on descriptors, this can be achieved thanks to the new getdtablecount()
system call. application may provide a reserve count to ensure that the
recvmsg() call is not called when they don't have enough descriptors to
work properly.
change the API so that transient errors that can be retried immediately
are retried within the function right away, whereas transient errors for
which the application may want to take action will set errno to EAGAIN.
ok deraadt@ and henning@
preventing them being locally allocated as dynamic ports.
If AMT is configured with the same IP address as the host (and, in
the case of redirection/https ports, if the relevant feature is
enabled), it will steal packets sent to its ports.
ok mikeb@. kettenis@ thinks it's probably a good idea.
and valloc() are not in the current version, while posix_memalign() mkstemp(),
and mkdtemp() are, and setstate()'s argument has lost a bogus 'const'.
ok millert@ jmc@ espie@ kettenis@; ports build testing by naddy@
These are useful if you're behind a bad nat with short timeouts as often
found in airport lounges and hotels. If the keepalives fail because the
network goes away (moving out of wireless reception, swapping cables etc)
your connections are more likely to drop so this is a double-edged sword.
ok henning@
* strptime(3) was introduced in XPG 4.0
* clock_gettime(3) and friends were introduced in 1003.1b-1993
* asctime_r(3) and friends were introduced in 1003.1c-1995
and conditionally provide prototypes and associated types accordingly.
This makes our <time.h> standards compliant except for some functions that are
still missing.
ok guenther@
friends in <time.h>. The kernel needs access to the associated #defines, but
can't get them from <time.h>, so introduce a new header <sys/_time.h> and
include that from <time.h> for userland and <sys/time.h> for the kernel.
ok matthew@, guenther@, millert@
explaining of "what a C string is", and make it more clear that these
functiosn BEHAVE EXACTLY LIKE snprintf with "%s"! (anyone who wants
to write a 'strlcpy considered harmful' paper should probably write a
'strlcpy and snprintf considered harmful' paper instead).
note to those from other projects reading this commit message: It would
be very good if this new manual was picked up in your project.
ok jmc millert krw
(IP20, IP22, IP24) in 64-bit mode, adapated from NetBSD. Currently limited
to headless operation, input and video drivers will get ported soon.
Should work on all R4000, R4440 and R5000 based systems. L2 cache on R5000SC
Indy not supported yet (coming soon), R4600 not supported yet either (coming
soon as well).
Tested to boot multiuser on: Indigo2 R4000SC, Indy R4000PC, Indy R4000SC,
Indy R5000SC, Indigo2 R4400SC. There are still glitches in the Ethernet driver
which are being looked at.
Expansion support is limited to the GIO E++ board; GIO boards with PCI-GIO
bridges not ported yet due to the lack of hardware, and this kind of driver
does not port blindly.
Most of this work comes from NetBSD, polishing and integration work, as well
as putting as many ``R4x00 in 64-bit mode'' erratas as necessary, by yours
truly.
More work is coming, as well as trying to get some easy way to boot install
kernels (as older PROM can only boot ECOFF binaries, which won't do for the
kernel).