSAFE.
- AR buffer handling.
Don't reallocate AR buffer but just recycle it.
Don't malloc and copy per packet in fwohci_arcv().
Pass packet to fw_rcv() using iovec.
Application must prepare receiving buffer in advance.
- Change fw_bind API so that application should pre-allocate xfer structure.
- Add fw_xfer_unload() for recycling struct fw_xfer.
- Add post_busreset hook
- Remove unused 'sub' and 'act_type' in struct fw_xfer.
- Remove npacket from struct fw_bulkxfer.
- Don't call back handlers in fwochi_arcv() if the packet has
not drained in AT queue
- Make firewire works on big endian platform.
- Use native endian for packet header and remove unnecessary ntohX/htonX.
- Remove FWXFERQ_PACKET mode. We don't use it anymore.
- Remove unnecessary restriction of FWSTMAXCHUNK.
- Don't set root node for phy config packet if the root node is
not cycle master capable but set myself for root node.
We should be the root node after next bus reset.
Spotted by: Yoshihiro Tabira <tabira@scd.mei.co.jp>
- Improve self id handling
Tested on: i386, sparc64 and i386 with forced bounce buffer
LDADD is not wrong, but the simple substitution in `make checkdpadd'
doesn't work if foo.a is not an installed library, so we use the full
path to foo.a in both DPADD and LDADD for non-installed libraries.
o Add jexec(8) to execute a command in an existing jail.
o Add -j option for killall(1) to kill all processes in a specified
jail.
o Add -i option to jail(8) to output jail ID of newly created jail.
Echo-Request and Echo-Reply packets may only be sent in the LCP
Opened state. Echo-Request and Echo-Reply packets received in any
state other than the LCP Opened state SHOULD be silently discarded.
PR: 45760
Submitted by: Eugene Grosbein
MFC after: 2 weeks
applying corrupt deltas, but has never (to my knowledge) caught any sort
of corruption, but instead has caused failures on correct deltas several
times. I don't see any way to make the check useful, so it's gone.
Submitted by: Stephen Montgomery-Smith <stephen@math.missouri.edu>
PR: 50461
MFC after: 7 days
the moment, with the deprecated flags.
o Better error reporting on getting values from the driver. When we can't
get one for the default dumpinfo output. The old driver would succeed
for invalid RIDs, while the new driver reports errors. Since the info
we're getting from the card/driver doesn't exist for all cards, we just
don't report them. Improve error reporting elsewhere now that wi_getval
doesn't exit. Also fix a file descriptor leak as a side effect.
Reported by: scottl
if matchinstalled() found no packages, which happens to be the
case after fresh installations.
- Instead of using strstr(3) to match the package name, depend on
matchinstalled()'s MATCH_REGEX package matching.
PR: bin/50384
MFC after: 2 weeks
as this can result in a NULL pointer deference when parsing the
flags later. This change fixes "pkg_add -r" on 5.0-CURRENT for
me; not quite clear how the problem was introduced.
that it prefaces the output with the package name.
This is useful for things like this:
# pkg_info -Qsa | awk -F : '{print $2 "\t" $1}' | sort -rn | expand -t 10
without the /sys symlink pointing to the current tree.
(Revision 1.2 made it non-fatal, but anyway.)
Apply style.Makefile(5).
Fixed ``make checkdpadd''.
next time the subroutine is re-entered
o s/configrun/configflag/
o Make the prompt make sense if the user was creating a configuration file
Approved by: markm (mentor)(implicit)
Kernel:
Change statistics to use the *uptime() timescale (ie: relative to
boottime) rather than the UTC aligned timescale. This makes the
device statistics code oblivious to clock steps.
Change timestamps to bintime format, they are cheaper.
Remove the "busy_count", and replace it with two counter fields:
"start_count" and "end_count", which are updated in the down and
up paths respectively. This removes the locking constraint on
devstat.
Add a timestamp argument to devstat_start_transaction(), this will
normally be a timestamp set by the *_bio() function in bp->bio_t0.
Use this field to calculate duration of I/O operations.
Add two timestamp arguments to devstat_end_transaction(), one is
the current time, a NULL pointer means "take timestamp yourself",
the other is the timestamp of when this transaction started (see
above).
Change calculation of busy_time to operate on "the salami principle":
Only when we are idle, which we can determine by the start+end
counts being identical, do we update the "busy_from" field in the
down path. In the up path we accumulate the timeslice in busy_time
and update busy_from.
Change the byte_* and num_* fields into two arrays: bytes[] and
operations[].
Userland:
Change the misleading "busy_time" name to be called "snap_time" and
make the time long double since that is what most users need anyway,
fill it using clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC) to put it on the same
timescale as the kernel fields.
Change devstat_compute_etime() to operate on struct bintime.
Remove the version 2 legacy interface: the change to bintime makes
compatibility far too expensive.
Fix a bug in systat's "vm" page where boot relative busy times would
be bogus.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to 500107
Review & Collaboration by: ken
one three times before we did the dump. Also, we printed 0x00 for the
tuple type rather than the actual tuple type. Now, we print the
actual tuple type. This appears to have no ill effects.
Should get rid of the
Code NN not found
and
code Unknown ignored
messages. The ignored messages are still generated for tuples tuples
who have a minimum length set and we find a tuple of that type that's
shorter than the minimum length.
how `crc' is actually defined.
- Remove an unnecessary `extern' variable declaration.
Data type corrections:
- Define a variable which contains a file byte offset value as type
off_t as required by the `crc' function.
- Change the type of a variable carrying a CRC checksum from `u_long'
to `uint32_t'.
- Substitute the wrong `extern' variable declaration of `crc_total'
by putting a correct one in the shared header extern.h.
`crc_total' is defined as an `uint32_t', thus fixing
incorrect mtree checksums on big-endian LP64 machines.
how `crc' is actually defined.
Data type corrections:
- Define variables which contain file byte offset values as type
off_t as required by the `crc' function.
- Change the type of a variable carrying a CRC checksum from `u_long'
to `uint32_t'.
- Parse the length of a file with sscanf as `intmax_t'
(as there is no conversion specifier for `off_t').
Style(9):
- Put an empty line between #include directives for system and user
header files.
and due to buffering they would sometimes come out after the actual
error message when mkheaders() failed due to an unknown device, so you'd
get an error messages followed by 20 or 30 lines of harmless warnings.
There are lots of other warning messages in config(8) that are printed
on stdout, but these were the most egregious (at least with LINT).
a filename pattern, and also wrt filenames given on the command line.
Now if a file is listed as a specific entry, it will not *also* be
processed by an entry specifying a pattern. And filename-patterns
will now only match existing files (ignoring directories, etc).
MFC after: 3 weeks
will contain the pid for a process group. This means the file must
contain a negative value (as would be needed in the 'kill' commmand).
I still need to write man-page update before MFC-ing.
This started by rewriting the get_pid() routine. Later I looked at
what OpenBSD has, and included a few ideas from their send_signal()
routine. So, parts of this change are from OpenBSD, even though
OpenBSD does not actually have a 'U' flag.
PR: bin/28435
Reviewed by: no objections on freebsd-arch
MFC after: 3 weeks
warning message if -s is specified and it rotates a file that expects
to be compressed. This warning message is not printed if -R is also
specified, because we assume a -sR request is coming from the process
which would have been signaled, and that it has already released the
logfile.
Indirectly noticed by: sheldonh
ifconfig equivalents. This is the first step in removing them from
the system. Users of wicontrol to configure the wireless card are
strongly encouraged to change their scripts, as sometime in the future
all configuration of the cards that isn't in ifconfig will be removed
with extreme prejustice.
and config-file entries which specify a filename-pattern (glob). It is
still not perfectly-right, but at least it isn't completely-wrong.
Reviewed by: no objections on freebsd-arch
MFC after: 3 weeks
MFC addendum: (or after the code-freeze of 4.x is lifted)
should rotate all files given on the command, even if they don't seem to
need to be rotated. This would be used by some other command that decides
the given log file(s) should be rotated, but wants the "how" of that rotation
to be determined by entries to newsyslog. Wes expects to change syslogd to
take advantage of this. Man page will be updated after we're sure this is
all working the way we want it to.
Reviewed by: no objections on freebsd-arch
MFC after: 3 weeks
MFC addendum: (or after the code-freeze of 4.x is lifted)
not send a signal to any processes. Also add a config-file flag of 'N' or
'n', which indicates that the given logfile has no process which needs a
signal when it is rotated. Both of these are based on changes NetBSD
has made, although the implementation is somewhat different.
PR: bin/36553 (2nd half)
Reviewed by: no objections on freebsd-arch
Obtained from: NetBSD (in spirit, at least)
MFC after: 3 weeks
read from CD from 2k to 16k, because in the modern world of meta-packages
(Gnome et al) the length of this list could easily owerflow limit causing
strange things to happen, ranging from installation failure due to list
truncation to complete stack trashing (there is very vague bounds checking).
For example, x11/gnome2-fifth-toe runtime dependencies list is 2,418 bytes
long.
Due to obvious reasons, this is an immediate MFC candidate.
Sponsored by: Porta Software Ltd
MFC after: 1 day
Fixed memory leak in the "nodevice" option implementation.
Use these instead of sed(1) in MD NOTES.
Use a single makefile (sys/conf/makeLINT.mk) to generate
LINT for all architectures. (Previous versions missed
the LINT dependency on Makefile, and i386 version also
missed the dependency on ${NOTES}.)
Fixed bugs in the previous NOTES conversion using the
"nodevice" token and sed(1):
- i386 LINT lost "device pst".
- pc98 LINT lost SC_*, MAXCONS and KBD_DISABLE_KEYMAP_LOAD
options, and got needless DPT_* options.
- Added nooptions PPC_DEBUG, PPC_PROBE_CHIPSET, KBD_INSTALL_CDEV
to sparc64 LINT so that it has a chance to config(8).
This basically returns us to where we were before.
structure from a file instead of a PC-CARD itself before parsing and
dumping it. (E.g. useful when you get a CIS file from a manufacturer
which fixes they broken card's CIS, and add it to the pccard quirks.)
post-deinstall script, the variable intended to hold the name of that
script would be used uninitialized. In some cases, fexists() would
succeed, causing pkg_delete to try to chmod +x it, then execute it,
resulting in bizarre error messages such as:
.//: Permission denied
This bug would normally only occur when multiple packages were
specified on the command line; otherwise post_script would be located
in a previously unused part of the stack, and implicitly (but quite
accidentally) initialized to all-zeros.
MFC after: 3 days
given for -a did not exist, then newsyslog would always try to create
it, even if -n was specified.
2) When -a processing *does* create the directory, have it check the result
from mkdir(), and immediately error-out if that failed.
PR: bin/46974
MFC after: 3 weeks
specified at runtime, but that filename is not listed in the newsyslog.conf
file. This default-action can be changed by having a line in newsyslog.conf
with the filename of "<default>". Before this change, the program would
quietly ignore the given file. An update to the man page will be written
after I finish some other updates to newsyslog.c.
Reviewed by: no objections from freebsd-arch
MFC after: 3 weeks
into a child process. Rather than closing the discriptors manually,
mark all discriptors as close-on-exec.
PR: 47694
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
we don't leak memory. Only one of these two cases (reconfig) actually
causes a leak because the other is usually followed by an exec.
PR: 46845
Reviewed by: David Wang <dsw@juniper.net>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Some DVcam(ex. Panasonic NV-DS1 DV camcorder) doesn't seems to set
this bit even if it's for PAL. Fix the DSF bit for such cases so that
we can send back the stream to the DVcam without problem.
Problem Reported by: Richard Tobin <richard@cogsci.ed.ac.uk>
- Make the number of bulkxfer packets(NPACKET_T) and the number of packets
write at once(TNBUF) to be different values.
I observe some block noise for large TNBUF.
- Show the detection of NTSC or PAL.
- Pad with 0xff rather than 0x00 for broken frames.
- Bzero hdr[0].
- Remove unused code.
assignment even if it is not quoted (as advertised by the man page).
This fixes a regression wrt RELENG_4 introduced in rev. 1.11.
Problem noted and patch tested by: CHOI Junho <cjh@kr.FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed by: roberto
If we already have a lease and restart sysinstall (or something with
the net configuration goes wrong), we would have to reboot just
because there is a dhclient hanging around.
Reviewed by: murray (re)
MFC after: 5 days
All characters will be accepted, and pw(8) can sort out which ones it
will allow and which ones it won't.
Approved by: markm (mentor)
Prodded by: Philippe Bourcier <philippe@cyberabuse.org>
If any of the given groups do not exist complain and let the user try again.
This saves the user from discovering at the end of the process that they've
forgotten to add a group or they've typoed.
Thanks to cmc/dougb for pointing out how bad my sh fu actually is.
Original code by: me
Scary sh rewrite by: dougb
Reviewed by: dougb
* Give back one line of ws when showing a diff.
This was requested by several.
* Un-quote DIFF_FLAG, and add DIFF_OPTIONS. This will allow the user to
do more creative things in a mergemaster rc file. Un-quoting is necessary
in order to handle things like CVS Id tags that look like shell variables.
* Simplify terminal width determination.
Suggestions related to ignoring the CVS Id's were taken from several, with
dillon and gad providing particularly helpful feedback.
always compatible with the i386 version.
This fixes one of the problems I had cross-releasing i386 on
Alpha: the produced "-f aout" binaries are now identical.
. Print the column headers centered (except for the left-aligned
TYPE header) using a different header for architectures where
sizeof(uintptr_t) is not four.
. Consistently do not print a '0x' prefix for hexadecimal values.
. Separate columns by a single space character.
. Pad the columns presenting an address or offset enough to hold
their respective largest value.
. Do not restrict the output to unknown file types, inodes and
sockets; allow displaying of pipes, fifos, kqueues and crypto file
descriptors too.
- Shorten an overly long line by removing a cast of printf's return
value to void.
PR: alpha/45240
Tested on: i386, sparc64, alpha
Back out the removal of custom version of endian.h system header.
On recent systems, it just falls back to <sys/endian.h>. But on
older systems like 5.0-DP1 or 4-STABLE, this private version may
be necessary, as crunchide(1) is a cross-tool for "make release".
Spotted by: kris, markm
or group name (mainly for the benefit of samba). This pretty much rewrites
he pw_checkname() routine, but should work exactly the same except for the
above change, and that error messages are somewhat more informative.
PR: 28733 46890
Inspired by: example patch written by Terry Lambert
Reviewed by: no objections on freebsd-arch and freebsd-current
MFC plans: no plans, but will do if people want it in stable.
physical memory. The default is still 2x physical memory. The nominal
calculation is used to back-off swap auto-allocation ('A'uto command)
when the disk is not large enough to accomodate all filesystem auto-defaults.
This gives other partitions (like /usr) more priority over swap on smaller
disks.
This should help solve reported auto-sizing failures on machines with small
hard drives and huge amounts of memory. For example, a machine with 2G of
disk and 4G of memory will fail to auto-size without this fix.
MFC after: 3 days
/var/log/adduser, disabled if empty or adduserlog="no")
- do not ask for password in configure mode
- print $passwdtype instead of password in configure mode
- add DATECMD, GREPCMD (not overridable but with full path)
- Move APRATE switch() code to function for clarity.
- Conditionally call wi_printaplist() alone if more than one 'L'
is preset.
- Add the 'Q' flag to suppress printing of extraneous information
in wi_printaplist().
- Re-order second getopt() in main().
Reviewed by: imp
on variables read out of raw kld files. Unlike other platforms the value
will be in an Elf_Rela, not in the data section of the elf file.
Submitted by: Hartmut Brandt <brandt@fokus.gmd.de>
PR: 46730
Tested on: alpha (obrien), i386, sparc64
'base' dist rename.
- Rework struct dist to allow for different types of dists. There are
currently three types of dists: DT_TARBALL, the traditonal gzipped and
split tar file; DT_PACKAGE, a package; and DT_SUBDIST, a meta-dist in
the tree that has its own array of dists as its contents. For example,
the 'base' dist is a DT_TARBALL dist, the 'perl' dist is a DT_PACKAGE
dist, and the 'src' dist is a DT_SUBDIST dist with its own dist table
that contains 'sbase', 'ssys', etc.
- Add helper macros for defining array entries for the different types of
dists to try and make the statically defined dist table in dist.c more
readable.
- Split the logic to deal with a DT_TARBALL dist out of distExtract()
and into its own distExtractTarball() function. distExtract() now
calls other functions to extract each dist.
- Tweak the percentage complete calculation in distExtractTarball() to
do the multiply prior to the divide so it doesn't have to use floating
point.
- Axe the installPackage() function along with the special handling for
the perl and XFree86 dists in distExtractAll() since distExtract()
handles package dists directly now.
- Add back in subdists for the X packages based on the split up packages
that XFree86-4 uses that as closely map to the X dists we used with
X 3.3.x.
- Lots of things like distSetX() and the X dist masks are no longer
#ifndef X_AS_PKG since we use them in both cases now.
- Make the entire installFixupXFree() function #ifndef X_AS_PKG, we only
call it in that case anyways, and it's not suitable for the X_AS_PKG
case.
- Add in X dist menus for the X_AS_PKG case.
Approved by: re
rather than specifically setting the process priority and resource class;
otherwise, we improperly set other aspects of the login class. We have
a bit more to do here, but the proper fix will probably involve breaking
out MAC labels from the login class at some point, as well as further
clarifying the logic here.
Pointed out by: kuriyama, max
load drivers from the driver floppy if the "driver_floppy" variable is set
in the kernel environment and call this function after probing devices but
before displaying the main menu.
X-MFC after: as soon as I finish committing to current
Approved by: re@ (blanket)
pointer types, and remove a huge number of casts from code using it.
Change struct xfile xf_data to xun_data (ABI is still compatible).
If we need to add a #define for f_data and xf_data we can, but I don't
think it will be necessary. There are no operational changes in this
commit.
with a class, rather than all aspects of the class when switching
classes for an inetd service. Because we hard-code /daemon in the
current inetd implementation, using SETALL has unfortunate side-effects
involving the MAC code, and potentially other credential related
settings in the future. This change maintains the DoS-resistent
aspects of the class behavior, which is all that is promised in the
inetd man page.
A larger set of diffs providing more pluggability and configurability
was deferred for this more simple approach in the short term.
Reviewed by: ache
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
work. The interface was gleaned from the Linux driver. Currently only
one RX & one TX buffer are used. Firmware support is not tested so for the
MPI-350 so it is disabled. Signal cache and monitor mode are not supported
yet. Signal cache is not supported since in encapsulation mode ethernet
frames are returned by the chip. LAN monitor mode support will be added
shortly. Thanks to Warner for the MPI-350 card he sent me.
Add support for RSSI map from PR kern/32880 which was incomplete. Enhanced
with the ability to select the cache mode of raw, dbm or per-cent.
Clean up Signal/Noise/Quality structures and units with help from
Marco Molteni.
Change flash to use a malloc'ed buffer when needed.
PR: kern/32880
Submitted by: Douglas S. J. De Couto decouto@pdos.lcs.mit.edu,
Marco Molteni
MFC: 3 weeks
i386, remove the seatbelt preventing users from setting the UFS2 flag
on the root file system on i386. This seatbelt did not exist on
other platforms.
MFC candidate.
argument, leading whitespace and empty lines be ignored, and
the `#' character marks the rest of the line as a comment.
PR: bin/45958
MFC after: 3 days
RSDP. Scan the first 1MB on i386 if the sysctl fails,
o Extend struct ACPIrsdp with the ACPI 2.0 fields which involves
changing a prior reserved field into the ACPI revision,
o Only calculate the RSDP checksum on the first 20 bytes to remain
compatible with ACPI 1.0 tables; we don't check the extended
checksum covering the whole table,
o Use the length field in the RSDP to map the RSDP into the address
space so that we don't have to know about future extensions here.
from "unix" back to "local". Add some compat stuff so both
ways work for some time.
Reviewed by: phk
Approved by: imp (UPDATING)
Requested by: iedowse, lukem@netbsd.org
`J' flag means that newsyslog should wait for previously started compression
jobs to complete before starting a new one for this entry. When it is used
along with the `G' flag, in the case when several logfiles match the pattern
and should be compressed, the newsyslog will compress logs one by one,
ensuring that only one compression job is running at a time.
This prevents newsyslog(8) from overloading system by starting several
compression jobs on big files simultaneously.
Sponsored by: Porta Software Ltd
MFC after: 2 weeks
a nonexistant target, in addition to the FTS_SL previously, so e.g.
setfmac -h sebsd/system_u:object_r:malloc_conf_t /etc/malloc.conf
succeeds.
Approved by: re
type of new slices and to change the type of existing slices. This also
has the advantage of moving a few #ifdef PC98's up to where the macros
are defined instead of in the middle of the code.
- Change the behavior of the 'T' option in the slice editor so that the
default value in the dialog box is the current type of the existing
slice rather than defaulting to changing the slice to a FreeBSD slice as
this is more intuitive.
Approved by: re
editor, in order to support specifying UFS2 as a newfs option.
(1) Support three different newfs types: NEWFS_UFS, NEWFS_MSDOS, and
NEWFS_CUSTOM. Don't mix up the arguments to them: you can't use
soft updates on an msdos file system.
(2) Distinguish adding new arguments to the newfs command line from
replacing it. Permit the addition of new arguments by the user for
NEWFS_UFS. If we entirely replace the command line provided by
sysinstall, call it NEWFS_CUSTOM. 'N' will now add additional
arguments; 'Z' will opt to replace the newfs command line entirely,
but will prompt the user with their current command line as a
starting point.
(3) Construct the newfs command line dynamically based on the options
provided by the user at label-time. Right now, this means selecting
UFS1 vs. UFS2, and the soft updates flag. Drop in some variables
to support ACLs and MAC Multilabel in the future also, but don't
expose them now.
This provides sysinstall with the ability to do more "in band" editing
of the newfs command line, so we can provide more support for the user,
but doesn't sacrifice the ability to entirely specify the newfs command
line of the user is willing to give up on the cushiness factor. It
also makes it easier for us to specify defaults in the future, and
define conditional behavior based on user configuration selections.
For now, we default to UFS1, and permit UFS2 to be used as the root
only on non-i386 systems.
While I was there, I dropped the default fragment and block sizes,
since newfs has much more sensible defaults now.
Reviewed by: jhb, marcel
Approved by: re
ia64 bits from: marcel
rather than installX11package().
- Add a perl psuedo-dist that installs the perl package. The perl
distribution is selected by default when a User distribution set is
selected. It is not selected when a Minimal distribution set is
selected. The perl distribution may be toggled manually in the
custom menu just as other distributions.
Approved by: re
bug fixed yesterday. New slices created in the fdisk editor and slices
whose sub-type is changed are of type 'mbr' if their sub-type is not a
magic type, not type 'unknown'.
Approved by: re
when parsing a malformed command-line parameter.
Rearrange a risky usage of sprintf() in a loop.
Reported by: phrail@division7.us via the vuln-dev mailing list
Approved by: re (rwatson)
o Mount the EFI file system as msdosfs and not ufs as it's a FAT
file system. Introduce Mount_msdos() for this to go side-by-side
with Mount().
o Also, since mounting is performed as a command (which means it's
queued, sorted, lost, found and executed), we cannot create a
directory on the file system by calling mkdir. We must make sure
the mkdir happens after the mount. Introduce Mkdir_command() to
allow mkdir operations to be queued, sorted, lost, found and
executed as well.
Approved by: re (jhb, rwatson)
Add 'setfsmac' link, which permits labels to be provided in a label
specification file, making it easier to provide initial file system
labeling specifications. This is used by the new mac_lomac to
provide initial system labeling and policy, and by sebsd, the port
of SELinux FLASK/TE to FreeBSD.
Approved by: re (jhb)
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
- Only declare mouse menus if WITH_MICE.
- Only declare syscons menus if WITH_SYSCONS.
- Only declare fdisk editor functions if WITH_SLICES.
Approved by: re
WITH_SYSCONS is defined.
- Only define mouse menus and mouse menu items if WITH_MICE is defined.
- Use WITH_SLICES instead of explicit lists of architectures to control
the layout of menus dependent on if slices are used on this arch or not.
- Only include the linux startup option if WITH_LINUX is defined.
- Only include the SVR4 startup option on i386. It doesn't work on sparc64,
and it is debatable that it even works on i386.
- Change the OSF1 startup option to execute configOSF1() instead of just
setting the variable so that /compat/osf1 gets created.
Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
Approved by: re
fdisk editor if WITH_SLICES. Before this on arch's that didn't support
slices such as alpha and sparc64 you would drop into the fdisk editor after
doing an Undo in the label editor.
Approved by: re
of an explicit list of architecture defines.
- Tweak the message prior to the label editor in the !WITH_SLICES case to
make it slightly less awkward since this is the first dialog we see after
starting an install.
- Only offer to customize syscons settings if WITH_SYSCONS.
- Offer to enable Linux compat if WITH_LINUX. Before we only did this for
i386.
- On the alpha, offer to enable OSF/1 compat after asking about Linux
compat.
- Only offer to configure moused(8) if WITH_MICE is defined.
Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
Approved by: re
and more maintainable.
- WITH_SYSCONS: defined on all arch's that support syscons (currently i386,
alpha, and ia64)
- WITH_MICE: defined on all arch's that support moused(8) (currently i386,
alpha, and ia64)
- WITH_SLICES: defined on all arch's that use disk slices (currently i386
and ia64)
- WITH_LINUX: defined on all arch's that support Linux binary compat
(currently i386 and alpha)
Approved by: re
the two GNOME 1-based alternatives.
While here, note that a majority of the items in this menu are not
sentences, and remove trailing dots to make the remainder consistent.
Reviewed by: marcus
Approved by: re (bmah)
Has been seen to work on several cards and communicating with
several mobile phones to use them as modems etc.
We are still talking with 3com to try get them to allow us to include
the firmware for their pccard in the driver but the driver is here..
In the mean time
it can be downloaded from the 3com website and loaded using the utility
bt3cfw(8) (supplied) (instructions in the man page)
Not yet linked to the build
Submitted by: Maksim Yevmenkin <myevmenk@exodus.net>
Approved by: re
of the EFI file system. This makes the EFI partition non-optional.
I don't think that the links are actually correct, given that all
the mount points are under /mnt when sysinstall is run as init.
(ie a non-upgrade). Thus: I think I need to go in once more, but
at least this doesn't get lost...
NTP on FreeBSD:
The first one allows one to avoid installing the html files.
The second one allows one to override the CLOCKDEFS on the
make command line.
Submitted by: phk
time_t. Deal with the possibility that time_t != int32_t. This boils
down to this sort of thing:
- time(&ut.ut_time);
+ ut.ut_time = time(NULL);
and similar for ctime(3) etc. I've kept it minimal for the stuff
that may need to be portable (or 3rd party code), but used Matt's time32
stuff for cases where that isn't as much of a concern.
Approved by: re (jhb)
the specified filename of the log to be rotated is in fact shell glob
pattern. In this case, all files matching this pattern will be rotated
using the same options. Useful in the case when there is no pre-defined
name for the logfiles (e.g. xtradius, samba etc).
Sponsored by: PortaOne Software Ltd
MFC after: 2 weeks
partitions marked as being of type efi. This change adds code to
1. actually run the newfs command at mount time (install.c),
2. display the newfs state on screen (label.c)
3. allow toggling of the newfs state (label.c)
Even though newfs(8)-ing FAT partitions can be of use on i386
machines in general, it has been opted to minimize impact for
now.
With this change there's no a priori difference between EFI and
FAT partitions. With this change and the corresponding change to
libdisk, we can create EFI partitions, just like regular FAT
partitions.
the loop that runs through the environment variables to be a bit more
intuitive. Also, change some 'continue's in failure cases to 'break's
instead. If we are going to fail, we should just do it.
PR: bin/40654
Submitted by: Thomas Zenker <thz@Lennartz-electronic.de> (partially)
argument as of revision 1.52 (July 12, 1996, about a month after I
graduated from high school) when 'newfs -u' support was axed, so remove it.
This also allows us to remove a hack in the create partition case where we
created the partition twice since we didn't have the size the first time.
is instead of the usual 022 umask, and explain that what the scheme
still prevents is unwanted changes, not prying eyes.
While I'm here, mess with the phrasing and line-breaks a bit.
the module compiled in or loaded instead of bogusly checking for ppp0.
Also if and only if the caller is actually root and the kernel does not
have ppp support, try to load the ppp module before giving up.
- Disabled 'Syscons, Font', 'Syscons, Screenmap' and 'Syscons, Ttys' menus
on pc98.
- Fixed the MenuMouseType and MenuMousePort menus for pc98.
- Fixed some comments for pc98.
branch and a few new drivers. See contrib/ntp/ChangeLog for details.
Hide kernel header sys/lock.h from ntp [1]
PR: bin/33914
Submitted by: thomas, bde[1]
MFC after: 1 month
files. Basically wrappers for mac_{get,set}_{file,link,pid,proc}(3).
Man pages to be updated shortly.
Approved by: re
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
* Change atapi-cd ioctls to use the same units.
* Change burncd, cdcontrol to convert CDROM speed to KB/sec before
calling the ioctl. Add a "max" speed option for their command lines.
This change does not break ABI but does change the units passed through
the ioctl so 3rd party software that uses cdrio.h will have to convert
(most likely by multiplying CDROM speed by 177 to get KB/s).
PR: kern/36845
Submitted by: Philipp Mergenthaler <p@i609a.hadiko.de> (CAM ioctls)
Reviewed by: sos, ken
MFC after: 1 month
something applies to. So change #ifndef to an explicit list of defines.
* Treate sparc64 and ia64 as 64-bit platforms, which means larger roots.
* sparc64 should halt back to the firmware, not reset.
* sparc64 doesn't need to play MS-DOS/BIOS partition crap games.
Reviewed by: jake
the command should not follow the symlink if the target file is a
symlink. Invoke the extattr_*_link(2) version of the system call
in that situation, instead of extattr_*_file(2). This is
consistent with other attribute management tools in the system.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
osreldate.
(Actually, due to differences in package compression formats, I'm
not sure that a -CURRENT pkg_add -r will do the right thing in
this case, once it finds them.)
revision 1.101 (which did not introduce the bug but made it harder to fix)
PR: misc/40363
Submitted by: David Dunham <dwdunham@isilon.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Peter had repocopied sys/disklabel.h to sys/diskpc98.h and sys/diskmbr.h.
These two new copies are still intact copies of disklabel.h and
therefore protected by #ifndef _SYS_DISKLABEL_H_ so #including them
in programs which already include <sys.disklabel.h> is currently a
no-op.
This commit adds a number of such #includes.
Once I have verified that I have fixed all the places which need fixing,
I will commit the updated versions of the three #include files.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
it as being in range.
set ifaddr 1.2.3.4/0 5.6.7.8/0
no longer allows 0.0.0.0 as a valid IP.
Reported/tested by: Bohdan Horst <nexus@hoth.amu.edu.pl>
MFC after: 3 days
that already exists for hosts: being able to specify a section that applies
to every program *except* the one in question.
The normal syntax for program specification is still valid. For the new
capability, one uses:
!-program
Since there is no way to specify a program beginning with a dash in the old
syntax, as it would be interpreted as the case above, the following
alternative syntax to the original capability is provided:
!+program
This shouldn't introduce incompatibilities with any syslogd configuration
in production because -stable's syslogd does not support a dash anywhere in
the program specification.
MFC after: 2 weeks
hack, thereby allowing future extensions to the structure (e.g., for extended
attributes) without rebreaking the ABI. FTSENT now contains a pointer to the
parent stream, which fts_compar() can then take advantage of, avoiding the
undefined behavior previously warned about. As a consequence of this change,
the prototype of the comparison function passed to fts_open() has changed
to reflect the required amount of constness for its use. All callers in the
tree are updated to use the correct prototype.
Comparison functions can now make use of the new parent pointer to access
the new stream-specific private data pointer, which is intended to assist
creation of reentrant library routines which use fts(3) internally.
Not objected to in spirit by: -arch
suffix attempts before failing. No need to try again by hand,
particularly when it fills your log with failures because
localhost.example.com..example.com fails to resolve. Also improve the
log message that helped find this error.
There is still (maybe) an uninitialised pointer problem here, but in a
month of testing I haven't triggered it.
minted -v flag.
o Print devices that don't return a name as 'unknown' in -v mode.
# Yea! Now I wont think I have 10 different ISA network adapters in my
# laptop.
synopsis, and the man page description ("selector" vs. "sel" and
"addr" vs. "reg").
Fix the usage message and man page synopsis to show that the "value"
argument is not optional.
under way to move the remnants of the a.out toolchain to ports. As the
comment in src/Makefile said, this stuff is deprecated and one should not
expect this to remain beyond 4.0-REL. It has already lasted WAY beyond
that.
Notable exceptions:
gcc - I have not touched the a.out generation stuff there.
ldd/ldconfig - still have some code to interface with a.out rtld.
old as/ld/etc - I have not removed these yet, pending their move to ports.
some includes - necessary for ldd/ldconfig for now.
Tested on: i386 (extensively), alpha
to control the mapping of things like the ACPI and APM into memory.
The problem is that starting X changes these values, so if something
was using the bits of BIOS mapped into memory (say ACPI or APM),
then next time they access this memory the machine would hang.
This patch refuse to change MTRR values it doesn't understand,
unless a new "force" option is given. This means X doesn't change
them by accident but someone can override that if they really want
to.
PR: 28418
Tested by: Christopher Masto <chris@netmonger.net>,
David Bushong <david@bushong.net>,
Santos <casd@myrealbox.com>
MFC after: 1 week
included into pkg_install according to the content of /var/db/pkg_install.conf
file, which specifies version and alternative location of the tools. Format
of the said file is very simple: one line which specifies revision of the
alternative version of the tools and their location separated by space,
i.e.:
20030102 /usr/local/sbin
This would allow bsd.port.mk to install and use up to date version of tools
on older system from ports.
Also add new `-P' flag to pkg_info, which causes it to report currently
installed version of package tools.
Discussed with: will
ports/INDEX, by allocating eactly amount of memory necessary for storing
each particular entry, insdead of 4K per entry (more than 7000 entries -
go figure). Memory consumption went down to some 500K from some 30M.
files are located at the very beginning of the package, this patch in
conjuction with latest tar(1) --fast-mode fix greatly speeds up pkg_info(1)
operation on package files.
MFC after: 1 week
for it.
While I'm here, add a the ability to say "!level" in a way which
should be compatible with Linux's syslogd.
PR: 28935
No objections: audit
MFC after: 2 weeks
declared - it was bad style and caused a bug. v[46]bind need to be
reset whenever we go to the "more:" label.
Jean-Luc and I came up with this patch independently, so it had
better be right!
PR: 40771
Submitted by: Jean-Luc Richier <Jean-Luc.Richier@imag.fr>
This will replace the existing getextattr(8) and setextattr(8) with
a single binary responding to the names getextattr, setextattr,
rmextattr and lsextattr.
This program is not yet connected to the build.
Sponsored by: DARPA and NAI Labs.
contributor)
- support ipv6cpretry and ipv6cpretries, which are IPv6 versions
of ipcpretry and ipcpretries.
- improve handling of IPv6 link-local addresses
Submitted by: JINMEI Tatuya <jinmei@isl.rdc.toshiba.co.jp>
from the dialler, usually indicating success or failure. Add -v to add
verbose responses in addition to return values indication success or
failure. Update man page.
EHOSTDOWN. These are often transient errors (when the remote host
reboots, temporary network problems, etc.), and we'd rather err on the
side of caution and keep trying send messages that never arrive than
just give up.
Note that this is not an implementation of the "back-off" methods
given in the PR. Those just seem too complicated. Why not just keep
trying each time? Trying and failing doesn't really consume
significantly more resources than if we were successful for each
message.
PR: bin/31029
MFC after: 1 week
called <machine/_types.h>.
o <machine/ansi.h> will continue to live so it can define MD clock
macros, which are only MD because of gratuitous differences between
architectures.
o Change all headers to make use of this. This mainly involves
changing:
#ifdef _BSD_FOO_T_
typedef _BSD_FOO_T_ foo_t;
#undef _BSD_FOO_T_
#endif
to:
#ifndef _FOO_T_DECLARED
typedef __foo_t foo_t;
#define _FOO_T_DECLARED
#endif
Concept by: bde
Reviewed by: jake, obrien
Be (somewhat) prepared for things to change size under us.
Recognize a empty attribute name as magic and print the list of attributes.
Use <err.h> for code clarity.
Deal with zero length returns.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
vmstat so that they never coalesce. Both iostat and vmstat need larger
fixes to prevent wide fields from unnecessarily messing up the alignment
of all subsequent fields.
PR: 41674
MFC-after: 3 days
by looking at the "type of number" field and providing configurable hooks
to correct the numbers accordingly. See keywords add-prefix, prefix-national
and prefix-international in isdnd.rc(5).
This feature was implemented by Christian Ullrich <chris@chrullrich.de>
(I skipped those in contrib/, gnu/ and crypto/)
While I was at it, fixed a lot more found by ispell that I
could identify with certainty to be errors. All of these
were in comments or text, not in actual code.
Suggested by: bde
MFC after: 3 days
PR40430 by "Peter Haight <peterh@sapros.com>" that has semilar patches
included and which I merged with my own work.
HW sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation & FreeBSD Mall Inc
Enjoy!
invocations of each service from a single IP address.
Requested by: matusita
Reviewed by: dwmalone
Tested by: matusita on snapshots.jp.FreeBSD.org
MFC after: 2 weeks
some of these need to be enabled for an extra verbose mode or
something):
o Try to print the dBm comms quality. This may or may not be available
for your card in your configuration.
o Print the PRI Id and STA Id. These are in the raw format, so might
be a little hard to read.
o Print CardID so that we can know exactly what kind of card the
user has (this is important if you download firmware to it).
o Regulatory domains are now printed for the card.
o Temp range is printed.
o If you define WI_EXTRA_INFO you get more garbage than is listed
here that you need the manual to decode.
o Channel list is now printed in hex for easier decoding. This has
lead to my discovery that my US symbol card supports channels 12-14
as well as 1-11, which is not allowed in the us/canada.
This ain't pretty, but it isn't horrible either.
Note that crunchgen's stub .c programs already have the code to use it:
"int _crunched_%s_stub(int argc, char **argv, char **envp)"
"{return main(argc,argv,envp);}\" >%s_stub.c\n",
Add $FreeBSD$ to allow the commit.
Reviewed by: luigi
MFC after: 3 days
for any reason other than ENOENT (think resource limits). Close allow and
deny files before allowed() returns to stop the user's EDITOR being able to
read them.
Obtained from: OpenBSD (partially)
remove all the code which was trying to do so.
This code was nasty in several ways, it was hiding
the kernel bug where the kernel was unable to properly
load a module, and it was quitting if it wasn't able
to load the module. The consequence is that an ABI
breakage of the vfsconf API would have broken *every*
mount utility.
kernel access control.
Provide ugidfw, a utility to manage the ruleset provided by
mac_bsdextended. Similar to ipfw, only for uids/gids and files.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
do not stop copying it into a buffer when encountering a
non-alphanumerical character. Only stop at unprintable characters.
This makes syslogd work correctly with executables like `interp.bin',
`httpd_old', etc.
PR: misc/40941
MFC after: 1 week
with random garbage in lower bits corresponding to stdin, stdout and
stderr to select(2).
This fixes the problem with nfsd sometimes getting stuck in a tight
select(2) loop eating 100% CPU time.
Reviewed by: iedowse
Approved by: obrien
attempting to export the non-root of a filesystem with -alldirs. This
pilot error seems to be very common, and the "could not remount" error
message doesn't give much hints about the real reason. See the old PR
below for an example.
While i was at it, make it possible to entirely omit the often
annoying error message in that case by specifying the "quiet" exports
flag. This allows to specify something like
/cdrom -alldirs,ro,quiet <where to export to>
which will silently fail if nothing is mounted under /cdrom, but do
the rigth thing as soon as you mount something.
While doing this, i've put the embedded example in the exports(5) man
page into a subsection of its own as it ought to be.
Thanks for Paul Southworth for reminding me about this problem.
PR: bin/4448
MFC after: 1 month
reflect much valuable feedback from wollman. More details on the new
'lpc topq' are in the log message for revision 1.2 of lpc/movejobs.c.
The previous implementation of 'lpc topq' is available as 'lpc xtopq',
in case there are any problems noticed in the new implementation. If
there are no problems with this version, a later update will remove the
'lpc xtopq' command.
Reviewed by: freebsd-print@bostonradio.org
MFC after: 6 days
(PROFLEVEL) to kern.pre.mk so that it is easier to manage. Bumped config
version to match.
Moved the check for cputype being configured to a less bogus place in
mkmakefile.c.
alphas:
.../elf2aout.c:130: warning: cast increases required alignment of
target type
The warning is about casting ((char *)e + phoff) to a struct pointer,
where e is aligned but phoff might be garbage, so I think the warning
should be emitted on most machines (even on i386's, alignment checking
might be on) and the correct fix would involve validation phoff before
using it.
most of the time (unless fork fails). This should fix the problem where
FreeBSD won't respond to a remote host and therefor the remote hosts
tries indefinitely to contact the FreeBSD hosts thereby irritating the
system administrator.
PR: misc/27810
implemented using a new VT_LOCKSWITCH ioctl. Although it is possible
to implement something like this by VT_SETMODEing to VT_PROCESS and
never releasing the vty, that method has a number of downsides, the
biggest of which is that some program has to stay resident for the
lock to be in effect.
Reviewed by: roam, sheldonh
sense. Since portmap/rpcbind is in /usr/sbin it doesn't make any sense for
nfsd and mountd to be in /sbin.
For the record, NetBSD has them in /usr/sbin while OpenBSD has them in /sbin
PR: bin/30972
Reviewed by: jake (mentor)
Objected to by: Andre Oppermann <oppermann@pipeline.ch>
After Andre's objection, I've re-examined rfc 2759 and noted that it
says that the domain name shouldn't be used when generating the
NT-Response field. So it looks like the bug is in freeradius rather
than in ppp.
This removes a bad latency problem during initial setup where we
end up waiting for too long before reading the connected message
and time the connection out.
Problem figured out by: Andre Albsmeier <andre@albsmeier.net>
In -STABLE, this is default, in -CURRENT it is not, which leads to many a
headache for a user coming to -CURRENT without remembering this fact. It
is one of the POLA violations we have not avoided by preparing the users
for it appopriately. Therefore, a warnx(3) is added here, explicitly to
be MFC'd shortly to start the re-education process rolling.
Reviewed by: General murmurs of approval in that IRC channel.
MFC after: 3 days
mainly so the compiler can correctly do printf-style parameter checking.
Some minor improvements to a few of the error messages, but the main
goal here is to get rid of a few more compile-time warning messages.
MFC after: 5 days
Change -l -> -L to match OpenBSD (since we haven't MFC'd it yet).
-l will now list stations that are associated with a hostap (preliminary)
MFC After: 2 weeks
is appropriate to avoid using typeof/__typeof__. It is worth noting that
SWAP() is only ever used to swap pointer values so 'void *' assumptions would
have been acceptable, but I'd gladly pay you tuesday for a cheeseburger^W
cleaner interface today.
Poked into submission by: bde
have native extended attributes rather than stacked extended attributes.
While I'm at it, make sure UFS_EXTATTR is not spelt FFS_EXTATTR.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
filesystem expands the inode to 256 bytes to make space for 64-bit
block pointers. It also adds a file-creation time field, an ability
to use jumbo blocks per inode to allow extent like pointer density,
and space for extended attributes (up to twice the filesystem block
size worth of attributes, e.g., on a 16K filesystem, there is space
for 32K of attributes). UFS2 fully supports and runs existing UFS1
filesystems. New filesystems built using newfs can be built in either
UFS1 or UFS2 format using the -O option. In this commit UFS1 is
the default format, so if you want to build UFS2 format filesystems,
you must specify -O 2. This default will be changed to UFS2 when
UFS2 proves itself to be stable. In this commit the boot code for
reading UFS2 filesystems is not compiled (see /sys/boot/common/ufsread.c)
as there is insufficient space in the boot block. Once the size of the
boot block is increased, this code can be defined.
Things to note: the definition of SBSIZE has changed to SBLOCKSIZE.
The header file <ufs/ufs/dinode.h> must be included before
<ufs/ffs/fs.h> so as to get the definitions of ufs2_daddr_t and
ufs_lbn_t.
Still TODO:
Verify that the first level bootstraps work for all the architectures.
Convert the utility ffsinfo to understand UFS2 and test growfs.
Add support for the extended attribute storage. Update soft updates
to ensure integrity of extended attribute storage. Switch the
current extended attribute interfaces to use the extended attribute
storage. Add the extent like functionality (framework is there,
but is currently never used).
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
Reviewed by: Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@freebsd.org>
path... after we've talked to any RADIUS servers involved, so that we
haven't touched the data before it gets to the server.
Make it clearer in the code that this compensation is done by setting
a flag to a value of zero, a flag which rfc2759 says *MUST* be zero.
While we're here, don't bother passing the peer challenge into
radius_Authenticate(). It's already part of the key we're passing in
(this becomes obvious now that I've structured that data...).
This ``fix'' doesn't help to authenticate Win98/WinME users in my test
environment as ports/net/freeradius seems to ignore the flag
completely anyway, but it may help with other RADIUS servers.
visible change should be that more than one queue can now be specified,
if one uses the '-msg' parameter to separate the list of queues from the
status message to set.
The previous implementation of 'down' remains available as the command
'xdown', available for instant fallback if there seems to be anything
wrong with the new one. If no one reports a problem after a few weeks,
then a later update will remove 'xdown'.
Reviewed by: freebsd-print@bostonradio.org
MFC after: 10 days
change the status message of a print queue. This includes some minor
changes to the upstat() routine, so that error messages are not printed
while seteuid(priv-user).
Reviewed by: freebsd-audit and freebsd-print@bostonradio.org
MFC after: 10 days
was removed from the kernel;
Advertise the prefix with zero lifetimes rather than to remove the prefix
from the prefix list to be advertised.
This will help renumber a receiving host by deprecating the address
derived from the old prefix.
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 2 weeks
'restart', 'start', 'stop' and 'up'. These are commands which mainly
just alter the access bits on the lock-file of a queue, and they all
now use a central routine to do that. This reduces the amount of code
that is run as the priv userid, and eliminates a number of cases where
error messages were written while that priv uid was in effect.
As far as users are concerned, there should be no noticable difference
in the new versions. In case there *is*, the previous implementations
are still there as 'xabort', 'xenable', etc, so they are available for
instant fallback. If no one reports a problem after a few weeks, then
a later update will remove those x-commands.
Reviewed by: freebsd-audit and freebsd-print@bostonradio.org
MFC after: 10 days
RAD_MICROSOFT_MS_CHAP_ERROR and RAD_MICROSOFT_MS_CHAP2_SUCCESS
messages, and remove the hack in chap.c to ignore that ident field
on the client side.
This anomoly was hacked around during development, and I forgot to
go back and fix it properly.
Spotted by: Sergey Korolew <ds@rt.balakovo.ru>
RAD_MICROSOFT_MS_MPPE_ENCRYPTION_POLICY
RAD_MICROSOFT_MS_MPPE_ENCRYPTION_TYPES
RAD_MICROSOFT_MS_MPPE_RECV_KEY
RAD_MICROSOFT_MS_MPPE_SEND_KEY
These attributes may be supplied by a RADIUS server when MSCHAPv2 is
used to authenticate.
It *should* now be possible to build ppp with -DNODES and still support
CHAP/MSCHAP/MSCHAPv2/MPPE via a RADIUS server, but the code isn't yet
smart enough to do that (building with -DNODES just looses these
facilities).
Sponsored by: Monzoon
hatching the idea of using dc, and Giorgos (keramida) for incubating it.
This also reverses most of the previous commit which took out or
modified the text about umask stuff.
are installing.
* Since this means that for now we can't accomodate non-standard
umask's, warn the user accordingly.
* Convert the "press enter to continue" prompt into a function.
of them to keep better track of which-is-which (multiple variables were
named 'pid'). Moved a global pid-variable into the only routine that
used it. Net result: fixes two compile-time warnings...
MFC after: 2 weeks
actually does work. Ignore errors from kldload(2) if the errno value is
EEXIST. It would help if this return value were documented in the
kldload(2) manual page.
one can set the 'noError' variable to ignore any errors that occur for the
next command. However, the code was only unsetting 'noError' when an error
actually occurred, so if you set 'noError', the next command completed ok,
and the command after that failed, the second command's failure would be
ignored. This fixes this by performing the 'noError' check earlier and
then unsetting 'noError' after every command that is run.
Sponsored by: The Weather Channel
sufficient.
In fact, using both breaks the radiator RADIUS daemon when used with
a db as it maps both attributes to the same field value and then
fails the insert.
I decided to remove RAD_NAS_IP_ADDRESS on the basis that rfc2138 says:
An Access-Request MUST contain a User-Name attribute. It SHOULD
contain either a NAS-IP-Address attribute or NAS-Identifier
attribute (or both, although that is not recommended). It MUST
despite the fact that this not recommended bit was removed from the
updated rfc.
we weren't properly checking for the case that the two version strings
being compared had different numbers of components. This has been
fixed.
Pointed out by: sobomax
Reviewed by: silence on -ports
temporarily turn off the nonInteractive variable around the DHCP and IPv6
Yes/No questions in a network device setup so that those questions are
asked.
use and has been broken in -CURRENT for a long time.
Clean up unneeded entries in the nlist array.
Implement kvm-backed ttymode (which we never had before). Incomplete as we
do not (yet?) print the correct device, sid or pgid.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
line as an environment variable assignment, is broken
and not conformant to its description in the manual page.
I think it is worthwhile to have that fix in 4.6.
PR: bin/38374
Submitted by: Thomas Quinot <thomas@cuivre.fr.eu.org>
MFC after: 2 days
`/2' with `>>1'. In the context `>>1' is more appropriate
because it looks like the division is used to restore a
shifted value.
GCC GNATS PR: c/6677
This fixes a problem where wheel-up movement is taken as wheel-down
in the sysmouse protocol.
Do not assume the plain char's are signed; use `signed char' where
char's need to be signed.
Discussed on: audit
Pointed out by: bde
configured).
Handle internal failures in radius_Authenticate() correctly.
Bump the ppp version number.
This doesn't yet work with MPPE. More will follow.
Sponsored by: Mozoon
/etc/exports. Oversized lines were unlikely due to the large 10k
limit, but any found would cause mountd to exit with an error. Also
fix one or two compiler warnings.
o Bump version number to 3.0.4
o When talking to a RADIUS server, provide a NAS-Port-Type.
When the NAS-Port-Type is Ethernet, provide a NAS-Port value equal
to the SESSIONID from the environment in direct mode or the
NGM_PPPOE_SESSIONID message in other modes. If no SESSIONID is found,
default to the interface index in client mode or zero in server mode.
When the NAS-Port-Type is ISDN, set the NAS-Port to the minor number
of the physical device (ie, the N in /dev/i4brbchN).
This makes it easier for the RADIUS server to identify the client
WRT accounting data etc.
Prompted by: lsz8425 <lsz8425@mail.cd.hn.cn>
just send PROTO_IP packets when we've got only one link up in multi-link
mode.
Problem noted by: Adrian Close <adrian@fernhilltec.com.au>
MFC after: 1 week
o Minor grammar fixes.
o Sort SEE ALSO references, and add iostat(8).
o Delete punctuation at end of AUTHORS' section only line
Reviewed by: rwatson, Hiten Pandya <hiten@uk.FreeBSD.org>
include all package files into resulting tarball.
PR: 34007
Submitted by: olgeni
While I here:
- Remove bogus comment;
- ensure that we return the proper exit code in the case of -b failure.
MFC after: 5 days
#include route.h before iso88025.h, and we have to dereference
the trld_route array correctly. (NOTE: I'm not altogether sure
that this is really the correct way to traverse this array. This
just eliminates the build warning/error. It may not work right at
runtime, and I have no way to test it since I lack the necessary
hardware.)
Broken by: kbyanc, who gets to wear the pointy hat
works on ATAPI drives only.
PR: kern/35512 (a part of)
Submitted by: Philipp Mergenthaler <philipp.mergenthaler@stud.uni-karlsruhe.de>
Reviewed by: -hackers
MFC after: 1 month
using new `@comment DEPORIGIN:...' directive. This would allow us to make
many neat things including:
- easier binary upgrades;
- source upgrades without using external tools by simply extending
bsd.port.mk and pkg_install tools;
- mixed-mode upgrades (source + binary);
- depreciate and deorbit silly +REQUIRED_BY files in the near future.
This feature is no-op until appropriate bsd.port.mk patch is committed, and
even when it is already committed packages generated will remain 100%
compatible with old set of pkg_install tools (module all those neat
features, of course).
MFC after: 6 days
directory, because this prevent this option from being used from the
package-depends target of bsd.port.mk since it creates such empty dir
during its normal operation.
MFC after: 6 days
fatal if the declaration of strdup() isn't in scope. The upper 32 bits
of the pointer are lost since it defaults to returning "int". Fix some
warnings while here, including trying to make gcc-3.1 happy.
Also add the ability to use Bzip'ed distributions -- but this is exclusive
of being able to use Gzip'ed distributions.
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Mall, Inc.
with variable numbers of arguments made this slightly harder than
it should be. Avoid the bug by not doing string concatenation within
the macros, and instead add a new function to syslog or print the
error messages.
This is a boolean option, and if it is specified in a print queue
for a remote host, it causes lpd to resend the data file for each
copy the user requested on 'lpr -#n'. This is useful for network
printers which accept lpd-style jobs, but which ignore the control
file (and thus they ignore any request for multiple copies).
PR: 25635
Reviewed by: short review on freebsd-audit
MFC after: 6 days
rendering of the man pages (turns some sequences of two blank lines
into a single blank line), and eliminates 306 errors generated while
formatting named.conf.5 .
for what is currently the '-p' parameter. '-s' is what NetBSD
used (and they implemented it before I added -p in FreeBSD), and
it also matches the '-s' option in syslogd. Someone in OpenBSD
land had also talked about adding a '-s' option, but it hasn't
happened yet.
MFC after: 5 days
destination.
(Currently lack of their specification does not lead to any problem, because
kernel does not check the consistency between actual address and its
address family / length on raw socket.
However kernel should always check their consistency and stop sending packets
if there is a contradiction. Considering backward compatibility of
programs, I just fixed rtsol now; I'd like to fix the kernel behavior later.)
Reviewed by: ume
MFC after: 3 days
them to point at static strings that contain the default paths. This
makes 'vipw -d' work again (I broke it in rev 1.21; apologies for taking
so long to fix it.)
Spotted by: Olivier Houchard <doginou@cognet.ci0.org>
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
instead of u_char *.
The changes are cosmetic except:
RecvConfigAck() now displays the options that are being ACK'd
Huge (bogus) options sent from the peer won't cause an infinite loop
SendIdent and ReceiveIdent are displayed consistenlty with other FSM data
LCP AUTHPROTO options that aren't understood are NAK'd, not REJ'd
trying to run X on some Athlon systems where the BIOS does odd things
(mines an ASUS A7A266, but it seems to also help on other systems).
Here's a description of the problem and my fix:
The problem with the old MTRR code is that it only expects
to find documented values in the bytes of MTRR registers.
To convert the MTRR byte into a FreeBSD "Memory Range Type"
(mrt) it uses the byte value and looks it up in an array.
If the value is not in range then the mrt value ends up
containing random junk.
This isn't an immediate problem. The mrt value is only used
later when rewriting the MTRR registers. When we finally
go to write a value back again, the function i686_mtrrtype()
searches for the junk value and returns -1 when it fails
to find it. This is converted to a byte (0xff) and written
back to the register, causing a GPF as 0xff is an illegal
value for a MTRR byte.
To work around this problem I've added a new mrt flag
MDF_UNKNOWN. We set this when we read a MTRR byte which
we do not understand. If we try to convert a MDF_UNKNOWN
back into a MTRR value, then the new function, i686_mrt2mtrr,
just returns the old value of the MTRR byte. This leaves
the memory range type unchanged.
I have seen one side effect of the fix, which is that ACPI calls
after X has been run seem to hang my machine. As running X would
previously panic the machine, this is still an improvement ;-)
I'd like to MFC this before the 4.6 code freeze - please let me
know if it causes any problems.
PR: 28418, 25958
Tested by: jkh, Christopher Masto <chris@netmonger.net>
MFC after: 2 weeks
present, this field specifies the media volume that the disc is
contained on. If the volume of a given packages is different than the
current volume of mediaDevice, then the user is prompted --
"This is disc #%d. Package %s is on disc #%d\n"
"Would you like to switch discs now?\n"
If the user selects yes, then DEVICE_SHUTDOWN is called and the user
is then prompted --
"Please remove disc #%d from you drive, and add disc #%d"
This works well for a carefully crafted INDEX file, but more work
needs to be done to sort dependencies on a given package based on the
volume that they reside on, to minimize the amount of disc flipping
required of the user.
This commit is a no-op for normal INDEX files and FreeBSD CDs. These
additional features are only used if the INDEX and cdrom.inf file have
multi-volume support.
print out the correct transport it failed on rather than always
spitting out 'udp', also call nc_sperror() to give a more verbose
error message detailing the problem.
files are owned by the caller of newsyslog (usually root:wheel) even if
alternative ownerships were specified in newsyslog.conf.
Note that this is part of a wider problem which is fully addressed in
OpenBSD. Anyone with the time and inclination to incorporate the full
fix for the wider problem will receive no complaints from me and should
feel free to walk all over this delta.
PR: bin/36738
MFC after: 1 week
"confused" about it being unassigned. In fact, gcc was right. Fix the
real problem by setting that variable before break-ing out of a select
statement so gcc is happy, and then remove the unnecessary assignment.
Reported by: a user wondering why lpd syslog-ed about "compiler confusion"
MFC after: 12 days
input file and any temporary (filter) file are closed upon return, and
that is generally done at the end of the routine. This should make it
easier for a later update (not yet written) to implement a "resend_copies"
option.
MFC after: 12 days
remote machines. Now they really are handled *exactly* the same as
input filters (if=) for remote queues, except that they are started
with a different set of parameters. This should fix a few subtle
bugs in output-filter processing on such queues. It is a pretty
significant re-arranging of sendfile(), moving some of it to a new
execfilter() routine.
PR: 36552
Reviewed by: no screams from freebsd-audit
MFC after: 12 days
We are long past the stage where we only had ARP working for 10 Mb/s.
PR: 35604
Submitted by: Gary W. Swearingen <swear@blarg.net>
Additional comments by: Mike DeGraw-Bertsch <mbertsch@radioactivedata.org>
This patch explains -F for usershow and groupshow. Because "groupmod
... -F" doesn't do anything, the patch also drops that from groupmod's
command line args.
PR: 35955
Submitted by: Mike DeGraw-Bertsch <mbertsch@radioactivedata.org>
so know we have proper PKG registration and dependency information.
This is a WIP for 5.0 DP #1, so it is still rough around the edges and
does not GC the old XFree86 3.3.6 handling stuff that should be GC'ed.
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Mall, Inc.
$ cat pkg.tgz | pkg_add -
The above command line will fail on -CURRENT or -STABLE, and
therefore, so will sysinstall if you try to install additional
packages through the network (FTP) from a multiuser system. Because
of the different environment during installation (wrt the playpen),
this bug does not manifest itself during initial installs, and users
may install packages from the network just fine at that time.
This bug was fixed in OpenBSD 4 years ago.
----------------------------
revision 1.4
date: 1998/04/07 05:56:13; author: marc; state: Exp; lines: +13 -8
fix package input from standard input -- the program tried to process
stdin twice. Note: it assumes stdin is a compressed tar file.
----------------------------
PR: conf/36606
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
from CD-ROM in 4-stable. Note that in 5-current, we use devfs so this
change (hopefully) shouldn't change anything.
I'll MFC to 4-stable later.
Tested with: FreeBSD/i386, 4.5-STABLE-20020330-JPSNAP
so the .lo files can be partially linked against libraries
which redefine symbols in the standard libs, or which reference
symbols in the objects.
Submitted by: Sam Leffler
MFC After: 3 days
discipline to do the async escaping, but no other benefits are available yet.
Change ``ifdef HAVE_DES'' to ``ifndef NODES'' for consistency.
Make the Makefile a little more sane WRT RELEASE_CRUNCH.
This is needed on sparc64 (and maybe all OpenFirmware based machines) as
most [all?] OpenBoot PROM's require either an a.out or FCode boot image.
Submitted by: jake
/kernel. kgmon actually appears to use getbootfile(), and the man page
might need to be updated to reflect that.
Reported by: Hiten Pandya <hiten@uk.FreeBSD.org>
rpcgen can't really make those fields const because the remote side might
want to munge them, so we need to pass non-const in. Hackish, but should
work.
It does not help modern compilers, and some may take some hit from it.
(I also found several functions that listed *every* of its 10 local vars with
"register" -- just how many free registers do people think machines have?)
While I'm here, make the menu entries on the documentation menu begin
with "1" instead of "2".
Reviewed by: imp, rwatson, murray
Approved by: imp, rwatson, murray
MFC after: 1 week
o Use ansi function definitions
o MAXPATHLEN already has the NUL at the end, so no need to add 1 (note that
MAXNAMLEN doesn't, so the + 1 there is correct).
o remove register.
the patch Matthew submitted, but I broke the lines in a more FreeBSD
way and made one small wording change.
PR: 31265
Submitted by: Matthew D. Fuller <fullermd@over-yonder.net>
MFC after: 3 weeks
case use size of the currently displaying font as a suffix. For example,
when the when the size of the currently displayed font is 8x8 the
following command will load koi8-r-8x8.fnt.
# vidcontrol -f koi8-r
MFC after: 2 weeks
installed ones under /boot (which we may not even have in the
case of a cross build).
This introduced chicken and egg problem - we need boot images
early in the "depend" stage but they have not yet been built.
Work around this by excluding the generated makeboot.c source
from the "depend" list; it's okay because we hardcode all its
dependencies explicitly. We actually lose the dependency bit
on <sys/types.h> but it's probably okay too as the only thing
we use is the u_char datatype and this is unlikely to change.
After all, it's normal for sloppy cleaning to cause problems.
beast.FreeBSD.org running 5.0-CURRENT alpha has been able to
cross build i386 world with this patch.
Prodded by: gallatin
spares (the size of the field was changed from u_short to u_int to
reflect what it really ends up being). Accordingly, change users of
xucred to set and check this field as appropriate. In the kernel,
this is being done inside the new cru2x() routine which takes a
`struct ucred' and fills out a `struct xucred' according to the
former. This also has the pleasant sideaffect of removing some
duplicate code.
Reviewed by: rwatson
master.passwd, group, and make.conf
* Add a feature to check variables in rc.conf[.local] to their
counterparts in /etc/defaults/rc.conf after a run
* Twiddle whitespace a little
* Change some "[ -f file ] && rm file" to "rm -f file"
counter type, as threatened in rev.1.8 (the density doesn't need to
be recorded since it can be derived from other fields). This doesn't
affect binary compatibility, but new utilities won't be able to depend
on the contents of this field because libc/gmon/gmon.c was broken --
it wrote garbage to the spare fields.
Added a history counter type field to struct gmonparam. This breaks
binary compatibility a little, since kgmon wanted to read the whole
struct. Fixed kgmon to only depend on reading the critical earlier
parts of the struct. This should also fix 6+ year old breakage of
binary compatibility when the profrate field was added.
Only initialize the new field in struct gmon for now, so that the
compatibility code for this (in kgmon) gets tested. The compatibility
code has to guesstimate the value. The new field in struct gmonparam
is for the kernel to initialize so that kgmon doesn't have to guess.
It doesn't actually do it yet though. This adds a flag to config so
that we can exclude certain vendor files from this even when the rest
of the kernel has it on. make -DNO_WERROR would also bypass all of it.
deprecated in favor of the POSIX-defined lowercase variants.
o Change all occurrences of NTOHL() and associated marcros in the
source tree to use the lowercase function variants.
o Add missing license bits to sparc64's <machine/endian.h>.
Approved by: jake
o Clean up <machine/endian.h> files.
o Remove unused __uint16_swap_uint32() from i386's <machine/endian.h>.
o Remove prototypes for non-existent bswapXX() functions.
o Include <machine/endian.h> in <arpa/inet.h> to define the
POSIX-required ntohl() family of functions.
o Do similar things to expose the ntohl() family in libstand, <netinet/in.h>,
and <sys/param.h>.
o Prepend underscores to the ntohl() family to help deal with
complexities associated with having MD (asm and inline) versions, and
having to prevent exposure of these functions in other headers that
happen to make use of endian-specific defines.
o Create weak aliases to the canonical function name to help deal with
third-party software forgetting to include an appropriate header.
o Remove some now unneeded pollution from <sys/types.h>.
o Add missing <arpa/inet.h> includes in userland.
Tested on: alpha, i386
Reviewed by: bde, jake, tmm
* Fix a problem with files that have no CVS $Id's. Thanks to naddy for
spotting this one. It wasn't a _huge_ problem since almost all the files
we install (except motd) have one, but still, it's a bug.
* Add a divider between diff outputs, which is helpful both for logs,
and for giving a good visual clue for diffs that are smaller than
$LINES. Another helpful suggestion from Gary W. Swearingen, swear@blarg.net.
it clear that the recent PCI cards do not require firmware to be loaded,
unlike the completely different ISA cards that are branded with the same name.
buffers before reading the memory. Arguably, the failure modes here
are poor, but we can now read >2k EAs. Also, update the copyrights
and licenses while I'm here.
Note that getextattr has not yet been updated to dynamically allocate
a read buffer, although that can now be done.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: NAI Labs
all facilities that previously relied on /proc have been rewritten
to use ptrace(). procfs has presented a substantial security
hazard for years, with several user->root compromises in the last
few years. Procfs will continue to be available but will require
administrator intervention to use.
Reviewed by: scottl, jedgar, mike, tmm
now it is fixed. This should get us a working keyserv again, since
it depends on local transport for key exchange.
Since we do not have any KEYFILE name hardcoded anymore, set the
umask that way that the keyserver socket can be created with with
the appropriate permissions.
Re-add the accidently removed signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN); to the code
which makes sense to avoid SIGPIPE when a disconnect on rpc socket
occurs.
Submitted by: mbr
the registering of the "unix" transport, now it is fixed.
Everywhere, rq_cred is taken to look what authentification we have.
We can not be sure that transp>xp_verf.oa_flavor is also filled in.
This seems to be the same for all sun source. they take the flavor
of rq_cred, instead of transp.
Submitted by: mbr
attention to the sub-optimal way that we deal with package
dependencies. Traditionally, for each package in an INDEX that the
user wants to add, we check all of the dependencies first even if the
package is already installed. With some GNOME packages, this can
cause package_extract to be called for 50 different dependencies when
we know the top level package is already installed.
The new behavior is to not check dependencies for packages that are
already installed. This fixes a bug where sysinstall gets itself into
a CPU intensive loop when trying to install sawfish gnome with the
most recent ports/INDEX. There is a bug somewhere in the ports INDEX,
but with over 6,400 ports we need to be a little more forgiving here.
/usr/share/examples/pppd.
Update pppd(8) documentation to reflect this, usr.sbin/pppd/pppd.8.
Remove the out-of-place pppd(8) configuration files in etc/ppp,
ppp.shells.sample and ppp.deny.
Make the appropriate changes to the build process, etc/Makefile and
etc/mtree/BSD.usr.mtree, so it all works.
The files from etc/ppp, ppp.shells.sample and ppp.deny, were moved
with a repo copy. Note it in the logs with a forced commit to these
two.
Submitted by: Maxim Konovalov <maxim@macomnet.ru> provided the new samples.
less robust to possible errors of the user/admin while adduser(8)
had been intended to minimize their possibility.
An alternative way of introducing strange symbols into usernames
to be committed really soon.
uhub.c: revision 1.37
usb.4: revision 1.30
usb.c: revision 1.38
usb.h: revision 1.40
usb_port.h: revision 1.21
usb_subr.c: revision 1.65
usbdi.h: revision 1.40
Split the attach/detach events up into device, driver and controller
attach and detach events.
The commit message from NetBSD was:
date: 2000/02/02 07:34:00; author: augustss; state: Exp;
Change the USB event mechanism to include more information
about devices and drivers. Partly from FreeBSD.
Also rework usbd to take these new event types into account.
umask was less restrictive. This was caused by the use of mkstemp()
which internally passes a mode of 0600 to open(). Fix this by
explicitly chmod'ing the files to (0666 & ~umask).
PR: bin/16119
Submitted by: Sascha Blank <blank@uni-trier.de>
the skeleton directory are chown'd to the new user.
PR: bin/10601
Submitted by: Adrian Filipi-Martin <adrian2ubergeeks.com@gosub.cstone.net>
MFC after: 1 month
time_to_xxx() and xxx_to_time() functions. e.g. _time_to_xxx()
instead of time_to_xxx(), to make it more obvious that these are
stopgap functions & placemarkers and not meant to create a defacto
standard. They will eventually be replaced when a real standard
comes out of committee.
Alfred, I took a look at retry_blockingfilelocklist() and the
solution seemed simple enough. Please correct me if I am wrong.
It seems said routine doesn't take into account boundary conditions
when putting back file_lock entries into the blocked lock-list.
Specifically, it fails when the file_lock being put back is the
last element in the list, and when it is the only element in the
list. I've included a patch below.
Basically, it introduces another variable: pfl, which keeps track
of the list item before ifl. That way if nfl is NULL, ifl gets
inserted after pfl. If pfl is also NULL, then it gets inserted
at the head of the list (since it was the only element in the
list).
Submitted by: Mike Makonnen <mike_makonnen@yahoo.com>
Tested by: Thomas Quinot <thomas@cuivre.fr.eu.org>
Clean up "n to m" type options with "n-m" and some other improvements
suggested by Ruslan.
Change -C option to report the transmit key "4" if in "Home" mode.
Submitted by: ru
Approved by: imp, ru
block sizees larger than 8192 bytes have been resolved, as per the
following deltas:
rev 1.34 src/sys/boot/i386/boot2/boot2.c
rev 1.5 src/sys/boot/alpha/boot1/sys.c
Fixed bugs from previous delta:
- Removed duplicate -m and -o options from SYNOPSIS
- Added missing -L option to SYNOPSIS
- Removed duplicate -M option from DESCRIPTION
- Tidy up the markup
using the part after the ``\'' if the original name is not found.
This allows M$ clients to use domain\user as their authname.
Reviewed by: Ian West <ian@niw.com.au>
filesystem using a block size of 8192. Since this seems unlikely to
be fixed soon (specifically in time for 4.5-RELEASE on the RELENG_4
branch), fall back to the old default block and frag sizes of 8192 and
1024 in sysinstall on the alpha.
Reported by: jhb
to recover its space into the previous partition. Revert 'D'elete
to not attempt to recover any space.
Do not auto-create /home as per release engineers decision (though
I think this is a mistake). However, all of this code will be
replaced later on anyway either with Jordan's stuff or with
some other sort of templater, so it isn't a big deal.
Before, we were using
while (*p++ && --len > 0);
to do this. However, len doesn't get decremented for the NUL byte, so when
we used len later to see if we still have CIS left for some optional fields,
we'd run off the end of an array and dump core.
Instead, replace it with
len -= strlen(p) + 1;
p += strlen(p) + 1;
which is more correct. It is a little bogus to assume that p points to
a valid C string, but only a little. The PC Card SPEC mandates that it
does, and we already depend on that with the use of strdup a few lines
earlier. Since much of the rest of the cis parsing code isn't hyper
retentive about error checking, I'll leave that level of checking for
another time and/or another committer :-).
a) Convert all the remaining older Perl system() calls to the new,
more secure LIST format so they are robust to whitespace and
shell metacharacters in their arguments.
b) Add a new option: -force, which allows adding usernames containing
characters that are otherwise illegal.
PR: bin/22860 bin/31049
a packed array so sizeof work. This broke RFMON mode and passing
up 802.11 packets.
The Linux emulation code was derived from the open source Linux driver to
maintain compatibility.
LEAP support is added, hints from Richard Johnson. I've verified this
locally with PC350v42510.img firmware. More bug fixing from Marco to
fix long passwords.
Change DELAYs in flash part of driver to FLASH_DELAY which uses tsleep
so it doesn't look like your system died during a flash update.
Install header files in /usr/include/dev/an
Cleanup some ifmedia bugs add "Home" key mode to ifmedia and ancontrol.
This way you can manage 2 keys a little easier. Map the home mode into
key 5. Enhance ifconfig to dump the various configured SSIDs. I use
a bunch of different ones and roam between them. Use the syntax similar
to the WEP keys to deal with setting difference SSIDs.
Bump up up the Card capabilities RID since they added 2 bytes to it
in the latest firmware. Thankfully we changed it from a terminal
failure so the card still worked but the driver whined.
Some cleanup patches from Marco Molteni.
Submitted by: Richard Johnson <raj@cisco.com>
Marco Molteni <molter@tin.it>
and myself
Various checks: David Wolfskill <david@catwhisker.org>
Reviewed by: Brooks Davis <brooks@freebsd.org>
Warner Losh <imp@freebsd.org>
Approved by: Brooks Davis <brooks@freebsd.org>
Warner Losh <imp@freebsd.org>
Obtained from: Linux emulation API's from Aironet driver.
changes in the userland utilities. For fdcontrol(8), i now finally
keep my promise made more than 7 years ago that ``the fdcontrol
utility is currently under development and the user interface will
likely change''. :-)
o Move nfs_reserved_port_only out of security profiles (where it was
set somewhat improperly) to the Security options menu directly.
Previously, the variable was set to true for Moderate, but not for
Extreme, which is at best inconsistent.
o Update the Security Profiles help file to remove reference to the
NFS reserved port.
o Note that the kernel currently defaults the sysctl to '0', but
sysinstall has changed it to '1' as a default as of late; however,
rc.conf sets the value to NO as the default. This change brings
them relatively into sync.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
and pull configSecurityProfile under that menu. Add a menu option
to determine whether LOMAC is enabled at boot. Probably, eventually,
many of the 'Security Profile' menu choices should be pulled out
independently into the Security Menu, so as to make them individually
selectable.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
The user can still toggle it back off in the label editor (or post-install
for that matter) if they explicitly do not want soft updates to be used
for some reason.
Agreed to be a good thing by: kirk
"skimming thru" the printcap file looking for some common mistakes that
people make. These are the kinds of mistakes where the printcap file
probably looks correct to human eyes, but is wrong in some subtle way
which causes a problem in some queue definitions. The program treats
these as "warnings" not "errors".
Note that I'm flexible on the m.f.c. schedule, if people would rather
this waited until after 4.5-release.
Reviewed by: no screams from freebsd-audit freebsd-print@bostonradio.org
MFC after: 4 days
. The main device node now supports automatic density selection for
commonly used media densities. So you can stuff your 1.44 MB and
720 KB media into your drive and just access /dev/fd0, no questions
asked. It's all that easy, isn't it? :)
. Device density handling has been completely overhauled. The old way
of hardwired kernel density knowledge is no longer there. Instead,
the kernel now implements 16 subdevices per drive. The first
subdevice uses automatic density selection, while the remaining 15
devices are freely programmable. They can be assigned an arbitrary
name of the form /dev/fd[:digit]+.[:digit:]{1,4}, where the second
number is meant to either implement device names that are mnemonic
for their raw capacity (as it used to be), or they can alternatively
be created as "anonymous" devices like fd0.1 through fd0.15,
depending on the taste of the administrator. After creating a
subdevice, it is initialized to the maximal native density of the
respective drive type, so it needs to be customized for other
densities by using fdcontrol(8). Pseudo-partition devices (fd0a
through fd0h) are still supported as symlinks.
. The old hack to use flags 0x1 to always assume drive 0 were there is
no longer supported; this is now supposed to be done by wiring the
devices down from the loader via device flags. On IA32
architectures, the first two drives are looked up in the CMOS
configuration records though. On PCMCIA (i. e., the Y-E Data
controller of the Toshiba Libretto), a single drive is always
assumed.
. Other specialities like disabling the FIFO and not probing the drive
at boot-time are selected by per-controller or per-drive flags, too.
. Unit attentions (media has been changed) are supposed to be detected
now; density autoselection only occurs after a unit attention. (Can
be turned off by a per-drive flag, this will cause each Fdopen() to
perform the autoselection.)
. FM floppies can be handled now (on controllers that actually support
it -- not all do these days).
. Fdopen() can be told to avoid density selection by setting
O_NONBLOCK; this leaves the descriptor in a half-opened state where
only a few ioctls are accepted. This is necessary to run fdformat
on a device that uses automatic density selection (since you cannot
autoselect on an unformatted medium, obviously).
. Just differentiate between a plain old NE765 and the enhanced chips,
but don't try more; the existing code was wrong and only misdetected
the chips anyway.
BUGS and TODOs:
. All documentation update still needs to be done.
. Formatting not-so-standard format yields unpredictable results; i
have yet to figure out why this happens. "Standard" formats like
720 and 1440 KB do work, however.
. rc scripts are needed to setup device nodes with nonstandard
densities (like the old /dev/fdN.MMM we used to have).
. Obtaining device flags from the kernel environment doesn't work yet,
thus currently only drives that are present in (IA32) CMOS are
really detected. Someone who knows the odds and ends about device
flags is needed here, i can't figure out what i'm doing wrong.
. 2.88 MB still needs to be done.
(which somehow now seems to be the default for compiling -current).
This error popped up while doing a PicoBSD cross-compile on a 4.3-ish system,
it may well be that there are other apps which have similar problems,
but I did not spot them as they are not included in my picobsd config.
Whether adding prototypes for main() is the correct solution or not
I have no idea, a request to -current on the matter went basically
unanswered. Those who have better ideas are welcome to back this out
and replace it with the correct fix.
16384/2048.
Following recent discussions on the -arch mailing list, involving dillon
and mckusick, this change parallels the one made over a decade ago when
the default was bumped up from 4096/512.
This should provide significant performance improvements for most
folks, less significant performance losses for a few folks and
wasted space lost to large fragments for many folks.
For discussion, please see the following thread in the -arch archive:
Subject: Using a larger block size on large filesystems
The discussion ceases to be relevant when the issue of partitioning
schemes is raised.
have a USB mouse. Here's the deal on how this works: USB mouse have
moused run for them automatically by usbd so we don't need to setup moused
for them. We do need to setup moused for other mice though, so if the
user has a USB mouse, we don't need to do anything. Hence the wording
"Do you have a non-USB mouse installed?" for the question. The question
can be reworded as "Do you have a PS/2 or Serial mouse installed?" instead
if that is preferred.
(1) We don't need compat3x and compat4x as we build the bits on the proper
release now (vs. getting them from the XFree people).
(2) We handle the compat2x needs thru proper port dependancies now.
sysinstall will automatically expand the previous partition to take up
the freed up space. So you can 'D'elete /home and /usr will get the
combined space, or you can 'D'elete /tmp and /var will get the combined space.
This gives the user, developer, or lay person a huge amount of flexibility
in constructing partitions from an 'A'uto base. It takes only 3 or 4
keystrokes to achieve virtually any combination of having or not having
a /tmp and/or /home after doing an 'A'uto create.
Change 'A'uto creation of /var/tmp to 'A'uto creation /tmp, which should
be less controversial.
MFC after: 6 days
and SIGQUIT during shutdown", but rpc.umntall is also run at boot
time, so ignoring these signals is a really bad idea: it makes it
impossible to ^C the process as it waits for a server response. I
can't see any reason to block these signals during shutdown either.
MFC after: 3 days
defaults both in regards to the size of the partitions that are created
and in regards to safety and functional separation.
Still TODO: extend the previous partition to cover a deleted partition
if the previous partiton was auto-created, and supply some sort of
solution for /tmp.
Reviewed by: Just about everyone
Approved by: Nobody except maybe my pet mouse fred
Obtained from: God, so complain to HIM
MFC after: 1 week
of /etc/daily. Some time later, /etc/daily became a set of periodic(8)
scripts. Now, this evolution continues, and /etc/security has been
broken into periodic(8) scripts to make local customization easier and
more maintainable.
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: ru
for a remote print job. This change comes from OpenBSD (who got it from
Sebastian Krahmer of SuSE). In OpenBSD this avoids a tiny theoretical
security issue, but that security issue does not exist in FreeBSD's lpr
due to the changes which added 'ctl_renametf()' just before 4.4-release.
This change is still worth doing in our version, but it isn't fixing a
security issue.
MFC after: 4 days
It is still nessesary to supply the tracks as individual files, burncd
can't read .cue files yet, but now the infrastructure to do it is
present we just need a .cue file parser (hint hint)...
o prototype usage()
o move BUFSIZE define above the functions
o nuke externs that are defined in unistd.h
Approved by: rwatson
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
1) Use devfs to mount filesystems. If mounting devfs is fail,
fallback to old code.
2) When fscking filesystems, use 'fsck_ffs' explicitly. As a
result, we no longer need 'fsck' the wrapper program.
Reviewed by: jkh
Since userconfig feature is implemented by tweaking variables (hint.*)
with loader(8), we can put back an equivalent feature. Maybe the first
step for this is to commit yokota-san's patch (add userconfig command
for loader).
Approved by: jkh
to the routing socket.
The local address on a point-to-point interface is not actually a
gateway address - despite it appearing in the second column of
netstat -r's output. Providing a gateway to an RTM_CHANGE will
currently change the route's interface so that it's using the
specified gateway - not what we want.
Patiently explained to me by: ru
control-files will always start with 'cfA*'. It turns out that some
implementations of lpd (such as solaris) may send a control file which
starts with 'cfB*', or really 'cf<anyLetter>*'. Although such filenames
are very odd, we did used to accept them. This changes ctl_renametf to
work correctly with them, and fixes up 'lpc clean' to match.
PR: bin/32183
MFC after: 10 days
with the old behavior available via the -o option (it might still be
useful if one has many kernels and cares which messages came from
which). If the boot file is not used as the prefix, it is still
logged once at startup.
This change is prompted by the fact that the boot file is now much
longer ("/boot/kernel/kernel" vs. "/kernel"), which significanlty
bloats the syslogd output.
Reviewed by: peter
o remove extraneous extern's
o prototype functions
o combine multiple return (0)'s into a single return (0) at the
end of main()
Approved by: rwatson
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
'l' ("plain text which includes control characters") is somewhat more
appropriate for 'o' ("postscript files"), and in fact some printers treat
'l' as a request to print a postscript file.
MFC after: 1 week
with 'HEAD' method.
Actually, when http.c was born, it used 'GET' method. This was changed
with revision 1.4 (which was submitted as PR: 21449). I've confirmed
to Philipp Mergenthaler <philipp.mergenthaler@stud.uni-karlsruhe.de>,
the submitter of PR: 21449, and it's absolutely OK that we can use
GET method.
Add missing 'FreeBSD' tag, and copyright notice. This file is originally
submitted by PR: 11316; I've contacted to the PR originator to submit it.
PR: 32238
Submitted by: Christoph Weber-Fahr <christoph.weber-fahr@arcor.de> (patch),
and Philipp Mergenthaler <un1i@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de> (copyright)
MFC after: 1 week
was never technically true (it's snp(4) that required root, not
watch(8)), and after snp.c 1.64, isn't even effectively true, since
who can run watch(8) depends on the permissions of the snp device(s).
Sort options in SYNOPSIS and DESCRIPTION while I'm here.
Previously, watch would always use the first device it could
successfully open, but this isn't always desired. Specifically, it
may not be desired during debugging (of snp), or if a particular snp
device has different permissions (which makes since after snp.c 1.64).
up in the same way that we expect them to be when we read them.
This is a no-op on i386 and probably on alphas, as we currently
only support AF_INET and AF_INET6.
of 0.0.0.0.
The OpenBSD PF_ROUTE/NET_RT_DUMP sysctl is sending back routes with
RTAX_NETMASK set, but the corresponding sockaddr being 4 zero bytes
(with an address family of zero). ppp was getting confused by this
and ending up interpreting it as a 0.0.0.0/32 routing table
destination and subsequently failing to do anything with the route.
Specifically, after this fix, ppp under OpenBSD can successfully
change and delete the default route again !
ncprange structure.
Don't write() the netmask for IPv6 sockaddrs to the routing socket if
the prefixlen is 128.
It seems that messages written to the routing socket with the scopeid
set for link local addresses are not understood. Instead, we have to
put the scopeid in the 5th and 6th bytes of the address (see
adjust_linklocal() in ncpaddr.c). I think this may be a bug in the
KAME implementation - it should really understand both forms.
includes changing a struct timeval to an explicit structure of two
int32_t's. This requires using temporary timevals in several places
when calling gettimeofday(), settimeofday(), etc. With this timed now
works properly on 64-bit platforms such as Alpha.
Obtained from: NetBSD
file is still completely covered by a flock(2) style lock, but we'll tackle
that at a later date.
Submitted by: "Andrew P. Lentvorski" <bsder@allcaps.org>
be overridden on the command line. This is useful for setting up
chroot/jail environments.
PR: bin/23509
Submitted by: Seth Kingsley <sethk@pike.osd.bsdi.com>
MFC after: 1 week
use LIST_FOREACH,
add prototypes (functions should be made static probably),
change DEBUG=1 to LOCKD_DEBUG,
K&R function instantiation for functions with long args lists,
Move comments about functions from within to above the function,
Simplified some if/else logic and reduced nested blocks.
parens around 'return' argument (return FOO -> return (FOO))
of the rpc.lockd fully compliant with the old file locking semantics.
Andrew will dig into the statd code next and then will attack the split
locking.
This also backs out a lot of the work I've done on making the code
more conformant with non-written style rules, but we'll revisit that
later.
Submitted by: "Andrew P. Lentvorski" <bsder@allcaps.org>
an alternative to /tftpboot. This is useful it you're using tftpd
with an alternative root (using -s), and would like rarpd to respond
selectively to RARP requests using the same criteria as tftp.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
computed a a chunksize that didn't include the extended attribute
header. This was a non-fatal error, in that it was just writing out
zeros anyway, but did have the effect of not pre-allocating the
right amount of disk space. This fix calculates chunksize to include
the attribute header.
Submitted by: Dale Rahn
Sponsored by: DARPA, UPenn POSSE Project
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Fix the WARNS 1 warnings except unused variables.
Add prototype for log_netobj().
Don't compare signed/unsigned.
Cast u_int64_t to 'unsigned long long' and print using %llu.
Fix constness of string arrays.
Use a cast to avoid an unused parameter in a signal handler.
alarm(2) can't fail, so don't check for it.
ANSI'ify some functions.
src/sys/fs/fifofs/fifo_vnops.c) to serve locks better, my previous
workaround for lack of decent fifo system wasn't cutting it,
particularly the kernel would send a message down the fifo and
immediately close it, this would lead to delayed unlock requests
being seen by the lockd causing all sorts of badness.
Basically, don't reopen the fifo, just select(2) on it.
change terminals being watched. This change makes watch pass the
<control-X> through to the terminal if it's not being intercepted--
previously, the keypress would simply be dropped.
Add an ``UPTIME'' variable to indicate the bundle uptime.
It's now possible to put something like this in ppp.linkdown
for a server setup:
MYADDR:
log Session closing: User USER, address HISADDR, up UPTIME
Fixed some memory leakage with commands that expand words.
Made some functions static.
Fixed a diagnostic bug (iface add .... SIOCDIFADDR)
the config file. This fixes the breakage caused by the recent change
in the behavior of device_add_child for ata (which shows soren's
reservations were well founded).
Submitted by: OGAWA Takaya <t-ogawa@triaez.kaisei.org>
since that is what we use now and this insulates us from any time_t
tweaks here. We can define a record format that uses 64 bit times if/when
we need to.
not setting any timer. Instead, set a 1 millisecond timer.
This ensures that ppp will come out of it's select() call after
losing carrier in -ddial mode with a reconnect period of 0 and
going to ST_OPENING, rather than waiting indefinitely for some
other event to wake ppp up.
Bump the ppp version number to indicate the event.
MFC after: 3 days
native inb/outb etc, and alpha has libio. ia64 doesn't have any yet.
move pppctl to the NOLIBC_R section (libc_r is not possible on ia64 in
its present form due to assumptions about setjmp/longjmp magic)
ports/devel/acpitools (iasl).
- Merge AML parser to build ACPI namespace
- Comment header info. out so that ASL compiler ignore them
- Fix DSDT header size to be discarded when DSDT file is specified
for input (acpidump and amldb)
- Write DSDT header as well into DSDT file for output
- Fix some trivial typo (Concatenate and SizeOf)
- Remove DEBUG_FLAGS from Makefile (acpidump and amldb)
allowed either because of the transport or configuration, send a
MRU NAK only once, then allow the negotiations to proceed.
rfc1661 says that 1500 should always be allowed and rfc2516 says
that 1492 is the maximum for PPPoE. This changes ppp so that it
only weakly suggests 1492, then goes with the default (leaving
the problem in the hands of the peer WRT how they set their MTU).
MFC after: 1 week
spin in a loop eating CPU time. This bug has existed since the
TI-RPC import. The problem is that we should only enter the select
loop if at least one TCP server was started. Fix this by having
the master nfsd become a UDP server itself if there are no TCP
servers.
Also improve/correct the code for cleaning up slave nfsd processes
and unregistering with rpcbind when the master nfsd exits.
One issue that remains open is that if a slave nfsd dies, then all
nfsds will shut down. This is because nfssvc() in the master nfsd
returns 0 when the master nfsd receives a SIGCHLD.
Submitted by: tmm
non-backward compatible changes in the format of packing list and handle
them gracefully;
- fix a longstanding issue with symlinks handling. Instead of recording
checksum for the file symlink points to, record checksum for the value
returned by readlink(2). For backward compatibility increase packing list
format minor version number and provide a fallback to a previous behaviour,
if package in question was created with older version of pkg_* tools;
Submitted by: Alec Wolman <wolman@cs.washington.edu>, sobomax
- don't record MD5 checksum for device nodes, fifo's and other non-regular
files.
Submitted by: nbm
MFC in: 2 weeks
allows for an easy way to backup old version of port prior to installing
a new one;
- silence compiler warnings by killing some unused variables and adding
all includes necessary.
MFC after: 2 weeks
1) Allow the sending of more than one control message at a time
over a unix domain socket. This should cover the PR 29499.
2) This requires that unp_{ex,in}ternalize and unp_scan understand
mbufs with more than one control message at a time.
3) Internalize and externalize used to work on the mbuf in-place.
This made life quite complicated and the code for sizeof(int) <
sizeof(file *) could end up doing the wrong thing. The patch always
create a new mbuf/cluster now. This resulted in the change of the
prototype for the domain externalise function.
4) You can now send SCM_TIMESTAMP messages.
5) Always use CMSG_DATA(cm) to determine the start where the data
in unp_{ex,in}ternalize. It was using ((struct cmsghdr *)cm + 1)
in some places, which gives the wrong alignment on the alpha.
(NetBSD made this fix some time ago).
This results in an ABI change for discriptor passing and creds
passing on the alpha. (Probably on the IA64 and Spare ports too).
6) Fix userland programs to use CMSG_* macros too.
7) Be more careful about freeing mbufs containing (file *)s.
This is made possible by the prototype change of externalise.
PR: 29499
MFC after: 6 weeks
allow to limit the prototype quota distribution (-p)
to a single filesystem. Useful when initializing
quotas on a newly added disk.
PR: bin/30816
Submitted by: Dmitry Morozovsky <marck@rinet.ru>
ethernet controllers. This adds support for the 3Com 3c996-T, the
SysKonnect SK-9D21 and SK-9D41, and the built-in gigE NICs on
Dell PowerEdge 2550 servers. The latter configuration hauls ass:
preliminary measurements show TCP speeds of over 900Mbps using
only normal size frames.
TCP/IP checksum offload, jumbo frames and VLAN tag insertion/stripping
are supported, as well as interrupt moderation.
Still need to fix autonegotiation support for 1000baseSX NICs, but
beyond that, driver is pretty solid.
'lpc tclean'. In some obscure cases, the previous version could cause a
valid user job to be removed (by 'clean'), due to invalid assumptions in
the sort routine. This was a rare problem, unless ctlinfo.c is compiled
with 'LEAVE_TMPCF_FILES' turned on (to check what that rtn was doing).
Reviewed by: Lack of outcry on -audit and freebsd-print@bostonradio.org
MFC after: 10 days
floppies if you try to actually use it. This code will work fine if
you build and use sysinstall on a running system, since you have the
benefit of an installed termcap file. However, this code does not
work on an MFSROOT, where you must set the TERMCAP environment
variable properly. Unfortunately the quick fix of setting the TERMCAP
variable doesn't seem to fix the problem either. olgeni will add this
functionality back once it's been fully implemented (hopefully using
the working code in termcap.c).
PR: bin/30739
Submitted by: Alexey V. Neyman <alex.neyman@auriga.ru>
Discussed with / Pointy hat to: olgeni
MFC after: 3 days
survive a sysinstall Ctrl-C -> 'Restart'. This fixes another annoying
bug where restarting sysinstall will try to reload kernel modules and
do other external things that have already been done. For now, use
these persistent variables to keep track of module, usbd, and pccardd
initialization.
Bug found by: rwatson
MFC after: 1 week
environment. This fixes an annoying bug where hitting Ctrl-C and
telling sysinstall to 'restart' will do no such thing since many of
the options are still set and so you won't be prompted for them
again.
MFC after: 1 week
variable to check for debug functionality. Previously, you had to set
both 'debug' and 'SYSINSTALL_DEBUG' to get a log of sysinstall's
activities. Now, only 'debug' is necessary.
This was described in the original RFC wrt lpr, but most lpr's do not
actually implement it. There is some indication that MacOS 10.1 will
be using this when sending postscript files to print servers (that is
what "o"-type was supposed to signify -- postscript files).
MFC after: 1 week
- fix harmless compiler's warnings (unused variables and missed prototype);
- before refusing to delete package because "there are packages installed
that require this package" check that packages in question is actually
installed;
- add new `-r' option to pkg_delete(8), which instructs it to delete not only
packages specified at command line, but all packages that depend on
specified packages as well.
MFC after: 2 weeks
than really solve it. This approach (inspired by Ruslan's patch) solves
the real problem by stripping the local domain off the host name in the
config line structure.
Also mark a bunch of code sections that either do not check the return value
of a strdup(), malloc() or calloc() call, or do not properly handle a NULL
return.
1.64, i.e. July of last year. Also fix a minor style bug in the same code.
PR: bin/28634
Pointy hat to: dwmalone
Pointed out by: my buggy DSL router's remote logging facility
1. FreeBSD should be spelled with "F" and "BSD" in capitals,
even in comments.
2. Please don't use hard sentence breaks. Always start a
new sentence from the new line.
3. Don't use `#' or `$' in EXAMPLES; this has been fixed
recently in share/examples/mdoc/ templates.
4. Nuke the prog_name variable burncd.c, use getprogname(3).
correct mode via ancontrol, you can use bpf to sniff raw 802.11 frames.
Who want's to port AirSnort. ;-)
Submitted by: Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.com> (author)
David Wolfskill <david@catwhisker.org> (port to current)
__unused, and change local variables named `sin' (struct
sockaddr_in) to `sin4'. (`sin' conflicts with the definition of
sin(3), which gcc assumes to be defined even if math.h isn't
included (it's a builtin). This is probably a bug in gcc.)
- Apply WARNS=1. WARNS=2 was not used because this program assigns
string literals to (struct iovec).iov_base for writing, and the only
clean way to silence -Wwrite-strings in that case would be to
strdup() and consequently free() those literals, which I considered
too disruptive.
Reviewed by: bde (partially)
for each option in the DHCP lease file. The DHCP lease parsing code
specifically ignores more than the first nameserver, but it didn't
previously deal with the case of more than one router. This caused
segfaults and a painful death when installing on a network with
multiple routers.
PR: misc/16003
COPTS towards the end of final CFLAGS so that it can be used to
override Makefile and other defaults. Using it in Makefiles risks
having options set using it clobbered when somebody uses it on the
command line.
Approved by: bde
doesn't talk about these files elsewhere, doesn't use the files by
default, and the names are dependent on site-specific newsyslog
configuration.
PR: 30348
Submitted by: Giorgos Keramidas <charon@labs.gr>
interactive case. This already works for non-interactive installs,
but at least one user thinks it would be useful and it certainly seems
more correct to allow it here as well.
So, this will now work :
# sysinstall netDev=fxp0 tcpMenuSelect
PR: bin/30229
Submitted by: Mikhail Teterin <mi@aldan.algebra.com>
This will now allow sysinstall to work properly if a FreeBSD CD/DVD is
already mounted as /cdrom, instead of just crapping out when it tries
to mount as /dist and gets EBUSY.
PR: conf/28081
Tested by: jhb
useful for post install configuration or other cases that might not be
handled by usb.c. (usb.c already sets usbd_enable iff sysinstall
detects usb during install).
PR: bin/18946
Submitted by: Peter van Heusden <pvh@egenetics.com>
Reviewed by: jhb
and RTSOL in sysinstall. If the respective TRY_FOO variable is set to
"YES" then it will be tried without prompting the user.
However, if the TRY_FOO variable is set to "NO" then the user will not
be prompted for a choice. This is the correct behavior, since we want
people to be able to script sysinstall in either case.
However, the default TRY_FOO variable has been "NO" since 1999. This
is incorrect, and when the logic was corrected in tcpip.c this has the
effect of never giving the user a choice to use DHCP or IPv6. The
value should be undefined until it is set by a script or by the user.
Submitted by: Randy Pratt, Chern Lee, many others.
UPGRADE.TXT along with a YesNo dialog requesting confirmation of
the upgrade. During the transition to RELNOTESng, UPGRADE.TXT got
folded into a file that eventually renders as INSTALL.TXT, which
makes sysinstall complain about a non-existent file. As a
solution/workaround, point the user at INSTALL.TXT, and then request
confirmation.
Noticed by: rpratt (on 4.4-RC3)
Approved by: jkh
1) Removed the low-level (unneeded in this context) details on
escape sequences that are already documented in screen(4).
2) Removed whitespace at EOL.
3) Removed the garbage from previous revision.
16 bits access is required by nsp driver to work in SMIT mode.
Since previously (1.65 and before in current, and 1.46.28 and before
in stable branch) 16 bits access was default, I hope it will break nothing.
Okayed-by: imp
mail, if configured to do so. Some sites have setups where the user's
mail is delivered to their home directory, so sending mail before is
exists didn't work.
PR: 29892
added but not its postrequisite -ltermcap.
Fixed breakage of DPADD in previous commit. ${LIBREADLINE} was misspelled
-lreadline. This should have been fatal since there is no file named
-lreadline, but it worked because of an undcumented bugfeature in make(1)
(or its configuration files): missing source files named -l* are silently
assumed to be up to date libraries. `make checkdpadd' also fails to detect
this error.
assignment of `l' in `gr_update' to the return value of snprintf. It
claimed to have fixed the case where snprintf returned -1--in fact, it
broke the entire routine. Not setting `l' here causes fileupdate() to
invariably fail with EINVAL because it does its own check to assert
that the parameter isn't -1.
for ntp-4.1.0.
Unfortunately, David Mills insists on managing the documentation in
such a way as to make it impossible for me to make things easy on our
translators, without printing out the documentation and reading through
it side-by-side with a finger on each page.
post-configuration "Startup" menu. In the event that diskcheckd is
removed, this can easily be trimmed also; in the mean time, it allows
diskcheckd to be easily disabled using our documented management
tool
the system on which it is running. The hostname is reloaded when
'HUPped' and a log message generated to note a change (before anyone
points it out, this is not an added security feature).
PR: bin/24444
Reviewed by: freebsd-audit
Approved by: ru
MFC after: 2 weeks
dictionaries are out of sync.
This avoids the complications that happen when our original reset
request gets lost in transit (quite likely in hind sight, given a
lossy link) when we end up ignoring the peer for the next (up to)
256 packets.
Submitted by: Nick Sayer <nsayer@quack.kfu.com>
originally written in January, 2000, but have been substantially updated.
- No longer use hz/stathz and the CPU times in computing the TTY stats,
but rather use etime, like the disk stats.
- Clean up malloc/realloc failure tests.
- Use a new integrated routine to fetch devstat information via sysctl or
KVM.
- Get rid of the X() macro for calculating CPU stats
- Use rint() on the CPU state display to avoid truncation errors. (this
requires libm)
- Clean up flag usage somewhat.
Reviewed by: bde
when we ioctl(TUNSIFINFO) under OpenBSD)
o Don't bring the interface up immediately
o Don't complain about unrecognised interface flags in ``show iface''.
the size of the tsp_name field is OS-dependent. 4.3BSD used a 32-byte
field, FreeBSD uses MAXHOSTNAMELEN and RedHat apparently uses a 64-byte
field. As a result, sanity checking code added a few months ago to detect
short packets will fail when interoperating with one of these other vendors.
Change the short packet detection code to expect a minimum packet size
corresponding to the 4.3BSD implementation, which should be a safe minimum
size.
Submitted by: Stephen Whiteley <stevew@best.com> (based on)
PR: misc/29867
and mask to the routing socket, otherwise the update fails.
Warning provided by: markm
The code here was broken for FreeBSD when IPv6 support was added, but
was fixed for OpenBSD. OpenBSD expects the gateway and mask to be
supplied and fails the update otherwise.
on older kernels correctly. Terminate the loop when we find a
suitable irq. Also, only try to select from the pool. Cleaned up the
two cases (IRQ picked by the user and ?) into one.
MFC upon re approval.
and implement a far more subtle and correct fix.
The reason behind the infinite loop was that ppp was trying to make up
initial IPv6 numbers and wasn't giving up when it failed unexpectedly to
assign the addresses it just fabricated to it's interface (thinking that
the reason was because another interface was using the same address).
It now attempts this up to 100 times before just failing and trying to
muddle along (in reality, this should never happen more than a couple
of times unless our random number generator doesn't work).
Also, when IPv6 is not available, don't even try to assign the IPv6
interface address in the first place...
monthly and weekly, respectively. Also fix the @yearly shortcut so
that it doesn't execute daily during January. OpenBSD and NetBSD also
appear to have this bug.
PR: bin/21152
sizes on a route.
IMHO this shouldn't be necessary (the destination & mask/prefixlen
should be enough), but without it, the default route update under
OpenBSD will fail.
Thanks to: Russell T Hunt <alaric@MIT.EDU>
the name for the moderate security profile is "moderate", not
"medium", so update this one reference to it as "medium".
This is a 4.4-RELEASE MFC candidate.
MFC after: 2 days
Add a timestamp to the comment so that it's possible to see when
changes were made.
e.g.:
# -- sysinstall generated deltas -- # Wed Aug 15 18:10:20 2001
progs prog1
special prog1 objdir ../../prog1/obj
special prog1 objs prog1.o
This fixes a bug that I introduced around the time of 4.2-release.
Reported by: Larry Baird <lab@gta.com>
use it. If not, then loop asking for each one, with normal -I
processing. This will effectively disable -I for when the pcic is in
PCI function interrupt routing mode.
structures (well, they're treated as opaque).
It's now possible to manage IPv6 interface addresses and routing
table entries and to filter IPV6 traffic whether encapsulated or
not.
IPV6CP support is crude for now, and hasn't been tested against
any other implementations.
RADIUS and IPv6 are independent of eachother for now.
ppp.linkup/ppp.linkdown aren't currently used by IPV6CP
o Understand all protocols(5) in filter rules rather than only a select
few.
o Allow a mask specification for the ``delete'' command. It's now
possible to specifically delete one of two conflicting routes.
o When creating and deleting proxy arp entries, do it for all IPv4
interface addresses rather than doing it just for the ``current''
peer address.
o When iface-alias isn't in effect, don't blow away manually (via ``iface
add'') added interface addresses.
o When listening on a tcp server (diagnostic) socket, bind so that a
tcp46 socket is created -- allowing both IPv4 and IPv6 connections.
o When displaying ICMP traffic, don't display the icmp type twice.
When display traffic, display at least some information about unrecognised
traffic.
o Bump version
Inspired after filtering work by: Makoto MATSUSHITA <matusita@jp.FreeBSD.org>
options used to build ppp.
Currently, this is a no-op and only handles LOCALNAT and LOCALRAD cases.
This will be used for the upcoming ipv6 changes, and allows a shared
man page between OpenBSD and FreeBSD.
conservative default, and actually prompt specifically for inetd rather
than handling it as a side effect of the security profile. Update the
help file to reflect this change.
o Rename "Fascist" to "Extreme" in the source code, to match the names
presented to the user.
o Remove portmap and inetd from profile management. Portmap is now
disabled by default, but automatically turned on if a feature requires
it (such as NFS, etc).
This is an MFC candidate for 4.4-RELEASE.
Reviewed by: freebsd-arch@FreeBSD.org
Approved by: re@FreeBSD.org
MFC after: 2 days
Not much, but it is better than nothing as it discourages
the extremely lazy.
Please read the actual text (the last text was softer than the commit
message about it) before giving me feedback.
Also, in the last commit I also tagged the newly optional elements in
the command line as optional.
WEP IS INSECURE. DO NOT USE IT.
and point people to details on the attack:
http://www.cs.rice.edu/~astubble/wep/wep_attack.html
and recommend people use ipsec instead if possible.
Approved by: kris
Mandoc police: Please do your worst. I'd like to merge similar text
into ancontrol and ifconfig.
Avoid using parenthesis enclosure macros (.Pq and .Po/.Pc) with plain text.
Not only this slows down the mdoc(7) processing significantly, but it also
has an undesired (in this case) effect of disabling hyphenation within the
entire enclosed block.
post-install config, reduce the potential confusion from the existence
of both configTTYs and configTtys by renaming configTTYs to
configEtcTtys. While this is not a C naming conflict, it was probably
a poor choice of names on my part.
into sadb_x_sa2_sequence from sadb_x_sa2_reserved3 in the sadb_x_sa2
structure. Also the output of setkey is changed. sequence number
of the sadb is replaced to the end of the output.
Obtained from: KAME
crash dumps, and make it use sysctl for all data retrievals in the
"live" case (i.e. when not using iostat on a crash dump).
Remove setgid kmem for the iostat executable, it is not needed any
more after these changes.
Reviewed by: ken
- clean_mtab():
Actually use the strdup'd version of the host that we go to the
trouble of creating.
- do_umntall/do_umount:
Don't return success if clnt_create() fails.
Don't access a client pointer after it has been destroyed.
Remember to destroy the authentication information we created.
crypto bits installed and/or NOCRYPTO/NO_OPENSSL is defined. This unfortunately
meants that usr.bin/chkey, usr.bin/newkey and usr.sbin/keyserv have also to
be disconnected.
IMO it is merely a workaround, the proper solution is to move libmp to
src/crypto where it belongs and use libgmp for the cryptoless builds instead.
Missed by: dd
Use '' quotes instead of `' to delimit names of files and packages in
warning and error messages, because it is easier to cut-n-paste name in
question that way (single click) without confusing the shell. And yes,
I know that it is less eye-candy...
MFC after: 1 month
some of the config problems that we've been seeing (where wi0 tries to
allocate 0x138-0x198, for example).
Use err(1,"foo") rather than perror + exit while I'm here.
system installation process. This allows users installing via serial
console to enable serial console login during the installation
process using an un-customized install. The user is not prompted to
modify /etc/ttys during a normal install, but is offered the
opportunity during post-install configuration.
- Introduce configTTYs(), which describes the benefits of editing
/etc/ttys, and asks for confirmation before spawning the editor.
- add configTTYs to the post-install configuration, as well as to
the global configuration index.
by providing the opportunity to edit inetd.conf during the system
installation process. The following modifications were made:
(1) Expand the Anonymous FTP description dialog to indicate that inetd
and ftpd must be enabled before it can be used.
(2) Introduce a new configInetd() pair of dialogs, the first describing
inetd, giving a couple of examples of services that require it, and
hinting at potential risk, then asking the user if they wish to
enable it. The second indicates that inetd.conf must be configured
to enabled specific services, and asks if the user would like to
load inetd.conf into the editor to modify it. Add this
configuration action to the index.
There are some further improvements that might be considered:
(1) Provide a more inetd.conf-specific configuration tool that speaks
inetd.conf(5). However, this is made difficult by the "yet another
configuration format" nature of inetd.conf, as well as its use of
commenting to disable services, rather than an in-syntax way to
disable a service without commenting it out. Submissions here
would probably be welcome.
(2) There's some overlap between settings in the somewhat obtuse
Security Profile mechanism and other settings, including the inetd
setting, and NFS server configuration. As features become
individually tunable, they should probably be removed from the
security profile mechanism. Otherwise, somewhat counter-intuitively,
sysinstall (in practice) queries multiple times whether inetd, nfsd,
etc, should be enabled/disabled. A possible future direction might
be to drive profiles not by degree of paranoia, rather, the set
of services desired. Or simply to remove the Security Profile
mechanism and resort to feature-driven configuration.
Reviewed by: imp, chris, jake, nate, -arch, -stable
When encryption (MPPE) is enabled, WindowsME and Windows98 both
fail because of the extra byte, suggesting that they autheticated
successfully in their log and then dropping the connection, telling
the user that the peer doesn't support compatible encryption
options.
MFC after: 1 week
byte of the packet to contain '\0'.
Windows 98 gets this wrong, dropping garbage into the last byte and
failing authentication.
Now, we notice this and whinge to our log file that we're compensating
for the corrupt data.
will soon return the irq from the pcic bridge in cases where't that's
appropriate.
Note: I've had to disbale -I option for the moment. I've made it easy
to reenable it for people that need it.
MFC After: soon!
doing PPPoE and the default MRU is therefore too big.
When negotiating with win2k, we ask for MRU 1492 and the win2k box
NAKs us saying ``MRU 1492''. This doesn't make sense to me. When
we continue to request MRU 1492, the win2k box eventually REJs our
MRU. This fix allows negotiations to continue at that point,
bringing the link up and potentially allowing the win2k box to send
us frames that are too large. AFAICT this is better than failing
to bring the link up.... probably !
I have no idea how to do the equivalent of ``route get'' or
``ifconfig -a'' under win2k, so I can't tell what MTU it actually
ends up using.
I believe the bug is in win2k (it's certainly mis-negotiating).
I'll MFC given the release engineers permission as code freeze
begins on August 1.
PR: 29277
MFC after: 3 days
inconsistently named "ptmp" and "etc_ptmp". This commit changes
it to "passwd_tmp" for consistency and to match OpenBSD's name
for the variable.
Consulted with: jedgar
once. If they repeat the request (again without the IPADDR option)
ACK it.
I've had reports that some ppp implementations will not assign
themselves an IP number. This should negotiate with such things.
MFC after: 3 days
When reading the code I had to stop, say "ok, what does *these*
modifications of strl*() do? Pull out grep. Oh, not in add/, maybe above
in ../lib/? Yep. So what do they do? Comments above them are misleading,
guess I'll have to read the code. Oh, they just test strl* against the
size and return the result of the test. Now I can continue to read the
code I was.
The uses of s_strl*() then test that result and errx()'s.
Lets think about the "optimized" code I am removing:
In general the compiler pushes the three args to strl* onto the stack and calls
s_strl*. s_strl* has to indirectly access 3 args from the stack. Then push
them on the stack a 2nd time for the real strl* call. s_strl* then pops the
return from strl* off the stack; or moves it from the register it was returned
in, to the register where tests can happen. s_strl* then pops the three
arguments to strl*. Perform the test, push the result of the test, or move it
from the result register to the return value register. The caller to s_strl*
now has to either pop the return value of s_strl* or move it from the return
value register to the test register. The caller then pops the three args to
s_strl* off the stack (the same args that s_strl* itself had to pop off after
the real call to strl*). The s_strl* caller then performs a simular test to
what has already been done, and conditionally jumps. By doing things this way, we've given the compiler optimizer less to work with.
Also, please don't forget the that call to s_strl* has possibly jumped to code
not in the cache due to being far away from the calling code, thus causing a
pipeline stall.
So where is the "optimization" from s_strl*?
It isn't code clarity.
It isn't code execution speed. It isn't code size either.