If your only going to allow one allocator to be used and it is defined
at compile time there is no point including the others in the build.
This patch could/should be refined for Linux to make the metaslab
configurable at run time. That might be a bit tricky however since
you would need to quiese all IO. Short of that making it configurable
as a module load option would be a reasonable compromise.
In the linux kernel 'current' is defined to mean the current process
and can never be used as a local variable in a function. Simply
replace all usage of 'current' with 'curr' in this function.
This is a portability change which removes the dependence of the Solaris
thread library. All locations where Solaris thread API was used before
have been replaced with equivilant Solaris kernel style thread calls.
In user space the kernel style threading API is implemented in term of
the portable pthreads library. This includes all threads, mutexs,
condition variables, reader/writer locks, and taskqs.
Updated fix to detect if we are in an interrupt and only sleep if it
is safe to do some. I guess it must be safe to sleep under Solaris
this must be handled in a sort interrupt handler there
Upstream they modified the ioctl code so we need to make similiar
updates since we modify the API ourselves to always pass a pointer
to file pointer around. This allows us to track per file handle
state which is used by the zevent code.
Almost exclusively this patch handled the addition of another char
array to the zfs_cmd_t structure. Unfortunately c90 doesn't allow
zero filling the entire struct with the '= { 0 };' shorthand.
Originally these changes were on other gcc-* topic branches but
because c90 touches the same bit of code and I'd like to keep all
the gcc-* branches completely parallel I've moved these few bits
over here. This is one of the downsides of not just having one
big patch stack.
Fix new instances or changes in gcc flagged unused code. These are
mostly related to variables which are not used when debugging is
disabled and the ASSERTs are compiled out.