for the AN985 "Centaur" chip, which is apparently the next genetation
of the "Comet." The AN985 is also a tulip clone and is similar to the
AL981 except that it uses a 99C66 EEPROM and a serial MII interface
(instead of direct access to the PHY registers).
Also updated various documentation to mention the AN985 and created
a loadable module.
I don't think there are any cards that use this chip on the market yet:
the datasheet I got from ADMtek has boxes with big X's in them where the
diagrams should be, and the sample boards I got have chips without any
artwork on them.
manpage does not describe the builtin wait command provided by either
of the standard shells. There is already an entry for wait.1 in the
builtins.1 MLINKS list.
commit and those which cause ugly nroff output have been fixed, since
the purpose of the style guideline which they contravene is to reduce
the sizes of deltas.
Reported by: bde
reference vfs_check_export
change license to my own, (ok'd by dfr) and remove advert clause.
remove extra Id tags and emacs cruft, this should be a fresh file.
VFS_CHECKEXP.9, now used to check export credentials
VFS_FHTOVP.9, only used for filehandle to vnode, no access checks are done.
VFS.9, inform people of the vfs_std* functions available to avoid
ugly casts to eopnotsup and making of dummy functions to return 0.
* Consistently misspell built-in as builtin.
* Add a builtin(1) manpage and create builtin(1) MLINKS for all shell
builtin commands for which no standalone utility exists. These MLINKS
replace those that were created for csh(1).
* Add appropriate xrefs for builtin(1) to the csh(1) and sh(1) manpages,
as well as to the manpages of standalone utilities which are supported
as shell builtin commands in at least one of the shells. In such
manpages, explain that similar functionality may be provided as a
shell builtin command.
* Improve sh(1)'s description of the cd builtin command. Csh(1) already
describes it adequately. Replace the cd(1) manpage with a builtin(1)
MLINKS link.
* Clean up some mdoc problems: use Xr instead of literal "foo(n)"; use
Ic instead of Xr for shell builtin commands.
* Undo English contractions.
Reviewed by: mpp, rgrimes
2) s/MODLOAD/KMODLOAD/ to be consistent with the rest of the variables
(KMOD, KMODOWN, KMODGRP, etc) and definition of MODLOAD/UNLOAD in the
Makefile of the ATAPI module
3) textual fixups
the Davicom DM9100 and DM9102 chipsets, including the Jaton Corporation
XPressNet. Datasheet is available from www.davicom8.com.
The DM910x chips are still more tulip clones. The API is reproduced
pretty faithfully, unfortunately the performance is pretty bad. The
transmitter seems to have a lot of problems DMAing multi-fragment
packets. The only way to make it work reliably is to coalesce transmitted
packets into a single contiguous buffer. The Linux driver (written by
Davicom) actually does something similar to this. I can't recomment this
NIC as anything more than a "connectivity solution."
This driver uses newbus and miibus and is supported on both i386
and alpha platforms.
SiS 900 and SiS 7016 PCI fast ethernet chipsets. Full manuals for the
SiS chips can be found at www.sis.com.tw.
This is a fairly simple chipset. The receiver uses a 128-bit multicast
hash table and single perfect entry for the station address. Transmit and
receive DMA and FIFO thresholds are easily tuneable. Documentation is
pretty decent and performance is not bad, even on my crufty 486. This
driver uses newbus and miibus and is supported on both the i386 and
alpha architectures.
Add back "src-eBones" to "cvs-supfile" and "secure-cvs-supfile".
Even though the eBones tree is disused, it still has files in the
repository. People fetching the repository might want them.
It's not supported any more. It was never ported to CAM, and that
functionality has been taken over by the da driver. So the man page can be
removed.
Reviewed by: ken
PCI fast ethernet controller. Currently, the only card I know that uses
this chip is the D-Link DFE-550TX. (Don't ask me where to buy these: the
only cards I have are samples sent to me by D-Link.)
This driver is the first to make use of the miibus code once I'm sure
it all works together nicely, I'll start converting the other drivers.
The Sundance chip is a clone of the 3Com 3c90x Etherlink XL design
only with its own register layout. Support is provided for ifmedia,
hardware multicast filtering, bridging and promiscuous mode.
- increase the default timeout from 10 seconds to 60 seconds
- add a new kernel option, SCSI_PT_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT, that lets users specify
the default timeout for the pt driver to use
- add two new ioctls, one to get the timeout for a given pt device, the
other to set the timeout for a given pt device. The idea is that
userland applications using the device can set the timeout to suit their
purposes. The ioctls are defined in a new header file, sys/ptio.h
PR: 10266
Reviewed by: gibbs, joerg
- Sort xrefs
- FreeBSD.ORG -> FreeBSD.org
- Be consistent with section names as outlined in mdoc(7).
- Other misc mdoc cleanup.
PR: doc/13144
Submitted by: Alexey M. Zelkin <phantom@cris.net>
of the AUTHORS section in mdoc.samples(7) to document how the
authors name should be specified.
PR: docs/13131
Pointed out by: Alexey M. Zelkin <phantom@cris.net>
> The route(4) manpage says:
>
> User processes can obtain information about the routing entry to a spe-
> cific destination by using a RTM_GET message, or by reading the /dev/kmem
> device, or by issuing a getkerninfo(2) system call.
>
> IMHO, the above sentence should probably be altered by replacing the
> first comma with a period, and throwing away the rest of it.
No one's objected, so I've made this change. This sort of fixes docs/12220,
by removing the reference to the undocumented getkerninfo(2) call. So I'll
close the PR as well.
PR: docs/12220
other typos, ~four grammar gnits, an ironic case of incorrect
parallelization, bad capitalization, an incorrect use of the
infamous slash ('/'), and an unclear sentence.
did not specify an exit code. This implies the use of either a hand-
rolled err() (Bruce's suggestion) or a random error code (my suggestion),
both of which are against the style guidelines. This commit specifies
the correct error code (implicitly). This also changes the error message
to be a little more helpful.
Specifically intended for removing -fschg ("INSTALLFLAGS_EDIT=:S/schg/uchg/")
this makes the NOFSCHG flag redundant. NOFSCHG will still be honoured by
bsd.lib.mk but is valid for buildworld only. NOFSCHG is still implemented in
the old way (ie. _not_ ".if NOFSCHG then { INSTALLFLAGS_EDIT+=:S/schg/,/ }"
to emphasize the fact that NOFSCHG is only supported in a limited
fashion and for buildworld.
The interface and implementation are such that future use of flags such
as sappnd can also be easily removed or altered (perhaps to uappnd).
This commit brought to you by the letters B, D, and E, and the numbers six,
one, thirteen, and three.
- device_print_child() either lets the BUS_PRINT_CHILD
method produce the entire device announcement message or
it prints "foo0: not found\n"
Alter sys/kern/subr_bus.c:bus_generic_print_child() to take on
the previous behavior of device_print_child() (printing the
"foo0: <FooDevice 1.1>" bit of the announce message.)
Provide bus_print_child_header() and bus_print_child_footer()
to actually print the output for bus_generic_print_child().
These functions should be used whenever possible (unless you can
just use bus_generic_print_child())
The BUS_PRINT_CHILD method now returns int instead of void.
Modify everything else that defines or uses a BUS_PRINT_CHILD
method to comply with the above changes.
- Devices are 'on' a bus, not 'at' it.
- If a custom BUS_PRINT_CHILD method does the same thing
as bus_generic_print_child(), use bus_generic_print_child()
- Use device_get_nameunit() instead of both
device_get_name() and device_get_unit()
- All BUS_PRINT_CHILD methods return the number of
characters output.
Reviewed by: dfr, peter
Prompted by docs/12343, in which people seemed to get a little confused.
The original text in the file said:
[...]
# By default we use COM1 as our serial console port *if* we're going to use
# a serial port as our console at all. (0x3E8 = COM2)
#
#BOOT_COMCONSOLE_PORT= 0x3F8
[...]
From what I can make out, some people have assumed that means that if
they just uncomment the BOOT_COMCONSOLE_PORT then it will use COM2:
These same people then assume that "0x3F8" on that line is a typo for
"0x3E8".
What it actually means is that if you uncomment the line then the default
stays as "Ox3F8" (COM1:), and that you have to uncomment the line, *and*
change the value of the variable in order to use COM2:.
So I've made that a little bit clearer. I've also listed the hex values
for COM1: thru COM4:, snarfed from sys/isa/isareg.h.
PR: docs/12343
Submitted by: Bill Grunfelder <wjgrun@dippy.cyberwar.com>
Originally submitted by: Wayne Self <wself@cdrom.com>
Allow a ppp startup option in rc.conf.
Adjust sysinstall so that it appends to the end of ppp.conf
and uses the generated profile to start ppp in auto mode on
boot.
Submitted by: Josef L. Karthauser <joe@uk.FreeBSD.org>
ethernet controllers based on the AIC-6915 "Starfire" controller chip.
There are single port, dual port and quad port cards, plus one 100baseFX
card. All are 64-bit PCI devices, except one single port model.
The Starfire would be a very nice chip were it not for the fact that
receive buffers have to be longword aligned. This requires buffer
copying in order to achieve proper payload alignment on the alpha.
Payload alignment is enforced on both the alpha and x86 platforms.
The Starfire has several different DMA descriptor formats and transfer
mechanisms. This driver uses frame descriptors for transmission which
can address up to 14 packet fragments, and a single fragment descriptor
for receive. It also uses the producer/consumer model and completion
queues for both transmit and receive. The transmit ring has 128
descriptors and the receive ring has 256.
This driver supports both FreeBSD/i386 and FreeBSD/alpha, and uses newbus
so that it can be compiled as a loadable kernel module. Support for BPF
and hardware multicast filtering is included.
track.
The $Id$ line is normally at the bottom of the main comment block in the
man page, separated from the rest of the manpage by an empty comment,
like so;
.\" $Id$
.\"
If the immediately preceding comment is a @(#) format ID marker than the
the $Id$ will line up underneath it with no intervening blank lines.
Otherwise, an additional blank line is inserted.
Approved by: bde
track.
The $Id$ line is normally at the bottom of the main comment block in the
man page, separated from the rest of the manpage by an empty comment,
like so;
.\" $Id$
.\"
If the immediately preceding comment is a @(#) format ID marker than the
the $Id$ will line up underneath it with no intervening blank lines.
Otherwise, an additional blank line is inserted.
Approved by: bde
gigabit ethernet adapters. This includes two single port cards
(single mode and multimode fiber) and two dual port cards (also single
mode and multimode fiber). SysKonnect is currently the only
vendor with a dual port gigabit ethernet NIC.
The ports on dual port adapters are treated as separate network
interfaces. Thus, if you have an SK-9844 dual port SX card, you
should have both sk0 and sk1 interfaces attached. Dual port cards
are implemented using two XMAC II chips connected to a single
SysKonnect GEnesis controller. Hence, dual port cards are really
one PCI device, as opposed to two separate PCI devices connected
through a PCI to PCI bridge. Note that SysKonnect's drivers use
the two ports for failover purposes rather that as two separate
interfaces, plus they don't support jumbo frames. This applies to
their Linux driver too. :)
Support is provided for hardware multicast filtering, BPF and
jumbo frames. The SysKonnect cards support TCP checksum offload
however this feature is not currently enabled (hopefully it will
be once we get checksum offload support).
There are still a few things that need to be implemeted, like
the ability to communicate with the on-board LM80 voltage/temperature
monitor, but I wanted to get the driver under CVS control and into
-current so people could bang on it.
A big thanks for SysKonnect for making all their programming info
for these cards (and for their FDDI and token ring cards) available
without NDA (see www.syskonnect.com).
-DNOFSCHG disables installation of libs with flag schg
GAMEGRP change the group with which games are installed
also organize the binary section into alphebetical order some what..
section. Update some descriptions of the various sections to
reflect that they are valid for section 9 man pages. Add a table
of section numbers and what they are used for.
Don't document non-bugs in the BUGS section, or anywhere else. It
is not a bug to drop data when overloaded. The compile-time tuning
options turned out to be not very useful, and aren't supported
offically.
Documented the not so new option CY_PCI_FASTINTR.
to implement multi-link ppp over more than one ISP with
the ability to lose ISPs without loss of connectivity.
It *requires* that you either have administrative access
to a machine that's already connected to the 'net or at
least know a really nice person that does.
(QIC) written under 2.X may not be easily read under the current
driver without explicitly setting to variable mode or to the blocksize
these tapes were written under 2.X with.
PR: 6681
similar to the PNIC I (supported by the pn driver). In fact, it's really
a Macronix 98715A with wake on LAN support added. According to LinkSys,
the PNIC II was jointly developed by Lite-On and Macronis. I get the
feeling Macronix did most of the work. (The datasheet has the Macronix
logo on it, and is in fact nearly identical to the 98715 datasheet, except
for the extra wake on LAN registers.) In any case, the PNIC II works just
fine with the Macronix driver.
The changes are:
- Move PCI ID for the PNIC II from the pn driver to the mx driver.
- Mention PNIC II support in mx.4.
- Mention PNIC II support in RELNOTES.TXT and HARDWARE.TXT.
- Mention that the 6Mbps turbo adapters are supported in HARDWARE.TXT
and RELNOTES.TXT and the wi.4 man page
- Mention turbo adapters in the wicontrol.8 man page and provide a
complete table of available transmit speed settings
ADMtek AL981 "Comet" chipset. The AL981 is yet another DEC tulip clone,
except with simpler receive filter options. The AL981 has a built-in
transceiver, power management support, wake on LAN and flow control.
This chip performs extremely well; it's on par with the ASIX chipset
in terms of speed, which is pretty good (it can do 11.5MB/sec with TCP
easily).
I would have committed this driver sooner, except I ran into one problem
with the AL981 that required a workaround. When the chip is transmitting
at full speed, it will sometimes wedge if you queue a series of packets
that wrap from the end of the transmit descriptor list back to the
beginning. I can't explain why this happens, and none of the other tulip
clones behave this way. The workaround this is to just watch for the end
of the transmit ring and make sure that al_start() breaks out of its
packet queuing loop and waiting until the current batch of transmissions
completes before wrapping back to the start of the ring. Fortunately, this
does not significantly impact transmit performance.
This is one of those things that takes weeks of analysis just to come
up with two or three lines of code changes.
is likely the intent of the original author since no other places use
tabs.
Sync us.unix.kdb to us.iso.kbd. It should now only swap ESC and `~,
bs and delete, control and caps lock and make no other changes from
us.iso.kdb.
adapter (and some workalikes). Also add man pages and a wicontrol
utility to manipulate some of the card parameters.
This driver was written using information gleaned from the Lucent HCF Light
library, though it does not use any of the HCF Light code itself, mainly
because it's contaminated by the GPL (but also because it's pretty gross).
The HCF Light lacks certain featurs from the full (but proprietary) HCF
library, including 802.11 frame encapsulation support, however it has
just enough register information about the Hermes chip to allow someone
with enough spare time and energy to implement a proper driver. (I would
have prefered getting my hands on the Hermes manual, but that's proprietary
too. For those who are wondering, the Linux driver uses the proprietary
HCF library, but it's provided in object code form only.)
Note that I do not have access to a WavePOINT access point, so I have
only been able to test ad-hoc mode. The wicontrol utility can turn on
BSS mode, but I don't know for certain that the NIC will associate with
an access point correctly. Testers are encouraged to send their results
to me so that I can find out if I screwed up or not.
are from 3.x-stable which was branched quite some time after 3.0-release
(about Jan 15 if I recall correctly).
----> FreeBSD-3.0-----\----- FreeBSD-4.x-current -----....
\
3.x-stable ----> 3.1 ---> 3.2 ....
Submitted by: peter
Added upcoming releases FreeBSD 3.2, NetBSD 1.3, OpenBSD 2.5
NetBSD 1.2.1 is a patch release of NetBSD 1.2 (a branch of 1.2)
NetBSD 1.3.1, 1.3.2, 1.3.3 are a patch release of NetBSD 1.3 (a branch of 1.3).
FreeBSD 3.0, FreeBSD 3.1 and FreeBSD 3.2 are a releases
from the 3.0-stable branch.
Added FreeBSD 4.0-current.
Added FreeBSD 3.1 release date.
This is a seriously beefed up chroot kind of thing. The process
is jailed along the same lines as a chroot does it, but with
additional tough restrictions imposed on what the superuser can do.
For all I know, it is safe to hand over the root bit inside a
prison to the customer living in that prison, this is what
it was developed for in fact: "real virtual servers".
Each prison has an ip number associated with it, which all IP
communications will be coerced to use and each prison has its own
hostname.
Needless to say, you need more RAM this way, but the advantage is
that each customer can run their own particular version of apache
and not stomp on the toes of their neighbors.
It generally does what one would expect, but setting up a jail
still takes a little knowledge.
A few notes:
I have no scripts for setting up a jail, don't ask me for them.
The IP number should be an alias on one of the interfaces.
mount a /proc in each jail, it will make ps more useable.
/proc/<pid>/status tells the hostname of the prison for
jailed processes.
Quotas are only sensible if you have a mountpoint per prison.
There are no privisions for stopping resource-hogging.
Some "#ifdef INET" and similar may be missing (send patches!)
If somebody wants to take it from here and develop it into
more of a "virtual machine" they should be most welcome!
Tools, comments, patches & documentation most welcome.
Have fun...
Sponsored by: http://www.rndassociates.com/
Run for almost a year by: http://www.servetheweb.com/
transceiver. Note in the manual page that autoselection doesn't
work on the 82c168 because the built-in NWAY support is horribly
broken. Manual mode selection works fine, but autoneg is broken for
everything except maybe 10Mbps half-duplex. There's no simple way
to fix this at the moment, so I have to settle for documenting the
bug for now. Fortunately, there aren't anywhere near as many 82c168
boards around as there are 82c169s.
I changed to "Christopher G. Demetriou" since the page appears to be a
revision of lkm(4).
PR: docs/8611
Submitted by: Rajesh Vaidheeswarran <rv@fore.com>
Networks Tigon 1 and Tigon 2 chipsets. There are a _lot_ of OEM'ed
gigabit ethernet adapters out there which use the Alteon chipset so
this driver covers a fair amount of hardware. I know that it works with
the Alteon AceNIC, 3Com 3c985 and Netgear GA620, however it should also
work with the DEC/Compaq EtherWORKS 1000, Silicon Graphics Gigabit
ethernet board, NEC Gigabit Ethernet board and maybe even the IBM and
and Sun boards. The Netgear board is the cheapest (~$350US) but still
yields fairly good performance.
Support is provided for jumbo frames with all adapters (just set the
MTU to something larger than 1500 bytes), as well as hardware multicast
filtering and vlan tagging (in conjunction with the vlan support in
-current, which I should merge into -stable soon). There are some hooks
for checksum offload support, but they're turned off for now since
FreeBSD doesn't have an officially sanctioned way to support checksum
offloading (yet).
I have not added the 'device ti0' entry to GENERIC since the driver
with all the firmware compiled in is quite large, and it doesn't really
fit into the category of generic hardware.
/usr/sbin/sysctl -> ${DESTDIR}/sbin/sysctl in some versions of 2.2,
and this link was broken if DESTDIR was set.
Added a SYMLINKS macro. This works the same as LINKS, except it
creates symlinks and the linked-to pathname may be relative. This
is more flexible than LN_FLAGS, since it supports installing
symlinks independently of hard links.
Use `ln -f[s] ...' instead of `rm -f ...; ln [-s] ...' for LINKS and
SYMLINKS. This is equivalent if the target is neither a directory nor
a symlink to a directory.
PR: 8279
kernel and userland modules.
Describe the superdevice method of ensuring that people at least
recognize the problem if they run into a debug synchronization problem.
it up on exit. The address for attaching the emulator (path, target id,
lun) is now specified on the command line. Some attempt at cathing
signals and cleaning up target mode instances is now made.
Describe /dev/vinum/control*
Describe drive "referenced" state.
Remove warning about kldunload; it seems to work now.
Still more descriptions of how to debug things.
AX88140A with power management and magic packet support. Correct the
addresses of the PCI power management registers and add some code to
detect the revision ID of the AX88141 and identify it in the probe
messages.
No other changes are needed since the AX88141 is functionally
identical to the AX88140A.
the peer demands authentication, and add some more detail to the
example configurations.
This is the first time I've written any TCL, so I'd appreciate it
if someone eyeballed the *-auth stuff and fixed any glaring problems.
- Add syscons.4.
If there still are errors, whether technical or grammatical, they are
entirely mine, not the reviewers'.
Reviewed by: sos, jkh, archie, Nick Hilliard <nick@iol.ie>
peripheral drivers can determine where in the devstat(9) list they are
inserted.
This requires recompilation of libdevstat, systat, vmstat, rpc.rstatd, and
any ports that depend on the devstat code, since the size of the devstat
structure has changed. The devstat version number has been incremented as
well to reflect the change.
This sorts devices in the devstat list in "more interesting" to "less
interesting" order. So, for instance, da devices are now more important
than floppy drives, and so will appear before floppy drives in the default
output from systat, iostat, vmstat, etc.
The order of devices is, for now, kept in a central table in devicestat.h.
If individual drivers were able to make a meaningful decision on what
priority they should be at attach time, we could consider splitting the
priority information out into the various drivers. For now, though, they
have no way of knowing that, so it's easier to put them in an easy to find
table.
Also, move the checkversion() call in vmstat(8) to a more logical place.
Thanks to Bruce and David O'Brien for suggestions, for reviewing this, and
for putting up with the long time it has taken me to commit it. Bruce did
object somewhat to the central priority table (he would rather the
priorities be distributed in each driver), so his objection is duly noted
here.
Reviewed by: bde, obrien
Russian zones/rules in rev.1.12. ache objected mainly to the changes
in the Moscow zone names in rev.1.11 and those changes have been backed
out in the vendor branch.
Reviewed by: ache
and Racore 8148 adapters are now supported by the ThunderLAN driver.
The 8165 is just a plain vanilla 10/100 card; the 8148 is a 'multi-
personality' adapter which can support 10baseT, 100baseTX and 100baseFX
if you include the proper modules.
Also update the tl man page to mention the Racore cards.
is not implied by -Wall as claimed by gcc.1. Adding it causes a
measly 7193 new warnings for LINT, mostly for "unused parameter" and
"comparison between signed and unsigned".
- The numpad * key should always generate *.
- The numpad - is fkey52 and should not generate a control code (0x1f).
- The numpad 5 is fkey54, not fkey61.
- The numpad 6 is fkey55 and should not generate a control code (0x1e).
- Fix Spanish keymap.
PR: i386/9532
Submitted by jose@we.lc.ehu.es.
- Added Croatian keymap. It is the same as the Slovenian keymap.
PR: misc/9706
Pointed out by: Damjan Marion
- Addef Finnish keymap. It is the same as the Swedish keymap.
PR: bin/9632
Submitted by: Martti Kuparinen
- Assign special functions consistently in all keymap files.
101 keyboard 84 keyboard function
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ctrl-Alt-Delete Ctrl-Alt-Delete reboot
Ctrl-Alt-Esc Ctrl-Alt-Esc debug
Ctrl-Alt-Space Ctrl-Alt-Space susp
ScrollLock ScrollLock slock
PrintScreen Shift-(Numpad *)/PrintScreen nscr
Ctrl-PrintScreen Shift-Ctrl-(Numpad *)/PrintScreen debug
Alt-PrintScreen/SysRq SysRq nop
Pause Ctrl-NumLock slock
Shift-Pause Shift-Ctrl-NumLock saver
Alt-Pause Alt-Ctrl-NumLock susp
Ctrl-Pause/Break Ctrl-ScrollLock/Break nop
Left W*ndow key NA fkey62
Right W*ndow key NA fkey63
Menu NA fkey64
NOTE: us.unix.kbd and us.emacs.kbd are very much different from the
other keymaps, thus, I didn't touch them.
There are only skeletons left here; they merely serve as a backup to
include the real versions under ${PORTSDIR}/Mk while we update the ports
tree to include them directly.
<bsd.libnames.mk> is included regardless of the object file format.
This is needed to fix the a.out PAM breakage that manifests itself
when trying to build login.
of important changes to European and South and Central American countries
which should be back-ported to 3.x.
Obtained from: ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/tzdata1999a.tar.gz
This should be merged into RELENG_3 and a similar patch may be needed
for RELENG_2_2, should that deemed necessary.
Make world succeeded with these patches in my tree.
Submitted by: "Kaleb S. KEITHLEY" <kaleb@ics.com>
When linking statically, LIBPAM is augmented with the extra libraries
that the PAM modules require. The idea is to centralize this
information rather than scattering it about in the Makefiles of
all the applications that use (OK, will use) PAM.
There is a new variable MINUSLPAM that should be used instead of
"-lpam". In the static case, it gets -l flags for the extra required
libraries.
This approach was suggested by <bde>, but he didn't actually review
my changes.
building dlopen-able modules, and add features needed to build a
static PAM library. I think I cleaned it up some, too, but beauty
is in the eye of the beholder.
You can now build a shared library without version numbers, by
defining SHLIB_NAME to something like "pam_unix.so". If SHLIB_MAJOR
and/or SHLIB_MINOR are set, SHLIB_NAME gets the usual default value,
but it can be overridden if desired. If none of these symbols are
set, no shared library is built.
SHLIB_LINK controls the name of the symbolic link that points to
the library. If it is unset, no link is made. In the usual case,
it gets the right default: e.g., "libc.so" for ELF, nothing for
a.out. This can be overridden.
STATICOBJS can be set to a list of extra object files that should
be added to the static library but not to the shared library.
These objects are added to the profiled library too.
These changes should make it easy to use <bsd.lib.mk> for building
things such as PAM modules and dynamic linkers, for which <bsd.prog.mk>
has been abused until now.
languages (en = English, de = German, zn = Chinese, and so on). This
complements the existing iso3166 file, which maps codes to countries.
Country code != language code.
I ran this past -core. No one voiced any objections, jkh said "fine".
The Eighth Edition is *not* descended from the Seventh Edition.
Submitted by: Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
and Dennis Ritchie
Here's a quote from Dennis Ritchie, posted to Warren Toomey:
[January 1999]
----- Forwarded message from dmr -----
I also got mail from Norman Wilson today about the discussion.
This is mainly to confirm and fill out details of Wilson's account.
The Eighth Edition system started with (I believe) BSD 4.1c and
the work was done on VAX 11/750s -- our group did not get
a 780 until a while later.
Most of the operating system superstructure of BSD was retained
(in particular no one (even the indefatigable Norman)
wanted to get much into the paging code. Norman is also
right that the competitor was John Reiser's (and Tom London's)
32V descendant from another group at the Labs. In structure
this system had a lot to offer (in particular the buffer cache and the page
pool were unified, but it was clear that their work was not being
supported by their own management. It was used for a while on
our first 750 and also our first 11/780 ("alice", a name that lives
in netnews fame preceding the reach of Dejanews).
The big change leading to V8 was the scooping-out and replacement of
the character-device and networking part by the streams mechanism. Later,
Peter Weinberger added the file-system switch that enabled
remote file systems and prescient things ideas like /proc). Weinberger,
as Norman said, also did a simple-minded FFS.
The TCP/IP stack wasn't very important to us then and it has a mixed and
murky history. Much of it came from early CSRG work, but it was converted
to a streams approach by Robert Morris and subsequently fiddled over a lot.
Likewise, as Norman said, the applications (/bin and whatnot) were somewhat
of a mixture. Many were the locally-done versions, some were taken
from BSD in some incarnation, some from System V.
Dennis
----- End of forwarded message from dmr -----
(as given by "uname -m") by which you can specify which
architectures the port is appropriate for.
Idea borrowed from: NetBSD, OpenBSD
Reviewed by: simokawa
(2) New variable PERL_ARCH (value: ${ARCH}-freebsd) that is also
passed to ${PLIST_SUB}. Use it to simplify PLISTs.
Submitted by: simokawa
(3) Check OSVERSION as well as existence of /usr/bin/perl5 before
assuming USE_PERL5 is to be a no-op. Basically to allow building
of 2.2-INDEX on a 3.0 machine.
(4) Change USE_QT definition to use new shlib version (2) and
directory (qt142).
(5) Uncomment temporary Motif dependency for parallel package
building. We still need to figure out a way to install the pkg
database files, but it's a start.
(6) Move EXTRACT_SUFX up into the pre.mk area so it can be used in
exists() tests.
(7) Add MASTER_SITE_COMP_SOURCES. Note that this is defined like
"/pub/usenet/comp.sources.%SUBDIR%/" so you can specify something
like "SUBDIR=x/volume18" to select the newsgroup as well as
subdirectory name.
Submitted by: "distfiles" fenner
(8) Other misc. master site cleanup.
Submitted by: "distfiles" fenner
(9) New target "maintainer". I intend to use it to auto-mail failure
build failure notices to the maintainer.
+ ECP parallel port chipset FIFO detection
+ DMA+FIFO parallel I/O handled as chipset specific
+ nlpt updated in order to use the above enhanced parallel I/O.
Use 'lptcontrol -e' to use enhanced I/O
+ Various options documented in LINT
+ Full IEEE1284 NIBBLE and BYTE modes support. See ppbus(4) for
an overview of the IEEE1284 standard
+ Detection of PnP parallel devices at boot
+ Read capability added to nlpt driver to get IEEE1284 compliant
printer status with a simple 'cat /dev/lpt0'
+ IEEE1284 peripheral emulation added to BYTE mode. Two computers
may dialog according to IEEE1284 signaling method.
See PERIPH_1284 option and /sys/dev/ppbus/ppi.c
All this code is supposed to provide basic functions for IEEE1284 programming.
ppi.c and nlpt.c may act as examples.
than ".so". The old extension conflicted with well-established
naming conventions for dynamically loadable modules.
The "clean" targets continue to remove ".so" files too, to deal with
old systems.
on the ASIX AX88140A chip. Update /sys/conf/files, RELNOTES.TXT,
/sys/i388/i386/userconfig.c, sysinstall/devices.c, GENERIC and LINT
accordingly.
For now, the only board that I know of that uses this chip is the
Alfa Inc. GFC2204. (Its predecessor, the GFC2202, was a DEC tulip card.)
Thanks again to Ulf for obtaining the board for me. If anyone runs
across another, please feel free to update the man page and/or the
release notes. (The same applies for the other drivers.)
FreeBSD should now have support for all of the DEC tulip workalike
chipsets currently on the market (Macronix, Lite-On, Winbond, ASIX).
And unless I'm mistaken, it should also have support for all PCI fast
ethernet chipsets in general (except maybe the SMC FEAST chip, which
nobody seems to ever use, including SMC). Now if only we could convince
3Com, Intel or whoever to cough up some documentation for gigabit
ethernet hardware.
Also updated RELNOTEX.TXT to mention that the SVEC PN102TX is supported
by the Macronix driver (assuming you actually have an SVEC PN102TX with
a Macronix chip on it; I tried to order a PN102TX once and got a box
labeled 'Hawking Technology PN102TX' that had a VIA Rhine board inside
it).
-add "depends" to list of recursive targets
-consistent capitilization of FreeBSD.ORG
-remove description of PATCH_DEBUG
-add .Xr to portcheckout(1) and pib(1)
ISDN4BSD is the work of our brand-new comitter: Hellmuth Michaelis,
who has done a tremendous amount of work to bring us this far.
There are still some outstanding issues and files to bring into
the tree, and for now it will be needed to pick up all the extra
docs from the isdn4bsd release.
It is probably also a very good idea to subscribe to the isdn@freebsd.org
mailing list before you try this out.
These files correspond to release "beta Version 0.70.00 / December
1998" from Hellmuth.
- Get the (tm) signal correct in nroff versions
- Correct highlighting (docs/9196)
Sigh. This is still a long way from being correct. In particular,
the states are both incorrect, and they don't format properly in
troff. But it will have to wait until I stop changing the meanings of
the states.
hacker -> intruder (couldn't desired between this and 'cracker')
config -> configuration
sorted crossreferences
spell checked
Overall very good content, but we need one of our wordsmiths to change the
tone to match the CSRG manpages.
corelate
corelated
corelation
corelative
corelatively
My Random-House dictionary doesn't list them, and grog says (paraphrased):
SOED only accepts 'corelate's, and it just notes corelate as an
alternative (and obviously not exactly mainstream) spelling for
correlate.
(yes these spellings tripped me)
ethernet driver.
The BUGS section is still impressive, but the driver seems to work for
me now. Disclaimer: i haven't been able to test this under -current
so far (but it compiles, and the notebook it's intended for can now be
updated to -current more easy than before). Don't be afraid of the
many #ifdefs on __FreeBSD_version in the imported file; i want them in
the repository on the vendor-branch so other people can also manually
integrate it into older systems. I'll clean it up on the -current
branch in a followup commit. The vendor-banch version right now
supports systems back to 2.2R.
This driver should be layered upon ppc(4), but i currently have no
idea how to do this.
Eventually i'll further develop the driver to also support the more
modern RTL 8012 success, which seems to be present in a number of
cheap pocket ethernet adapters these days. Right now, i doubt it will
run with the 8012 without any changes.
Finally a big Thanks! to RealTek for promptly providing me with
documentation and with the source code for the 8012 pocket driver upon
request. I wish all vendors were that cooperative!.
mechanisms. It is a little light on detail but still a pretty good
overview. I suggest that for specific detail (such as, for example,
how to setup kerberos), that additional security-DETAILNAME man pages
be written and refered to.
don't recurse in "make describe". The new INDEX target in
ports/Makefile invokes a perl script to recurse and convert them
into package names.
While I'm here, change the name of targets and move them around a
little bit for the sake of consistency.
It is also probably worth noting here that the meaning of the
"build dependency" list in INDEX has been changed slightly
changed. The old list was "build depends and its build depends"
-- not particularly useful if you had things like autoconf, which
run-depend on gm4 (you install all the things listed here and
you'll get an autoconf that won't run).
It is now "build depends and its run depends" -- you install
everything listed here, and you'll be able to build the port.
Submitted by: steve
(0') Fast README.html generation. It uses ports/INDEX to find
dependencies instead of embarking on to a recursive loop.
Submitted by: steve
(1) Remove NO_WRKDIR and NO_EXTRACT. Their functionality are easily
replacable with NO_WRKSUBDIR=t and EXTRACT_ONLY= (nothing on right
side), and they get in the way of read-only port trees.
(2) Surround first few variable definitions with ".if !defined()".
This will make cross-compilation easier and also speed up make
processes.
(3) Call sysctl with absolute path. Prefer the one in /sbin over the
one in /usr/sbin.
(4) Add four new variables
PKGINSTALL?= ${PKGDIR}/INSTALL
PKGDEINSTALL?= ${PKGDIR}/DEINSTALL
PKGREQ?= ${PKGDIR}/REQ
PKGMESSAGE?= ${PKGDIR}/MESSAGE
and use them in PKG_ARGS. Frobbing with PKG_ARGS directly is
strongly discouraged.
(5) Change PKG_SUFX to ".tar" (instead of ".tgz") if PKG_NOCOMPRESS is
defined. This is intended only for our own use.
(6) Add more sites to MASTER_SITE_GNU.
Submitted by: billf
(7) Override MANUAL_PACKAGE_BUILD if PARALLEL_PACKAGE_BUILD is
defined. This is intended only for our own use.
(8) Add new target "ignorelist" which will print out the package name
if the port is not going to be built on this machine. This is
intended only for our own use.
(9) Make mtree a little quieter.
that are misinterpreted by echo(1) aren't.
PR: docs/8757
Submitted By: Takeshi OHASHI <ohashi@mickey.ai.kyutech.ac.jp>
Sergei Laskavy <laskavy@gambit.msk.su>
as a RealTek 8139
if_rlreg.h: use bus_space_read_X() in CSR_READ_X() macros instead of
directly calling inb()/outb() etc...
rl.4 + RELNOTES.TXT: mention that SMC EtherEZ PCI 1211-TX is supported
by the RealTek driver
PCI fast ethernet adapters, plus man pages.
if_pn.c: Netgear FA310TX model D1, LinkSys LNE100TX, Matrox FastNIC 10/100,
various other PNIC devices
if_mx.c: NDC Communications SOHOware SFA100 (Macronix 98713A), various
other boards based on the Macronix 98713, 98713A, 98715, 98715A
and 98725 chips
if_vr.c: D-Link DFE530-TX, other boards based on the VIA Rhine and
Rhine II chips (note: the D-Link and certain other cards
that actually use a Rhine II chip still return the PCI
device ID of the Rhine I. I don't know why, and it doesn't
really matter since the driver treats both chips the same
anyway.)
if_wb.c: Trendware TE100-PCIE and various other cards based on the
Winbond W89C840F chip (the Trendware card is identical to
the sample boards Winbond sent me, so who knows how many
clones there are running around)
All drivers include support for ifmedia, BPF and hardware multicast
filtering.
Also updated GENERIC, LINT, RELNOTES.TXT, userconfig and
sysinstall device list.
I also have a driver for the ASIX AX88140A in the works.
break one way or another. With it goes the package-loop and the
describe loop.
(2) Add new variable MASTERDIR to make it easier to share files between ports.
bsd.port.mk will find things like ${PKGDIR} underneath
${MASTERDIR} (which defaults to ${.CURDIR}).
(3) Do not allow MD5_FILE to be renamed. Funny things can happen if
you do that.
(4) Use a few more absolute paths in the bsd.port.pre.mk part. I
can't use absolute paths for sysctl because it moved recently.
a few variables that could be used in the port Makefile for ".if exists()"
tests. bsd.port.post.mk defines the rest.
Note: if you define USE_X_PREFIX or USE_IMAKE, put it before including
bsd.port.pre.mk. These are the only two variables used in the first part.
In reality, bsd.port.pre.mk and bsd.port.post.mk just include bsd.port.mk
with special variables to turn part of it off.
list. The old MAKE_FLAGS was a little hard to use since it had a weird
default ("-f").
Suggested by: Shigeyuki FUKUSHIMA <shige@kuis.kyoto-u.ac.jp>
(2) Add new targets clean-restricted and clean-for-cdrom, which will
delete RESTRICTED and NO_CDROM packages and distfiles from the top.
Reviewed by: jkh
(3) Add depends to list of things to recurse on. It will help people
who are trying to fetch some ports plus their dependencies.
Requested by: Chris Dillon <cdillon@wolves.k12.mo.us>
packages from a single port. LOOP_VAR is the name of the variable
and LOOP_OPTIONS is a space-separated list of values it should
take. When these are set, the target "package-loop" will go
through a clean and package loop for all the options. The
"package-loop" target is defined as "package" when LOOP_VAR is not
defined, so if you are in the business for building packages, you
should use "package-loop" all the time. (This target is added to
bsd.port.subdir.mk too.)
Also, the "describe" target prints out multiple lines so that all
options will go into the INDEX. (In other words, if you define
these variables, INDEX is going to look real silly if you don't
put ${${LOOP_VAR}} in PKGNAME.)
Seconded by: obrien ("ANYTHING")
(2) Turn off regexp support for LIB_DEPENDS. It is a fixed string of
the form <NAME>.<VER> now.
Tested by: several rounds of complete package builds
(3) Check checksum even if NO_EXTRACT is defined.
(4) Cosmetic fix for message in MANUAL_PACKAGE_BUILD case.
configured in drivers.
Attempted to update the generated interrupt handler attachment to the
current "temporary" method. Not tested. To test it, someone would first
have to fix the bitrot in the ioctl command arg type.
configured in drivers.
Quote the last few args to form 1 arg. Quoting them in pairs almost
defeated the point of quoting them, which is to reduce the arg count
to <= 9.
Alpha. This is a minor, but important distinction. Should be a no-op
to the install base. If OBJFORMAT is set elsewhere, things work
exactly as they did before.
SCSI controllers, respectively.
Once these drivers are tested on the alpha, these man pages can probably be
moved up a directory to reflect the fact that they're architecture
independent.
An mdoc guru should probably look at the AUTHORS sections in both of these
pages -- the .An macro seems to cause strange spacing problems.
Reviewed by: ken
Submitted by: gibbs
as cam(4) as well.
This includes a description of all the generic CAM kernel options, as
well as a description of some of the CAM debugging printf options.
st(4) man page.
Take out most of the sd(4) and st(4) man pages and point to the new
da(4) and sa(4) man pages.
Add sa.4 to the makefile.
Reviewed by: ken
Submitted by: gibbs
driver, and point users in the right direction for similar functionality.
The functionality that used to be provided there is now provided by the
cd(4) driver and cdrecord.
Fix cross-references in a few other man pages. (i.e. delete references to
things I haven't written yet)
update of the quirk entry descriptions to reflect the current state of
things.
Once I find out where such things belong, I'll document things like
the changer scheduling mechanism, actions taken at probe, etc.
This includes a description of the changer timeout kernel options and
sysctl variables. I didn't check to make sure the ioctl descriptions are
up to date; that will come sometime later. (The ioctls haven't changed in
the CAM driver, but I'm not sure if the man page was in sync with even the
old driver.)
name conversion. Use it for binary ports that come with its own private
shlib dirs, ports that install linux compatibility libraries (thus following
their naming conventions and not ours), etc.
Reviewed by: Martin Cracauer <cracauer@FreeBSD.ORG>
though I'm afraid there's a lot more that needs fixing in this file,
judging by 'find /usr/src -name "*.8" -print'.
Spotted-by: glimpse -H /usr/src tickadj
Disable building tickadj(8) by removing util from SUBDIR in the xntpd
Makefile. Note that the sources are still there and tickadj can still
be built and installed by doing:
# cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/xntpd/util
# make all install
There are enough references to tickadj in e.g. the xntpd documentation
(not to mention the sysctl variables it uses etc.) that I don't feel
up to implementing the final solution right now.
Kinda-approved-by: phk
version number part (i.e., "<directory>/perl"). Use this to
substitute #! lines in your perl5 scripts.
Requested and reviewed by: ache
(2) Add new variable WRKDIRPREFIX (defaults to ""). The "work"
directories are now in ${WRKDIRPREFIX}${.CURDIR}/work by default.
You can have a read-only ports tree (modulo any broken ports that
write something to places other than ${WRKDIR}) by setting this to
a writable location.
Ports that set WRKDIR explicitly should append this to front so
they will work when the user has WRKDIRPREFIX set.
Reviewed by: Toshihiko Kodama <kodama@ayame.mfd.cs.fujitsu.co.jp>
SERVICE INTERNATIONAL DE LA ROTATION TERRESTRE
BUREAU CENTRAL DE L'IERS
OBSERVATOIRE DE PARIS
61, Av. de l'Observatoire 75014 PARIS (France)
Tel. : 33 (0) 1 40 51 22 26
FAX : 33 (0) 1 40 51 22 91
Internet : iers@obspm.fr
Paris, 17 July 1998
Bulletin C 16
To authorities responsible for
the measurement and distribution
of time
UTC TIME STEP
on the 1st of January 1999
A positive leap second will be introduced at the end of December 1998.
The sequence of dates of the UTC second markers will be:
1998 December 31, 23h 59m 59s
1998 December 31, 23h 59m 60s
1999 January 1, 0h 0m 0s
The difference between UTC and the International Atomic Time TAI is:
from 1997 July 1, 0h UTC, to 1999 January 1, 0h UTC : UTC-TAI = - 31s
from 1999 January 1, 0h UTC, until further notice : UTC-TAI = - 32s
Leap seconds can be introduced in UTC at the end of the months of
December or June, depending on the evolution of UT1-TAI. Bulletin C mailed
every six months, either to announce a time step in UTC, or to confirm that
there will be no time step at the next possible date.
Daniel GAMBIS
Director
Central Bureau of IERS
since ports are not supposed to be broken during the process of
conversion to ELF -- please proceed with caution.)
(2) Support for checking file size before fetching. The essential
parts are commented out for now, so I won't lose the submission
while we discuss how to do it.
Submitted by: se (mostly)
(3) Don't run "fetch" twice. It was due to the change in checksum
target chaining. It used to be fetch -> checksum -> extract,
after 1.285 it was fetch -> checksum and checksum was also
explicitly called from extract. Fix it by not calling fetch from
checksum when it's invoked by extract.
Noticed by: pre-fetch target of lesstif being run twice
(4) Don't try to remove non-existent distfiles and patchfiles in
distclean.
Submitted by: anto@netscape.net
PR: 7988
Submitted by: "Eugene M. Kim" <gene@nttlabs.com>
(2) Check for exact version of perl5 in /usr/bin and exit with error
message if USE_PERL5 is defined and version does not match
${PERL_VERSION}.
(3) Note LIB_DEPENDS should not have any regular expressions. Remove
those in USE_XLIB and USE_QT.
Host ATM Research Platform (HARP), Network Computing Services, Inc.
This software was developed with the support of the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
Submitted by: hoek
(2) ELF support.
2a. Variable PORTOBJFORMAT specifies the object format of the system.
It is passed down to configure/make via CONFIGURE_ENV/MAKE_ENV,
and is given to generate-plist via PLIST_SUB.
2b. In PLIST, substitute lines that end with "/libFOO.so.X" with
"/libFOO.so.X.0". (This means PLISTs should only list ELF
libraries.)
Reviewed by: jb, jdp, hoek, jseger, steve
(3) Perl5-in-system support. Basically turns USE_PERL5 into a no-op
if there exists a "/usr/bin/perl5". Also fix prior breakage by
dima (${PREFIX} => ${LOCALBASE} in perl5 path).
Reviewed by: markm (sort of)
(4) Install requirement file as "+REQUIRE" so it will be executed
correctly by pkg_delete.
Reported by: Shigeyuki FUKUSHIMA <shige@kuis.kyoto-u.ac.jp>
(5) Do not disable checksum and makesum when NO_EXTRACT is set.
Pointed out by: hoek and kiri, among other people
src/lkm/Makefile.inc. This fixes broken builds of the syscons LKMs
when OBJFORMAT=elf. Removed src/lkm/Makefile.inc since it became
empty and is worse than useless.
the way, most of the things below are "Reviewed by: hoek" as well.)
The changes are (roughly in order of appearance):
(1) Revamp comments at beginning of file. Major rewrites. Reorder
them into more relevant sections. Make clear which ones are user
variables and not to be set in ports' Makefiles.
Reviewed by: hoek (well, he's the only one who sent any comments)
(2) Include ${.CURDIR}/Makefile.local if it exists. This is a local
configuration file (ala rc.conf.local and make.conf.local) so
please do not commit a file with this name to the repository.
Suggested by: dillon
(3) MANCOMPRESSED now takes three possible values: "yes", "no" and
"maybe". (It used to be a binary variable -- the old behavior is
now accomplished by "MANCOMPRESSED=yes". Ports that defined this
variable to other values have been corrected.)
"yes" means the manpages are installed compressed, "no" means they
are not, and "maybe" means the port already respects the value of
NOMANCOMPRESS. The default is "yes" for USE_IMAKE ports without
NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES, and "no" otherwise.
Add "compress-man" target and move manpage {,de}compression there.
Reviewed by: hoek etc. and a full build of the ports tree
(4) Add LIBDIR="${LIBDIR}" to MAKE_ENV. Makes easier to "fix" ports
for /usr/lib/aout mess.
Submitted by: ohashi@mickey.ai.kyutech.ac.jp (Takeshi Ohashi)
(5) Change ${TMPPLIST} from ${WRKDIR}/PLIST.mktmp to
${WRKDIR}/.PLIST.mktmp.
Suggested by: hoek
Strongly seconded by: steve
(6) Change a couple more relative pathnames to absolute ones.
Submitted by: hoek
(7) Move checksum into real-extract.
(8) Change way rules are chained. Instead of:
build: configure ${BUILD_COOKIE}
${BUILD_COOKIE}:
@cd ${.CURDIR} && ${MAKE} ${.MAKEFLAGS} real-build
we now have
build: ${BUILD_COOKIE}
${BUILD_COOKIE}:
@cd ${.CURDIR} && ${MAKE} ${.MAKEFLAGS} configure
@cd ${.CURDIR} && ${MAKE} ${.MAKEFLAGS} real-build
Other than being more PC (pmake clean), this really speeds up
skipping ports already built. For instance, "make package" on a
fully packaged games subtree used to take 269 seconds on average,
now it's 45 seconds on average.
The flip side of this is that it will create more processes when
the targets actually chain, but when you're actually compiling
things, your make is creating half a bazzilion processes anyway so
I don't think it matters.
(9) ${TMPPLIST} is now a real dependency. Create "generate-plist"
target to generate ${TMPPLIST}. Make sure it's called when needed
(usually between do-install and post-install), and that the
required files exist.
(10) Change some messages so we can tell where "make index" failed.
(11) Check if LIB_DEPENDS really generated the required shared lib or
not.
Seconded by: "Brent J. Nordquist" <bjn@visi.com>
the diff is attached below. This is done on the 3.0 source-tree.
I have test this on 2.2-stable before, but I don't have a 3.0 machine
right now.
This patch is mainly to make libc support BIG5 encoding, thus add
zh_TW.BIG5 locale to 3.0.
Submitted by: Chen Hsiung Chan <frankch@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw>
I hope some other people might find them useful. They are for
zh_CN.EUC (GB) only. I'm not familiar with the BIG5 encoding,
so I could only hope someone else would fill the gap.
PR: 7310
Submitted by: Luoqi Chen <luoqi@chen.ml.org>
generic and should go one level up, but it can keep the sb(4) man
page company for now until somebody moves all the no-longer-x86-specific
driver man pages up some day.
Submitted by: luigi
when certain .mk files include other .mk files. This will remove the
need for multiple include protection in some other makefiles around the
tree (and helps some elf conditionals).
means (change PREFIX to ${X11BASE}) and add a new variable USE_X11
which means "this port requires the X window system (actually the
library)". USE_X_PREFIX implies USE_X11. USE_X11 adds a
LIB_DEPENDS to libX11 with the x11/XFree86 port.
Reviewed by: the ports list, hoek in particular
(2) Remove NO_CONFIGURE and NO_PATCH, which never meant anything.
Yell if they are defined.
Reviewed by: the ports list
(3) Add new variable OSREL, which is automatically set to the
numeric OS version (e.g., 2.2.1, 3.0). It can be used to refer to
files in gcc installations, for instance.
(4) Finally remove EXEC_DEPENDS hack after all these years.
Submitted by: hoek
(5) Put quotes around some echo ${*_DEPENDS} statements so they won't
blow up when the variables include regular expressions like
"qt\\.1\\.\\\(33\\\|40\\\):${PORTSDIR}/x11/qt140".
recently added definitions from sys.mk to bsd.own.mk. Include the
src-relative bsd.own.mk in src/Makefile to pick up all new definitions.
Don't check that MACHINE_ARCH is defined in src/Makefile, since it is
(and should have been) guaranteed to be defined.
...is expected to conform to IEEE (``POSIX'') Std 1003.1c when it is
published.
to:
...conforms to ISO/IEC 9945-1 ANSI/IEEE (``POSIX'') Std 1003.1 Second
Edition 1996-07-12.
Discussed with: jb
(mostly for includes) separate from direct dependencies (so that ${.ALLSRC}
can be used to find full paths to the sources for the direct dependencies
only). The `::' hack just forgot the indirect dependendencies. This
broke building doc/usd/13.viref with `make -jN' - the index got corrupted
by being built twice concurrently.
Cleaned up the ${DFILE} rule. There was a .else clause with dead code in
it following a .else clause (make accepts this bad syntax). ${.ALLSRC}
now works in the USE_SOELIMPP case. Some client Makefiles no longer need
the SRCDIR=${.OBJDIR} hack.
pthread_mutex routines. I've also tweaked pthread_create.3 to point to
pthread_cleanup_push(3) and pthread_cleanup_pop(3).
PR: 7450
Submitted by: Brian Cully <shmit@kublai.com>
`make world' to avoid problems with picking up (new) target or (stale)
host shared libraries.
Don't honor -static in LDFLAGS for linking LKMs. LDFLAGS is not
actually for ld, but we use it anyway, and must prevent -static being
misinterpreted as -s.
Don't hide any of the link steps.
some months ago and was incorporated to FreeBSD) has capitalized
weekdays names, but this is not correct according to the rules of the
Spanish language.
Also, the patch applies a small change to the "date_fmt" string, adding
a comma between the year and the hour.
PR: 7211
Submitted by: Jose M. Alcaide <jose@we.lc.ehu.es>
bootstrapped by `make world'. The version just built in ".."
normally won't work if the target system is not binary compatible.
Don't build or install anything if _BUILD_TOOLS is defined. Then
we only want to build and install the mklocale binary, but the layout
of the mklocale tree forces recursing to mklocale/data for at least
the obj target even when _BUILD_TOOLS is defined.
bootstrapped by `make world'. The version just built in ".."
normally won't work if the target system is not binary compatible.
Don't build or install anything if _BUILD_TOOLS is defined. Then
we only want to build and install the colldef binary, but the layout
of the colldef tree forces recursing to colldef/data for at least
the obj target even when _BUILD_TOOLS is defined.
Submitted by: Randall Hopper <rhh@ct.picker.com>
The patch supports using the X10 Mouse Remote in both stand-alone and
pass-through configurations, so you can plug your mouse and remote into the
same serial port, use the mouse for X, and use the remote for other apps
like Fxtv. For instance, we can now control fxtv via the remote control
just like a TV : change channels, mute, increase volume, zoom video,
freeze frame 8)
The mouse events are channeled through the syscons/sysmouse I/F like
normal, and the remote buttons are "syphoned off" to a UNIX-domain stream
socket (defined as _PATH_MOUSEREMOTE in <machine/mouse.h>) for a
remote-aware app to grab and use.
For further info on the X10 Mouse Remote see:
http://www.x10.com/products/x10_mk19a.htm
Move a.out libraries to /usr/lib/aout to make space for ELF libs.
Make rtld usr /usr/lib/aout as default library path.
Make ldconfig reject /usr/lib as an a.out library path.
Fix various Makefiles for LIBDIR!=/usr/lib breakage.
This will after a make world & reboot give a system that no
longer uses /usr/lib/*, infact one could remove all the old
libraries there, they are not used anymore.
We are getting close to an ELF make world, but I'll let this
all settle for a week or two...
passed to the user process for incoming packets. When the sockaddr_in
is passed back to the divert socket later, use thi sas the primary
interface lookup and only revert to the IP address when the name fails.
This solves a long standing bug with divert sockets:
When two interfaces had the same address (P2P for example) the interface
"assigned" to the reinjected packet was sometimes incorect.
Probably we should define a "sockaddr_div" to officially hold this
extended information in teh same manner as sockaddr_dl.
the right solution or not, bsd.port.mk is broken unless bsd.locale.mk
is installed.
Note that if LOCALE is not defined, port-building explodes:
"/usr/share/mk/bsd.locale.mk", line 135: if-less elif
"/usr/share/mk/bsd.locale.mk", line 135: Need an operator
(For each .if testing LOCALE)
Notes:
- We no longer use -fgnu-runtime in bsd.lib.mk, since it is the default
and bsd.lib.mk is the wrong place to override it.
- Gnu C doesn't have a special compiler driver for Objective C like it
does for C++. The defaults are suitable for Gnu C. Use `OBJCLIBS='
in /etc/make.conf for POC.
is used in the dependency list for ${DEPENDFILE}. `make depend' was
broken for a few days. `make world' only uses `make depend' when
NOCLEAN is defined, so only a few people noticed the bug.
Submitted by: mostly by jmg
bsd.obj.mk instead of bsd.dep.mk for defining the _SUBDIR target
and a default tags target. Abuse bsd.obj.mk for defining default
cleandepend and depend targets.
that want a y.tab.h file. This want must be specified by putting y.tab.h
in SRCS (and defaulting to or putting -d in YFLAGS). This only works if
there is only one yacc parser, of course. One improvement: copy y.tab.c
to foo.c instead of renaming it, so that `#line...y.tab.c' statements in
it refer to an existing file.
Regress to not generating explicit rules for .l and .y sources containing
slashes. This case is unusual and hard to handle properly.
Don't generate an unused dependency when -d is not in YFLAGS.
sources. This will be used to fix `make -jN' races in many
Makefiles in /usr/src, and to simplify these and other Makefiles.
To get the fixes and simplifications, application Makefiles should
put the raw lex and yacc source names (foo.l and bar.y) in SRCS and
not put the names of any generated files in SRCS or CLEANFILES. A
few Makefiles already do this, although it didn't actually work before
(mkdep couldn't create complete dependencies because there is no
intermediate .c file for the .y.o and .l.o implicit rules).
Complications: if bar.y is in SRCS and -d is in YFLAGS, then bar.h
will be generated whether or not it is used, even if this clobbers a
real source file. This is so that bar.c can be generated using the
-j-safe and debugger-friendly -o option to YACC. There are smaller
warts for handling y.tab.h. y.tab.c and lex.yy.c are not supported.
letters one pixel taller, and the ()[]{} are more distinct. Nice if
your monitor is small. 8x16 and 8x8 fonts included.
PR: 4208
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@emsphone.com>
is reason enough to make the compilation & installation of sendmail an
make.conf option. I know that you hate negative options Bruce.
PR: 6284
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Adrian Colley <aecolley@world.std.com>
Add a note about not touching errno and warn about previous drafts
of the standard which changed the level of indirection to the thread
argument. POSIX had a bit of trouble deciding what to do. So anyone
coding to both draft 4 and draft 10 (the final draft) will get burnt
by this function. I did. Grrr.
_KPOSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING options to work. Changes:
Change all "posix4" to "p1003_1b". Misnamed files are left
as "posix4" until I'm told if I can simply delete them and add
new ones;
Add _POSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING system calls for FreeBSD and Linux;
Add man pages for _POSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING system calls;
Add options to LINT;
Minor fixes to P1003_1B code during testing.
ESCAPE and `~ are swapped
CTRL and CAPS LOCK are swapped
BACKSPACE and DELETE are swapped
Suitable for keymap=us.unix in your rc.conf file or for setting on the
fly with kbdcontrol -l us.unix. This is the keyboard layout of many of
the more traditional unix workstations and terminals that have been around
for a very long time. Older Sun keyboards and VT100's had a layout
very similar to the PC, with the above exceptions.
Idea Reviewed by: Many people in -hackers
`BINFORMAT=foo make checkdpadd' in /usr/src now reports only 2 false
negatives (in libss and init). (BINFORMAT=foo is to turn off better
handling of the a.out case.)
Changes to support building with _POSIX_SOURCE set to 199309L:
1. Add sys/_posix.h to handle those preprocessor defs that POSIX
says have effects when defined before including any header files;
2. Change POSIX4_VISIBLE back to _POSIX4_VISIBLE
3. Add _POSIX4_VISIBLE_HISTORICALLY for pre-existing BSD features now
defined in POSIX. These show up when:
_POSIX_SOURCE and _POSIX_C_SOURCE are not set or
_POSIX_C_SOURCE is set >= 199309L
and vanish when:
_POSIX_SOURCE is set or _POSIX_C_SOURCE is < 199309L.
4. Explain these in man 9 posix4;
5. Include _posix.h and conditionalize on new feature test.
- the two `_EXTRADEPEND::' targets potentially clobbered each other for
`make -jN'. In practice, the output for the second target sometimes
disappeared.
- bogus dependencies were generated for static libraries.
headers in ${SRCS}, as in bsd.lmod.mk and bsd.prog.mk. This helps
`make [-j]' work when .depend doesn't exist. Even plain `make'
sometimes only worked because of magic ordering in ${SRCS}.
use the default without losing any (currently unused) features.
(CLEANDIRS is only used by for libgmp and libmp via bsd.lib.mk, and
only documented everywhere it is supported except of course where it
is actually used.)
I don't know what the hell I was thinking in: rev. 1.268
(2) Create ${PREFIX} before calling mtree if it doesn't exist. This
may not be the best solution, but pre-install is called after
mtree so there really isn't any way to fix this from the port
Makefiles and thus has to be done here.
Document `make readmes'. This is getting old, and the intent is to
stop questions regarding it; however, I have a suspicion documenting it
will work counter to ending questions about it and am mentally prepared
to see it go-ooooooooo.......
Reviewed by: the lists
(2) Change MASTER_SITE_CTAN to reflect current reality.
Submitted by: fenner
(3) Add new port variable NO_LATEST_LINK. When this is set, the
"Latest" package symlink is not created. Use this for ports that
are betas when there is also a port for an older, more stable,
version.
(4) Don't be too stupid about "make deinstall".
Submitted by: fenner
in kernel Makefiles. Nothing in /usr/include is used (provided
relative paths for sys/* and <machine> can be found), so there is
no need for the -I/usr/include kludge as in kernel Makefiles.
- define CTL-ALT-ESC as `debug' key in all keymaps. (FAQ mentions this
key sequence but not all keymaps had it!)
- define CTL-SPACE as NUL in all keymaps.
- define CTL-ALT-SPACE as `suspend' key in all but Russiun keymaps.
- Fix Japanese keymaps. Some CTL- keystrokes were wrong.
- Remove accent (dead) key definitions from spanish.iso.kbd,
fr.iso.kbd and icelandic.iso.kbd. Create spanish.iso.acc.kbd,
fr.iso.acc.kbd and icelandic.iso.acc.kbd with accent key definitions
instead.
- Update INDEX.keymaps and Makefile.
them in the include path. This fixes recent breakage of the syscons
LKMs and general brokenness of the include paths (headers under
/usr/include were used in many cases).
it is built with this defined (which it isn't by default). This change
to sys.mk treats the absence of MACHINE_ARCH as i386 on the assumption
that it will be appropriately defined (as something else) on any other
architecture. When building FreeBSD's make with NetBSD tools, both
MACHINE and MACHINE_ARCH are correctly set (e.g. when bootstrapping
FreeBSD's make on NetBSD/mvme68k, MACHINE=mvme68k and
MACHINE_ARCH=m68k). This isn't really needed for the alpha which
has both defined as 'alpha', but I thought it was worth getting the
distinction between a MACHINE and a MACHINE_ARCH correct now.
Now, shouldn't PC98 have MACHINE=pc98 and MACHINE_ARCH=i386 ??!!
- New, Icelandic keymap with accent (dead) key definitions.
Based on the work done by totii@est.is.
spanish iso.kbd
- Added accent (dead) key definitions.
Based on the work done by jmrueda@diatel.upm.es.
the northern part of Belgium (nl_BE). The southern part of
Belgium is supposed to be covered by the LC_TIME file in fr_BE.
Now only the LC_TIME for Finland is left to close PR 5409.
PR: 5409
Submitted by: Arjan de Vet Thanks!
Submitted by Peter Olsson. Thanks!
Changed weekdays -> weekday, as suggested by Steve Price.
PR: 5409 can be closed if someone sends in LC_TIME files
for Belgium, Finland and the Netherlands.
~
(1) Allow multiple checksums of same file.
Submitted by: hoek
(2) Add "deinstall" target as an alias to "pkg_delete $(make package-name)"
(well, something like that, see diff for details).
(3) Add new port variable USE_AUTOCONF. It appends BUILD_DEPENDS to
devel/autoconf and runs autoconf before configure.
Submitted by: ohashi@mickey.ai.kyutech.ac.jp (Takeshi Ohashi)
(4) Clarify USE_X11 and USE_IMAKE usage.
(5) Add new user-overridable variable MASTER_SITE_KDE.
Submitted by: vanilla
(6) Add support for "Latest" package links.
Idea by: Terry Lambert
(7) Try to catch obsolete tcl/tk installations that could cause problems.
Annoyed by various bogus commits by: you-know-who
don't remove a.out explicitly. a.out should only be generated for
libraries and is removed in the non-default rule in bsd.lib.mk.
Removed undocumented cleanfiles target. It was the same as the
default clean target except it didn't descend into subdirs. It was
different from special clean targets in other ways. This feature
hasn't been missed for more important targets.
Removed unused default cleandepend target. bsd.dep.mk has a better
version which is always used.
Use a better rule for checkdpadd in the BINFORMAT=aout case. This
mainly checks that ld -f is working correctly. The old rule is
still available via `make BINFORMAT=foo checkdpadd' and should be
used to check for regressions under 2.2 where ld -f is not available.
(as in bsd.prog.mk). Include it if `checkdpadd' is being made, so that
it can be checked until it goes away.
Don't clean files that we don't create.
Fixed style of empty test.
when there is no /usr/src/share/info if it were actually used.
Added comments to explain duplicated tex commands.
Use substitution in IFILENS to simplify some things.
Removed /g from many substitutions. It is bogus for anchored matches.
Don't echo nothing.
Don't add things that wouldn't be built with the current options to
CLEANFILES (except for some cases involving tex).
Reviewed by: wosch
uk.phone (in line with na.phone). This is a more detailed
list than the one in inter.phone.
Add uk.postcodes. I've prefixed it with `uk' to leave room
for (maybe) au.postcodes etc. (if someone feels so inclined).
Obtained from: http://www.brainstorm.co.uk/public/utils
Ok'd to use by: steve@brainstorm.co.uk (Steve Crook)
information-hiding. Also recommended against naming typedefs to end
in _t unless POSIX or ANSI requires it, and in favor of using queue(3)
macros to generate lists rather than rolling one's own.
Some firmware versions becomes unreliable when these bits are not preserved,
e.g. ST15150N-0017 breaks if the DISC bit is cleared in the caching page.
This happened by default when editing the page.
we won't have double-slashes.
Add support for new port variable MANUAL_PACKAGE_BUILD. If this is
defined as well as the user variable PACKAGE_BUILDING, the port will
be ignored. This is used to mark ports that can be built normally
except on a machine that has a lot of conflicting ports (i.e., our
package building machine).
DESCR files when building README.html .
Don't use control characters in sed statement.
Problems reported by "Chris G. Demetriou" <cgd@pa.dec.com> in NetBSD PR
pkg/4341.
variables were lost when we removed -W, and 23 new ones including at
least one serious one have crept in for LINT.
Restored -Winline to CFLAGS. This gives only 3 old warnings and 1 new
for LINT.
connection timeout controllable by a new printcap(5) capability named
`ct' (connectiom timeout), defaulting to 120 seconds (which is the
default TCP connection timeout).
Would anybody see a problem with merging all this into RELENG_2_2?
Run tex twice due cross references.
Cleanup many tex generated files in `make clean'
Format latin1 output in 80 characters column (was ~110 characters).
more changes to come.
Submitted by: Nobuhrio Yasutomi <nobu@psrc.isac.co.jp>
AM/PM changed to 2 letter versions for now, original SJIS versions
commented out. change/check later..
configure ee to use emacs key-bindings
do not expand tabs into spaces
dont truncate lines at the right margin
Submitted by: Aled Morris <aledm@routers.co.uk>
Reviewed by: jkh
now-obsolete sysconfig(5) man page out. If you add new rc.conf variables,
folks, please try to remember to keep the man page up to date. Thanks!
PR: 4398
.if in Makefiles. bsd.prog.mk and bsd.lib.mk do not depend on it however.
Allow overriding of the -soname arg when building the lib*crypt.so* libs
since libdescrypt.so and libscrupt.so both need a -soname of libcrypt.so
so that the symlink is obeyed at runtime rather than at compile time.
since 2.1.x make(1) apparently does not have the -m switch to set both
the the bsd.*.mk and sys.mk location, and this breaks 'make world' from a
2.1.x system.
* lots of fixes to error handling-- mostly works now
* improve DMA timing config for Triton chipsets-- PIIX4 and UDMA drive
still untested
* generally improve DMA config in many ways-- mostly cleanup
* clean up boot-time messages
* rewrite PRD generation algorithm
* first wd timeout is now longer, to handle drive spinup
Submitted by: John Hood <cgull@smoke.marlboro.vt.us>
note, using "-Wl,-f" to generate a library objects list doesn't work
anymore since the hack to ld hasn't been incorporated into binutils-2.8.
(and the -f switch is used for something else already)
This is disabled by default, don't panic! :-)
you can get one from.)
(2) Use "reinstall" as DEPENDS_TARGET if target is "reinstall". In
particular, this will make it possible to do a "make reinstall" on
several NFS clients and have them install all dependencies
correctly.
Tested by: davidn
a couple *.mk files to enable -current world building on really old
machines (e.g., 2.1.5).
Reviewed by: too many many people to list here, special thanks to bde
in a few places (in bsd.lib.mk and bsd.prog.mk); this merely fixed part of
the brokenness by not setting it here.
This fixes building of secure telnetd when DESTDIR is defined.
(Otherwise, it will try to link libtelnet from ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib.)
Reviewed by: bde, jkh
patches and files. Note this is just for testing -- I don't
expect "patches.OpenBSD" or "Makefile.alpha" start cropping up on
our ports tree just yet!
Pretty much ignored by: the ports/committers list
(2) Add "SH?=/bin/sh" to the list of command-name macros. Use it.
Checked by: recompiling all packages
Fixed bitrot (__dead went away; EOF is now wrong for the getopt failure
value).
Moved sleep command to the end of the main loop to avoid mismatch between
main loop and the report loop. There is an extra iteration that could be
used to calibrate the loop overhead, but was used to report wrong results.
Fixed usage message.
it also sets RUN_DEPENDS (USE_GMAKE is BUILD_DEPENDS only).
The (immediate) purpose of this is to avoid having to change 70
zillion ports when the version of perl changes. Also, when perl5 is
pulled into -current, this will become a no-op in -current's
bsd.port.mk.
Reviewed by: jfitz
(bsd.dep.mk) and compiling assembly language sources (bsd.lib.mk).
This doesn't change anything for our current source tree, but if you
want to use the -B switch in C*FLAGS to specify the location of
compiler subprograms, now you can do it.
Reviewed by: bde (implicitly)
"do-install" target to the beginning of the "install" meta-target, so
that ports that define their own do-install will also run it without
having to duplicate it themselves.
Tested by: rebuilding all packages
like bsd.lib.mk and bsd.prog.mk. It doesn't add it to CXXINCLUDES, I
don't think anybody has written a kernel module with C++. (Not that I
think DavidG will allow it anyway. :)
Reviewed by: bde
1) fix k1-k4 to match XF3.3
2) fix kb,kD to match keyboard
3) merge xterm-color in: default description must match best current practice
and color card is most common variant for X now. Add xterm-mono entry for
mono cards.
/usr/X11R6 if USE_IMAKE or USE_X11 is set. It is mostly designed
after the XFree86 distribution, but also includes some of our own
goodies (libexec, share/doc, etc/rc.d).
(2) Full support for per-port dependency target. An optional
":<target>" can be added to any of the *_DEPENDS variables. Do
not attempt to print out anything about dependencies if NO_DEPENDS
is set (there was already too much code duplication, and this
extra colon has really pushed it over the limit).
Requested by: jfitz
(3) Make "reinstal" pmake-safe.
Reminded in an e-mail from: jkh
These commands are required for the "Disk-At-Once" write process:
WORMIOCREADSESSIONINFO returns the length of the lead-in and lead-out areas
and WORMIOCWRITESESSION is used to send the table of contents of the disk.
The FAQ and handbook have been repository copied to their own top-level
("doc") directory in the cvs tree which will not be branched so as to
avoid the syncing problems. At some point, the sgml text will require
formatting tools that will be from ports rather than the main source tree.
Requested by: jfieber, jkh
Added MASTER_STIE_LOCAL and updated it's location.
Added -N to diff options to ensure the diff includes new files.
Mentioned that USENET news ports should use ${PREFIX}/news.
Refromatted some of the comments w/in the sample Makefile so they wouldn't
wrap in the latin1 format.
General updating and minor word changes.
- remove all calls to scsi_stop_unit(). Some drives refuse commands when
stopped. This will fix the 'device not configured' message which was
cleared after opening/closing the tray.
- Never set the logical block address in the scsi_cmd struct when writing.
The computation was bogus for block sizes not a multiple of DEV_BSIZE.
(the bug is still there in the READ case)
- reset the block size to the 2048 bytes in finalize_track() track to avoid
an error when mounting a disk after an audio write.
- remove the WORMIOCQUIRKSELECT ioctl. Quirks are now recorded at probe time
(see scsiconf.c)
- change and expand the argument to the WORMIOCPREPTRACK ioctl. It now possible
to select more track options (copy bits, ISRC codes, track type,
track number)
- add an error handler to catch false errors (warnings in fact) and record
the error type.
- add an ioctl call (WORMIOERROR) to get more information on the nature of the
error when a command or a write failed.
- add an ioctl call (WORMIOCFINISHTRACK) to finalize a track without closing
the device (closing the device still finalize the track if the command was
not performed)
Approved by: joerg
Add Motoyuki Konno <motoyuki@st.rim.or.jp> into the
contributors' list for Japanese translation.
Reviewed by: hanai@astec.co.jp
Submitted by: motoyuki@st.rim.or.jp
Murphy's Law: define LPR=true in /etc/make.conf if you don't want
tomorrow find 3 paper copies (ascii, latin1, postscript) of the
handbook in your printer (or someone else printer on the other half of
the world).
While at it, did some tabs <-> spaces conversion to match the JP version
to the EN version so that patch generated by cvs diff handbook/contrib.sgml
can be often reused to update the JP version.
libraries. Remove the now-unneeded CPLUSPLUSLIB hack. I will also
remove the CPLUSPLUSLIB definitions from the Makefiles that use it,
after the dust settles.
Use gcc's LIBRARY_PATH environment variable to handle DESTDIR,
instead of -L flags in LDDESTDIR. LIBRARY_PATH is documented in
the gcc info pages. It is better than using -L flags, because it
modifies the search for start-up files as well as for libraries.
A new variable LDDESTDIRENV is used to contain the normally-empty
LIBRARY_PATH environment setting.
LDDESTDIR is no longer set in <bsd.lib.mk>. It is still honored for
the time being, because a couple of userland Makefiles still (wrongly)
set it. These should be fixed, and LDDESTDIR should vanish.
Removed the commented-out "LDDESTDIR+=-nostdlib", because "gcc -shared"
doesn't link in any standard libraries anyway.
Removed the ".if defined(LDADD)" around the _EXTRADEPEND target for
shared libraries. This target is always necessary now, because
c++rt0.o is linked into every shared library.
Don't merge this into -2.2 without first merging the support for
"gcc -shared".
latin1 looks very ugly on Russian screens/printers and users should
be able to print/view handbook first without inner knowledge of
bsd.sgml.mk tuning.
(somebody with better English, please check!)
BTW: Next: entry have wrong name "Network Communications"
in Locale Setup although points to right direction.
Looks like sgmlfmt bug...
with these files MUST understand what a `make release' does before
making changes like this or get nasty-grams from me when my builds start
falling over. In fact, if they can't test "make release" after making
such changes then they *should leave these files completely alone*.
Thank you.
opt_smp_invltlb.h
from:
SMPHDRS= opt_smp.h opt_smp_invltlb.h
SMP_INVLTLB is no longer a valid config option, the invalidation of the TLB
via inter-CPU IPIs is now standard when APIC_IO is used.
file so that we fail if it isn't already installed. The bootstrap
is now done by `make install' in the top-level src directory. As
well as being gross, the rule didn't actually work for src trees
other than /usr/src, and this is difficult to fix since the whole
src tree may not exist.
(default: IS_DEPENDED?=install) target on the depended port, call
DEPENDS_TARGET (default: install) from the depending port.
Other than being more flexible (some ports don't require the
dependency to be fully installed: see ghostscript4), this seems
like a more natural thing to do. (I never understood the
convoluted logic that was used before.)
By building packages with "DEPENDS_TARGET=package", I can avoid
file-sharing problems (like gs3 binary going into the gs4
package).
(2) Add new variable PATCH_SITE_SUBDIR and separate it from
MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR. Fixes linuxls port and is a correct thing to
do anyway.
Initially suggested and reviewed by: fenner
(3) Add new variable MASTER_SITE_LOCAL for local ports. Defaults to
LOCAL_PORTS subdir on ftp.freebsd.org's distfiles dir.
Submitted by: jkh
make world fails when it tries to build LKMs because the files
opt_smp.h
opt_smp_invltbl.h
are missing.
This patch to /usr/src/share/mk/bsd.kmod.mk is a temporary workaround.
Note that LKMs built in this way may or may NOT work properly with an
SMP kernel.
Fixed back to front -X and -x strip flags in .m.o and .m.po rules.
Fixed disordered .m.o and .m.po rules. What is .m?
Stripping probably should be removed. It makes problems in library
functions hard to debug...
for how to use gcc to invoke the linker only.
Removed `.if 0'ed support for not creating intermediate object files.
Removed unused include of bsd.libnames.mk (LDONLY had the last reference
to it).
Removed stale misplaced comment about MANDEPEND.
means.
(2) Change MASTER_SITE_GNU etc. to use += instead of ?=, so users can
specify a local mirror in /etc/make.conf and still get the full
fallback in case something is missing.
Submitted by: Narvi <narvi@haldjas.folklore.ee>
(3) Skip port if USE_X11 or USE_IMAKE is defined and /usr/X11R6
doesn't exist.
Submitted by: imp
(4) Add "-" in front of rmdir of ${DISTDIR}/${DIST_SUBDIR} in
distclean target; the directory might not be empty because the
subdir is shared with some other ports' distfiles.
emacs-style editing (which it used to have for a long time already).
Also mention the `gdb' and `help' commands. Other commands need an
overhaul, too (like the various `show' subcommands), but i don't feel
very competent for these.
- don't quote function names, since quoting them is unnecessary and
unusual and confuses my synopsis checker.
- include <sys/types.h> instead of <sys/param.h>. It is normal to
(have to) include <sys/param.h> instead of <sys/types.h>, but it
is more useful for man pages to document minimal prerequisites.
- don't declare nonexistent function sleep().
- don't include <sys/errno.h> explicitly.
sleep() should be nuked some more, e.g., this man page should not be
named after a nonexistent function.
List all three packages directories in the ensuing packages description.
Add a short (in fact, very short) section about libc.so.3.0 and wrong
package versions.
almost perfect dependencies on crt0's and libraries. DPADD and
bsd.libnames.mk should go away soon. Use a new _EXTRADEPEND target
to implement this and to avoid editing of .depend when .depend isn;t
being rebuilt. The afterdepend target doesn't seem to be good for
anything and is now unused.
Fixed LDDESTDIR for the DESTDIR case when ${SHLIBDIR} != /usr/lib.
Added commented-out -nostdlib to LDDESTDIR for the DESTDIR case.
The wrong libraries may be used without this; however it breaks
linkage to crt0 and libc.
is most useful for centralizing the definitions of paths to contrib
directories.
Removed useless subshell and evil-hiding @ in the the rule for
initializing the info dir.
Use the name argument almost the same in all LKM types. Maintain
the current behavior for the external (e.g., modstat) name for DEV,
EXEC, and MISC types being #name ## "_mod" and SYCALL and VFS only
#name. This is a candidate for change and I vote just the name without
the "_mod".
Change the DISPATCH macro to MOD_DISPATCH for consistency with the
other macros.
Add an LKM_ANON #define to eliminate the magic -1 and associated
signed/unsigned warnings.
Add MOD_PRIVATE to support wcd.c's poking around in the lkm structure.
Change source in tree to use the new interface.
Reviewed by: Bruce Evans
'make -j3 world' works
Jordan points out that this may not be the only place this is required to be
added, but so far, its the only one I've found to break -j3
is the example is quite spartan.
As pointed out by Bruce there are *three* different filenames being used:
cvs FREEBSD.README
groff FREEBSD-upgrade
libgmp FREEBSD-upgrade
libpcap FREEBSD-upgrade
tcpdump FREEBSD-upgrade
traceroute FREEBSD-upgrade
tcl README.FreeBSD
The handbook states "README.FreeBSD". Perhaps this should be changed?
NetBSD and then modified by me to reflect some FreeBSD specific
things and to clarify some other pointed based on some old mail
from Bruce Evans about this man page.
See http://www.xig.com/ci/pr/970219.xigraphics.html
Leading Software Company Changes Name to Avoid Confusion with Internet
Porn Denver -- A leading developer of high-performance graphical
software has changed its name from X Inside to Xi Graphics. The
reason: Ongoing confusion between the software developer and the
increasing number of X-rated pornography companies on the Internet
http://www.xig.com/ci/pr/970219.xigraphics.html
Leading Software Company Changes Name to Avoid Confusion with Internet
Porn Denver -- A leading developer of high-performance graphical
software has changed its name from X Inside to Xi Graphics. The
reason: Ongoing confusion between the software developer and the
increasing number of X-rated pornography companies on the Internet
I noticed while editing these man pages.
Usage: .An Author_name
Example:
This manual page was written by
.An Mike Pritchard Aq mpp@FreeBSD.ORG .
Produces:
This manual page was written by Mike Pritchard <mpp@FreeBSD.ORG>.
".Rv -std atexit" will generate the following text:
The atexit() function returns the value 0 if successful; otherwise the
value -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the
error.
available macro for enum, struct and union members. .Ft seems to
be the best available macro for enum, struct and union tags and
types).
Fixed missing void arg types.
Yep, you heard it, this book has survived since 1997 via the photocopier
underground. Well SCO decided it is now safe for us to see the 6th ed.
Kernel source. :-)
This is a really nice small (274 pages) book on UNIX architecture.
It "reads" like K&R, has good straightforward explantions and nice diagrams
of structures and things, w/o unnessiary bulk. It covers both BSD and sysV.
I wish this had been the textbook for my undergrad OS class rather
than Tannenbam.
years.
Not fixed: stale, misformatted copy of <dirent.h>. I will be cleaning
up the dirent.h and dir.h headers soon (ufs stuff needs to be separated
better), so don't change the man page yet.
files. Also mention that this feature is not enabled by default
and that they must be enabled by compile-time options.
Fixed another typo or two I noticed while I was at it.
interesting problems because the resulting file is newer than the source
and this stops 'make' from rebuilding it. Go via an intermediate file
and rename to make sure this doesn't happen.
to before they are used in .for loops and .SUFFIXES lists, or it
doesn't work! Without this, 'make all' doesn't gzip the result as the
generated 'all' target doesn't seem to be defined completely.
this is the main reason why we want them as diffs.) Also, ask them to
explicitly state files that are added or deleted (lazy committers like me
often forget to "cvs add" or "cvs remove").
bsd.doc.mk:
rename GZIPCMD to DCOMPRESS_CMD, add DCOMPRESS_EXT
bsd.info.mk:
rename GZIPCMD to ICOMPRESS_CMD, add ICOMPRESS_EXT
set INFOTMPL to ${INFODIR}/dir-tmpl
bsd.man.mk
rename ZEXTENSION to MCOMPRESS_EXT, MCOMPRESS to MCOMPRESS_CMD
incomplete and some are just placeholders but I wanted to try to get
something at least into 2.2 on the grounds that what I have is a lot
better than nothing. I also wanted to commit something which documents
the interfaces in 2.2 before I start updating the documentation for 3.0.
This is a definite 2.2 candidate and is also relavent to 2.1 if people
still care about that branch.
use:
- don't put [your name] on a a separate line. Most authors have shorter
names than "The Regents of the University of California".
- don't repeat [your name].
mv, respectively. This will make Warner's life easier.
(2) Add new variable ${PLIST}, which defaults to ${PKGDIR}/PLIST.
If you need to have different PLISTs for different configurations,
you can either
@ pre-fabricate all of them and switch ${PLIST} to point to the
appropriate one, or
@ use sed/awk/perl/whatever to create the correct one from
pkg/PLIST and set ${PLIST} to it.
It is still recommended to have a file called "pkg/PLIST" so
people can do "grep badprog /usr/ports/*/*/pkg/PLIST" and such.
(3) Move /var/db/pkg/${PKGNAME} clash detection to before the
installation (instead of after) and make it fatal, with an error
message suggesting a workaround.
(4) Don't make distclean fail if DIST_SUBDIR is set and the
subdirectory does not exist.
(5) Don't put "@pkgdep Error code 2. Stop." kind of garbage into
packing list if depended port's directory doesn't exist. Instead,
print out a message to stderr.
CD-ROM, FTP, CTM, and CVSup. Adjust cross-references accordingly.
Add a list of CVSup mirror sites, and reference it from the CVSup
tutorial.
Also, fix a spelling error in the porting document.
. Don't clobber the TERM setting; it's supposed to be done by /etc/ttys
already.
. Comment out the Interviews stuff, 98 % of all users probably won't
ever use it.
. Install the files with better default permissions in the skeleton
directory; pw(8) retains the permissions when creating a new
acount, and installing them read-only is stupid, yet installing
.rhosts world-readable is dangerous.
2.2 candidate
1) comment out xref to non-existant libc(3)
2) comment out reference to Fortran specific section (3f)
3) add libkvm with reference to kvm(3)
4) comment out xref to non-existant pc(1)
5) comment out libplot and libplotf77
6) fix problem with -ltermcap not being parenthesized
7) sort files listing
still missing most of the libraries that exist in /usr/lib.
Closes PR#1151
at runtime.
etc/make.conf:
Nuked HAVE_FPU option.
lib/msun/Makefile:
Always build the i387 objects. Copy the i387 source files at build
time so that the i387 objects have different names. This is simpler
than renaming the files in the cvs repository or repeating half of
bsd.lib.mk to add explicit rules.
lib/msun/src/*.c:
Renamed all functions that have an i387-specific version by adding
`__generic_' to their names.
lib/msun/src/get_hw_float.c:
New file for getting machdep.hw_float from the kernel.
sys/i386/include/asmacros.h:
Abuse the ENTRY() macro to generate jump vectors and associated code.
This works much like PIC PLT dynamic initialization. The PIC case is
messy. The old i387 entry points are renamed. Renaming is easier
here because the names are given by macro expansions.
Hung-Chi Chu <hcchu@r350.ee.ntu.edu.tw> - big5con port
Justin M. Seger <jseger@scds.ziplink.net> - bing port
Opps! Forgot to add Jordan K. Hubbard for his xspringies port.
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.
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>
create a skeleton device driver.
one for a real device and the other for a pseudo device.
they each take one argument which is the name (prefix) for the driver.
they add the new file to the /sys tree and add appropriate config files
etc for a build.
hopefully others will build on this so that we get
1/ these drivers improved and the shell scripts
improved in how/where that hook the new code in.
2/ similar tools for providing skeletons for other
modules (I'm tempted to do a VFS filesystem skeleton :)
please take a look and fix anything that maybe should be added.
they compile and link fine,
but I think I wouldn't trust them, as faar as RUNNING yet :)
(well they really wouldn't do very much being skeletons..
we need to add PCI and EISA skeletons as well
followed by a SCSI driver skeleton.
when parsing a printf-like arg list. Looking for someone to blame,
I noticed that the man page has a bad example. It clearly says at
the top that types following the last known argument are passed after
their default type conversions, and then later the example uses
va_arg (..., char);
so I fixed it.
sys/param.h. Change _HAVE_PARAM_H to "HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H" for those who
still like this method -- leading underscores are in the compiler/library
name space and the Ollivier says to follow GNU Autoconf anyway.
${PORTSDIR}. This undoes the changes done in rev. 1.38 and 1.59
(part of the bsd.port.mk pre-dawn ages I've never understood).
Requested by: jkh
(2) Add new variable NO_IGNORE that will override any IGNORE causes.
This is just a little hack to allow building of REQUIRES_MOTIF
ports and its dependencies only etc., so don't document it.
(3) Update +REQUIRED_BY files as necessary. Now you should be able to
delete ports that have runtime dependencies without pkg_delete
complaining about this file missing.
Manpage police??? Looking kinda bored there aren't you? Need something
to do? :-) I'm sure there's work here to be done.
Inspired by: Joerg
2.2-R candidate after Mike gets thru with them.
"a.brian" is already used. It's now a.briansomers
Reviewed by: None
Submitted by: Brian Somers <brian@awfulhak.demon.co.uk>
Obtained from: Brian Somers <brian@awfulhak.demon.co.uk>
2) Handle <keycombo> more or less correctly
3) Start dealing with <cmdsynopsis> (it is pretty ugly!)
4) Handle titles and attributions in blockquote.
5) Handle <accel> (accelerator keys in <guimenu> and friends)
6) Probably some other things...
- Use MAP_FAILED instead of the constant -1 to indicate
failure (required by POSIX).
- Removed flag arguments of '0' (required by POSIX).
- Fixed code which expected an error return of 0.
- Fixed code which thought any address with the high bit set
was an error.
- Check for failure where no checks were present.
Discussed with: bde
understand how to do it from the handbook. I suggest the following
re-wording and extension to make it clearer.
Submitted-By: Eivind Eklund <eivind@dimaga.com>
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
Sorry, I know it's a gross fix to call share/info's install target as
a side-effect, but that's less gross than propagating the work-around
changes to files which have nothing to do with the info system.
the original logic went into a section of code assuming some
incarnation is there, but it's basically a "test -d" fix. Closes PR
ports/2082.
Reviewed by: max ("although I didn't test it, it looks fine")
(1) Change commented out MAINTAINER to FreeBSD_MAINTAINER and
OpenBSD_MAINTAINER. These are not comments anymore, so we may
even use it in the future.
(2) Instead of the ".if ${OPSYS} = "NetBSD" hack, use ".if exists()"
to find the location of md5 an tar. Play similar trick for fetch
(OpenBSD uses /usr/bin/ftp which groks http: addresses).
This commit includes most of the changes made in 1.242 (although many
of them are done differently after more discussion). One thing that
is conspicuously missing is NOMANCOMPRESS, which has been postponed
until Warner figures out what exactly the situation is on the OpenBSD
ports paradigm. (In a nutshell, we can't just define NOMANCOMPRESS in
this file even if uncompressed manpages is the default for OpenBSD,
because that will take away the ability of individual users to select
manpage compression.)
Reviewed by: imp@openbsd.org
and scripts/{pre,post}-* as environment vars. Also, if BATCH is
set, "BATCH=yes" is automatically added to SCRIPTS_ENV.
(Requested by: max)
(2) The INSTALL_* macros are added to SCRIPTS_ENV and MAKE_ENV as
BSD_INSTALL_*. (Requested by: obrien)
(3) New variable MOTIF_ONLY, which will only build ports with
REQUIRES_MOTIF defined. This doesn't do dependencies right (what
if the depended port doesn't need Motif) yet.
(4) Try not to clean the same port twice in clean-depends when (for
instance) it's defined in both BUILD_DEPENDS and INSTALL_DEPENDS.
Note that it won't check chained dependencies so you may still see
the same port cleaned multiple times, but checking that far will
surely make this run slower than the un-"optimized" case so I left
it as is. (Requested by: jkh)
(5) Ignore *.rej files in patches/ directory in addition to *~ and
*.orig.
but replacing the "dir" file unconditionally isn't it. During the course
of development, if .info files go away from the sources, nothing removes
them from /usr/share/info, this is the same as system binaries etc.
Removing the entire index isn't helpful, because you've got to reinstall
the entire tree to get it back again. bsd.info.mk has a reference to
/usr/share/info/dir-tmpl, I wonder if it once created dir if needed?
taob@risc.org as requested (It looks like Nate forgot or
didn't know about this one, or I just jumped the gun
and got to it before he did :-).
Submitted by: Brian Tao <taob@risc.org>
into the DESTDIR in the beforeinstall rule in src/share/info/Makefile.
Then each info file that gets installed into the dir file using
install-info.
It has struck me that there's going to be a problem bootstrapping
this change, since parts of install will fail until install-info
is installed. Maybe someone who knows best how to deal with this can
fix it.
HTML is compliant with the 3.2 DTD.
Sanity preservation and bug prevention - define frequently used
constructs as entities.
What remains to be done is better hypertextification which includes
breaking large documents into managable chunks, and managing links.
There are currently some (easy to avioid) situations that result
in multiple anchors with the same name, or links nested within other
links. :(
Add all of the possible errno's to example.3.
Show examples of the .Bx (BSD) and .At (AT&T UNIX) macros
in the various HISTORY sections.
Add some .Rs/.Re (used for referencing things other
than man pages) in the SEE ALSO sections.
Suggested by: wollman
Lots of tweaks and new functionality. This now handles pretty much
everything that the linuxdoc to docbook translator generates. Output
is still a single (very large in the case of the handbaak) file but now
has minimal internal navigation links.
partial sync with iso3166
2-letter country codes added to na.phone for Caribbean islands
(except Cayman Islands and Monserrat since the 2-letter codes clash with
Kentucky and Mississippi)
changed city codes in Finland (from Ville.Eerola@vlsi.fi)
changed city codes in Australia (from danny@hilink.com.au)
I now have a functioning, semi-automagic linuxdoc to docbook converter,
so once the docbook to (HTML|groff) converters are up to snuff,
linuxdoc will be history. :)
books that I have laying around my house. Please check to see if your
state is now correct :-). I know that the one area code states are correct,
as well as CO and KS, but although I've tried to be careful about the
rest, I may have goofed.
since it seemed like a better place, and the makefiles for
/usr/share/examples didn't need to be fussed with.
The old stuff can be removed from the Attic.
developer can actually take and convert into a real man page
with little work, as opposed to mdoc.template which really
just defines what sections should be present.
So now there is no reason for not providing man pages
with new commands/functions!
corrected various dialcodes, from 1996 phonebook
NB: many ex-soviet countries with prefix 7 were not added, and others
might have been missed
some ex-yugoslav states are probably missing
Belgrade is both in Serbia and Yugoslavia, while the latter retains
an existence
pointed out by Rick Robinson. Found and fixed some grammar problems
at the same time.
Note: the reason for avoiding contractions is two-fold:
1) It makes the text easier to understand for people who speak English
as a second language.
2) Expanding the contractions often reveals poorly worded passages.
Generalize the selection of programs to run based on the existance of files
rather than the OS names that we find. Add comments about me being the
keeper of the OpenBSD mods of this file. Use ftp on OpenBSD rather than
fetch since OpenBSD's FTP supports urls and there is no fetch.
Reviewed by: Joerge Wunch, Jordan Hubbard, and others in ports I've forgotten
Obtained from: OpenBSD with changes from me.
Add a little more sophistication to the md5 grep command.
Change the md5 checksum logic a bit. Now, the message is printed
out for every successfully/unsuccessfully matched checksum, and it
aborts at the end if there was a mismatch. Also, make missing checksum
and IGNORE file inconsistency fatal, as there is now no reason to have
a missing checksum.
sort this file in the process, gave up).
Add section in whos-who for Doc project.
Move John Lind's author tag to a.jlind since we try to keep it as
a.<freefallusername> whenever possible, and "john" is now assigned.
of PRINTER for defining the default output device when formatting
documents for installation. This prevents problems if the
user has defined PRINTER for use by lpr.
Closes PR# 1437.
coincidence - this was the very next item on my TODO list, huzzah! Thanks,
Doug - I don't usually get them checked off so fast! :-). Also change
XCOPY command example to match new realities.
Submitted-By: Doug White <dwhite@resnet.uoregon.edu>
Here's the logic (mostly suggested by John Fieber):
@ If ALLLANG is defined, descend to all language-specific subdirs too.
@ If ALLLANG is not defined, but LANG is defined and a subdirectory with
that name exists, descend to that directory too.
@ In either case, the default subdirectories are always traversed.
Right now there's only one subdirectory (ja_JP.EUC) with one document
(handbook). Note these changes won't do anything if you don't have ALLLANG
defined or LANG set to ja_JP.EUC.
The make world for releases is expected to define ALLLANG, so all language-
specific documentation can be built (and be put in appropriate *dists).
This should be in 2.2.
be changing slightly in such a way that missing end tags might cause
rude surprises, so make end tags manditory and update the existing
transpecs to conform.
2.2 fodder
feature in CVSup-14.0. You no longer need a 200-column window to look
at them.
Also did some general cleanups, and corrected some errors.
2.2 candidate. These should be brought directly into 2.2 if at all
possible, since they correspond with the CVSup release whose port is
going to go into 2.2.
(1) MANLANG is now a list (defaulting to ""), so if you have English
and Japanese-EUC versions of the manpages, you can say something
like `MANLANG= "" ja_JP.EUC' and manpage compression will DTRT.
(2) Add new variables MAN%cPREFIX (where %c=[1-9LN]) which default to
MANPREFIX (which defaults to PREFIX), to specify per-section
prefixes. In particular, this handles the cases in many perl
ports, which install man1pages into man/man1 and man3pages into
lib/perl5/man/man3.
Note these modifications won't change the behavior of existing
variables used in previously-approved ways, so any Makefile that
worked before will still continue to work.
(1) Print out reason when port is ignored because of NO_CDROM,
RESTRICTED, IS_INTERACTIVE, (not) IS_INTERACTIVE, BROKEN,
REQUIRES_MOTIF or NO_PACKAGE.
Submitted by: obrien
(2) Add new special file in pkg/: DISPLAY. (Cf. man pkg_create)
(3) Minor bugfix in clean-depends target, which sometimes executed
"make clean" in the current directory. (Which is probably ok, but
is wrong nonetheless.)
section.
Added Takenori KATO to the developers section. (I'm surprised that he wasn't
listed even in the additional contributors section despite his work on pc98.)
list in alphabetical order.
Added following persons to the additional contributor list. They have been
missing from the list but listed as maintainer of some port.
Committers should pay much more attention to maintain the contributor list!!
Andrew Stevenson <andrew@ugh.net.au>
Boyd Faulkner <faulkner@mpd.tandem.com>
Mike McGaughey <mmcg@cs.monash.edu.au>
Paul Fox <pgf@foxharp.boston.ma.us>
Rob Mallory <rmallory@csusb.edu>
Webmaster list since I'm not doing that anymore, remove "system administration"
category entirely since it's now a responsibility shared among multiple
individuals and, finally, add FAQ category and stick Peter da Silva's name on
it.
Reminded-By: max
better than using the "FAQ" alias as people have either ignored or
misused the alias in the past, and this gives the feeling that there's
an actual person behind it now (which will be a nice change in any case :-).
line with BSD/OS and Linux's username limits, making transitioning from
either operating system a lot easier than it is now. I'm currently
running with this change on my system, as are several others, and have
experienced no ill effects.
This is not for 2.2! This needs to get shaken out longer term in 3.0.
Previously-approved-by: davidg
Changed an expression "one year ago", which is in fact only valid
for a short period of time.
Updated the section about ports. Make this more general, "hundreds of
ports" and give a concrete number of ports (over 710) with a timestamp
"at end of November 96".
I reformatted the "ports" paragraph using fmt, because I think it looks
nicer now in sgml source. So the diff shows more changed lines than was
actually changed. If this isn't suitable for you, then I'll do my best
in the future, to avoid this. My intention was, to make the source look
nicer as well.
now identical with the distributed versions, which may cause some
abbreviations to change for people in obscure zones. (The abbreviations
can be changed again if need be.) It also changes the abbreviation
of Central European Time to `CET' from its previous value of `MET'
(a curious German-English hybrid). Finally, we have finally rid
ourselves of those nasty ZONE-DESCR comments, which were a maintenance
nightmare, in favor of the new zone.tab file. We are not using the
distribution's iso3166.tab file because we have our own list.
Obtained from: Arthur David Olson; ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov
Japanese readers and send queries about Japanese handbook to doc@freebsd.org
in Japanese.
Some cosmetic tweaks.
Some improvement in translation.
This change, together with recent change to jmembers.sgml and jcontrib.sgml,
should definitely go into 2.2.
Makefile yet as John needs to figure out ${LANG}-based doc building.
Please put this in 2.2, or the translators are going to kill me. ;)
Submitted by: doc-jp@jp.freebsd.org (The FreeBSD Japanese Doc Team)
Reviewed by: doc-jp@jp.freebsd.org (mutual review)
you have a Makefile without one.
(2) Fix case when user had DISTDIR defined elsewhere and DIST_SUBDIR
is also defined. (Submitted by: max)
(3) Add several popular master sites as variables. For instance,
MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB is defined to be a list of X11R6 contrib sites,
which you can set MASTER_SITES to in your Makefile if you just
want ftp.x.org or any of the mirror sites.
There is also a new variable, MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR, to specify which
subdirectory of the master site your tarball is located.
One nice thing this enables the user to do is to define the
nearest mirror site in /etc/make.conf. This is especially useful
for continents without a full FreeBSD master site.
Eventually, we will probably split this into a separate file
(bsd.port.sites.mk?), and add some more sites from all corners of
the world.
Right now, XCONTRIB, GNU, PERL_CPAN, TEX_CTAN, and SUNSITE are
supported.
(4) COMPRESS_MAN command alias is replaced by MAN[1-9LN] variables.
You just say "MAN1=foo.1 bar.1" and the make rules will
automatically compress it for you if necessary. (Idea by: obrien)
(5) New "distclean" target to delete distfile too. (Submitted by:
obrien)
(6) Chained dependency cleaning, can be turned off by NOCLEANDEPENDS.
Reviewed by: the ports list
2.2 are more obvious. -Winline is unimportant, but -W gives thousands
of warnings for comparisions. Turning off -W also loses warnings for:
- auto variables clobbered by longjmp. Not much of a problem in the kernel.
- functions returning without a value. I don't like losing this.
- an expression statement or the left side of a comma operand contains no
side effects. Turning this off also stops warnings for the low quality
debugging macros in gsc.c and lpt.c.
Should be in 2.2.
"+=" originally because (as I understand) Jordan used a sed script (or
was it perl?) to edit all the ports Makefiles automatically and he
wanted to make sure multiple CATEGORIES lines (they were inserted
after DISTNAME or something, there shouldn't have been multiple of
them to begin with but that's another story) won't be stepping on each
other's toes.
Reminded by: obrien
^^^^ ^^^^^
doesn't make the ".." in typewritten format. And the ascii version
of the file shows '<tt>..</tt>' literally. After looking into linuxdoc dtd,
we found there is no way to make ".." in typewritten font.
Noticed by: Mitsuru IWASAKI <iwasaki@pc.jaring.my>
Added reference to "MAINTAINER on Makefiles" section.
Submitted by: Jason Thorpe <thorpej@nas.nasa.gov>
(2) Remove the bogus "CAT+=" definition. Closes PR ports/1703.
Submitted by: Peter Childs <pjchilds@imforei.apana.org.au>
(3) Change MKDIR to "/bin/mkdir -p", remove "-p" from ${MKDIR}
invocations. Closes PR ports/1901.
Submitted by: obrien
(4) Add a new macro variable COMPRESS_MAN, which will evaluate to gzip
if NOMANCOMPRESS isn't set (default), or true if it is.
(5) Add a new variable NO_CHECKSUM, which will disable the md5 checksum.
Submitted by: jkh
(6) Also, move NO_PATCH and NO_PACKAGE checks to right place in
invocation order.
(7) Check for LIB_DEPENDS before installation too. (It used to check
only before extraction.)
Forgotten a long time ago by: asami
Added reference to pkg_create(1) man page in the explanation of the packing
list.
Added description of ${INSTALL_*} macros.
Added an explanation to use patch files distributed in .tar.gz format.
Added statement about the copyright on the submitted files.
Slgith change in sample Makefile.
Written mostly by: asami
the required size, as opposed to simply `touch'ing it. This works
around problems in the -current NFS and/or VFS and/or VM code.
Also hint about restricting the permissions to this file.
When I booted my system without the above option, the CDROM could not
respond in time to the bootup probe of devices and was "missed". When
I tried to access the device I got the "Device not configured" error
message. I rebuilt the kernel with the SCSI_DELAY option and the
problem went away.
Submitted by: Jon Wallace <adrl@whoweb.com>
Dmitry Kohmanyuk <dk@farm.org>
Lars Koeller <Lars_Koeller@odie.physik2.uni-rostock.de>
Michael Searle <searle@longacre.demon.co.uk>
MOROHOSHI Akihiko <moro@race.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
Ronald Kuehn <kuehn@rz.tu-clausthal.de>
Ville Eerola <ve@sci.fi>
Yukihiro Nakai <nakai@mlab.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
Updated following people's addresses:
Brian Clapper, Hideaki Ohmon, Jian-Da Li, Jim Lowe
Removed &a.andreas; as he's listed in the developpers section.
shipped with freebsd can be changed without modifying the Makefiles directly.
Creates: BOOT_FORCE_COMCONSOLE
BOOT_PROBE_KEYBOARD
BOOT_PROBE_KEYBOARD_LOCK
BOOT_COMCONSOLE (port value for console)
Also disabled -Wunused. It caused too many warnings even for me.
The sign mismatch warnings should be fixed first. They are more
important and harder to disable (they are controlled by -W, which
controls too many things).
NOT being maintained, that I vote for killing this document soon and
moving everything into the Handbook. The FAQ needs to be "driven" a lot
more aggressively than it has been, and since that's clearly never going to
happen then we should kill it to halt the spread of outdated information.
forced in any of the standard ways (MAKEOBJDIR was lost in the
previous commit). Simplified the conditionals for this.
Restored comment about MAKEOBJDIR from rev.1.4.
Improved English in comments.
of the variable OBJLINK which is used in /etc/make.conf to build 'obj'
links in the current directory. This caused lots of useless warnings
since if OBJLINK is defined ./obj will be created and used.
Submitted by: max
While I'm here, add "${DIST_SUBDIR}/" at end of CDROM pathnames. Also
add an empty declaration of PATCH_SITES next to MASTER_SITES to avoid
"variable recursive" error.
the gnu libobjc rather than the NeXT one. I do not understand objc
so I don't know the implications of this, but the gcc-2.7.2 libobjc is
built with this.
in the tree that use things like bsd.prog.mk just to get the default
targets like install, tags, obj, clean, cleandir, cleandepend, but do not
actually build anything there.
bsd.obj.mk. Also, a make target called objwarn checks to see
if ${.OBJDIR} != ${.CURDIR} and ${.OBJDIR} != ${CANONICALOBJDIR}
and outputs a warning. (No warning for the latter if MAKEOBJDIR or MAKEOBJDIRP
REFIX is set). objwarn is called from all targets in bsd.prog.mk, bsd.kmod.mk,
and bsd.lib.mk.
Reviewed by: bde
man pages (eg: named/bind/etc). In order to get (say) dig.1 to pass
through the filter and produce a new dig.1 for installing, I used an
intermediate file at build time, similar to the way the .gz man pages are
built.
I've not extensively tested this, but it seems to work for the known
cases where it was failing, and it only affects the NOMANCOMPRESS case
which was already broken.
Pointed out by: "Ph. Charnier" <charnier@xp11.frmug.org>, PR#1612
Add a section on what to do in order to recompile the latest BIND from ISC.
Change a & into a more proper & as LaTeX shoked on it.
Obtained from: Usenet
Submitted-By: "David E. O'Brien" <obrien@Nuxi.cs.ucdavis.edu>
Incorporate new development section, since Satoshi seems to have wandered
off for a bit and I have too much stuff stacking up in my handbook directory.
Submitted-By: asami
negated the descriptive sense of "frag" and "-N", which were clearly wrong.
changed instructions (which were bogus in the extreme) for allowing/preventing
outgoing rsh/rlogin, rewording the paragraph so it applies to incoming
connections so it actually both makes sense and tells the truth. It can
be deleted instead if not relevant.
did not change the paragraph about loading multiple rules in one command,
although this operation is now partially supported by loading from a
command file.
I hope I'm not treading on anyone's toes here.
Running them twice usually destroyed the target binary. E.g., the
second `make objlink' in `make objlink; make; make objlink' replaced
the `cat' binary by a symlink cat@ -> /usr/obj/usr/src/bin/cat.
`ln -fs' is unusable when the target might be a symlink that resolves
to a directory. Then -f applies to a file in the directory and not
to the symlink. This seems to be the standard (and sometimes useful)
behaviour.
Added forgotten share/doc/psd/05.sysman and share/zoneinfo/America/Indiana.
bsd.doc.mk:
Nuked mkdir -p and wrong fixups of the leaf directory's ownerships and
permissions. The doc tree should be well enough established for this
to be safe. Installs to directories should use a trailing slash on
the directory name so installs to non-drectories are fatal, but I
didn't start changing them.
bsd.man.mk:
Nuked mkdir -p and wrong fixups of the leaf directory's ownerships and
permissions. They were overkill to create just /usr/share/info.
zoneinfo/Makefile:
No changes yet. zic creates directories with ordinary 755 permissions.
Why do we use 555 permissions for directories in /usr/share/zoninfo.
Why not for zoneinfo itself? /proc and /dev/fd are the only other
directories in the system with 555 permissions.
note that at_shutdown has a new parameter to indicate When
during a shutdown the callout should be made. also
add a RB_POWEROFF flag to reboot "howto" parameter..
tells the reboot code in our at_shutdown module to turn off the UPS
and kill the power. bound to be useful eventually on laptops
pages.
For those of you that don't know, here is an example of how the .Fx
macro is used:
The xyzzy command first appeared in
.Fx 2.2 .
Will expand to:
The xyzzy command first appeared in FreeBSD 2.2.
"4.4BSD-Lite" (not "4.4 BSD Lite", "BSD 4.4-lite" or some such), this
is what the CSRG people call their release in the red daemon book (and
most of the handbook had it that way).
substitute.
(2) Bring the *_DEPENDS section up to the current state. Explain that
the pathname in the "path:dir" pair can be a full pathname if you
want a port to depend on something that isn't executable or an
executable that's not expected to be in the user's search path
(like /usr/local/libexec). Also, change the LIB_DEPENDS example
to use jpeg, tcl-7.3's appropriateness as an example is quite
outdated at this point. ;)
Here are the diffs for libc_r to get it one step closer to P1003.1c
These make most of the thread/mutex/condvar structures opaque to the
user. There are three functions which have been renamed with _np
suffixes because they are extensions to P1003.1c (I did them for JAVA,
which needs to suspend/resume threads and also start threads suspended).
I've created a new header (pthread_np.h) for the non-POSIX stuff.
The egrep tags stuff in /usr/src/lib/libc_r/Makefile that I uncommented
doesn't work. I think its best to delete it. I don't think libc_r needs
tags anyway, 'cause most of the source is in libc which does have tags.
also:
Here's the first batch of man pages for the thread functions.
The diff to /usr/src/lib/libc_r/Makefile removes some stuff that was
inherited from /usr/src/lib/libc/Makefile that should only be done with
libc.
also:
I should have sent this diff with the pthread(3) man page.
It allows people to type
make -DWANT_LIBC_R world
to get libc_r built with the rest of the world. I put this in the
pthread(3) man page. The default is still not to build libc_r.
also:
The diff attached adds a pthread(3) man page to /usr/src/share/man/man3.
The idea is that without libc_r installed, this man page will give people
enough info to know that they have to build libc_r.
so that people can look and comment.
I'll add the at_fork and at_exit immediatly, but I'll
add teh at_shutdown later as it's more extensive
and I desire people's comments..
julian
bombing mercilessly.
(2) If that directory has a directory called CVS, remind the user of
the existence of the "-P" option to cvs co and update.
(3) While I'm here, clean up the PATCH_DEBUG code a bit. In
particular, don't duplicate a whole bunch of code just for adding
a single "echo" statement. ;)
Reviewed by: the ports list
the devices I once owned or contemplated purchasing .. )
(1) The ncr controller supports 53C810/815/825/860/875.
(2) Descrpitions of fxp0 and vx0 were missing.
(3) The ed driver supports SMC 8216 (`Elite Ultra') too.
(4) Add pseudo-device ccd.
won't be pulled into individual ports that include this file. ;)
(2) Document MOTIFLIB, it's not set in the ports Makefiles but is
important for Motif ports (already documented in the handbook).
(3) Add INSTALL_PROGRAM, INSTALL_SCRIPT, INSTALL_DATA, INSTALL_MAN as
"aliases" of the appropriate install command line, for use in *-install
targets.
Reviewed by: the ports list (item 3 only)
eg: options "SCSI_DELAY=15" should be options SCSI_DELAY=15, as config
knows about the "=" and splits it correctly into key=value for the #defines.
The only options that need quotes are those that have numbers as part of
the actual name, eg: "TUNE_1542" and "COMPAT_IBCS2".
pipe the man page source through before compressing or installing.
This can be used to do do (eg) sed substitution on man pages from
3rd party packages (in particular, ncurses and bind-4.9.4)
This should not affect anything already in the source tree.
address - Melbourne is a city in the state of Victoria, not vice versa! :-)
Also add reference to Greg Lehey's books in the appropriate section,
replace some redundant questions by pointers to the Handbook, replace
"look at this bit of the Handbook" pointers by URLs, clean up
inconsistent use of "one" and "you" and fix a couple of typos
introduced by my previous changes...
* Removed material that was duplicated in the installation instructions.
* Updated the address for an Australian supplier of CDROMs (supplied by
David Henshaw via Martin Butkus).
* Give more info about how to get started with the installation.
* Update references to 2.1.0 as "the latest release".
* Added pointer to a Web page explaining how to have multiple operating
systems on the same machine.
* Moved question about running DOS binaries out of the installation section.
* Added question re boot floppy not loading properly.
* Added explanation of disk geometry, moved things around so that "please
refer to the previous question" no longer sends the reader with a
non-booting system to a PLIP cable wiring diagram!
* Mention the time/space requirements for making a custom install floppy.
* Acknowledge a couple of people whose answers I've adapted in various
places (and who deserve credit anyway for answering so many questions!)
I forgot his name whilst typing in the commit message on the
port, and he wasn't in the handbook (I guessed wrong, using Marc
Van Kempen, sorry to both). Now, his name is in here and I
won't get mixed up again!
Obtained from: Mark (not Marc!)
(1) Additional __FreeBSD_version's from <osreldate.h>. Closes PR
docs/1438.
Submitted by: "David E. O'Brien" <obrien@Nuxi.cs.ucdavis.edu>
(2) Make it clear that when submitting a port, the package is not
necassary.
Suggested by: joerg
(3) Recommend people to use send-pr to send us notifications of new
ports and upgrades so that they won't fall between the cracks.
Suggested by: a lot of people
(4) Add a section about Motif and describe REQUIRES_MOTIF and
MOTIFLIB.
Prodded by: chuckr
(5) Revise the licensing problems section and describe the two
variables RESTRICTED and NO_CDROM.
(6) Fill in the section about upgrading. In particular, recommend to
send in diffs of the old and new ports (these are "ports", not the
original source or anything!), so it's easier to see what has
changed.
Discourage the use of the EXB-2501 by now, and slightly improve the
formatting for this entry.
Correct some minor oddities for the Tandberg entries based on my input
data.
Minor addition to the <!-- tech> section for QIC.
Changed zones: Algeria, Egypt, Ghana, Libya, Morocco, Sierra Leone,
South Africa, Sudan, Tunisia, Armenia, Myanmar, China, Taiwan, Hong
Kong, Macao, Cyprus, Georgia, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Kazakhstan,
Kirgizstan, Lebanon, Mongolia, the Phillippines, Syria, Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Australia, Kiribati, New Caledonia, New
Zealand, Vanuatu, the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Czech Republic,
Finland, France, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the
Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Switzerland, Turkey,
Canada, Mexico, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Costa Rica, Cuba, the
Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Nicaragua,
Brazil, the Falkland Islands, Paraguay
Deleted zones: Asia/Tomsk (superseded by Asia/Krasnoyarsk)
Added zones: Asia/Aktau (area formerly part of Asia/Alma-Ata);
Asia/Krasnoyarsk (supersedes Asia/Tomsk); America/Glace_Bay (area
formerly part of America/Halifax); America/Thunder_Bay,
America/Nipigon, America/Rainy_River (areas formerly covered by
America/Montreal); America/Swift_Current (area formerly part of
America/Regina); America/Dawson_Creek (area formerly part of
America/Vancouver); America/Pangnirtung, America/Iqaluit,
America/Rankin_Inlet, America/Yellowknife, America/Inuvik,
America/Dawson (areas formerly part of America/Whitehorse)
standards and to clean up some of the English. The job is
nowhere complete.
This man page would be a good project for someone who knows
something about the firewall software, and would like to
contribute to the documentation effort. Many of the things
in this man page are out of date and do not reflect reality.
This stuff should not be too destructive if the IPDIVERT is not compiled in..
be aware that this changes the size of the ip_fw struct
so ipfw needs to be recompiled to use it.. more changes coming to clean this up.
(suggested by Darryl Okahata).
* Add explanation of what virtual consoles are
(suggested by Francisco Reyes)
* Minor formatting change to fix docs/1378 (could some kind person
close this for me? Thanks!)
* Removed references to obsolete /usr/share/FAQ/Text directory.
* Added details of UK supplier of FreeBSD CDs.
* Made the consequences of running ``make world'' more explicit.
* More cleaning and tidying up.
comprehensive re-write later.
* Ruthlessly condense questions so they fit on a single line (the
TOC is now actually readable in lynx!). In one or two cases, this
has meant splitting up questions or incorporating part of the old
question into the answer.
* Make it clear that the question about disklabel'ing is actually
about adding a second hard disk, provide a _much_ simpler answer and
move it out of the installation section.
* Don't imply that the AHA2920 is supported (I suspect we will get a
lot of queries about this)
* Reword the non-serious questions to hint that the answer may not be
particularly informative...
* Correct typos and grammar, remove US-centric colloquialisms :-)
and many more.
based on the HD64570 chip. Both the 1 and 2 port cards is supported.
Line speeds of up to 2Mbps is possible. At this speed about 95% of the
bandwidth is usable with 486DX processors.
The standard FreeBSD sppp code is used for the link level layer. The
default protocol used is PPP. The Cisco HDLC protocol can be used by
adding "link2" to the ifconfig line in /etc/sysconfig or where ever
ifconfig is run.
At the moment only the X.21 interface is tested. The others may need
tweaks to the clock selection code.
"It would be good to point out that a machine that only has SCSI devices
may also generate this message if an IDE CD-ROM is not configured as
the Master device. Words like these might work ..."
This generally means that there is no CDROM in the CDROM drive,
or the drive is not visible on the bus. Feed the drive
something, and/or check it's master/slave status.
Submitted by: Neil Smith <ngs@sesame.hensa.ac.uk> with a small addition
Expand definition of 'established' and 'icmptypes.' Correct examples
which still used the old syntax. Add a pointer to the CERT packet
filtering checklist.
Indicate that gateway in /etc/sysconfig is *really* the correct way
if you have an /etc/sysconfig file. Other small tweaks.
Requested by: Guy Helmer <ghelmer@alpha.dsu.edu>
(SRC_ENCAPSUATION). Stick in some cd ${.CURDIR} directives which have
been (benignly) missing all this time. Allow more types of targets to be
selectively disabled.
"MASTER_SITES:= ..." of defined(MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE) case, otherwise
it would cause a recursive variable definition error when
MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE is set and MASTER_SITES is not set.
having a hosts.lpd(5) manpage and some references to it from
within lpd(8) might help here. Close PR docs/1277
Submitted by: andreas@knobel.gun.de (Andreas Klemm)
Add some comments for variables and targets.
Include <bsd.obj.mk>, remove targets obj, clean, cleandir.
Replace ${MAN*} with ${DOC*} variables.
Use a .for loop for undefined targets
I was in the middle of one of these "projects" when I started
on the next, so they wound up all intermixed)
Move the mailing list entities from authors.sgml to the new file
lists.sgml. Add an entity for majordomo at the same time.
Avoid the use of contractions. This revealed some grammer problems,
and also has the benefit of helping make things clearer for those people
who do make speak English as a their first language.
we are consistent in how they are referenced in the handbook, and
so that they are now all clickable URLs. E.g. no more mis-matched
freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org and hackers@freebsd.org. They are used
just like the individual mail addresses defined in authors.sgml.
E.g. &a.doc will expand to:
FreeBSD documentation project mailing list <freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.ORG>
Be consistent in using the FreeBSD.ORG address. All references
to freebsd.org were changed to FreeBSD.ORG.
Use pre-defined addresses for some individuals where available.
Create 'obj' directory in current directory instead
a symbolic link to the 'obj' tree if defined. [not set]
Print a warning if 'obj' tree (/usr/obj) does not exist.
Change default 'obj' directory from ``obj.${MACHINE}'' back to
``obj'', unfortunately many Makefiles are wired with the name ``obj''.
Add some comments for variables and targets.
eliminates many local symbols that could not be removed by the "ld -r -x"
steps on the individual object files. It makes shared libraries
substantially smaller -- almost 11%, in the case of libc.so.3.0.
(1) The new NO_CDROM Boolean variable means "don't put the distfile/
package on the CDROM you're going to sell". It will basically
turn off everything if FOR_CDROM is set.
Many of the NO_PACKAGE ports are actually "don't sell for profit"
types, which we shouldn't have any problem distributing via ftp.
(2) The new RESTRICTED Boolean variable means don't build this unless
you know what you are doing. It doesn't have any effect unless
NO_RESTRICTED is also set.
(3) BROKEN means this port is broken. At least it will now show up in
INDEX and README.html, and give people more incentive to fix (I
hope).
RESTRICTED and BROKEN are expected to replace the pseudo-targets
in parent Makefiles. (The RESTRICTED and BROKEN list didn't do
anything before, they were solely for grepping purposes.)
(4) The Motif support brings in four new variables: REQUIRES_MOTIF,
which the porter sets for ports that require Motif to build;
HAVE_MOTIF, which the user sets to indicate the system has Motif;
MOTIF_STATIC, which the user sets to indicate that the static
libXm, instead af the default dynamic library, is to be used; and
MOTIFLIB, which is set to "${X11BASE}/lib/libXm.a" or
"-L${X11BASE}/lib -lXm", depending on whether MOTIF_STATIC is set.
The porter is expected to replace all occurrences of libXm in the
{Im,M}akefiles with ${MOTIFLIB}, and this will allow both dynamic
linkage (for users with Motif) and static linkage (for those who
build packages to be used by those withot Motif, i.e., me ;)
automatically.
Original Motif support idea by: graichen
man pages up to mdoc guidelines and fix some minor formatting glitches.
Also fixed a number of man pages to not abuse the .Xr macro to
display functions and path names and a lot of other junk.
devfs_link.9: modified man page to reflect source code
devfs_add_devsw.9: replaced by devfs_add_devswf.9
devfs_add_devswf.9: proper function for adding devices to DEVFS
word: "zilch"). I guess the only way to get people try and comment on
these kind of things is to shove it down their throat.... ;)
Anyway, here's a set of changes required for auto-generation of READMEs
in ports directories. Necessary changes and additions of templates
to the ports tree will follow shortly.
Eventually I'll commit all the generated READMEs to the tree, but that
will be in the rather distant future. For now, I encourage anyone
with a -current systam and a matching ports tree to do a "make readmes"
at the top level and see what they get.
Next step will be to add pkg/{COMMENT,DESCR} to all the categories.
looks rather ugly.
Also slightly adopt the contents to the results of a discussion that
took place in -core some months ago. We couldn't agree on everything,
but some of the previous sentiments were rather outdated.
which has been in the tree for a much longer time.
Sorry for the multiple commits and I know I shouldn't be doing this but
my hamster tells me to be orthogonal...("hey Phoenix, do you think
I should call it LOCALBASE?" "squeak" "ok, if you say so").
counterpart to X11BASE (default "/usr/X11R6").
Now PREFIX is set to ${X11BASE} or ${LOCAL_PREFIX} depending on
whether USE_IMAKE or USE_X11 is set or not.
This enables us to refer to non-X ports from X ports using
${LOCAL_PREFIX}, thus removing most of the remaining "/usr/local"s
from the ports tree.
This will also allow the system administrator to move the whole
"local" tree to somewhere else, without affecting X ports. (Of course
not all ports are necessarily happy with that, but we're working on
it.)
Based on: an idea that came up while I was watching a football game
several months ago ("hey, maybe I can move that sideline
without disturbing the other!")
actually follow the links, and change references from DigiBoard
to Digi International (I'm currently working for Digi, and we were
just asked to do the same thing with everything we are working
on when possible, so I figured I might as well do the same under FreeBSD).
Fixed DPADD again.
mk/bsd.README
Don't list the LIBXXX identifiers here. Describe them better.
mk/bsd.prog.mk
Updated the list of LIBXXX identifiers.
- recently added library libdisk.a wasn't mentioned (required for sysinstall)
- old objects kz*.o weren't mentioned
- old libraries libc_pic.a, libcom_err.a, libf2c.a, libg++.a, libgcc_pic.a,
libgmp.a, libipx.a, libkeycap.a, libss.a and libxpg4.a weren't mentioned
- old libraries libgnumalloc.a and libftp.a no longer exist
- old library libmp.a was said to not exist
- deprecated links libfl.a and libln.a weren't mentioned
"foo", what this does is:
(1) Put all distfiles and patchfiles in /usr/ports/distfiles/foo
(2) Go to ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/foo when the
master site is down
When your port has a lot of dist/patchfiles, or has a file that does
not have a very port-specific name (e.g., "Makefile"), set this
variable instead of redefining DISTDIR. (If you redefine DISTDIR, (1)
will work but (2) will not.)
Agreed that it's a good idea by: adam
since I've no idea what the ISO standard for Italian keyboards is, but we
can always adjust it later and this is better than the nothing we had before.
Submitted by: Gianmarco Giovannelli <gmarco@masternet.it>
port documentation (which can be things like postscript manuals
describing every single of the 65,536 options) from being installed
into ${PREFIX}/share/doc.
(Sorry Jordan, but your other idea (${CATEGORIES}) was a major hit.)
Also remove the keyword field in the INDEX line and replace it with
two columns: build-time dependencies and run-time dependencies. They
are both list of package names (minus the ".tgz").
(1) people can have weird paths and it will still work, and
(2) if you really need to use /usr/local/bin/cp instead of /bin/cp,
you can do that by changing only one line.
Submitted by: wosch
Ideally, this should go into the ``mail'' section of the handbook, but
i don't have the time to write all of this right now, so i've put it
into the FAQ.
so that the developer section isn't garbaged up.
Suggestion: anytime you mess with the handbook, build it
and actually look at the result with your favorite browser, since
a one character typo can mess up the whole thing.
so it looks just a little more professional (and helps me figure out
when/if someone's already been added!).
Add Wolfram Schneider to list of developers.
Update latest changes from avail.
1. Import UART technical description from Frank Durda IV
<uhclem@nemesis.lonestar.org>.
2. Push existing sio chapter out of hw.sgml and make a separate
document out of it.
3. Make hw.sgml include the first two under serial devices section.
Submitted by: Frank Durda IV <uhclem@nemesis.lonestar.org> & I
Cruft removed (small amounts)
Added entry about IJPPP pred1 and some sites.
Changed entry on commiters to read "All CVS commits" instead of current commits
exactly as I did (should have checked there first I guess) except my
macro for TAILQ_INSERT_BEFORE took an unneeded arg. We now match 4.4Lite2.
Suggested by: Jeffrey Hsu <hsu@FreeBSD.org>
Corrected some bogus cross references to man pages that we don't/won't
have and either deleted them, or found a more appropriate man page
that we do have. Various other minor changes to silence manck.
Manck is currently down to about 200 lines of errors, down from
the 500 - 600+ when I started all this.
Also corrected a few minor formatting errors, file location and cross
references in some of the section 3 man pages.
This shuts up a lot of the output from "manck" for section 3.
/var/db/pkg/${PKGNAME} exists. ("make install" will do nothing
because this is not a critical error and the installation is
treated as successful.)
Closes PR 870.
the hp300 crash(8) man page in the lite-2 source tree.
Also removed man8/makedev.8 (this was vax specific and was replaced
by man8/man8.i386/MAKEDEV.8 a long time ago - it was just never removed
from the source tree).
I tried using `MAN4!= *.4' but it did weird things for plain make
although it handled the long overlooked pt.4 and worm.4 better than
the old manually edited list.
the verbose output for `make -s install' and gives nicer output for
`make install' and `make -n install'. This method should be used more.
Install meteor and startslip. In fact, install all subdirectories
except CVS. This method should be used more so that SUBDIR lists don't
have to be changed so often (special cases could be handled by short
exclusion lists).
Take developers out of the contrib list.
Change Core, Developers and who does what to use active links.
Add Terry Lambert to contrib list. (For one thing or another:))
Remove some information in the process, but I'm trying to make this
as transparent as possible so that regions can move site names around
as ftp servers are created or go offline.
MOD_MISC() and DISPATCH() macros.
Renamed new_syscall module as new_syscall_mod. It seems to be standard
to have module names ending with _mod, and this may be forced when
MOD_SYSCALL() and MOD_VFS() are updated to match MOD_MISC().
Cleaned up lkm examples a little.
prototypes don't go missing again. Also added -Winline so that some
doubtful (non-)inlines get fixed.
bsd.kmod.mk:
Also added `-Wreturn-type -Wimplicit -Wnested-externs' to catch up
with the kernel.
the 'rm -rf' and cpio was bugging me because rdist used to get false hits
and also it installs the files with the wrong uid.
I've tried this by running a find .. -exec ${INSTALL} ...; instead...
these files a bit. The entries for the International secure collections
don't match Freefall's naming conventions, but hopefully MarkM will fix that
soon. Each file now has an extensive header describing what it is, how
to use it, and how you may want to customize it for a particular system.
Errors in document processing are almost never passed back to `make'.
Removed the requirement for having an obj directory. fig.2.3.n
previously had to live in obj/.
a little different than the one to generate the document. This caused
wrong page numbers.
Fixed sourcing of index.so. The hack of handling it separately is no
longer necessary. This hack didn't quite work - the page numbers and
columnization of the index were wrong.
Fixed warnings about not being able to source index.so.
Fixed generation of `index' in the source directory.
Don't bother removing `index' after creating index.so. `index' gets
created again when the final document is built and it's too much
trouble to remove later.
Fixed dependencies. The long {SRCS} list in 4.4lite isn't quite
right and got broken to allow centralized rules.
1. ${ROFF} is run in ${.OBJDIR}.
2. the preprocessor prefixes ${SRCDIR}/ to relative pathnames in `.so'
statements.
This is useful when running ${ROFF} in the source directory isn't
convenient.
Added dependencies on ${EXTRA} and ${OBJS}. These are usually for files
that are sourced indirectly. ${OBJS} is for files that are built.
4.4lite has decentalized incomplete dependencies on ${EXTRA} and ${DPADD}.
These were broken by are centralized handling of the roff targets.
too. Basically, if the name starts with a "/", it's tested with "test -e";
otherwise, it's tested with "witch -s".
Reviewed by: the ports list (well at least nobody complained)
us.dvorak.kbd: The "standard" (note the quotes, there really isn't any
standard for non-alphanumeric keys in the Dvorak
world) version, identical to what MicroSoft
distributes in their DOS-6.22 supplementary disk.
us.dvorakx.kbd: The version I use, three pairs swapped (esc <-> `~,
clock <-> lctrl, and =+ <-> \|) from the above.
Is there anyone who could give me an account on a faster-than-20-bytes-per
second line to the US (not EBONE) ? I'm having too many problems connecting
to freefall to do commits... It would be better if it could be a ssh-protected
account, that would give a strong authentication.
The RENATER line (and thus EBONE) is almost dead for remote login after
10AM european time... :-(
Thanks in advance.
misplaced extern declarations (mostly prototypes of interrupt handlers)
that this exposed. The prototypes should be moved back to the driver
sources when the functions are staticalized.
Added idempotency guards to <machine/conf.h>. "ioconf.h" can't be
included when building LKMs so define a wart in bsd.kmod.mk to help
guard against including it.
failed when there was an obj directory. Use .PATH.n for installing too
so that make can find the source files. This allows the source files to
be in several directories (the old method using cd only works well for
a single directory). The dependencies are on the source files even for
the compressed case, although it would be more flexible to depend on the
files being installed, so that `make install' doesn't attempt to build
things
Force COPY to -c for the NOMANCOMPRESS case. Then the files to be installed
are always sources, so they must not be moved.
The private clean rules have been broken since we started
building compressed man pages in the obj directory and the
others don't do anything different from the general rules.
use .PATH.n to get the dependencies right and to avoid some shell tests.
Remove bogus dependency of individual compressed man pages on MANDEPEND.
Use for loops to avoid duplicated code.
Combine some rm steps in installation of links. Linking still takes too
long.
* Kernel configuration, from Jake Hamby <jehamby@lightside.com>
I'd like as many people as possible to give this one a good
check before 2.1 goes out the door.
* Routing, from Coranth Gryphon <gryphon@healer.com>
A bazillion formatting tweaks (only 13 bazillion more to go!)
I couldn't use the original, as it had unusable copyright on the manpage..
(now that must be a first.. the source copyright was fine, the manpage
was not..)
* Import my "Installation for the Impatient" to the install section.
* Move Booting and memory use into a "Tech Topics" chapter; add
DMA information. (Frank Durda IV)
* Bring in ESDI section. (Wilko Bulte)
* Bring in MD5/DES section. (Garrett Wollman)
* Fix a couple problems with LaTeX output.
Added entry on NFS mounting SunOS drives (Just like the Linux entry above it)
Added entry on use of cu to do AT commands
Still to be added: KTRACE entry
They are called from the fetch, extract and install targets,
respectively.
Also, only RUN_DEPENDS is put into the @pkgdep list of the package.
EXEC_DEPENDS is still supported (for now), it is copied into
BUILD_DEPENDS and RUN_DEPENDS. This will go away after we finish
fixing all the ports Makefiles.
This change fixes the following bug/features:
(1) "make fetch" building and installing all the dependencies
(2) Programs needed for building only (e.g., gmake) put into the
packages' dependency lists ("why does the emacs package depend on
gmake?")
Reviewed by: the ports list
FORMATS can be defined as an empty string to suppress generation or
installation of any files. Previously setting it to "null" had that
effects.
Now uses MANOWN, MANGRP and MANMODE for installation instead of BINOWN,
BINGRP and BINMODE.
on the installation floppy.
Also pulled the entity definitions for the various sections out
of handbook.sgml and put them in their own file since they are used
both by handbook.sgml (the full version) and boothelp.sgml (the
abridged version).
b) Put in names and email addresses of people who have claimed
empty sections as their own.
c) Incorporated MIRROR.SITES as the first section in the appendix
titled "Obtaining FreeBSD". When adding, removing or otherwize
twiddling with the mirror site info, do it in mirrors.sgml!
d) A couple other odds and ends.
e) NOTE: You must update your your /usr/bin/sgmlfmt and /usr/share/sgml
to process this edition of the handbook!
the file is fetched or not. Apparently Jordan fixed it a long time
ago but it was broken again at import of the new version of ncftp.
Which means even if we fix it, it may break again and we may need to
fix it again, and (imagination here, please)....
Instead, move the file existence check into the for loop for
MASTER_SITES/PATCH_SITES and break out with "continue 2" when the file
is found. This is actually a cleaner logic than before if you ask me,
because instead of assuming the file is fetched on a 0 exit status
from ncftp AND checking for the existence of the file after the loop,
the check is done exactly once for each iteration and nowhere else.
do-extract target depending on defined(EXTRACT_ONLY) or not, simply
set EXTRACT_ONLY ?= ${DISTFILES} and always use ${EXTRACT_ONLY} as
the extraction list.
Jordan, you might wish to update sysinstall's builtin knowledge, too.
They are also offering r/o NFS access, will this be interesting for
us? (sysinstall)
change, but I've been testing this on thud and silvia for quite a
while, also I haven't gotten any bug reports from the ports list, so
I'm going to let it loose!
It cleans up this file quite a bit, now I can go in and start adding
some more "interesting" things.... ;)
Remove some rare-used semigraphics from VT100 entry, it really helps many
not-fully compatible emulators and don't degradate original vt100 much.
Add VT200 keys set to VT100 k1-k4, it not affects original VT100 since no one
program tests keys presense, but helps emulators to work
Anthony Yee-Hang Chan <yeehang@netcom.com>
Bill Fenner <fenner@parc.xerox.com>
Brian Tao <taob@gate.sinica.edu.tw>
Chris Stenton <jacs@gnome.co.uk>
Chuck Robey <chuckr@Glue.umd.edu>
Cornelis van der Laan <nils@guru.ims.uni-stuttgart.de>
Craig Struble <cstruble@vt.edu>
Dave Chapeskie <dchapes@ale.zeus.leitch.com>
Don Whiteside <dwhite@anshar.shadow.net>
Eric L. Hernes <erich@lodgenet.com>
Frank Nobis <fn@trinity.radio-do.de>
Janusz Kokot <janek@gaja.ipan.lublin.pl>
Javier Martin Rueda <jmrueda@diatel.upm.es>
Josh MacDonald <jmacd@uclink.berkeley.edu>
Lucas James <Lucas.James@ldjpc.apana.org.au>
Marc Ramirez <mrami@mramirez.sy.yale.edu
Marc van Kempen <wmbfmk@urc.tue.nl>
Michael Smith <msmith@atrad.adelaide.edu.au>
NIIMI Satoshi <sa2c@and.or.jp>
Nobuyuki Koganemaru <kogane@kces.koganemaru.co.jp>
Peter Wemm <peter@haywire.DIALix.COM>
Philippe Charnier <charnier@lirmm.fr>
Rob Snow <rsnow@txdirect.net>
Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
Thomas Gellekum <thomas@ghpc8.ihf.rwth-aachen.de>
Tom Samplonius <tom@misery.sdf.com>
Torbjorn Granlund <tege@matematik.su.se>
Werner Griessl <werner@btp1da.phy.uni-bayreuth.de>
These are the people who appeared in the "Submitted by:" lines of the
commit messages that I still have in my mail archive. Since they are
my commit messages, most of them are porters and port bug-fixers.
You will probably notice at least one major "celebrity" in there. Yes
you're right, that's him, he sent me a patch for emacs (what else? :)
By the way, if you are a committer, now may be a good time to add
yourself to this list by yourself, provided you made at least one
commit before. We don't do that for you, you have to claim credit
for yourself. :)
Add a section on /etc/sysconfig and the new configuration scheme
Corrections from Brad Midgley and David O'Brien (from the lists).
Formatting changes for the ASCII version.
Change about Motif from SWiM to Lasermoon.
The FreeBSD goal section needs more meat, Jordan :-)
is 1996 EC harmonization. Also, the following timezones have been renamed:
Asia/Frunze -> Asia/Bishkek
Pacific/Cocos -> Indian/Cocos
Pacific/Belau -> Pacific/Palau
America/Navajo -> America/Shiprock
and one new timezone has been added:
Australia/Canberra
specially from Darryl Okahata. I've rewritten several URL to the proper
<url url="" name=""> tag. There is still room for improvement but it
should be closer to 2.0.5R now. I'll try to be faster for future updates...
Obtained from: Mail messages from the lists.
o a couple of header files have been missing
o convert the LKM Makefile to use <bsd.kmod.mk>
o rename the module to ``misc_mod'' (as opposed to ``miscmod''), so
the module name can be made identical to the module's file name,
avoiding the clash with one of the component's .o file names
o modstat(1/8) has been moved meanwhile
of replacing it. This way you can point it to a site close to you
that carries many distfiles, and still let it go fetch from the
original site if the distfile is not there.
Original idea by: mmead@Glock.COM
This is performed by using a line similar to:
controller scbus0 at ahc0 bus 1
to wire scbus0 to the second bus on an adaptec 2742T controller.
Reviewed by: Peter Dufault(dufault@hda.com), Rod Grimes(rgrimes@FreeBSD.org)
the wrong branch :-(]
Eliminate incorrect double negative logic Bruce has been gripping
about for a year now. Change = no_way to = true.
Submitted by: bde (sort of, patch by me :-))
to do something else than "install". For example,
make IS_DEPENDED_TARGET=fetch fetch
will fetch the required distfiles including those of the dependencies
without actually building and installing dependencies.
Also document ECHO_MSG.
Requested by: paul
Reviewed by: paul, jhs and others
All cross reference labels start with name of the file that contains
them. A label for the top section level is simply the name of the
file (omitting the .sgml). Other references within the file append a
colon and onother name. For example, the label on the mailing list
section in the file eresources.sgml is eresources:mail. This gives
each file its own cross reference namespace.
ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/
as our distribution point for distfiles and patches. Other than
cosmetic changes (freebsd.cdrom.com -> ftp.freebsd.org), the
omission of "ports" is important. I would like to move this
directory completely out of the ports tree (on the ftp site),
so that people who do "get ports.tar.gz" won't get a bogus distfiles
-> ../distfiles symlink (which will make "make fetch" fail).
Sometime around the 2.1 release, the distfiles link will be deleted.
set permissions and ownerships of PREFIX (usually /usr/local). This
is the default if USE_IMAKE or USE_X11 is set.
This should be useful for machines like thud, where we want to keep
the /usr/local subtree writable to a group ("ports" in our case). Anybody
who installs stuff in /usr/local should have this set in the environment.
Note this won't affect anything the pkg_* suite does.
Note that the two "touch"s I took out from do-patch shouldn't have
been there in the first place.
This target may give incorrent results if two separate patches deal
with the same file, and their hunks overlap. (But having those kinds
of patches are bad, and they should be merged anyway.)
Reviewed by: hsu
arcihves of the mailing lists and usenet groups.
Renamed the last part "Appendicies"
Moved "PC hardware reference" to the Appendicies section and added
an introduction.
Fixed a dangling cross reference. (submitters.sgml)
".../packages/All". The "all" category that was automatically added
for every package is gone.
Note that bsd.port.mk requires category names to start with lowercase
names, otherwise it may get confused.
Reviewed by: jkh
By the way, here is a small script to convert your local package
hierarchy. Run it in bash, as /bin/sh not only will bark at the
$(.) command substitution but will also botch the [a-z]*/*.tgz
expansion (long-standing and annoying bug, reported before).
cd /usr/ports/packages
mv .packages All
for i in [a-z]*/*.tgz; do
j=$(basename $i)
/bin/rm $i
ln -s ../All/$j $i
done
Add Bt956 as being supported.
Include 2940 in the 2742/2842 section.
Anyone with a new feature or driver in 2.0.5 should think about adding "blurbs"
to this file. Some features say exactly what they do, others say nothing...
this document needs some rounding out.
The site in Island has only the 1.1-RELEASE dist.
The previous South Africa sites are dead and the brasilian one
is very hard to get into and painfully slow.
The two South Africa sites come from MIRROR.SITES.
2. Adjust some of my previous wording to be more indicative of the way things
currently are and using less bogus corporate categorizations ("Directors"
and "Officers" only exist in real corporations, which the FreeBSD Project
is not, so it sounded kind of pompus on reflection).
Rearranged a few sections, add memoryuse section.
current.sgml, ports.sgml, porting.sgml
Added a <label>s for cross reference targes.
submitters.sgml
Lots of editing, added cross references to other sections of
the handbook. Added a sample BSD-style copyright statement.
eresources.sgml
Updated the mailing list section, thanks to Peter Dufault.
authors.sgml
Added Peter Dufault, David Greenman and Joerg Wunsch.
memoryuse.sgml
A new section about how/where in PC memory the FreeBSD kernel
gets loaded and run.
one of the key components of the system, but I'm sure that this:
===
- ${ECHO_MSG} "===> Registering installation for ${PKGNAME}"; \
+ ${ECHO_MSG} "===> Registering installation for ${PKGNAME}"; \
===
change has absolutely no chance to screw us up, right? :)
Ports for which we can't build packages should define NO_PACKAGE but
still prepare pkg/* files. The user who really wants a package and
clear of the legal problems can say FORCE_PACKAGE from the command line
to build a package anyway.
package: check installation, build package, create links,
touch cookie
repackage: ditto but don't check cookie
package-noinstall: just build package from installed stuff, no cookies
involved at all
package-links create the symbolic links only
delete-package: delete package and symbolic links
delete-package-links: delete links only
These should make the management of the spaghetti of package links
a little friendlier. :)
too (otherwise the chain won't work).
(2) If NO_WRKDIR is set, "make clean" removes "./.*_done" (assuming
these are cookies...or should I list all the cookies?)
build, install) are now all skeletons and do nothing but
(1) Call pre-* target (if exists)
(2) Call scripts/pre-* script (if exists)
(3) Call do-* target
(4) Call post-* target (if exists)
(5) Call scripts/post-* script (if exists)
The do-* targets do all the work. The pre-* and post-* targets/scripts
don't exist by default. The main targets check for the cookies too, so
porters shouldn't have to worry about them at all.
NOTE: THE MAIN TARGETS IN THE PORTS MAKEFILES SHOULD GO AWAY. We need
to fix this before wcarchive comes back up. Change the names to do-*,
rip out the cookies, rip out the calls to pre-* etc. and most of them
should work.
Also, reorganize the whole thing so that similar targets are together
and add more comments. Surround section header with 64 #'s (C-u C-u
C-u # in emacs :).
Hopefully this will be the last major change to bsd.port.mk. Now let
the Makefile-hacking begin.
rule.
2. Have all non-X11 prefix using packages include the BSD.local.dist mtree
file for initialization of /usr/local. I'm still not sure if this is
A Good Thing(tm) but I'll see what the users say. It's easily overridden.
3. Standardise on ${PKG_DBDIR} as pointer to /var/db/pkg or local preference.
"Building for WWW" (pops up in two different ports) "Installing for
web2c-6.1" (ditto), which aren even't reminiscent of the port's real
name.
Sorry jmz, please don't go fix the print Makefiles' own messages.
We are going to take them out after we do the great bsd.port.mk
update anyway.
the top level and have the build-package sequence of each port work
together.
For the old behavior (i.e, just go ahead and blindly pack everything up,
regardless of the contents of work/), there is a new target "repackage".
Since "build" depends on "configure", which depends on "patch", etc.,
this shouldn't disrupt any Makefile that doesn't break the dependency
chain.
The old behavior was very annoying because when I did a "make -k",
it would still try to go configure and build even if the extraction
failed.
Add references to the ahc driver to the other adaptec man pages.
Remove the "NOTE" section of the ahb man page that complained about
Adaptec's NDA policy preventing 274x driver development.
all .tgz files go to /usr/ports/packages/.packages, and a relative
symlink is created for every item in CATEGORIES...i.e., if "CATEGORIES
= foo bar", then /usr/ports/packages/{foo,bar}/pkgname.tgz both point
to /usr/ports/packages/.packages/pkgname.tgz.
Suggested by: jkh
Also please note that previous commit regarding UH24F controller was
misattributed to Poul - it was Steve's!
Submitted by: Steve Gerakines <steve2@genesis.tiac.net>
*Really* strip out unused local symbols from shared objects.
This was a typo on my part caused by an assumption that the profiled
libraries stripped symbols that same way as the non-profiled libraries.
Cut-n-Paste strikes again.
Obtained from: NetBSD
New variables:
PATCH_SITES: patch equivalent of MASTER_SITES, overridable with
. MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE.
PATCHFILES: Additional files to fetch and give to patch before
. applying the ones in patches/patch-*. If name ends
. with ".gz" or ".Z", it will be piped through zcat first.
Plus PATCH_DIST_STRIP and PATCH_DIST_ARGS that serve the same functions
as PATCH_STRIP and PATCH_ARGS for patches in patches/patch-*.
In the documentation and echo messages, I used the term "distributed
patches" and "FreeBSD patches" to refer to ${PATCHFILES} and patches/patch-*.
If you can come up with better names, by all means go ahead and fix them.
"grep PATCH /usr/ports/*/*/Makefile" reveals seven ports (mule, jless,
jtcl, jtk, dgd, less, color_xterm, gee I wonder why I'm the one who
implemented this) that can benefit from this. I'm now diving headlong
into /usr/ports to fix their Makefiles.
installation script, DEINSTALL for the deinstallation script, and
REQ for the requirement script, will be added with appropriate
flags to PKG_ARGS if they exist under pkg/.
It's time to start moving in the directions we've had in mind for awhile.
SGML for everything new and old stuff moved into a location where it can slowly
be aged and removed (basically, Text/).
list? (It should be added at the bottom to the sites serving export-
restricted code, please)
Country Site and Maintainer
======= ========================================================
Brazil ftp://ftp.iqm.unicamp.br/pub/FreeBSD
Pedro A M Vazquez <vazquez@iqm.unicamp.br>
Reviewed by: roberto
Submitted by: Mark Murray <mark@grondar.za>
Let "grey delete" be a function key (default is 0x7f)
Fix the xor cursor again..
Made the backspace key generate del as default
Made CTRL-space generate nul as default.
list or something since there are many contributors now but very few on
the order of folks like Bill or Satoshi or Jean-Marc.. This seems unfair.
Suggestions?
manual page can now also be read.
Change the references in MAKEDEV from com to tty and delete flog and add
sd instead.
Need much more work, but for today, after i lost my first changes through
a new sup :-), that's enough.
probation.. Another vanishing act and I won't hesitate to nuke this back
out again. He hasn't been heard from very much since he was over here to
visit! :-)
`depend' wasn't supported. This seems to have only broken `make depend'
in gnu/usr.bin/ld.
bsd.prog.mk:
Build the man pages in ${MANDEPEND} at build time.
have three variables:
EXEC_DEPENDS - A list of "prog:dir" pairs of other ports this
package depends on. "prog" is the name of an
executable. make will search your $PATH for it and go
into "dir" to do a "make all install" if it's not found.
LIB_DEPENDS - A list of "lib:dir" pairs of other ports this package
depends on. "lib" is the name of a shared library.
make will use "ldconfig -r" to search for the
library. Note that lib can be any regular expression,
and you need two backslashes in front of dots (.) to
supress its special meaning (e.g., use
"foo\\.2\\.:${PORTSDIR}/utils/foo" to match "libfoo.2.*").
DEPENDS - A list of other ports this package depends on being
made first. Use this for things that don't fall into
the above two categories.
DEPENDS behaves exactly like before, so old Makefiles will still work
the same. The two variables are lists of pairs as described above.
For instance, if your program depends on unzip and libjpeg.5.*, use
the following definitions:
EXEC_DEPENDS= unzip:${PORTSDIR}/archivers/unzip
LIB_DEPENDS= jpeg\\.5\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/jpeg
gmake:${PORTSDIR}/utils/gmake is automatically added to EXEC_DEPENDS
if USE_GMAKE is defined.
If NO_DEPENDS is defined, the list will just be printed out one by one.
Display update method changed, now allways write in memory buffer,
then periodically update physical display.
Speed improvements (now > 5 times faster than the old syscons).
History now circular buffer, with changeable size.
History scroll by up/down line, up/down page, home and end.
Backtab proberly implemented.
Now space for 96 function keys, 63 allocated standard, default now
SCO/SYSV compat again as in the old days.
New keyboard definition files ~share/syscons/keymaps/*
Misc fixes for old "hacks" that broke SCO/SYSV compat.
More that I forgot before writing this...
/usr/src/share/termcap/termcap.src? It defines the sequences emitted
by the PageUp, PageDown and Keypad-[79513] keys.
Submitted by: Thomas Gellekum <thomas@ghpc8.ihf.rwth-aachen.de>
share/doc/usd/{30.rogue,31.trek}: make fails if the games source
tree is not present (see the mail that I have sent yesterday).
This patch makes the Makefiles test if the games source
tree is present. If it is not present, the Makefiles default to
no operation.
share/doc/usd/{30.rogue,31.trek}: make fails if the games source
tree is not present (see the mail that I have sent yesterday).
This patch makes the Makefiles test if the games source
tree is present. If it is not present, the Makefiles default to
no operation.
[Note: I'm not sure if the Makefile changes might not be collapsable into
a shorter format, but I'll just leave it this way for now and be safe -jkh]
Submitted by: Remy Card <Remy.Card@masi.ibp.fr>
when creating the obj link. While bsd.prog.mk inconditionnaly creates
a link in /usr/obj, bsd.doc.mk tests if the source tree is contained in
/usr/src. If so, it creates a link to /usr/obj. If the source tree
is contained in another directory, bsd.doc.mk creates an obj subdirectory.
Submitted by: Remy Card <Remy.Card@masi.ibp.fr>
a program directory has subdirectories, make now prints "===> dir/subdir"
instead of "===> subdir". This is modeled after the rules contained in
bsd.subdir.mk.
Submitted by: Remy Card <Remy.Card@masi.ibp.fr>
No kernel config options anymore besides keyboard language layout.
Virtual consoles are now dynamically allocated, no NCONS anymore.
Software cursor blinking/nonblinking.
Visual bell for laptops (don't beep at meetings :-).
Cursor/bell default type setable via config "flags" instead of as defines.
Cursor/bell type setable via ioctl's.
New video modes 80x30 80x60 for some laptops, and those with multisync monitors.
Scroll-lock history (length currently fixed at 100 lines).
Lots of cleanups, some only commented out for now (will goaway soon).
Support for new features in vidcontrol/kbdcontrol.
Updated manpages.
Fixes bugs in the latter: the `all' target was never up to date; there
was no `depend' target. Doesn't work for multiple info files because
it leverages bsd.doc.mk and that is broken. Info should be installed
more like man pages...
Updated to 2.0 .
Included sections about how to use DDB, post-mortem analysis of
a kernel crash where you didn't anticipate it and therefore
didn't config -g it. Added a real-world example of a kgdb session.
2) Change INSTALL_MANPAGES to NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES and document it
3) Add a PKGNAME variable to allow the package name
not to be dictated by stupid DISTNAMEs
4) Add a PATCH_DEBUG option and a slight change to the default
patch system - add --forward to help ensure correct patching
Added note about lp TCP/IP driver
Added notes about b004, cx, ctx and pcaudio
Updated perl entry to point to ftp site that has it
NOTE: If you have a system running 2.0 please email me (FAQ@freebsd.org)
tell what you have so I can include it!
Further investigation showed that prefix was erroneously set to /usr/local
for X11 based ports as well, when the assumption was that they'd really go
into ${X11BASE} (an /etc/make.conf variable that the user's free to set).
Set X11BASE to /usr/X11R6 if the user hasn't already, and assume that
the user really wants prefix to point there when the port is XMKMF based.
MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE - If set in the environment, will override everyone's
MASTER_SITES settings. Useful if you'd prefer to point to a
distfiles repository somewhere closer.
MASTER_SITE_FREEBSD - Sets OVERRIDE to be FreeBSD's own master repository.
Define SHLIBDIR?= ${LIBDIR} and install shared libraries in
${DESTDIR}${SHLIBDIR} instead of in ${DESTDIR}${LIBDIR}.
SHLIBDIR may be defined in /etc/make.conf to override the
default of /usr/lib (I use /lib). Other changes are required
for non-default shared library directories to actually work
(ld* and crtso have too many hard-coded paths).
Bruce
RANTOUCH may be defined in /etc/make.conf as
`${ECHO} skipping ${RANLIB} -t' to help stop `make install' from
changing the timestamps on unchanged libraries, thus making the
uninstalled binaries appear to be out of date... Other changes
are required to stop install from clobbering the timestamps.
Comment about missing libraries for LIBDES, LIBKDB, LIBKRB, LIBMP, LIBPC
and LIBPLOT.
Don't define LIBDBM since it was replaced by db in libc.
Remove duplication. ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/... gives /usr/lib/... even when
DESTDIR is not defined.
put the stuff into the right "distribution". As default things end up
in "bindist".
Normal (ie: most) makefiles know naught of this.
More commits will follow, which will direct various parts of the tree
into the distribution we want them in.
Some of the grief of being release-engineer is supposed to go away with this.
often on USENET.
Added comments regarding the new 'extended IDE' controllers, which work with
FreeBSD but do not use the extended features.
Minor formatting changes.
I'm going to re-roll the boot floppies to have this in, and hopefully
Poul will update it into his world tree before making the bin tarballs.
Be a real shame to leave this incorrect! Very sorry, Soren! It was
simply an updating oversight! :-(
about them.. :-) The patches/* won't work, it needs to be patches/patch-*
to avoid catching things like CVS files when working with a checked-out
copy of ports! Whoops!
1. Make build rely on a BUILD_COOKIE now. I'm tired of builds
being redone gratuitously while I'm trying to debug a tree build
problem.
2. Remove all the literal `touch -f' commands and indirect them through
variables. This lets you "leave tracks" in different ways, depending
on the medium. Just part 1 of my planned changes to make builds
directly off the CD work.
cc/Makefile.inc use (abuse?) LDDESTDIR for their internal libraries
so "?=" hides non-default external libraries. Adding multiple paths
to LDDESTDIR works except it makes it even harder than usual to
decide which libraries will actually be linked against.
is an interactive port, and requires user input somewhere along
the way (either fetching, configuring, building or installing).
If the user then sets BATCH in their environment, this port will be
skipped. If the user sets INTERACTIVE, then ONLY those ports marked
interactive are run (allowing one to do all ports in two passes).
If the user sets both BATCH and INTERACTIVE, then a metal claw extends
from the CRT and brutally yanks their nose off.
install cookie work any other way (perhaps I'm just being stupid).
In any case, INSTALL_COOKIE now works as advertised, and prevents duplicate
installations. pre-install users will have to keep their own cookies if
they wish to avoid duplicate installations, or tell me how to make the
rules run properly.
2. Update the list of library names and variables.
3. Update to reflect forth coming bsd.inc.mk file.
4. Update which .mk files include other .mk files.
Submitted by: Bruce Evans (partial, enhanced by me)
1. Make DEPENDS fully qualified, and not implictly assume relative
to ${PORTSDIR}. This allows more arbitrary dependencies to be
specified. This also means that DEPENDS= x11/foo needs to be changed
to DEPENDS= ${PORTSDIR}/x11/foo in any Makefiles. I'll try to do
these changes myself.
2. Add an option NO_DEPENDS to disable the automagic building of depended
ports.
Submitted by: rww
Make DEPENDS now does a `make is_depended' in the target port.
This defaults to `all install' globally, but can be overriden locally
by a port if it wants to do different things when other ports depend on it.
the light. `env' can be used to pass environment variables to shell
scripts this way, which means that all *configure/post-build scripts
_no longer take any arguments_; everything they should need (and more)
is now available in the environment. I'm working now to adapt the older
shell scripts over, but if you want beat me to it on some of your own
ports, don't let me stop you! :)
Submitted by: witr
if requested. LKMs which need it should use:
SRCS+= vnode_if.h
CLEANFILES+= vnode_if.h vnode_if.c
These rules were already present for VFS LKMs; now they are enabled all
the time. (VFS LKMs do not need the fragment above; it is still done for them.)
cons50r|cons50-koi8-r|80x50 koi8-r FreeBSD console:\
Aliases to koi8-r console added:
cons25r|pc3r|ibmpc3r|cons25-koi8-r|FreeBSD console for syscons koi8-r code table:\
ISO 8859-1 console 80x25 and 80x50 added with full semigraphics description
cons25l1|cons25-iso8859-1|80x25 ISO 8859-1 FreeBSD console:\
cons50l1|cons50-iso8859-1|80x50 ISO 8859-1 FreeBSD console:\
make.conf: Pulled in the following changes that had been commited
to share/examples/etc:
----------------------------
revision 1.6
date: 1994/09/20 22:30:33; author: adam; state: Exp; lines: +3 -3
BOOTWAIT example converted to milliseconds calibration
----------------------------
revision 1.4
date: 1994/09/19 21:35:28; author: wollman; state: Exp; lines: +7 -1
Document NO_SHARED_LIBCC_INT.
----------------------------
revision 1.3
date: 1994/09/19 21:28:11; author: wollman; state: Exp; lines: +12 -17
Install /etc from the same source as /usr/share/examples/etc (mostly).
----------------------------
revision 1.2
date: 1994/09/19 02:05:08; author: ache; state: Exp; lines: +1 -11
Remove STARTUP_LOCALE, obsoleted now
----------------------------
revision 1.1
date: 1994/09/08 19:08:59; author: jkh; state: Exp;
Add a sample make.conf. Also document the new X11BASE variable, and
expand some of the documentation for other entries.
Submitted by: jkh
----------------------------
manpath.config: Pulled down from Attic, and merged share/examples/etc
changes.
rc: Pulled in the following change from share/examples/etc:
----------------------------
revision 1.2
date: 1994/09/19 23:13:37; author: ache; state: Exp; lines: +1 -2
Remove warning about adjkerntz /var/run file
----------------------------
Move old FAQ to FreeBSD-1.1.FAQ
Started new FAQ
Move old Systems to Systems-1.1.FAQ
Started new Systems
moved slip-dialup to Slip.FAQ (Needs to be reworked for 2.0)
More work to come...
as the previous one, and better integrated with the build scheme.
Define OLDTIMEZONES to get backward-compatibility links added.
Define LEAPSECONDS if you want leap-second support.
to a reasonable compromise:
MASTER_SITES now contains a space seperated list of sites for which each
DISTFILE may be retrieved. This should be a directory spec, which will be
concatenated with each file in DISTFILES. HOME_LOCATION is *gone* now
and isn't used for anything, so you can delete it from your Makefiles.
If you want to force a fetch from a given location, simply do something like:
MASTER_SITES= ftp://fnord.foo.bar/pub/dist
DISTFILES= a.tar.gz b.tar.gz
Your entry in MASTER_SITES will be tried first to fetch a.tar.gz and
b.tar.gz, followed by any master sites we have set up (right now, only
freebsd.cdrom.com).
directories or links before we install the new things, but now we don't
delete /usr/share/examples itself, so other examples installed from
other places in the tree will not be touched.
Submitted by: jkh gclarkii paul satoshi freebsd-hackers
These are the FAQ files, reorganized a bit and updated marginally for 2.0.
There is *still more work to be done* in updating, so if some of your FAQ text
is below, please check it over! We've also got a lot of FAQ entries still
to write (examples: "how do I upgrade?" "what's new in 2.0?" "how do I
install on a notebook/second drive/from DOS/etc etc etc?"
1. DISTFILE is gone and replaced by DISTFILES, which can contain one or
more file specifications.
2. MASTER_SITE created, which points to the distfiles directory on
freebsd.cdrom.com (which I'll set up in a moment).
3. HOME_LOCATION is now simply a hint, and is never directly used except
to inform the user when ncftp unable to transfer a file from
MASTER_SITE.
4. ncftp is now assumed to live somewhere in the path, in preparation for
Andrew bringing it in on a more permanant basis.
5. XMKMF defined - it was not before.
Thanks to Andrew (ache) for many helpful suggestions.
date: 1993/11/15 07:15:16; author: rgrimes; state: Exp; lines: +1 -0
From Andrew Moore
Make /usr/share/dict/words a symbolic link to web2
[This is now NECESSARY for games/boggle as it uses /usr/share/dict/words
as an input file]
Reviewed by: rgrimes
Submitted by: From 1.x, alm
revision 1.6
date: 1993/10/19 19:57:35; author: rgrimes; state: Exp; lines: +2 -1
Pull in ../Makefile.inc so that the whatis database ends up in the correct
place. Rich Murphy has a better fix for this, but I lost it!
multiple targets when dealing with creating a set of distribution files
from scratch. Another problem is *verifying* that a given file fetched
from its HOME_LOCATION is the one we wanted (what if the stupid ftp site
maintainer updated it in place?). Rich Morin pointed this out and suggested
some solutions. I need to think about it some more (suggestions?).
For now, we have a seperate `fetch' and `extract' target.
Submitted by: jkh
Submitted by:
Delete the old style generation of the whatis database and replace it
with the call to makewhatis. Don't install the old makewhatis.sed script
under /usr/share/man any longer.
be easy to change to /usr/X11R6 if and when the time comes. This is
to deal with things like xditview which otherwise had hardcoded assumptions
about where X lived. Yuck.
Submitted by: jkh
remains, and that's that this does not work with multiple targets, which
sort of throws the tk and fvwm distributions into a mess. tk needs both
a tarball and a patch file from the same site, fvwm needs up to 3 different
files if you want all the options. If anyone wants to take this the last
few steps of the way towards somehow handling cases like this, I'd be very
happy.
Submitted by: jkh
${DISTDIR}/${DISTNAME}${EXTRACT_SUFX}
With simply `${DISTFILE}' which defaults to the above. This lets you
easily name distribution files that don't cooperate with any rational
naming syntax.
Similarly, make a variable called ${PKGFILE} which fills the same purpose
for packages.
Just trying to make this thing really really general to suit every need.
Now I need somebody to figure out how to make the extract target auto-fetch
things from ${HOME_LOCATION} with ncftp *if* ncftp is installed and it
looks possible to reach the foreign site. That will take some fancy footwork,
but would be slick. I've changed this too so that HOME_LOCATION is no longer
set by default, allowing you to do an .if defined(..) check for it. The
extract rule now does this too.
Submitted by: jkh
Build an intermediate object file even when there is only one source
file. This costs a little space but saves time if the target is rebuilt
a lot, and it stops the target varying with the name of temporary
intermediates.
Use ${ECHO} instead of `echo' so that `make -s' is fairly quiet.
Use ${ECHODIR} instead of echo for printing directory names so that
`make -ss' is very quiet.
previous commit:
+ Everything is initialized using ?= instead of =.
+ Nicer formatting (more white space).
+ .c: rule.
Add macros ECHO and ECHODIR. Both are normally `echo', but when
the make flags include -s, ECHO is set to `true' and when the make
flags include two or more -s's ECHODIR is set to `true'. @${ECHO}
should be used instead of @echo in most cases. ${ECHODIR} is
intended to be used mainly for messages about directory names.
PRECIOUSLIB causes the shared library to be installed with the system
immutable flag (schg) set. (You can add other flags for shared-library
installation by modifying SHLINSTALLFLAGS.)
INTERNALLIB disables the generation of non-shared versions of the library.
This may be of use for programs like Taylor UUCP and GCC which have large
internal libraries shared among a number of programs.
Add pre-{build,extract,install,...} targets for Torsten, who apparently
needs them. Can't do effective post-* targets without major work, sorry.
Jordan
Reviewed by:
Submitted by:
special ports building targets and will recurse properly. Sorry,
Julian E - no fancy prompts, just recursion! :-)
Added a `bundle' target. Purpose is as follows:
You want to give someone a complete tree sans distfiles (for
sticking on CDROM perhaps?) but the difficulty there is that
the first time the user types `make clean', all the unpacked
sources are gone again. Typing `make bundle' recreates the
original distfile if it can, so someone can "back up" their
unpacked tree easily with one command.
Whoops, just thought of something - it should warn if you
configured the working source.
Ok, next commit! :)
Submitted by: jkh
1. New variable DEPENDS lets you list packages that this depends on,
relative to the top (lang/tcl, x11/tk, etc). These packages will
always get made first.
2. Don't configure again if you've already done so successfully.
3. Add pre-configure and post-configure hooks. You can now do a pre-configure,
a local configure, a port-provided configure and finally a post-configure
if you really really want to. I can't imagine anything this will leave us
not being able to do! :) [ Yes, I have actually found a use for at least
two of these in one port - see x11/tk!].
Submitted by: jkh
Makefiles.
DANGER WILL ROBINSON!
This will cause repeat installs of certain programs, such as `init' and
`rcp', to fail unless one of the two conditions is met:
1) You are in single-user mode.
2) Your security level is set to 0 or -1.
If you have compiled a kernel from the latest sources, your kernel
security level is set to -1 by default, which will keep `init' from
fiddling with it. You can increase it, but not decrease it, from the
command line with the command `sysctl -w kern.securelevel=<new value>'.
I believe that -1 is the most appropriate value to use while we are still
developing the code, although when we ship it should be changed back to 0.
See init(8) for more information.
have a choice between SHARED=copies and SHARED=symlinks. The default
is to copy.
I have also added a /usr/share/examples/etc directory, where I hope to
have all sample configuration files which in real use go into /etc installed.
(This way, if the user really screws the real one up, they can always go
back to a known-working distribution copy, even if they don't have sources.)
and cleandir: targets, simple use a CLEANFILES+= to handle this very
simple special case.
Add ${COPY} knob to install commands so that files don't disappear out
of the obj tree after a make install.
ready to go deal with just yet.
Disable man for now it will be fixed shortly, just wanted all the man
page converion stuff to be done togeather since that is a major functional
change and really belongs in a seperate commit.
I already update this manpage from wilko, moreover,
I fix some his bugs and add some new material.
Jordan, pleeease, do following commands *before* each your commit:
cvs update <file>
cvs rlog <file>
and after update (before commit)
cvs diff -c <file>
It can saves my life time at least...
Subject: syscons-1.3
Date: Sat, 29 Jan 94 23:33:50 MET
But here is the (hopefully) final syscons-1.3....
....
I've changed sgetc so it works as the pccons parallel
(it now uses a scgetc internally).
[
There were a couple changes that Bruce Evans sent me that were applied
to this version along with some changes that S'ren didn't incorporate
into the final version. There will be only minor changes if anything
from this version to his final release.
]