In the struct passed to SHCreateFromDesktop the fourth field is the parameter that later on will be passed to ShowWindow. Initialize it properly so that when we run filrbrowser.exe in win2k3 the main window won't be hidden.
-Rename StartMenuBtnCtxMenuCreator to CStartMenuBtnCtxMenu_CreateInstance.
-Rename CreateStartMenuSite to CStartMenuSite_CreateInstance.
-Remove a couple of definitions that were not used.
NtTerminateProcess just queues an apc in every thread of the target process which in turn kills each thread. We need to wait so that all processes have enough time to exit before shutting down.
Extracted from the pci.ids database at https://pci-ids.ucw.cz/ from 2018-11-21 03:15:02 .
Maintained by Albert Pool, Martin Mares, Michal Vaner, and other volunteers from the PCI ID Project.
Before taking any default action if there is no timeout, check whether
the supplied key filter callback function may handle a specific user
keypress. If it does, the menu timeout is cancelled.
This allows e.g. handling F8 press for displaying boot options even when
the timeout is zero.
CORE-14046
Matching the existence of Eclipse CDT ignore rules, .vscode should also be added to .gitignore
Visual Studio Code is always eager to create settings.json file there.
- Cache the RootFcb so that its cleanup can be handled separately
during dismounting.
- Force volume dismount at cleanup if the VCB_DISMOUNT_PENDING flag
is set.
- Actually dismount a volume if its VCB has been flagged as not good,
or if we force dismounting.
NOTE: In their *CheckForDismount() function, our 3rd-party FS drivers
as well as MS' fastfat, perform a comparison check of the current VCB's
VPB ReferenceCount with some sort of "dangling"/"residual" open count.
It seems to be related to the fact that the volume root directory as
well as auxiliary data stream(s) are still opened, and only these are
allowed to be opened at that moment. After analysis it appears that for
the ReactOS' fastfat, this number is equal to "3".
- On dismounting, cleanup and destroy the RootFcb, VolumeFcb and the
FATFileObject. Then cleanup the SpareVPB or the IoVPB members, and
finish by removing the dismounted volume from the VolumeListEntry
and cleaning up the notify synchronization object and the resources.
- During dismounting, and on shutdown, flush the volume before
resetting its dirty bit.
- On shutdown, after volume flushing, try to unmount it without forcing.
- Release the VCB resources only when we actually dismount the volume
in VfatCheckForDismount().
- Initialize first the notify list and the synchronization object,
before sending the FSRTL_VOLUME_MOUNT notification.
- If we failed at mounting a volume but its VCB's FATFileObject was
already initialized, first call CcUninitializeCacheMap() on it
before dereferencing it.
- Send FSRTL_VOLUME_LOCK, FSRTL_VOLUME_LOCK_FAILED and
FSRTL_VOLUME_UNLOCK notifications during volume locking (and failure)
and volume unlocking.
- Flush the volume before locking it, and clean its dirty bit if needed.
NOTE: In addition to checking for VCB_CLEAR_DIRTY, we also check for the
presence of the VCB_IS_DIRTY flag before cleaning up the dirty bit: this
allows us to not re-clean the bit if it has been previously cleaned.
This is needed for instance in this scenario:
- The volume is locked (it gets flushed and the dirty bit is possibly cleared);
- The volume then gets formatted with a completely different FS, that
possibly clears up the first sector (e.g. BTRFS ignores 1st sector);
- The volume is then dismounted: if we didn't check whether VCB_IS_DIRTY
was set prior to resetting it, we could attempt clearing it again! But
now that the volume's filesystem has been completely changed, we would
then try to modify the dirty bit on an erroneous position on disk!
That's why it should not be touched in this case during dismounting.
- The volume is unlocked (same comment as above), and later can be
detected as being BTRFS.