Searched hist:283538 (Results 1 - 15 of 15) sorted by relevance
/freebsd-11-stable/sys/net80211/ | ||
H A D | ieee80211_rssadapt.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_tdma.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_amrr.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_scan_sw.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_hostap.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_freebsd.h | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_scan_sta.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_sta.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_ioctl.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_freebsd.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_proto.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_mesh.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_input.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_node.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
H A D | ieee80211_output.c | diff 283538 Mon May 25 17:24:05 MDT 2015 adrian Convert malloc/free back to #define's, as part of OS portability work. DragonflyBSD uses the FreeBSD wireless stack and drivers. Their malloc() API is named differently, so they don't have userland/kernel symbol clashes like we do (think libuinet.) So, to make it easier for them and to port to other BSDs/other operating systems, start hiding the malloc specific bits behind defines in ieee80211_freebsd.h. DragonflyBSD can now put these portability defines in their local ieee80211_dragonflybsd.h. This should be a great big no-op for everyone running wifi. TODO: * kill M_WAITOK - some platforms just don't want you to use it * .. and/or handle it returning NULL rather than waiting forever. * MALLOC_DEFINE() ? * Migrate the well-known malloc names (eg M_TEMP) to net80211 namespace defines. |
Completed in 370 milliseconds