read-mode access to CD-ROM media in the worm(4) driver. No whistles
and bells yet, like all the CDIO* commands, but at least a start.
In order to do this, i had to slightly rearrange the semantics of an
open(2) on the worm driver: now, opening it with O_NONBLOCK set means
no actual IO operations will be intended but only ioctls are to be
processed. This mode is used by wormcontrol(8) to prepare a track
and/or session.
I have only been able to test this on a 2.2-GAMMA system by now, and
only the !DEVFS part is tested yet. Also, i have only done a dummy
burn so far, but wouldn't expect many surprises else. Report bugs to
me ASAP, if there's reasonable demand and i hear no objections, i
might consider merging it into the 2.2 branch as well.
everything that depends on this needs to be doc as well. Maybe they
doc tools should be split out into a separate distribution, but until
that decision is made, at least keep them together.
affect programs that sit on top of divert(4) sockets. The
multicast routing code already unconditionally zeros the sum
before recalculating.
Any code that unconditionaly sums a packet without first zeroing
the sum (assuming that it's already zero'd) will break. No such
code seems to exist.
- Fix the bug with URIs of the form ftp://host/filename.
- Fix some more string-termination bugs in util.c.
- Use safe_malloc() rather than testing the return value of
regular malloc() in 15 places.
- Implement HTTP authentication, for both servers and proxies.
Currently only ``basic'' authentication is supported; This Is A Bug
(but less of one tjhan nmot supporting any authentication).
I think there is only one more feature which is required for full
HTTP/1.1 support, which is Transfer-Encoding: chunked; this should
not be toohard, but it isn't very important, either.
server to bind to. This works until you send it a SIGHUP with a
new service defined ... the new service is bound to INADDR_ANY.
This patch fixes this bug (in both RELENG_2_2 and -current).
This is a 2.2 candidate..(i.e. pure bug fix)
Submitted by: Archie Cobbs (archie@whistle.com)
There is still some debate if this is yet the proper way to handle
<sys/param.h>, but this is certainly closer than what I had to start with.
Submitted by: Warner Losh <imp@village.org>
This parameter is intended to allow new kernels to work with old LKM binaries,
provided the revision ID is incremented whenever the PCI LKM interface is
changed. The revision ID does not at all protect against changes in data
structures accesses by the driver.