- Added missing NOCRYPT and NO_OPENSSL checks for Kerberos.
- Don't depend on -lcrypto and -lcrypt in pam_ssh to resolve
dependencies in pam_krb5 and pam_ksu -- the former may not
be compiled at all if NO_OPENSSH knob is enabled.
- Added missing -lcrypt to pam_ssh dependencies.
- Moved librpcsvc after libypclnt.
(The last two aren't strictly speaking necessary to resolve
the dependencies of static versions of pam_ssh and pam_unix,
respectively, but they correspond to dynamic dependencies
of libssh and libypclnt, and are put here for consistency.)
In collaboration with: bde
Reviewed by: des
it is still above the critical temperature on the next poll cycle. This
is a 10 second advance notice by default. Document the private
(non-standard) notify we will be using with devd(8).
individules from asking a question which may result in the following answer:
"Hi, please do not run a newfs utility on a file system if there
is still data on it you would like to keep."
PR: 56894
Submitted by: Marc Silver <marcs@draenor.org> (original version)
ifconfig(8) flag since header for version 2 is the same but IP payload
is prepended with additional 4-bytes field.
Inspired by: Roman Synyuk <roman@univ.kiev.ua>
MFC after: 2 weeks
network interface cards smart (or twisted?) enough to be able
to calculate a TCP/UDP checksum for a packet fragmented by the
host CPU. Therefore the paragraph on the case has been revised.
- Sort MAN and MLINKS in "dictionary" order ignoring case.
- For multi-value MAN and multi-pair MLINKS, put each value/pair
on its own line, for easier sorting and so that further diffs
are easier to see.
to the nice style used in ifnet(9).
This includes specifying field types, starting descriptions
with a capital letter, and ending them with a full stop.
Improve the language a bit, as well.
GCC 3.3 -O2 produces correct code on Alpha. However, note that FreeBSD
has alias bugs that make -O2 produce bad code on all(most?) platforms.
Also don't tell people we don't want -O2 related bug reports, we do -- if
they contain patches.
missing and there are multiple choices using multiple inference
(suffix transformation) rules.
This is known to fix compilation of s_log1p.o in lib/msun on i386,
as otherwise it attempted to use s_log1p.S as the source (which is
marked broken) instead of legal s_log1p.c which is in CFLAGS. The
normal case where .depend file exists is not affected.
Reviewed by: bde
no cryptodev module.) Should probably create a separate cryptodev man
page (or a link to this one) but for now add enough so folks understand
the relationship between the two.
Prodded by: phk
just libc functions wrappers), and updated text to match reality:
there are three threading libraries in FreeBSD these days.
Removed instructions of how not to build libc_r, it's documented in
the make.conf(5) manpage already.
Removed description of the FreeBSD-specific gcc(1) option, -pthread.
While it's still provided (for backwards compatibility reasons),
its usefulness is questionable.
needed for generating dependencies. SRCS are always part of it,
and normally only they.
This can be useful in some random cases where it's necessary to
have something in .depend that isn't part of SRCS. This will be
used to replace a hack in lib/libpam/libpam/Makefile.
form became unnecessary with the bsd.prog.mk,v 1.69 change.
- Eliminated duplicate y.tab.h in SRCS.
Reviewed by: bde
- Complementary to the said bsd.prog.mk change, use the fact
that inner .for loops are not real loops but a tricky form
of a local macro for the outer loop's variable, and switch
to using faster variable modifiers to replace extensions.
kernel BOOTP options is *not* required if the boot loader can pass
network configuration information to the kernel using the kernel
environment. As such, PXE doesn't require them. However, the NFS
options are required in the kernel (previously not documented).
Tripped over by: des
Rearrange the order of the initial description to correspond with the
detailed description below.
Reinstate reference to Topsy, at the risk of confusing people whose
understanding of English grammar is better than of American folklore.
- A #include of <sys/mutex.h> is no longer needed to use sx(9) (since
2001/05/01).
- Use of the SX_SYSINIT() macro requires inclusion of '<sys/kernel.h>'
Yes, it's what you think it is. Yes, you should run away now.
This is a special compatibility module for allowing Windows NDIS
miniport network drivers to be used with FreeBSD/x86. This provides
_binary_ NDIS compatibility (not source): you can run NDIS driver
code, but you can't build it. There are three main parts:
sys/compat/ndis: the NDIS compat API, which provides binary
compatibility functions for many routines in NDIS.SYS, HAL.dll
and ntoskrnl.exe in Windows (these are the three modules that
most NDIS miniport drivers use). The compat module also contains
a small PE relocator/dynalinker which relocates the Windows .SYS
image and then patches in our native routines.
sys/dev/if_ndis: the if_ndis driver wrapper. This module makes
use of the ndis compat API and can be compiled with a specially
prepared binary image file (ndis_driver_data.h) containing the
Windows .SYS image and registry key information parsed out of the
accompanying .INF file. Once if_ndis.ko is built, it can be loaded
and unloaded just like a native FreeBSD kenrel module.
usr.sbin/ndiscvt: a special utility that converts foo.sys and foo.inf
into an ndis_driver_data.h file that can be compiled into if_ndis.o.
Contains an .inf file parser graciously provided by Matt Dodd (and
mercilessly hacked upon by me) that strips out device ID info and
registry key info from a .INF file and packages it up with a binary
image array. The ndiscvt(8) utility also does some manipulation of
the segments within the .sys file to make life easier for the kernel
loader. (Doing the manipulation here saves the kernel code from having
to move things around later, which would waste memory.)
ndiscvt is only built for the i386 arch. Only files.i386 has been
updated, and none of this is turned on in GENERIC. It should probably
work on pc98. I have no idea about amd64 or ia64 at this point.
This is still a work in progress. I estimate it's about %85 done, but
I want it under CVS control so I can track subsequent changes. It has
been tested with exactly three drivers: the LinkSys LNE100TX v4 driver
(Lne100v4.sys), the sample Intel 82559 driver from the Windows DDK
(e100bex.sys) and the Broadcom BCM43xx wireless driver (bcmwl5.sys). It
still needs to have a net80211 stuff added to it. To use it, you would
do something like this:
# cd /sys/modules/ndis
# make; make load
# cd /sys/modules/if_ndis
# ndiscvt -i /path/to/foo.inf -s /path/to/foo.sys -o ndis_driver_data.h
# make; make load
# sysctl -a | grep ndis
All registry keys are mapped to sysctl nodes. Sometimes drivers refer
to registry keys that aren't mentioned in foo.inf. If this happens,
the NDIS API module creates sysctl nodes for these keys on the fly so
you can tweak them.
An example usage of the Broadcom wireless driver would be:
# sysctl hw.ndis0.EnableAutoConnect=1
# sysctl hw.ndis0.SSID="MY_SSID"
# sysctl hw.ndis0.NetworkType=0 (0 for bss, 1 for adhoc)
# ifconfig ndis0 <my ipaddr> netmask 0xffffff00 up
Things to be done:
- get rid of debug messages
- add in ndis80211 support
- defer transmissions until after a status update with
NDIS_STATUS_CONNECTED occurs
- Create smarter lookaside list support
- Split off if_ndis_pci.c and if_ndis_pccard.c attachments
- Make sure PCMCIA support works
- Fix ndiscvt to properly parse PCMCIA device IDs from INF files
- write ndisapi.9 man page
as these ioctl's aren't MD. This also means they are installed in
/usr/include/dev/bktr now. Also provide compatability wrappers for
where these headers lived in 4.x.
man4.i386. It documents that meteor no longer works, but keeps the
extensive documentation on the meteor interface, which the bktr driver
implements also. This should be merged into tha man page, but such a
merging seems to be planned by others.
# we really need something like video4bsd to define these sorts of
# things for all video capture drivers.
Requested by: rwatson and obrien
note that says that this man page is sub-optimal. Bruce Mah should be
happier about this, but someone that groks the cards supported by the
digi driver is encouraged to make this man page suck less.
lots of old interfaces, and digi now supports all cards that dgb
supported. The author of the driver says that this is no longer
necessary.
Approved by: babkin@
a long time: lmc The LAN Media Corp PCI WAN driver based on tulip.
This driver hasn't compiled for 3 years since the PCI compat shims
were removed, and Lan Media appears to have gone out of business.
These cards appear to be rare (a recent search of ebay had no hits).
Should someone wish to revive this driver, submitting patches to make
it compile plus a testing report will bring it back.
valid value for cx_lowest. To disable sleeping, use machdep.cpu_idle_hlt
instead. Update the version of the ACPI spec we implement.
Approved by: re (implicitly)
* Use the cpu_idle_hook() to do idling for C1-C3.
* Use both _CST and the FADT to detect Cx states.
* Use both _PTC and P_CNT for controlling throttling.
* Add a notify handler to detect changes in _CST and _PSS
* Call the _INI function for each processor if present. This will be
done by ACPI-CA in the future.
* Fix a bug on SMP systems where CPUs will attach multiple times if the
bus is rescan.
* Document new sysctls for controlling idling.
constants NG_*SIZ that include the trailing NUL byte. This change
is mostly mechanical except for the replacement of a couple of snprintf()
and sprintf() calls with strlcpy.
options, information on VCHANs, and more.
Based on content submitted by: Mathew Kanner <mat@cnd.mcgill.ca> && Cameron Grant
Update requested by: ru, and I think hmp
occurences of the old *LEN definitions to the new *SIZ definitions.
Correct the example how to compare a nodename.
strncmp(name, "fred", NG_NODELEN) may step behind "fred" if the node
name is really fred.
Reminded by: ru
* Add missing `utility' word to sentence describing
ips(4) card configuration.
* Remove extraneous use of .Pp, and describe the tunable
hw.ips.0.disable in a better way.
* Replace wrongly used .Op mdoc macros with the .Bq macro.
The .Op macro should only be used when describing a
``usage'' line of a utility/command.
* Add .Er, for marking errno defines (ENOMEM etc etc)
The manual page contains enough information to get someone started
with ALQ.
MLINKS have been added appropriately.
Approved by: jeff, des
Reviewed by: des, jeff, sam, brooks, rwatson, mtm
interfaced via the PCM framework.
This manual page was obtained from NetBSD, and the required
changes were made to adapt it to our uaudio driver.
Pre-cursor review: joe@
* Add MLINKS for:
-> Soundblaster emu10k1(4) Driver [points to pcm(4)]
-> Avance Logic ALS400 Driver [points to pcm(4)]
We should not need separate manual page for each of these
drivers; instead, linking them to pcm(4) manual page is
simpler, and new device lists can be easily added to the
said manual page.
* While I am here, sort out mdoc(7) entries in ${MAN}.
list of supported controllers into a list.
Note that the 53C875A has not been included in the list of supported
devices, since this controller does not seem to be supported by the
version of the sym(4) driver currently in FreeBSD.
PR: docs/55557
Submitted by: Lukas Ertl <l.ertl@univie.ac.at> (original version)
MFC after: 1 week
53C875A omission reviewed by: silence from -scsi and groudier
o Remove entries for 1510, 152x and 1535. These are supported, for some value
of supported, by the aic driver.
o Add notes about 1542-CP being plug and play, but it can still conflict with
other resources because all the resources it uses are set with the onboard
BIOS.
in share/security in the trustedbsd_sebsd branch that are not present
in the main tree. Also, .include Makefile.inc from the parent directory
so that BINDIR is set right.
Pointed out by: bde
buildworld as src/etc/sendmail/freebsd.mc is missing. That example
was added 3 years ago, before the /etc/mail/ infrastructure was in
place for customized configurations. It is time to remove this example.
Noticed by: Robert Gray <bob@boulderlabs.com> in freebsd-stable
MFC after: 1 day
if_xname, if_dname, and if_dunit. if_xname is the name of the interface
and if_dname/unit are the driver name and instance.
This change paves the way for interface renaming and enhanced pseudo
device creation and configuration symantics.
Approved By: re (in principle)
Reviewed By: njl, imp
Tested On: i386, amd64, sparc64
Obtained From: NetBSD (if_xname)
dcons(4): very simple console and gdb port driver
dcons_crom(4): FireWire attachment
dconschat(8): User interface to dcons
Tested with: i386, i386-PAE, and sparc64.
* Uppercase the .Dt command contents.
* Remove incorrect usage of .Fa.
* Use .Va for struct members, and .Vt for structs
(correct replacement for .Fa)
* Markup VM_* and MAP_* macros with .Dv command.
* Replace 'man' with 'manual' for consistency.
* Uppercase .Dt command contents.
* Make use of .Fo and .Fc for marking up functions with
a lot of arguments.
NOTE: Please do not use the `\' line seperator for mdoc(7)
manual pages, as it has problems of its own on some displays;
instead, consult the mdoc(7) manual on using .Fo and .Fc.
* Change 'man' to 'manual' for consistency.
* Add .Vt in the right places, transform some .Fa to .Vt, depending
on discussion context.
* When refering to the function malloc(), use .Fn, and not .Xr.
* Add `The' to prefix a sentence when describing a function, so
it results in ``The xxx() function..."
* Use `system call' instead of `syscall'.
* Improve the sentence which discusses accept_filt_generic_mod_event();
Talk about moduledata_t, and refer to the DECLARE_MODULE(9) manual
page.
* Properly markup .An (Author Name) throughout the AUTHORS section.
* Remove first person sentence start.
* Make use of .Dv for LEASE_READ and LEASE_WRITE.
* Move the LOCKS section below the standard mdoc(7) RETURN VALUES
section.
* Cleanup grammar for RETURN VALUES and AUTHORS section.
* Remove redundant sentence on return values.
rate is how fast modems exchange symbols. Bit rate is how many bits
per second the serial port nominally communicates at. Try to use bit
rate consistently where that's what is ment. The default data rate is
now 9600 baud. 300 baud being default pre-dates 4.4-LITE1. Document
that tip doesn't respect the system default rate for a given channel.
Sorry guys, but no ucbvax, kremvax or kgbvax added to the example.
Noted by: bde
what the entry does for people that are not used to reading
/etc/remote files every day. Keep arpavax, because it is a cool name,
but remove the phone number listed. arpavax hasn't been answering
that number for a while :-)
FreeBSD supports. None of them support an alternate formats, except
the alpha (which prints extra register information).
# if we get a mips port, we can put the mips case back to document the
# actual behavior.
ebay. Also have notes for my recent experiences with 3com pcmcia
cards (mostly this or that doesn't work). Also look at the strings
that are claimed to be supported in the bus specific front ends. Note
that the 3C569* are CBUS.
libraries to be reported as up-to-date.
Before:
# make -f /dev/null nonexistent.a
`nonexistent.a' is up to date.
After:
# make -f /dev/null nonexistent.a
make: don't know how to make nonexistent.a. Stop
PR: bin/44137 (part of)
callout lock while the callout is happening. So the serialization
that I thought was happening isn't. Therefore, remove the part of the
bugs that says this. Leave in the other bug as it is very hard to
work around (impossible?).
Fix various typos.
Also note that timeout/untimeout are considered to be the old interface and
the callout interface should be used insetad.
Submitted by: bde (first two) and wollman (third)
callout has finished or is in progress. Also document that the
locking of the callout code for FreeBSD 5 has eliminated the 'or is in
progress' clause as a possibility and that such elimination is an
accident of the implementation and shouldn't be relied upon.
o It is the /usr/include files, not the /usr include files.
o Document the practice of converting to the c99 standard uintXX_t
form from the older, but non-standard, BSD-style u_intXX_t. This
has been going on in the tree for a while now, and I've heard other
developers also state that this conversion is happening. Note also
that this is a slow process and should be treated like whitespace
changes.
has been supported for the last 10 months. [1]
- Make the device list compact, since it is getting rather large.
Reported by: David Magda <dmagda@magda.ca> [1]
MFC after: 2 weeks
instances: the memory holding a struct disk should be pre-zeroed so
as to initialize any storage framework private data in the structures
properly. In addition, the memory must be writable so that the
private data may be updated.
Pointed out by: phk
APIs permit disk device drivers to register and deregister storage devices
for use by storage device consumers. No doubt this API will change
more as time flies by, but this should be helpful to the creators of
new storage device drivers.
Reviewed by: phk
- Fill in autosense data.
- Add compatibility for RELENG_4.
* scsi_target.c
- Raw device support
- Set correct value in c_descr->offset for CAM_DIR_NONE case.
- Support for CTIO abort.
and use it in src/etc/sendmail/Makefile in case the user wants to use
a different path to the sendmail m4 sources (e.g., sendmail port users).
Submitted by: dinoex
MFC after: 21 days
X-MFC after: RELENG_4 code freeze ends
which are based on the AR5212 and should just work (not verified).
Add Proxim Skyline 4032, the PCI version of th e4030.
Add revision suffix 'B' to D-Link DWL-G520/G650 entries, in order
to indicate that revision A1 cards are not supported by this driver
(both A1 and B1/B2 cards are sold in identical boxes).
Explicitly point out the existence of unsupported DWL-G520/G650
(rev. A1) cards in the CAVEATS section.
Approved by: sam
be hardwired into makefiles, including those under /usr/share/mk.
The reporter submitted a patch, but I've watered it down.
Reported by: Ian Freislich <ianf@za.uu.net>
MFC after: 3 weeks
written by Stuart Walsh and Duncan Barclay (with some kibbitzing by
me). I'm checking it in on Stuart's behalf.
The BCM4401 is built into several x86 laptop and desktop systems. For the
moment, I have only enabled it in the x86 kernel config because although
it's a PCI device, I haven't heard of any standalone NICs that use it. If
somebody knows of one, we can easily add it to the other arches.
This driver uses register/structure data gleaned from the Linux
driver released by Broadcom, but does not contain any of the code
from the Linux driver itself. It uses busdma.
rl(4) driver and put it in a new re(4) driver. The re(4) driver shares
the if_rlreg.h file with rl(4) but is a separate module. (Ultimately
I may change this. For now, it's convenient.)
rl(4) has been modified so that it will never attach to an 8139C+
chip, leaving it to re(4) instead. Only re(4) has the PCI IDs to
match the 8169/8169S/8110S gigE chips. if_re.c contains the same
basic code that was originally bolted onto if_rl.c, with the
following updates:
- Added support for jumbo frames. Currently, there seems to be
a limit of approximately 6200 bytes for jumbo frames on transmit.
(This was determined via experimentation.) The 8169S/8110S chips
apparently are limited to 7.5K frames on transmit. This may require
some more work, though the framework to handle jumbo frames on RX
is in place: the re_rxeof() routine will gather up frames than span
multiple 2K clusters into a single mbuf list.
- Fixed bug in re_txeof(): if we reap some of the TX buffers,
but there are still some pending, re-arm the timer before exiting
re_txeof() so that another timeout interrupt will be generated, just
in case re_start() doesn't do it for us.
- Handle the 'link state changed' interrupt
- Fix a detach bug. If re(4) is loaded as a module, and you do
tcpdump -i re0, then you do 'kldunload if_re,' the system will
panic after a few seconds. This happens because ether_ifdetach()
ends up calling the BPF detach code, which notices the interface
is in promiscuous mode and tries to switch promisc mode off while
detaching the BPF listner. This ultimately results in a call
to re_ioctl() (due to SIOCSIFFLAGS), which in turn calls re_init()
to handle the IFF_PROMISC flag change. Unfortunately, calling re_init()
here turns the chip back on and restarts the 1-second timeout loop
that drives re_tick(). By the time the timeout fires, if_re.ko
has been unloaded, which results in a call to invalid code and
blows up the system.
To fix this, I cleared the IFF_UP flag before calling ether_ifdetach(),
which stops the ioctl routine from trying to reset the chip.
- Modified comments in re_rxeof() relating to the difference in
RX descriptor status bit layout between the 8139C+ and the gigE
chips. The layout is different because the frame length field
was expanded from 12 bits to 13, and they got rid of one of the
status bits to make room.
- Add diagnostic code (re_diag()) to test for the case where a user
has installed a broken 32-bit 8169 PCI NIC in a 64-bit slot. Some
NICs have the REQ64# and ACK64# lines connected even though the
board is 32-bit only (in this case, they should be pulled high).
This fools the chip into doing 64-bit DMA transfers even though
there is no 64-bit data path. To detect this, re_diag() puts the
chip into digital loopback mode and sets the receiver to promiscuous
mode, then initiates a single 64-byte packet transmission. The
frame is echoed back to the host, and if the frame contents are
intact, we know DMA is working correctly, otherwise we complain
loudly on the console and abort the device attach. (At the moment,
I don't know of any way to work around the problem other than
physically modifying the board, so until/unless I can think of a
software workaround, this will have do to.)
- Created re(4) man page
- Modified rlphy.c to allow re(4) to attach as well as rl(4).
Note that this code works for the sample 8169/Marvell 88E1000 NIC
that I have, but probably won't work for the 8169S/8110S chips.
RealTek has sent me some sample NICs, but they haven't arrived yet.
I will probably need to add an rlgphy driver to handle the on-board
PHY in the 8169S/8110S (it needs special DSP initialization).
as it was decided that our toolchain will revert to looking
for libraries in /usr/lib only.
- Make /usr/lib/libfoo.so -> /lib/libfoo.so.X symlinks absolute
so that they still work if /usr is symlinked.
- Remove stale /usr/lib/libfoo.so.X libraries during install.
Discussed with: gordon, obrien, peter
It improves on sio(4) in the following areas:
o Fully newbusified to allow for memory mapped I/O. This is a must
for ia64 and sparc64,
o Machine dependent code to take full advantage of machine and firm-
ware specific ways to define serial consoles and/or debug ports.
o Hardware abstraction layer to allow the driver to be used with
various UARTs, such as the well-known ns8250 family of UARTs, the
Siemens sab82532 or the Zilog Z8530. This is especially important
for pc98 and sparc64 where it's common to have different UARTs,
o The notion of system devices to unkludge low-level consoles and
remote gdb ports and provides the mechanics necessary to support
the keyboard on sparc64 (which is UART based).
o The notion of a kernel interface so that a UART can be tied to
something other than the well-known TTY interface. This is needed
on sparc64 to present the user with a device and ioctl handling
suitable for a keyboard, but also allows us to cleanly hide an
UART when used as a debug port.
Following is a list of features and bugs/flaws specific to the ns8250
family of UARTs as compared to their support in sio(4):
o The uart(4) driver determines the FIFO size and automaticly takes
advantages of larger FIFOs and/or additional features. Note that
since I don't have sufficient access to 16[679]5x UARTs, hardware
flow control has not been enabled. This is almost trivial to do,
provided one can test. The downside of this is that broken UARTs
are more likely to not work correctly with uart(4). The need for
tunables or knobs may be large enough to warrant their creation.
o The uart(4) driver does not share the same bumpy history as sio(4)
and will therefore not provide the necessary hooks, tweaks, quirks
or work-arounds to deal with once common hardware. To that extend,
uart(4) supports a subset of the UARTs that sio(4) supports. The
question before us is whether the subset is sufficient for current
hardware.
o There is no support for multiport UARTs in uart(4). The decision
behind this is that uart(4) deals with one EIA RS232-C interface.
Packaging of multiple interfaces in a single chip or on a single
expansion board is beyond the scope of uart(4) and is now mostly
left for puc(4) to deal with. Lack of hardware made it impossible
to actually implement such a dependency other than is present for
the dual channel SAB82532 and Z8350 SCCs.
The current list of missing features is:
o No configuration capabilities. A set of tunables and sysctls is
being worked out. There are likely not going to be any or much
compile-time knobs. Such configuration does not fit well with
current hardware.
o No support for the PPS API. This is partly dependent on the
ability to configure uart(4) and partly dependent on having
sufficient information to implement it properly.
As usual, the manpage is present but lacks the attention the
software has gotten.
hose your system. You end up with just about everything statically linked
(except for libpam.so), which then causes all the pam users to fail.
eg: login, sshd, su etc all stop working because dlopen no longer works
because there is no libc.so in memory anymore.
gcc passes -L/usr/lib to ld. The /usr/lib/libxxx.so symlink is *not* a
compatability link. It is actually the primary link. There should be no
symlinks in /lib at all. Only /lib/libXX.so.Y.
peter@daintree[9:27pm]/usr/bin-104> file yppasswd
yppasswd: setuid ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1 (FreeBSD), for FreeBSD 5.1.1, dynamically linked (uses shared libs), stripped
peter@daintree[9:27pm]/usr/bin-105> ldd yppasswd
yppasswd:
libpam.so.2 => /usr/lib/libpam.so.2 (0x280d1000)
peter@daintree[9:28pm]/usr/bin-106>
Note no libc.so.5. Hence libpam.so.2 has unresolved dependencies.
I believe this is also the cause of the recent buildworld failures when
pam_krb5.so references -lcrypto stuff etc and when librpcsvc.so references
des_setparity() etc.
This change could not possibly have worked, unless there are other missing
changes to the gcc configuration. It won't work with ports versions of
gcc either.
out of cdregister() and daregister(), which are run from interrupt context.
The sysctl code does blocking mallocs (M_WAITOK), which causes problems
if malloc(9) actually needs to sleep.
The eventual fix for this issue will involve moving the CAM probe process
inside a kernel thread. For now, though, I have fixed the issue by moving
dynamic sysctl variable creation for these two drivers to a task queue
running in a kernel thread.
The existing task queues (taskqueue_swi and taskqueue_swi_giant) run in
software interrupt handlers, which wouldn't fix the problem at hand. So I
have created a new task queue, taskqueue_thread, that runs inside a kernel
thread. (It also runs outside of Giant -- clients must explicitly acquire
and release Giant in their taskqueue functions.)
scsi_cd.c: Remove sysctl variable creation code from cdregister(), and
move it to a new function, cdsysctlinit(). Queue
cdsysctlinit() to the taskqueue_thread taskqueue once we
have fully registered the cd(4) driver instance.
scsi_da.c: Remove sysctl variable creation code from daregister(), and
move it to move it to a new function, dasysctlinit().
Queue dasysctlinit() to the taskqueue_thread taskqueue once
we have fully registered the da(4) instance.
taskqueue.h: Declare the new taskqueue_thread taskqueue, update some
comments.
subr_taskqueue.c:
Create the new kernel thread taskqueue. This taskqueue
runs outside of Giant, so any functions queued to it would
need to explicitly acquire/release Giant if they need it.
cd.4: Update the cd(4) man page to talk about the minimum command
size sysctl/loader tunable. Also note that the changer
variables are available as loader tunables as well.
da.4: Update the da(4) man page to cover the retry_count,
default_timeout and minimum_cmd_size sysctl variables/loader
tunables. Remove references to /dev/r???, they aren't used
any longer.
cd.9: Update the cd(9) man page to describe the CD_Q_10_BYTE_ONLY
quirk.
taskqueue.9: Update the taskqueue(9) man page to describe the new thread
task queue, and the taskqueue_swi_giant queue.
MFC after: 3 days
are supported by the driver.
- Use a list to specify which cards are supported.
- Add the 3c592/3c597 EISA cards to the list of supported cards.
PR: docs/56086 (based on)
Submitted by: Lukas Ertl <l.ertl@univie.ac.at>
buildworld targets by default, but allow it to be done for all user
targets by introducing a boolean option, named ALWAYS_CHECK_MAKE.
This change is by no means perfect and I don't even want to claim
this to be a solution. It does however address the fact that not
everybody likes to see make(1) rebuilt simply because the regression
test failed for some reason or other, including pilot error. It
therefore serves the purpose of keeping the crowd happy until we
have something better or simply reached a compromise.
The reasons for changing the default behaviour are:
o It avoids a negative, possibly non-intuitive option,
o It's according to POLA and fond of feet,
o Only buildworld is documented to do its best to be
successful at reasonably cost.
Reviewed by: gad, imp, obrien, peter
Change the manual page title to use the device family name (Rhine),
since the list of supported device id's won't fit on one line anymore.
Submitted by: Lukas Ertl <l.ertl@univie.ac.at> (based on) [1]
PR: docs/55639 (based on) [1]
Confirmed by: driver source code [1]
MFC after: 3 days
names in Amharic instead of English.
Also, remove some extra names I had previously considered
including. They don't make sense since the calendar names
don't match up.
specific interfaces. This is required by aodvd, and may in future help us
in getting rid of the requirement for BPF from our import of isc-dhcp.
Suggested by: fenestro
Obtained from: BSD/OS
Reviewed by: mini, sam
Approved by: jake (mentor)
are created in the correct location. Always make them. For libraries
that live in /lib, this causes a /lib/libfoo.so and a compatibility
/usr/lib/libfoo.so to be created. We may want to drop the
/usr/lib/libfoo.so symlink at some future point.
need relative pathing to work correctly. This is s necessary step
for putting libraries in /lib while the .so symlinks still live
in /usr/lib.
This should be a big NOOP in the case where SHLIBDIR == LIBDIR.
use the atmconfig(8) utility instead of route(8) to install those routes.
For this we need a new rc.conf variable natm_static_routes that works
just like static_routes except that the referenced routes use the syntax
of atmconfig(8).
Okay'ed by: mtm
new ATMIOCOPENVCC/CLOSEVCC. This allows us to not only use UBR channels
for IP over ATM, but also CBR, VBR and ABR. Change the format of the
link layer address to specify the channel characteristics. The old
format is still supported and opens UBR channels.
- Move isa/ppc* to sys/dev/ppc (repo-copy)
- Add an attachment method to ppc for puc
- In puc we need to walk the chain of parents.
Still to do, is to make ppc(4) & puc(4) work on other platforms. Testers
wanted.
PR: 38372 (in spirit done differently)
Verified by: Make universe (if I messed up a platform please fix)
/rescue, from section 7 to section 8. The old rescue.7 file has been
simply subjected to "cvs rm", as there is no history to preserve.
Update the release documentation accordingly.
Requested by: njl, ru
Most text by: Tim Kientzle <kientzle@acm.org>
Reviewed by: ru, doc@
Approved by: ceri (mentor)
for the harp(4) pseudo driver and for loadable native HARP drivers
(like hfa_pci).
To use harp(4) the rc variable natm_interfaces must be set to the
list of NATM interfaces to be used for HARP. These interfaces
will be brought up with ifconfig and the harp(4) will be loaded.
To use loadable native HARP drivers atm_load must be set to
the list of drivers to load.
Reviewed by: mtm, gordon (partly)
The release.9 target is now responsible only for generation of MFS root
file systems, that are built for all architectures, even those that do
not provide a floppy installation option. The release.10 target is now
responsible for creation of a set of boot, MFS root, and fixit floppies,
and the NO_FLOPPIES variable now affects only this target.
Also, replaced the FIXIT_TARGET variable with a check of whether the
*FIXITSIZE variables are present for a given architecture, similar to
how this is done when generating boot floppies.
Discussed with: jhb
it attaches to all existing NATM network interfaces in the system
and creates a HARP physical interface for each of them. This allows
us to use the same set of ATM drivers for all ATM stuff. It is
possible to use the same interface for HARP, NATM and netgraph at the
same time.
large to huge amounts of small or medium sized receive buffers. The problem
with these situations is that they eat up the available DMA address space
very quickly when using mbufs or even mbuf clusters. Additionally this
facility provides a direct mapping between 32-bit integers and these buffers.
This is needed for devices originally designed for 32-bit systems. Ususally
the virtual address of the buffer is used as a handle to find the buffer as
soon as it is returned by the card. This does not work for 64-bit machines
and hence this mapping is needed.
- MN-110 10/100 USB ethernet (ADMtek Pegasus II, if_aue)
- MN-120 10/100 cardbus (ADMtek Centaur-C, if_dc)
- MN-130 10/100 PCI (ADMtek Centaur-P, if_dc)
Also update dc(4) man page to mention support for MN-120 and MN-130.
for targets that have been unsupported since April:
- upgrade
- aout-to-elf
- aout-to-elf-build
- aout-to-elf-install
- move-aout-libs
Approved by: imp
is common in British English, while "toward" is the preferred form in
American English. Use the American form for consistency.
Correct the date on the manual page.
Submitted by: Tom Rhodes <trhodes@freebsd.org>,
underway@comcast.net (Gary W. Swearingen)
(though probably not a good idea in general) to set the various
SENDMAIL_*_MC variables to /etc/mail/sendmail.mc or /etc/mail/submit.mc.
MFC after: 5 days
This is simpler, and is easy to do now that make(1) supports substituting
regexps. Fixed missing '$' anchor in the regexp. Use less cryptic names
for temporary variables.
Submitted by: ru (early version)
Reviewed by: ru
All .s files that need cpp(1) processing (see gcc(1) manpage's
DESCRIPTION section) have been repo-copied to .S files. This
is mostly to bring bsd.lib.mk in agreement with sys.mk.
Desired by: obrien
symbols from object files has bitrotted over the last
thirteen years, and it now does more harm than good.
An attempt to work around the problems caused by using
ld(1) for stripping was to pass LDFLAGS to the ld(1)
command, but this was not right either as ${LDFLAGS}
should, by design, be used with cc(1) and not ld(1).
One of the proposed solutions was to use the objcopy(1)
utility to do the strip work, and the other would be to
use strip(1), but Bruce Evans suggested not stripping
any symbols at all. This works by leaving the grunt
work to the final strip(1) command (when installing the
binary).
Submitted by: bde
components. This is generally considered a non-optimal solution but
it gets the job done for the /rescue case.
Submitted by: Tim Kientzle <kientzle@acm.org>
This commit has two pieces. One half is the watchdog kernel code which lives
primarily in hardclock() in sys/kern/kern_clock.c. The other half is a userland
daemon which, when run, will keep the watchdog from firing while the userland
is intact and functioning.
Approved by: jeff (mentor)
The matcd.4 man page has been upgraded to reflect current 5.1.x
functionality, and efforts were made to match the style and layout found
in similar-single purpose block drivers man pages found in the 5.1 tree
man4 area while not losing useful information. However, the documentation
folks should still take a look, since the man pages used as guides were
somewhat inconsistent on a variety of points.
Approved by: markm(mentor)
Remove a reference to the defunct macro M_COPY_PKTHDR;
document the new functions m_dup_pkthdr() and m_move_pkthdr(),
and the macro variant of the latter, M_MOVE_PKTHDR().
- tagging plaintext "mbuf", "mbuf cluster", and "mbuf chain"
with .Vt (variable type) since all of them are ways of managing
data, i.e., they can be seen as data types;
- using .Vt/.Va instead of .Li (literal) where appropriate;
- tagging plaintext words that actually refer to function arguments
with .Fa.
Suggested by: ru
uses alloca() and alloca is impossible to implement as a callable function
on amd64. It has to be a compiler builtin. Note that the bigger problem
is that libc is not c99 clean internally.
bus_dmamap_sync() by OR'ing them together.
- Don't document what BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD|BUS_DMASYNC_PREWRITE and
BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD|BUS_DMASYNC_POSTWRITE is supposed to do when
passed to bus_dmamap_sync(). There are other possible combinations
and the reader just needs to know what the individual flags do and
that he can combine different DMA operations.
- Use .An when listing authors.
Reviewed by: hmp
man page. This will be more scaleable as more driver man pages hit
the tree. Add also a description on how to do this configuration
in the rc.conf script.
toggle several media options (sonet/sdh, for example) with ifconfig and
to see the carrier state in ifconfig's output. It gives also read/write
access (given the right privilegs) to the S/Uni registers to user space
programs.
discipline to Random Early Detection (RED) in the future. The same para
incorrectly spelt ``Random Early Detection'' as ``Random Early Drop''.
While I am there, nuke IF_ENQ_DROP from the list of functions. More
work will be done on this, since some of the functions like
if_enq_drop() and if_queue_drop() were replaced with one function
called if_handoff() that does the job of enqueing the packet and
updating interface statistics as necessary.
Reviewed by: wollman
Approved by: des (mentor)
MFC after: 1 day
It currently supports the PMC Sierra Lite, Ultra and 622 chips and
the IDT 77105. The driver handles media options and state in a consistent
manner for ATM drivers. The next commit to the midway driver will make
it use utopia.
from NetBSD, and changed slightly to account for FreeBSD specifics.
- Hook them up to the build.
- Add them to the list of miibus-using drivers in miibus(4).
PCI bus interface. I have made some modifications to this manual
page, so it looks a bit different from the original version that
was posted to me.
Submitted by: Bruce M. Simpson <bms@spc.org>
Reviewed by: imp, mdodd (early copy)
Approved by: des (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
take advantage of the rc.subr(8) glue. They are renamed dhclient_program
and dhclient_flags.
o Rename them in rc.conf(5)
o Rename them in /etc/defaults/rc.conf
o Add the deprecated variables to /etc/rc.subr
o Isolate the use of the 'command' variable to the
NetBSD specific parts in /etc/rc.d/dhclient.
o Now that dhcp_flags has also been renamed it will
be applied properly by rc.subr(8) glue code.
Reported by: John Nielsen <john@jnielsen.net>
extended attribute.
EINVAL can also reflect an invalid namespace for either a get
or set operation on EAs.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
VOP_GETEXTATTR() to retrieve the attribute name list on some file
systems, and note that this will be replaced with its own VOP
in due course.
Pointed out by: Dominic Giampaolo <dbg@apple.com>
Repo-copy it from the i386 specific man4 section to the common one.
Remove the i386 keyword from the man page header.
Document the sysctl interface to the driver.
Fix a spelling error (ALL -> AAL).
- Nuke markup indicators for editors.
- Bump the date
- Use mdoc(7) specifiers for marking up defines, etc.
- Update the prototypes
- Flash out the description
- Cleanup english, spelling and grammar
- Update .Xr's
- Add following SEE ALSOs: uio(9), uma(9), vput(9), vref(9)
- Reorder sections to be in agreement with mdoc(7)
- Add FILES section
- Update Copyright and AUTHORS section.
Approved by: des (mentor)
Nuke incorrect usage of .Ar; replace it with .Vt, .Va or .Fa appropriately.
The .Ar mdoc(7) specifier should only be used when displaying command line
arguments.
Approved by: des (mentor)
- update ``struct usb_device_info''
- add information about new fields in about struct
- document USB_EVENT_IS_ATTACH() and USB_EVENT_IS_DETACH()
- update URL of the USB.ORG developer documentation
PR: docs/41580 (original patch)
Reviewed by: n_hibma
Approved by: des (mentor), re (bmah)
- remove '-*- nroff -*-'
- bump the date
- nuke outdated ``struct vnode''
(it is just better to lookup the struct in the header)
- nuke ``enum vtype'' and related junk
- add a one line about ``struct vnode''
- use .Va instead of .Dv for vnode struct fields
Approved by: des (mentor), re (bmah)
Reviewed by: arch@, mentor
on and fix if neceeary).
o Note that acpi is available on i386-ia32, ia64 and amd64, not just 'intel'
platforms. Intel has had nothing to do with amd64.
Approved by: re (scottl@)
known to produce broken code with -march=pentium4. Add a note explaining this.
This should be removed when we update to gcc 3.3 or the bug is otherwise fixed.
Approved by: re
This manpage should really have only one short description (.Nd);
if anyone could come up with a wording suitable for both conversion
and decoding/encoding functions, that would unbreak the whatis(1)
output for this manpage.
Approved by: re (blanket)
kharma it will be to disable some or all of acpi on ia64 or amd64 (are
there other non-i386 platforms that FreeBSD supports with ACPI?).
Submitted by: Ryan Losh
Approved by: re@ (rwatson)
description.
- Remove some bogus commas.
- Use the past tense when referring to the removal of the sleep() function
since it happened quite a while ago and since the previous sentence in the
paragraph already uses the past tense.
Approved by: re (rwatson)
- prefix(8) and gifconfig(8) are deprecated
- dtcpc, dtcps were never imported (also removed from KAME CVS)
- pim6dd, pim6sd and racoon are ports
- inet6d does not exist on FreeBSD
PR: docs/51295
Submitted by: Simon L. Nielsen <simon@nitro.dk>
Content reviewed by: itojun
Approved by: des (mentor), re (bmah)
was obtained from [1], with heavy editing, and ammending text for some of
the ioctls.
All ioctls (in sys/agpio.h) are now documented.
PR: docs/50503
Original patch by: Alex Semenyaka <alexs@snark.ratmir.ru> [1]
Content approved by:
- Eric Anholt <anholt@FreeBSD.ORG>
- Matthew N. Dodd <mdodd@FreeBSD.ORG> (cursory review)
Approved and Reviewed by: des (mentor), re (scottl)
displays the 'hostname' of the jail, or a hyphen '-' to indicate
that the process is not jailed.
PR: docs/37470
Submitted by: Adrian Filipi-Martin <adrian@ubergeeks.com>
Approved and Reviewed by: des (mentor), re (bmah)
- Add a description of b0 / b1 fields.
- Do not use 'entry' to refer to both 'entry' and 'field'.
- Do not confuse people with heading 'Name' and entry 'Name'.
PR: 48104
Submitted by: Gary W. Swearingen <swear@attbi.com> (original version)
Approved by: re (blanket)
datagrams have a LIST of multicast group memberships...". On -CURRENT, that
LIST is actually a TAILQ. Note that -STABLE still uses a LIST
PR: 50426
Submitted by: Scott Mitchell <scott+freebsd@fishballoon.org>
in which the source code is written. This is controlled by the CSTD
variable, which can have one of the following values:
- "k&r" => -traditional
- "c89" or "c90" => -std=iso9899:1990
- "c94" or "c95" => -std=iso9899:199409
- "c99" => -std=iso9899:1999
The corresponding option is added to CFLAGS regardless of WARNS level.
This also removes -ansi from WARNS level 6, but adds -Wno-long-long to
work around a weird gcc bug (-ansi, which is supposedly equivalent to
-std=iso9899:1990, seems to turn long long warnings off instead of on)
If CSTD is undefined, CFLAGS are unchanged except for the -ansi /
-Wno-long-long change mentioned above for WARNS level 6.
separate man page. Document new device_is_attached there and remove that
new man page too.
Connect device_get_name to build, and install a link for
device_get_nameunit.
strangely nobody noticed this yet...
and this manpage is somewhat machine independent.
- Don't redundantly say that SMP support is present for all supported
architectures. Instead, say that it is present for all Tier-1
architectures.
- Note that an SMP kernel not booting on a UP machine is an i386-only
exception.
- Add a paragraph about hyperthreading support including some docco on the
machdep.hlt_logical_cpus sysctl ps@ recently added.
- Note that SMP support for alpha, ia64, and sparc64 debuted in 5.0.
ethernet controller. The driver has been tested with the LinkSys
USB200M adapter. I know for a fact that there are other devices out
there with this chip but don't have all the USB vendor/device IDs.
Note: I'm not sure if this will force the driver to end up in the
install kernel image or not. Special magic needs to be done to exclude
it to keep the boot floppies from bloating again, someone please
advise.
libthr. No changes were made to libpthread by request of deischen,
who will soon commit a real implementation for that library.
PR: standards/50848
Submitted by: Sergey A. Osokin <osa@freebsd.org.ru>
MFC after: 1 week
non-alphanumeric characters in these and this will be a hint to the
users that quotes can and should be used in such cases.
PR: docs/42292
Submitted by: Matthias Andree <matthias.andree@web.de>
MFC after: 1 week
While beeing here also correct the following:
- list missing macros in the header
- document MALLOC_DEFINE and MALLOC_DECLARE in the SYNOPSIS section
- document additional include requirements for MALLOC_DEFINE
- M_NOWAIT is not 0 anymore
- remove rotted diagnostic messages
This is an optional feature, disabled by default.
This will be useful to people testing the various POSIX threading
libraries under -CURRENT but can easily serve other needs.
example of utilizing multiple slots on a multi-slot card reader.
PR: docs/49036
Submitted by: Scott Mitchell <scott+freebsd@fishballoon.org>
MFC after: 3 days
FreeBSD. This method attempts to centralize all the necessary hacks
or work arounds in one of two places in the tree (src/Makefile.inc1
and src/tools/build). We build a small compatibility library
(libbuild.a) as well as selectively installing necessary include
files. We then include this directory when building host binaries.
This removes all the past release compatibilty hacks from various
places in the tree. We still build on tip of stable and current. I
will work with those that want to support more, although I anticipate
it will just work.
Many thanks to ru@, obrien@ and jhb@ for providing valuable input at
various stage of implementation, as well as for working together to
positively effect a change for the better.
(See: ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc3514.txt)
This fulfills the host requirements for userland support by
way of the setsockopt() IP_EVIL_INTENT message.
There are three sysctl tunables provided to govern system behavior.
net.inet.ip.rfc3514:
Enables support for rfc3514. As this is an
Informational RFC and support is not yet widespread
this option is disabled by default.
net.inet.ip.hear_no_evil
If set the host will discard all received evil packets.
net.inet.ip.speak_no_evil
If set the host will discard all transmitted evil packets.
The IP statistics counter 'ips_evil' (available via 'netstat') provides
information on the number of 'evil' packets recieved.
For reference, the '-E' option to 'ping' has been provided to demonstrate
and test the implementation.
glibc which is externally maintained, so GCC ships with these
warnings turned off by default. This is also consistent with
the src/contrib/gcc/c-lex.c,v 1.2 change.
pointed this out a while ago, and I'm just now getting back to it. It
obsoletes one of ru's changes, but since oldcard.4 is so much better,
that doesn't matter.
Submitted by: ru
Both "product" and "build" ordering are rampant in /usr/src. This document
is not indented to be as strict as style(9) as historically BSD hasn't been
as consistent about Makefile as C code. Also there are too many variations,
exceptions and allowances in out existing Makefile style to be strict.
However there is a general level of consensus on what the general BSD style
of our Makefiles is. This manpage documents that "smell".
o Give the proper spelling for WARNS.
o Clarify using NO_WERROR.
o Embelish -D after -I verbage.
o Document preference of ${.ALLSRC} & ${.TARGET} vs. $< & $@.
Based on: brucification
various functions of the card. Be pedantically careful to use 'station
firmware' when talking about the version of Prism firmware.
As always, word-smithing welcome.
MFC-After: Tom Rhodes wakes up and notices :-)
and other localized keys.
MFC candidate pending re@ approval.
Contributed by: Gruppo Utenti FreeBSD Italia (www.gufi.org)
No-reply-from: ache
MFC after: 3 days
Always use sys/conf/kern.mk when building kernel/modules.
<bsd.kern.mk> is only preserved for sys/boot/pc98/boot2
for now, but this will be fixed. If there are other
users of <bsd.kern.mk>, please let me know.
Reminded by: bde
o Expand on MAC policy enforcement on network interfaces
o Add cross-references to su(1) and setfsmac(8) where appropriate
o Comment out mmap revocation sysctls as they are a bit too experimental
o Add the standard BUGS section
Prompted by: rwatson
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
labels"
o Remove the ++ compartment range notation example as this has not yet
been merged into CVS.
o Include a "Runtime Configuration" section listing all of the relevant
sysctl knobs for this policy.
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
another subsection, but I'm not quite sure where yet. Right now it's just
the configurable bits.
- Move the label format off into another subsection to match other labeling
policy man pages.
- Make the sample range label look like the form specified.
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
More work likely needs to happen. This describes things better than
the old "this man page intentionally left blank" style man page that
I'd committed previously.
Nitpickers: comb nits and commit!
freen: imputed typo in original wordlist. I can find no evidence for this
being an actual English word, not even in the OED.
freend: archaic spelling of `friend'. In a modern document, it is far
more likely that this appears as a typo or a dialect word than it does
under the original meaning, so remove it as not to cause false negatives
for spelling checkers.
with vnode interlocks held.
Emphasize that users need to be careful with malloc flags versus mbuf
flags.
Remove stale portion in vnode.9 about v_tag. We don't have it anylonger.
Submitted by: Hiten Pandya <hiten@unixdaemons.com>
* Fix a bug where devices weren't cleaned up on close(): CAM_REQ_CMP != 0
user:
* Increase timeout in usermode to CAM_TIME_INFINITY. The initiator is in
charge of timeouts and the value was in ms, not seconds.
* Bring two debugging printfs under the debug flag
* Clean up man page to show increased testing on isp(4)
Submitted by: gibbs (bugfixes)
"Network Associates Labs" in the copyright notice.
o Remove clause #3 in the license terms.
o Remove the line break from my name.
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
my fingers are getting tired. Here is a new manual page, 'development',
which describes a very powerful, generic, exportable development environment
suitable to developers, sysops, admins, and anyone at all who is
maintaining more the one FreeBSD box. I have used this type of environment
for many years and have had to make virtually no changes to it for all that
time.
MFC after: 3 days
o Correct the range of compartments (1..256 instead of 0..255)
o Use the correct name for "Network Associates Laboratories"
MFC Candidate.
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
Reviewed by: Adam Migus <adam@migus.org>
background fsck. The delay defaults to sixty seconds to allow
large applications such as the X server to start before disk I/O
bandwidth is monopolized by fsck.
Submitted by: Brooks Davis <brooks@one-eyed-alien.net>
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
solution is worked out to clarify more specific compartment-related
cases.
Submitted by: dcs
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Labs
Approved by: re (blanket)
o None: Stub policy
o Seeotheruids: The "see processes and sockets owned by other users" policy
o Test: Debugging policy
Standardize the SYNOPSIS and HISTORY sections.
Update SEE ALSO sections.
it, so don't suggest it. It's likely going away soon also, so avoid
believing it's supported.
Suggested by: Sean Kelly <smkelly@zombie.org>
Approved by: re
that we do MP on more than just i386, and add some cross-references.
This is far from a perfect update, but at least it's a start. More
will no doubt follow.
Reviewed by: jhb
Approved by: re
o Biba: A data integrity policy
o BSD Extended: Support for the firewall-like access controls (ugidfw(8))
o MLS: Multi-level security, a confidentiality policy
(These files originally lived in src/share/man/man9)
Approved by: re (blanket)
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Labs
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
This mostly consists of functionality to serialize accesses to
the two ATA channels (which can also be used to "fix" certain
PCI based controllers).
Add support for Acard controllers.
Enable the ATA driver in PC98 GENERIC, and add device hints.
Update man page with latest support.
The PC98 core team has kindly provided me with a PC98
machine that made this all possible, thanks to all that
contributed to that effort, without that this would
probably newer have been possible..
Approved by: re@
the file system initial labeling policy exists in userland, and is
fed into setfsmac(1). This is based on the old LOMAC PLM.
Approved by: re
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
The /usr/bin/perl wrapper isn't solving many of the problems it was
imported to deal with. There are limitations to it that don't have a
clear "fix".
Reviewed by: markm, kris
Extorted approval from: re(jhb)
Revert to using the .Tn POSIX and .Tn ANSI instead of \*[Px] and \*[Ai]
strings; using these strings is unsafe in troff mode, as they include a
change in a font size.
Approved by: re
for the -static flag instead when constructing LIBPAM.
(This fixes false warnings from ``make checkdpadd -DNOSHARED'' in
lib/libpam/modules/.)
Submitted by: bde, ru
Approved by: re
device ppc
and
hint.ppc.0.at="isa"
hint.ppc.0.irq="7"
in /boot/device.hints to configure the ppc device.
Reviewed by: trhodes, ru
Approved by: re@ (rwatson)
This code allows a user program to enable target mode on a SIM and
then emulate any number of devices (disks, tape drives, etc.) All
decisions about device behavior (UA, CA, inquiry response) are left
to the usermode program and the kernel driver is merely a conduit
for CCBs. This enables multiple concurrent target emulators, each
using its own backing store and IO model.
Also included is a user program that emulates a disk (RBC) using a
file as a backing store. This provides functionality similar to
md(4) at the CAM layer.
Code has been tested on ahc(4) and should also work on isp(4) (and
other SIMs that gain target mode support). It is a complete rewrite
of /sys/cam/scsi_target* and /usr/share/examples/scsi_target.
Design, comments from: gibbs
Supported by: Cryptography Research
Approved by: re
Has been seen to work on several cards and communicating with
several mobile phones to use them as modems etc.
We are still talking with 3com to try get them to allow us to include
the firmware for their pccard in the driver but the driver is here..
In the mean time
it can be downloaded from the 3com website and loaded using the utility
bt3cfw(8) (supplied) (instructions in the man page)
Not yet linked to the build
Submitted by: Maksim Yevmenkin <myevmenk@exodus.net>
Approved by: re
NAI.
Add cautionary notes on the experimental status of the MAC Framework
in FreeBSD 5.0.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
Replace ARC4 with SHA2-512.
Change lock-structure encoding to use random ordering rather for obscurity.
Encrypt lock-structure with AES/256 instead of AES/128.
Change kkey derivation to be MD5 hash based.
Watch for malloc(M_NOWAIT) failures and ditch our cache when they happen.
Remove clause 3 of the license with NAI Labs consent.
Many thanks to "Lucky Green" <shamrock@cypherpunks.to> and "David
Wagner" <daw@cs.berkeley.edu>, for code reading, inputs and
suggestions.
This code has still not been stared at for 10 years by a gang of
hard-core cryptographers. Discretion advised.
NB: These changes result in the on-disk format changing: dump/restore needed.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
largely submitted by bde. Return our exemption of the #ifdef lint
comments since the exemption is intended to handle a particularly
common current case without mandating change. Improve language and
spelling, and slightly clarify the notions associated specifically
with #elif.
Obtained from: bde
This is NOT YET CONVERTED TO -current.
This node is a source for preprogrammed packets at a known rate for testing.
I will convert it to -current "in place" but will MFC teh original
pre-conversion variant as that is what is originally submitted.
Man page my me, info from Dave's README.
Submitted by: Dave Chapeskie <dchapeskie@SANDVINE.com>
Obtained from: Sandvine inc.
MFC after: 1 week
Abuse .for so that the variable expansion works inside the N modifier.
This won't be a simple abuse with the next version of bsd.doc.mk
which will support multi-value PRINTERDEVICE.
Don't gratuitously pipe thru a cat(1) if NODOCCOMPRESS.
Only create _stamp.extra when necessary.
Get rid of SOELIMPP and OBJS.
Use Groff version of soelim(1); we need its -I option
for the following to work.
Don't needlessly chdir to SRCDIR. Only a few documents
need CD_HACK, and those that need it either use refer(1)
or .PSPIC macro which internally uses the .psbb call.
The closing comment is required only for long conditionally defined
code sections, with the exception of lint cases. Attempt to document
also the logic for using '!' before the SOMETIMESSOMETHGINGHERE.
The goal of these comments is to make complex cases more
comprehensible, not to require them in all cases. The rules here are
derived from behavior used in 90+% of the kernel source code.
Reviewed by and discussed with: jhb, bde, mike
linking.
* Fix disorder in the SEE ALSO sections of aio_*(2).
* Remove unnecessary cross-references from the SEE ALSO sections of
aio_*(2); config(8), kldload(8) and kldunload(8) are cross-referenced
from aio(4).
* Remove the KERNEL OPTIONS sections from aio_*(2), now that these
pages cross-reference aio(4), which contains suitable kernel linking
reference material.
associated with the TrustedBSD MAC Framework, as well as some credits
to developers and contributors.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
a server process bound to a wildcard UDP socket to select the IP
address from which outgoing packets are sent on a per-datagram
basis. When combined with IP_RECVDSTADDR, such a server process can
guarantee to reply to an incoming request using the same source IP
address as the destination IP address of the request, without having
to open one socket per server IP address.
Discussed on: -net
Approved by: re
which may surprise developers coming from Solaris, or other platforms
which have a similar interface, but slightly different rules.
Reviewed by: jhb, ru
to creating the tags file using ctags(1). Defaults to "gtags".
Made GTAGSFLAGS and HTAGSFLAGS overrideable, added CTAGSFLAGS.
Folded bsd.prog.mk version of `tags' into bsd.dep.mk.
PR: bin/42852
o describe additional argument in driver callbacks
o describe flow-control mechanism for processing crypto requests
o remove old cruft
o remove openbsd-specific cruft
o fixup some references
o yada yada ...
Fix the "@gprel relocation against dynamic symbol xxx" linker error.
Variables defined in the link unit and small enough to be put in the
short data section will have a gp-relative access sequence (using the
@gprel relocation). It is invalid to have @gprel relocations in shared
libraries, because they are to be resolved by the static linker and
not the dynamic linker. The -fpic option will cause @ltoff relocations
for @gprel relocations, but the side-effects are untested (if any).
Instead, disable/eliminate the short data section to achieve the same.
One bug fixed: Use getmicrouptime() to trigger reseeds so that we
cannot be tricked by a clock being stepped backwards.
Express parameters in natural units and with natural names.
Don't use struct timeval more than we need to.
Various stylistic and readability polishing.
Introduce arc4rand(void *ptr, u_int len, int reseed) function which
returns a stream of pseudo-random bytes, observing the automatic
reseed criteria as well as allowing forced reseeds.
Rewrite arc4random() in terms of arc4rand().
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
In "nroff" mode, italic font renders as an underlined text, which
makes it indistinguishable from the bold text on color monitors
(cons25 terminal type), yet it requires the less(1)'s -R option.
(Refer to the new grotty(1) manpage for details.)
So turn off the color support for now (when generating catpages),
until we figure out what do we do with this new feature. I have
a patch for grotty(1) that tells it to use the "reverse video"
attribute to render the italic font. Once this is accepted, we
can turn color support back on (if there won't be any objections
from the community).
This reduces the size of GENERIC's text space by 73999 bytes (about 2%).
The bloat is from approximately 3437 strings longer than 31 characters
being padded to a 32-byte boundary.
o Make it possible to prevent parts of the tree from being linted
(say) during a 'make world' by setting NOLINT in a leaf Makefile.
o Make "make lint" work (better) for executable programs.
o Clean up (nuke!) a syntax damaged pipeline.
lowest value in order to get the right MACHINE_CPU values since setting
CPUTYPE can result in problems later in the buildkernel case. Instead,
set MACHINE_CPU directly and leave CPUTYPE alone.
Tested by: mbr
Capitalize the first letter of the descriptions for the entries in the ERRORS
section if they are complete sentences and end the sentences with periods.
under way to move the remnants of the a.out toolchain to ports. As the
comment in src/Makefile said, this stuff is deprecated and one should not
expect this to remain beyond 4.0-REL. It has already lasted WAY beyond
that.
Notable exceptions:
gcc - I have not touched the a.out generation stuff there.
ldd/ldconfig - still have some code to interface with a.out rtld.
old as/ld/etc - I have not removed these yet, pending their move to ports.
some includes - necessary for ldd/ldconfig for now.
Tested on: i386 (extensively), alpha
and adjacent tokens in declarations.
The added text was originally a single sentence I wrote and which
was heavily modified and extended by Bruce Evans.
This clarification attempt originates from differing usage of the
'restrict' type-qualifier.
Although various documents documents dicussing the C Programming
Language put a space between an asterisk and the 'restrict' keyword,
including the C99 standard (at least the n869.txt draft) and other
ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22/WG14 documents, the IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 document
does not separate them.
Discussed with: bde
Requested by: tjr
Separation using a single space also liked by: mike
which became wrong after using do { } while (0) became recommended.
Move the definition of what braces are to their new first occurrence.
Reviewed by: bde
we don't use two-letters names already many years.
2) Make xterm-color just plain alias to xterm instead of unnecessary
reduplication of color capabilities already exist in xterm entry.
ev6 or pca56 etc this downgrades the cpu specification passed to gas.
As a result, gas will fail when gcc generates media instructions (in
uipc_usrreq.c). This only affects what gas will accept, not what gcc
generates or what our *.s file contain.
Fix device hints entry for disabling acpi(4).
This also should fix the arbitration with apm(4) when both drivers
are enabled.
Note that your /boot/device.hints needs to be updated if you want to
stop auto-loading acpi.ko or disable acpi(4).
3 bytes (ut:) seems too long for kterm-color. There is a limitation
of buffer size within 1024 bytes in our ncurses.
Submitted by: mistral@imasy.or.jp
Reviewed by: matusita
MFC after: 1 day
by looking at the "type of number" field and providing configurable hooks
to correct the numbers accordingly. See keywords add-prefix, prefix-national
and prefix-international in isdnd.rc(5).
This feature was implemented by Christian Ullrich <chris@chrullrich.de>
(I skipped those in contrib/, gnu/ and crypto/)
While I was at it, fixed a lot more found by ispell that I
could identify with certainty to be errors. All of these
were in comments or text, not in actual code.
Suggested by: bde
MFC after: 3 days
TARGET_ARCH and TARGET. This is problematic when one has the =
(unconditional) type of assigment for CPUTYPE in /etc/make.conf.
(This would override what was set on the command line to "make
buildworld".)
Add a (horrible) kludge to Makefile.inc1 to check the type of
assignment for CPUTYPE (only for those who attempts to set it to
a different value). Fix an example make.conf. Fix the kernel's
build-tools target (aicasm only at the moment) to catch up with
bsd.cpu.mk,v 1.15 (BOOTSTRAPPING replaced with NO_CPU_CFLAGS in
Makefile.inc1's BMAKE).
Reviewed by: jhb
bsd.cpu.mk doesn't have to worry about compilers other than the current
version.
- Allow TARGET_CPUTYPE to override CPUTYPE in bsd.cpu.mk.
- Treat an empty CPUTYPE the same as an undefined CPUTYPE.
- For buildworld, buildkernel, etc., define TARGET_CPUTYPE to CPUTYPE for
native builds and define it to be empty for cross-builds.
TARGET_CPUTYPE is only defined if it is not already defined via the
commandline or environment.
- To minimize whitespace changes, remove a test that didn't define
_CPUCFLAGS if both NO_CPU_CFLAGS and NO_CPU_COPTFLAGS were defined
since it is redundant (we don't use _CPUCFLAGS if those are defined).
to tune for more advanced processors while still supporting the minimum
processor in an architecture. We can do this with the '-mtune=' option
to gcc for alpha, sparc64, and powerpc and with the mis-named '-mcpu='
option for i386.
This defaults to tuning i386 builds for i686 machines though not using
any instructions that aren't found on an 80386. For alpha it defaults
to tuning for an EV5.
Approved by: peter
Peril sensitive sunglasses borrowed from: peter
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2401.txt), IPsec is the right word and
already in the dictionary.
PR: in part docs/38668
Reviewed by: murray
MFC after: 10 days
since apparently people were missing that you aren't supposed to access
the name buffer following namei() unless you specify one of these flags.
Pointed out by: green
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
including documenting that ucreds must not be pulled out of thin air,
when to use td_cred vs. p_ucred, how to avoid race conditions in
credential updates, and why to use p_ucred when targetting a thread
or process in an access control operation involving two processes.
Reviewed by: julian, jhb (earlier revision)
these days, and the average user expects ^A and arrow keys to work, however
if they know nothing of editing modes, they will think sh(1) just sucks. It
is likely that because of defaults on most systems and with most shells that
anyone who actually wants vi(1) editing mode will have 'set -o vi'. This
won't affect existing accounts, this way, of course. Only accounts with
.shrc from new etc/skel will be affected. This is much better than making
the change in sh(1).
now needs to set COPY=-C as -C is no longer compatible with the -d
option. It is also likely to be renamed to INSTALL_COPY soon.
Update documentation to reflect this change.
PR: bin/40724
to make it call `install' in the bsd.subdir.mk-driven makefiles
too. (share/examples/Makefile,v 1.29 changed the bsd.prog.mk
to bsd.subdir.mk and many stuff was lost during "make release".
I then merged this change in rev. 1.28.2.2 to work around the
namespace pollution (FILES) in this makefile.)
There was an added complexity here. Both the `distribute' and
`install' targets are recursive (they propagate to SUBDIRs).
So `distribute' first calls `install' in the ${.CURDIR}, then
calls `distribute' in each SUBDIR, etc. The problem is that
`install' (being also recursive) causes the stuff from SUBDIR
to be installed twice, first time thru `install' in ${.CURDIR}
triggered by `distribute', second time by `distribute' run in
the SUBDIR. This problem is not new, but it became apparent
only after I moved the `distribute' target from bsd.obj.mk to
bsd.subdir.mk. My first attempt testing the fix failed due to
this, because the whole world was distributed twice, causing
all the imaginable mess (kerberos5 stuff was installed into both
"base" and "krb5" dists, there was /sbin/init.bak, etc.)
I say the problem is not new because bsd.prog.mk and bsd.lib.mk
makefiles with SUBDIR (even without this fix) had this problem
for years. Try e.g. running ``make distribute DISTDIR=/foo''
from usr.bin/bzip2 or from lib/libcom_err (without the fix) and
watch the output.
So the solution was to make `install' behave non-recursive when
executed by `distribute'. My first attempt in passing SUBDIR=
to the `install' in the `distribute' body failed because of the
way how src/Makefile and src/Makefile.inc1 communicate with each
other. SUBDIR='s assignment precedence on the "make install
SUBDIR=" command line is lowered after src/Makefile wrapper calls
"make ... -f ${.CURDIR}/Makefile.inc1 install" because SUBDIR=
is moved into environment, and Makefile.inc1's assignments now
take higher precedence. This may be fixed someday when we merge
Makefile with Makefile.inc1. For now, this is implemented as a
NO_SUBDIR knob.
Spotted by: Dmitry Pryanishnikov <dmitry@atlantis.dp.ua>
Prodded by: des
MFC after: 3 days
mi_switch(9) is still wildly innacurate. I suggest that every kernel
developer takes 20 minutes a day for the next few days and updates one or
two of his favourite chapter 9 man pages as they are now WAY out of date
in general. I will add a couple of KSE related pages soon.
directives to ensure that all realinstall sub-tasks are executed
after beforeinstall, similarly ensure that all afterinstall sub-
tasks are executed after realinstall. Demonstration:
all: task1 task2
.ORDER: task1 task2
task2: task2_subtask
.ORDER: task1 task2_subtask
task1 task2 task2_subtask:
@sleep `jot -r 1 0 1.0`
@echo ${.TARGET}
Without the second .ORDER directive, task2_subtask can be run in
parallel with task1.
Spotted by: Andrea Campi <andrea@webcom.it>
PR: 38096
Submitted by: Chris Pepper <pepper@rockefeller.edu>
While I'm here correct some typos pointed out by ispell.
Approved by: sheldonh (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
Provided the (previously missing) dependency on source files
for intermediate .msg files.
Provided the default for NLSSRCDIR (defaults to .CURDIR).
Slightly changed the API: NLS should now list plain locale
names, without the .msg suffix.
When included from bsd.prog.mk, NLSNAME defaults to PROG.
try to avoid ambiguous cases in the future.
Wording approved by: julian (early draft), grog, rwatson, wes and maybe other
members of core I'm forgetting.
and afterinstall targets. Make sure they are run in sequence in the
-j case.
This fixes the recent breakage with beforeinstall being run _after_
realinstall.
Reported by: knu
MAKEDEV: Add MAKEDEV glue for the ti(4) device nodes.
ti.4: Update the ti(4) man page to include information on the
TI_JUMBO_HDRSPLIT and TI_PRIVATE_JUMBOS kernel options,
and also include information about the new character
device interface and the associated ioctls.
man9/Makefile: Add jumbo.9 and zero_copy.9 man pages and associated
links.
jumbo.9: New man page describing the jumbo buffer allocator
interface and operation.
zero_copy.9: New man page describing the general characteristics of
the zero copy send and receive code, and what an
application author should do to take advantage of the
zero copy functionality.
NOTES: Add entries for ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS, TI_PRIVATE_JUMBOS,
TI_JUMBO_HDRSPLIT, MSIZE, and MCLSHIFT.
conf/files: Add uipc_jumbo.c and uipc_cow.c.
conf/options: Add the 5 options mentioned above.
kern_subr.c: Receive side zero copy implementation. This takes
"disposable" pages attached to an mbuf, gives them to
a user process, and then recycles the user's page.
This is only active when ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS is turned on
and the kern.ipc.zero_copy.receive sysctl variable is
set to 1.
uipc_cow.c: Send side zero copy functions. Takes a page written
by the user and maps it copy on write and assigns it
kernel virtual address space. Removes copy on write
mapping once the buffer has been freed by the network
stack.
uipc_jumbo.c: Jumbo disposable page allocator code. This allocates
(optionally) disposable pages for network drivers that
want to give the user the option of doing zero copy
receive.
uipc_socket.c: Add kern.ipc.zero_copy.{send,receive} sysctls that are
enabled if ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS is turned on.
Add zero copy send support to sosend() -- pages get
mapped into the kernel instead of getting copied if
they meet size and alignment restrictions.
uipc_syscalls.c:Un-staticize some of the sf* functions so that they
can be used elsewhere. (uipc_cow.c)
if_media.c: In the SIOCGIFMEDIA ioctl in ifmedia_ioctl(), avoid
calling malloc() with M_WAITOK. Return an error if
the M_NOWAIT malloc fails.
The ti(4) driver and the wi(4) driver, at least, call
this with a mutex held. This causes witness warnings
for 'ifconfig -a' with a wi(4) or ti(4) board in the
system. (I've only verified for ti(4)).
ip_output.c: Fragment large datagrams so that each segment contains
a multiple of PAGE_SIZE amount of data plus headers.
This allows the receiver to potentially do page
flipping on receives.
if_ti.c: Add zero copy receive support to the ti(4) driver. If
TI_PRIVATE_JUMBOS is not defined, it now uses the
jumbo(9) buffer allocator for jumbo receive buffers.
Add a new character device interface for the ti(4)
driver for the new debugging interface. This allows
(a patched version of) gdb to talk to the Tigon board
and debug the firmware. There are also a few additional
debugging ioctls available through this interface.
Add header splitting support to the ti(4) driver.
Tweak some of the default interrupt coalescing
parameters to more useful defaults.
Add hooks for supporting transmit flow control, but
leave it turned off with a comment describing why it
is turned off.
if_tireg.h: Change the firmware rev to 12.4.11, since we're really
at 12.4.11 plus fixes from 12.4.13.
Add defines needed for debugging.
Remove the ti_stats structure, it is now defined in
sys/tiio.h.
ti_fw.h: 12.4.11 firmware.
ti_fw2.h: 12.4.11 firmware, plus selected fixes from 12.4.13,
and my header splitting patches. Revision 12.4.13
doesn't handle 10/100 negotiation properly. (This
firmware is the same as what was in the tree previously,
with the addition of header splitting support.)
sys/jumbo.h: Jumbo buffer allocator interface.
sys/mbuf.h: Add a new external mbuf type, EXT_DISPOSABLE, to
indicate that the payload buffer can be thrown away /
flipped to a userland process.
socketvar.h: Add prototype for socow_setup.
tiio.h: ioctl interface to the character portion of the ti(4)
driver, plus associated structure/type definitions.
uio.h: Change prototype for uiomoveco() so that we'll know
whether the source page is disposable.
ufs_readwrite.c:Update for new prototype of uiomoveco().
vm_fault.c: In vm_fault(), check to see whether we need to do a page
based copy on write fault.
vm_object.c: Add a new function, vm_object_allocate_wait(). This
does the same thing that vm_object allocate does, except
that it gives the caller the opportunity to specify whether
it should wait on the uma_zalloc() of the object structre.
This allows vm objects to be allocated while holding a
mutex. (Without generating WITNESS warnings.)
vm_object_allocate() is implemented as a call to
vm_object_allocate_wait() with the malloc flag set to
M_WAITOK.
vm_object.h: Add prototype for vm_object_allocate_wait().
vm_page.c: Add page-based copy on write setup, clear and fault
routines.
vm_page.h: Add page based COW function prototypes and variable in
the vm_page structure.
Many thanks to Drew Gallatin, who wrote the zero copy send and receive
code, and to all the other folks who have tested and reviewed this code
over the years.
so that /dev/mumble can be the entrypoint to some networking graph,
e.g. a tunnel or a remote tape drive or whatever...
Not fully tested (by me) yet.
Submitted by: Mark Santcroos <marks@ripe.net>
MFC after: 3 weeks
same set of features as in recently added bsd.incs.mk
(FILESGROUPS, accessibility from both bsd.prog.mk and
bsd.lib.mk, de-pessimized typical installation path,
etc.) New standard targets: buildfiles, installfiles,
and files (buildfiles + installfiles).
Do not use raw roff requests.
Replace tbl(1)'s use with the mdoc(7)'s -column list.
Removed cross references to non-existing manpages.
Minor markup nits.
'manck' from ports does just about everything these tools ever did.
(I did have these 90% working about 5 years ago, but manck came along.....)
The only file of interest might be sp.ignore, but it can be pulled
from the attic if anyone has that much interest.
Inspired by: Mark Murray's deletion of share/man/man0
softlink to /var/tmp.
This is horribly wrong since /tmp and /var/tmp serve different goals.
Even given the text that in the old days things were different doesn't help,
since our scripts clean /tmp, and we depend on /var/tmp to persist for
vi editing sessions recovery and other likewise applications.
documentation) hasn't had its nappies changed since FreeBSD-2.0, and
is now starting to smell rather ripe.
Its dependant on ancient and removed tools, and the last maintainer
can't remember looking at it 1 1/2 years ago.
If we need it, its in the Attic.
Discussed with: asmodai
permissions to use for alias and map database files built by
/etc/mail/Makefile. The default is 0640 to assist users in avoiding
a file locking local denial of service.
MFC after: 1 day
pending RE approval
back to -fformat-extensions (or whatever) when we have the functionality.
We are gaining warnings again that should be fixed but the are being hidden
by NO_WERROR and all the -Wformat noise.
Apparently binding only to 127.0.0.1 inside of a jail actually binds
to the jail IP address as well (in effect, bind to all available
interfaces in the jail).
Submitted by: Helge Oldach <test-smtp@oldach.net>
MFC after: 1 day
pending RE approval
Obtained from: mark
Pointy hat to: grog
Change msU macros to mU.
This is only a partial solution; the whole issue of building the
documentation needs to be revisited.
01.cacm 02.implement 03.iosys 04.uprog 06.Clang 15.yacc 16.lex 17.m4
Some of these produce a number of warnings. I don't want to remove
them yet, because some noble soul may decide to remove the cause of
the warnings, but they won't if it doesn't bite them.
Add Caldera license.
Approved by: David Taylor <davidt@caldera.com>
Make buildable under FreeBSD. This one was relatively easy, though it
still contains obscenities.
Add Caldera license.
Approved by: David Taylor <davidt@caldera.com>
Make buildable under FreeBSD.
This one's a real mess. It's full of undefined macros, and in one
place deliberately causes syntax warnings. I've decided against
taking out the undefined macros: they don't alter the format of the
output document, and maybe one day somebody will put in the macro
definitions.
Note that this file corrects a number of format errors which appear in
the O'Reilly 4.4BSD manual set.
Add Caldera license.
Approved by: David Taylor <davidt@caldera.com>
Make buildable under FreeBSD. This was relatively complicated: the
original text used the msU macros, which are available in a number of
different kinds. This version uses a number of mm-like macros,
including AL and BL, which just aren't available in ms, and the msU
macros I've found (even the ones in 4.4BSD) don't have them either. I
replaced them with ms constructs, which makes it format better than
the O'Reilly document, but I wasn't able to get the table of contents
(ms doesn't have that facility).
Add a prominent comment that this is not a reference for any modern
version of C.
Add Caldera license.
Approved by: David Taylor <davidt@caldera.com>
Make roughly buildable under FreeBSD.
The results are not perfect: the original Makefile referred to a refer
file papers/Ind, which doesn't seem to have been kept, so the
references to other publications are missing.
Add Caldera license.
Approved by: David Taylor <davidt@caldera.com>
Make roughly buildable under FreeBSD.
The results are not perfect: the original Makefile referred to a refer
file papers/Ind, which doesn't seem to have been kept, so the
references to other publications are missing.
Add Caldera license.
Approved by: David Taylor <davidt@caldera.com>
Make roughly buildable under FreeBSD.
The results are not perfect: the original Makefile referred to a refer
file papers/Ind, which doesn't seem to have been kept, so the
references to other publications are missing. In addition, the
pagination is not correct, with the result that some .DS/.DE blocks
leave large amounts of white space empty before them. Possibly this
could be fixed by putting the (blank) footnotes at the end.
PR: 35345
Requested by: Tony Finch <fanf@dotat.at>
This does not use the standard build macros for two reasons:
1. There's more than one document (paper and appendix).
2. The standard build macros need revision anyway (we shouldn't need
to set variables to get PostScript output, it should be a separate
target).
If anybody feels offended by this breach of style, feel free to fix
it.
Rename `incsinstall' to `installincludes'.
Make `includes' a -j safe shortcut for `buildincludes' + `installincludes'.
`buildincludes' and `installincludes' are SUBDIR friendly, if run directly.
Get rid of the INTERNALSTATICLIB knob and just use plain INTERNALLIB.
INTERNALLIB now means to build static library only and don't install
anything. Added a NOINSTALLLIB knob for libpam/modules. To not
build any library at all, just do not set LIB.
via INCS. Implemented INCSLINKS (equivalent to SYMLINKS) to
handle symlinking include files. Allow for multiple groups of
include files to be installed, with the powerful INCSGROUPS knob.
Documentation to follow.
Added standard `includes' and `incsinstall' targets, use them
in Makefile.inc1. Headers from the following makefiles were
not installed before (during `includes' in Makefile.inc1):
kerberos5/lib/libtelnet/Makefile
lib/libbz2/Makefile
lib/libdevinfo/Makefile
lib/libform/Makefile
lib/libisc/Makefile
lib/libmenu/Makefile
lib/libmilter/Makefile
lib/libpanel/Makefile
Replaced all `beforeinstall' targets for installing includes
with the INCS stuff.
Renamed INCDIR to INCSDIR, for consistency with FILES and SCRIPTS,
and for compatibility with NetBSD. Similarly for INCOWN, INCGRP,
and INCMODE.
Consistently use INCLUDEDIR instead of /usr/include.
gnu/lib/libstdc++/Makefile and gnu/lib/libsupc++/Makefile changes
were only lightly tested due to the missing contrib/libstdc++-v3.
I fully tested the pre-WIP_GCC31 version of this patch with the
contrib/libstdc++.295 stuff.
These changes have been tested on i386 with the -DNO_WERROR "make
world" and "make release".
and `maninstall' targets. This fixes the issue where each subdir
was descended into twice during "make all", and also resurrects
the standardization of `maninstall'.
Urged by: bde
PR: 37796
Submitted by: drs@rucus.ru.ac.za
MFC after: 1 week
Note, I don't usually look after pppd (just ppp), so I haven't
removed the ftp and ingres users as I guess they're there for
a reason....
Move the code that I have not yet finished documenting into the
`IMPLEMENTATION NOTES' section.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
o Don't ever refer to ad-hoc mode in the raw. Instead, refer to it as
demo ad-hoc mode or lucent legacy demo ad-hoc or some variation on this
theme.
o Talk about point-to-point modes rather than ad-hoc modes. Use ibss where
appropriate.
o Fix type IBBS -> IBSS
for VOP_GETATTR() and VOP_SETATTR(), reference VOP_NULL() to suggest
clearing all of *vap with it before setting specific values. Cross
reference VFS(9). Indicate that failure modes are possible from
VOP_GETATTR() and that an errno value is returned.
Submitted by: Hiten Pandya <hiten@uk.FreeBSD.org>
o go ahead and document ibss-master and ibss modes, since there are
patches in the pipeline to support them.
o Note that they aren't implemented yet.
o Note that different regulatory domains have different default
channels.
o Note that Lucent cards prior to firmware 6.0.4 do not support
ibss mode, and only support the older demo ad-hoc mode.
o Note that PRISM2 chipsets do not support WDS mode of operation
(the mysterious -p 2 option).
Change date to today.
Add socket low power WLAN CF card
Add SMC 2602W which I use all the time
Comment out the create-ibss example. FreeBSD doesn't yet have that
media option. Also change it to master-ibss since that's what OpenBSD
really uses (and that is a change in their man page too)
however I'm adding the Dlink DWL520 as supported from OpenBSD. Also
adding Dlink DWL650 since I have one in my hot little hands and it
works great.
# I suspect that OpenBSD needs this too :-)
heavily on OpenBSD's wi man page, with OpenBSDisms replaced by
FreeBSDisms. I also added a note about where the man page came from.
I hope that I've not broken anything that ru cleaned up. We now run
this through tbl, but that appears to be automatic.
Obtained From: OpenBSD
in progress, and should not have been committed in revision 1.114.
This broke gnu/usr.bin/binutils/strip and usr.bin/strip makefiles;
they were now attempting to install and strip "strip" from objdir.
Pointed out by: bde
This has nothing to do with PR misc/37516.
Do not install games and profiled libraries to the ${CHROOTDIR}
with the initial installworld.
Eliminate the need in the second installworld. For that, make sure
_everything_ is built in the "world" environment, using the right
tool chain.
Added SUBDIR_OVERRIDE helper stuff to Makefile.inc1. Split the
buildworld process into stages, and skip some stages when
SUBDIR_OVERRIDE is set (used to build crypto, krb4, and krb5
dists).
Added NO_MAKEDB_RUN knob to Makefile.inc1 to avoid running
makewhatis(1) at the end of installworld (used when making crypto,
krb4, and krb5 dists).
In release/scripts/doFS.sh, ensure that the correct boot blocks are
used.
Moved the creation of the "crypto" dist from release.5 to
release.2.
In release.3 and doMFSKERN, build kernels in the "world"
environment. KERNELS now means "additional" kernels, GENERIC is
always built.
Ensure we build crunched binaries in the "world" environment.
Obfuscate release/Makefile some more (WMAKEENV) to achieve this.
Inline createBOOTMFS target.
Use already built GENERIC kernel modules to augment mfsfd's
/stand/modules. GC doMODULES as such.
Assorted fixes:
Get rid of the "afterdistribute" target by moving the single use
of it from sys/Makefile to etc/Makefile's "distribute".
Makefile.inc1: apparently "etc" no longer needs to be last for
"distribute" to succeed.
gnu/usr.bin/perl/library/Makefile.inc: do not override the
"install" and "distribute" targets, do it the "canonical" way.
release/scripts/{man,cat}pages-make.sh: make sure Perl manpages and
catpages appear in the right dists. Note that because Perl does
not respect the MANBUILDCAT (and NOMAN), this results in a loss of
/usr/share/perl/man/cat* empty directories. This will be fixed
soon.
Turn MAKE_KERBEROS4 into a plain boolean variable (if it is set it
means "make KerberosIV"), as documented in the make.conf(5)
manpage. Most of the userland makefiles did not test it for "YES"
anyway.
XXX Should specialized kerberized libpam versions be included into
the krb4 and krb5 dists? (libpam.a would be incorrect anyway if
both krb4 and krb5 dists were choosen.)
Make sure "games" dist is made before "catpages", otherwise games
catpages settle in the wrong dist.
Fast build machine provided by: Igor Kucherenko <kivvy@sunbay.com>
to build kernel and kernel modules so stop supporting them in
bsd.subdir.mk and reimplement them in kern.post.mk and kmod.mk
as special versions of the install and reinstall targets, and
only define them if DEBUG is also defined (when debug versions
are really built).
Prompted by: bde
1. The committer refused to respond to questions over the commit.
2. The servers rlogind, rshd, rexecd were not wrapped.
3. "rcmnds" as an abbreviation gets an order of magnitude less hits on
Google than the much more well known "rcmds".
Ensure all standard targets honor SUBDIR. Now `make obj' descends into
SUBDIRs even if NOOBJ is set (some descendants may still need an object
directory, but we do not have such precedents). Now `make install' in
non-bsd.subdir.mk makefiles runs `afterinstall' target _after_ `install'
in SUBDIRs, like we do in bsd.subdir.mk. Nothing depended on the wrong
order anyway.
Fixed `distribute' targets (except for the bsd.subdir.mk version) so that
they do not depend on _SUBDIR; `distribute' calls `install' which already
depends on _SUBDIR.
De-standardize `maninstall', otherwise manpages would be installed twice.
(To be revised later.)
alternative MTAs. Therefore, always install rc.sendmail, regardless of
NO_SENDMAIL make.conf setting. Users can still set mta_start_script to a
different script.
This commit is after a repo-copy of src/etc/sendmail/rc.sendmail to
src/etc/rc.sendmail.
Noticed by: Calvin NG <calvinng@brel.com>
MFC after: 3 days
bsd.own.mk as of share/mk/sys.mk,v 1.60.
I did not notice this because I tested with DESTDIR=/foo/5.0,
and the "exists(/foo/5.0)" test apparently succeeded.
Reported by: fenner
to use ``.if defined()'' inside bsd.own.mk to test for defines
in individual makefiles. For example, setting DEBUG_FLAGS in
Makefile didn't take the desired effect on the STRIP assignment.
Added bsd.init.mk (like in NetBSD) that handles the inclusion
of ../Makefile.inc and bsd.own.mk from all bsd.*.mk files that
"build something".
Back out bsd.own.mk,v 1.15: moved OBJFORMAT initialization back
to sys.mk (several source tree makefiles want to check it early)
and removed MACHINE_ARCH initialization (it's hard to see from
looking at the commitlogs what the problem was at the time, but
now it serves no purpose).
Prohibit the direct inclusion of bsd.man.mk and bsd.libnames.mk.
Protect bsd.obj.mk from repetitive inclusion. Prohibiting the
direct inclusion of bsd.obj.mk might be a good idea too.
incorrect, however, as Dennis Ritchie states ``Actually the acronym is "block
started by symbol." It was a pseudo-op in FAP (Fortran Assembly Program), an
assembler for the IBM <models> machines. It identified its label and set
aside space for a given number of words.''
PR: 34088
Submitted by: Martin Faxer <gmh003532@brfmasthugget.se>
MFC after: 2 days
the .mc file used for /etc/mail/submit.cf. By default,
/etc/mail/freebsd.submit.mc is installed and used.
Requested by: fenner
Submitted by: ume
MFC after: 1 week
indeed a good change, I shouldn't have made it after testing
with the -DNOCLEAN buildworld. There are far too many users
of this misfeature under sys/boot/. I will reapply the change
after I fix these.
This change has been tested with the clean buildworld.
Make the defined(SRCS) case similar to the !defined(SRCS)
case - only define ${PROG}: ${OBJS} if the ${PROG} target
does not exist. This has only one precedence in the entire
source tree, usr.bin/doscmd, and its Makefile is horribly
broken. I will temporarily unconnect it from build until
I'm working on the fix.
Remove need_resched as it no longer exists.
Cleanup the text for other functions that have changed out from under
their descriptions.
This page needs to be reviewed again after things settle down a bit.
Reviewed by: jhb
To do this you need to have each top-end connected as well.
IP can be routed and other protocols get bridged..
Also useful when bridgeing two networks while merging them as
machines will work with both old and new netmasks. (well mostly).
clientmqueue (submit mail queue).
The new mailq display is only active if both the old
daily_status_mailq_enable is set to "YES" and the new
daily_status_include_submit_mailq is set to "YES" so people who disabled
440.status-mailq won't have any surprises.
Likewise, the new queue run is only active if both the old
daily_queuerun_enable is set to "YES" and the new daily_submit_queuerun
is set to "YES" so people who disabled 500.queuerun won't have any
surprises.
While I am here, remove the [ ! -d /var/spool/mqueue ] checks from
both scripts as the queue directory isn't always /var/spool/mqueue for
the main daemon -- it can be set to anything in the sendmail.cf file.
MFC after: 1 week
have the __FBSDID() macro in <sys/cdefs.h>. Fix this once and for all
for tools that need to be bootstrapped.
PR: bin/36747
MFC after: 3 days
Prodded by: obrien
the .PATH (but not in the ${.OBJDIR}) would result in a leak of
the ${OBJS}: ${SRCS:M*.h} dependency hint.
Spotted by: fixing the broken gnu/usr.bin/cc/cc1obj build
MFC after: 1 day
again."
As an alternative to sendmail_enable=NONE, solve the boot time problem
for non-sendmail users completely by moving all of the sendmail startup
code from /etc/rc to /etc/rc.sendmail. The source for that script will
be kept in src/etc/sendmail/rc.sendmail so make.conf's NO_SENDMAIL will
prevent it from being installed. A new rc.conf variable,
mta_start_script specifies the script to run to start the user's
preferred MTA. For backward compatibility, it will default to
/etc/rc.sendmail. The specified script is called out of /etc/rc after
checking to make sure it exists. A new rc.sendmail.8 man page has also
been added which now houses the sendmail_* variable descriptions
formerly in rc.conf.5.
Use /etc/rc.sendmail in /etc/mail/Makefile to reduce code duplication.
Reviewed by: -current, -stable, obrien, peter, ru
MFC after: 1 week
at boot time.
Instead of rc.conf's sendmail_enable only accepting YES or NO, it can now
also accept NONE. If set to NONE, none of the other sendmail related
startup items will be done.
Remove an extra queue running daemon might be started that wasn't necessary
(it didn't hurt anything but it wasn't needed).
The new logic is:
# MTA
if ${sendmail_enable} == NONE
# Do nothing
else if ${sendmail_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_flags}
else if ${sendmail_submit_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_submit_flags}
else if ${sendmail_outbound_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_outbound_flags}
endif
# MSP Queue Runner
if ${sendmail_enable} != NONE &&
[ -r /etc/mail/submit.cf] && ${sendmail_msp_queue_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_msp_queue_flags}
endif
Discussed with: Thomas Quinot <Thomas.Quinot@Cuivre.FR.EU.ORG>,
Christopher Schulte <schulte+freebsd@nospam.schulte.org>
MFC after: 1 week
Install sys/<arch>/include/pc/*.h to /usr/include/machine/pc/.
PR: docs/29534
Install sys/netatm/*/*.h to /usr/include/netatm/*/.
Don't install compatibility symlinks for <machine/soundcard.h>
and <machine/joystick.h>. Three years is enough to be aware of
the change, and these weren't visible in the SHARED=symlinks
case.
Back out include/Makefile,v 1.160 that was a null change anyway
due to the bug in the path, and we now don't want to install
these headers because they would otherwise be invisible in the
SHARED=symlinks case.
Don't install IPFILTER headers. Userland utilities fetch them
directly, and they were not visible in the SHARED=symlinks case.
Resurrect SHARED=symlinks in Makefile.inc1.
PR: bin/28002
Prodded by: bde
MFC after: 2 weeks
This file contains FreeBSD/Unix lexicon that is used by the system
documentation. It makes a great ispell(1) personal dictionary to
supplement the standard English language dictionary, and can be used
to greatly reduce the number of false positives when spell checking
share/man/*, www/*, or doc/*
Discussed with: ru, obrien
MFC after: 2 weeks
(See commit log for usr.bin/xlint/Makefile,v 1.11 for what was wrong
with enabling build of lint libraries in rev. 1.12.)
This fixes cross-arch compiles (running binaries for a different arch
when generating lint.7 and lint libraries) and cross-branch compiles
(4.x -> 5.0 buildworld should be working again).
"env name=value ... cmd ..." was just a pessimized way of doing
"name=value ... cmd ...". Note that make(1) can't optimize
either of these to an exec of env(1) or "cmd" even if the second
"..." is simple, since it can't tell that the shell metacharacter
in "name=value" is actually handled by env(1).
Use this where we are now using /etc/make.conf.
This allows people to override the current default of always including
/etc/make.conf. Setting __MAKE_CONF to /dev/null disables it
completely, while setting it to something else allows one to override
what is on the system. This can be desirable in situations where a
machine has many users and some of them want different defaults, or
defaults appropriate to cross building to be different than those for
normal building.
Not objected to by: arch@
lint, so this is turned off by default. Setting WANT_LINT will turn
on generation of lint libraries for /usr/libdata/lint/*.ln.
Reviewd by: silence in -audit.
* Document the LOCAL_SCRIPT option.
* Document the NOPORTREADMES option.
* Be more specific in a comment.
* Be more specific about the ftp.1 and cdrom.1 targets.
* Clarify the usage of the CVSROOT variable.
* Clarify the usage of the NODOC variable.
Suggested by: matusita
about the TARGET_ARCH variable. (1)
Add information about the DESTDIR variable.
Add more examples for cross-building.
(1) Submitted by: ru
MFC after: 3 days
* Remove trailing whitespace at EOL.
* Various grammar cleanups.
* Note that MAKE_ISOS is disabled by default.
* Use more descriptive mdoc markup.
* Use proper references for the online FDP documents.
Submitted by: dd
Specifically, this documents the available targets and relevant
environment variables for "make release". LOCAL_PATCHES,
RELEASEDISTFILES, RELEASENOUPDATE, etc.. are covered.
A future commit should add more information about drivers.conf,
boot_crunch.conf, and other less well-known aspects of the release
build.
Reviewed and history section added by: phk
argument. Don't fail silently, but let savecore(8) make noise. It
won't behave badly, it doesn't need protection.
At the same time, allow the administrator to have dumpdev enabled
while dumpdir (savecore(8)) is disabled and document how to do it.
PR: conf/35725
install PicoBSD on hard disks and CDROM images, and on the
bootstrap sequence and the places where you can customise
a PicoBSD image.
Now if some of the -doc guys want to put this stuff in a nice
handbook page, that would be extremely useful!
{kerberos,kadmind}_enable to {kerberos,kadmind}4_enable to match
reality. Fix some mismatched parentheses while I'm here.
PR: 34982
Submitted by: Michel Oosterhof <m.oosterhof@xs4all.nl>
via sysctl's. The old #defines, MAX_GIF_NEST and XBONEHACK are
currently supported for backwards compatability, but will probably be
removed at some point in the future.
to pick up the correct cross-tools (the compiler executables and binutils)
and special linker files (crt*.o). This is now controlled by a single knob,
TOOLS_PREFIX, when building cross-tools.
Fixed regression in Makefile.inc1,v 1.203 (-nostdinc). This clobbered target
architecture's CFLAGS with building host's CPUTYPE setting in /etc/make.conf,
and had a nice but nasty side effect of exposing some (normally hidden) bugs
in system headers.
(Attempt to move the "-nostdinc -I..." part of CFLAGS into the new CINCLUDES
(modeled after a similar CXXINCLUDES) eventually failed because hard-coding
${WORLDTMP}/usr/include to be the first in the include list does not always
work, e.g. lib/libbind.)
Compensate the -nostdinc removal by making cpp(1) built in the cross-tools
stage to not look for <> header files in the building host's /usr/include
(already committed as gnu/usr.bin/cc/cc_tools/freebsd-native.h, revisions
1.10-1.12, STANDARD_INCLUDE_DIR).
: $ /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/bin/cpp -v /dev/null
:
: Before:
:
: #include <...> search starts here:
: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/include
: /usr/include
: End of search list.
:
: After:
:
: #include <...> search starts here:
: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/include
: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/include
(Disabling the use of GCC_INCLUDE_DIR in the FREEBSD_NATIVE case would fix
the duplicate above.)
Get rid of the (now unneeded) -I${DESTDIR}/usr/include magic in bsd.prog.mk
and bsd.lib.mk. Finish the removal of LDDESTDIR in bsd.lib.mk,v 1.55 -- we
no longer have users of it.
The required changes to gcc were already committed as contrib/gcc.295/gcc.c,
revisions 1.23 and 1.24.
Basically, this allows for the changes above plus makes gcc(1) persistent
about path configuration, whether it's configured as a native or a cross
compiler:
: $ /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/bin/cc -print-search-dirs
: install: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/(null)
: programs: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/elf/:/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/
: libraries: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/lib/
:
: $ /usr/obj/alpha/usr/src/i386/usr/bin/cc -print-search-dirs
: install: /usr/obj/alpha/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/(null)
: programs: /usr/obj/alpha/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/elf/:/usr/obj/alpha/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/
: libraries: /usr/obj/alpha/usr/src/i386/usr/lib/
Reviewed by: bde, obrien
when running natd(8) out of the rc-files. It is perfectly valid for
the interface or alias address to be set in a natd(8) configuration
file, not on the command line. Also, loosen up the restrictions on
identifying an IP address argument in 'natd_interface.'
Fix the documentation, rc.conf(5), to reflect this change.
Take the bogus default for 'natd_interface' out of /etc/defaults/rc.conf.
MFC after: 3 days
at boot (sendmail_enable=NO), a localhost-only daemon may started
(sendmail_submit_enable) as it is needed to accept mail from command line
submissions. If this isn't desired, see etc/mail/README for more hints.
Optionally (sendmail_msp_queue_enable) start a queue runner for the
submission queue in case a daemon isn't available to accept command line
submitted mail at submission time.
Note that the syslog labels for all of these sendmail processes have been
uniquified for easier log parsing.
the structure definitions come from NetBSD to make it easier to share card
definitions. The driver only acts as a shim between the pci bus and the
sio driver. Later pci parallel ports could also be supported through this
driver. Support for most single and multiport pci serial cards should be
as simple as adding its definition to pucdata.c
Tested with the following pci cards:
Moxa Industio CP-114, 4 port RS-232,RS-422/485
Syba Tech Ltd. PCI-4S2P-550-ECP, 4 port RS-232 + 2 parallel ports
Netmos NM9835 PCI-2S-550, 2 port RS-232
descriptors. This simplifies code for jumbo frames.
- Cleaned up coding conventions to make code more unix-like.
- Cleaned up code in if_em_fxhw.c and if_em_phy.c.
Added relevant comments.
MFC after: 1 week
- explictly say not to edit infrastructure for vendor ids (not just the
ids).
- say to enclose vendor ids and their infrastucture in ``#if 0'', and
partly explain why.
- don't set a bad example by mangling the Berkeley id infrastructure from
``static char sccsid[] ...'' to ``__RCSID(...)''.
- show a blank line between the vendor id cruft and the FreeeBSD if cruft
in the example.
- relaxed the rule about adding "From: " to say that "From: " is actually
useful if the file has been renamed.
- minor English improvements.
Discussed with: obrien
/usr/share/examples/pppd.
Update pppd(8) documentation to reflect this, usr.sbin/pppd/pppd.8.
Remove the out-of-place pppd(8) configuration files in etc/ppp,
ppp.shells.sample and ppp.deny.
Make the appropriate changes to the build process, etc/Makefile and
etc/mtree/BSD.usr.mtree, so it all works.
The files from etc/ppp, ppp.shells.sample and ppp.deny, were moved
with a repo copy. Note it in the logs with a forced commit to these
two.
Submitted by: Maxim Konovalov <maxim@macomnet.ru> provided the new samples.
uhub.c: revision 1.37
usb.4: revision 1.30
usb.c: revision 1.38
usb.h: revision 1.40
usb_port.h: revision 1.21
usb_subr.c: revision 1.65
usbdi.h: revision 1.40
Split the attach/detach events up into device, driver and controller
attach and detach events.
The commit message from NetBSD was:
date: 2000/02/02 07:34:00; author: augustss; state: Exp;
Change the USB event mechanism to include more information
about devices and drivers. Partly from FreeBSD.
Also rework usbd to take these new event types into account.
Try this out in -CURRENT, MFC, and then consider dropping the
'log_in_vain' knob all together. It really is something for
sysctl.conf(5).
PR: bin/32953
Reviewed by: -bugs discussion
MFC after: 1 week
some content and layout changes were made.
lock.9 had existed before but was never added to Makefile, so it was
never installed. That is why the duplicate files were created in the
first place.
Reviewed by: ru, alfred
- Spam /usr/lib some more by making libssh a standard library.
- Tweak ${LIBPAM} and ${MINUSLPAM}.
- Garbage collect unused libssh_pic.a.
- Add fake -lz dependency to secure/ makefiles needed for
dynamic linkage with -lssh.
Reviewed by: des, markm
Approved by: markm
but those maps also used as backward maps for Paste, so space becomes mapped
to last non-existen character on Paste as result.
Fix it by mapping non-existen characters to another non-existen one, i.e. to
0x00, so unused 0x00 can be backward-mapped to some junk without real harm.
Pointed by: Alexander Kabaev <ak03@gte.com>
socket so that routing daemons and other interested parties
know when an interface is attached/detached.
PR: kern/33747
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
One to notify the system that the MTU for VLAN can be 1500 so the vlan
will automatically be configured with a 1500 MTU the other is to ignore
the error case if the received frame is to long.
The frame size notification came from code in the SIS driver, and
the support for long frames derived from the NetBSD Tulip driver.
Tested on: 4 port D-Link adapter DFE-570TX 4 Intel 21143
Netgear card with 82c169 PNIC 10/100BaseTX
Reviewed by: ru (manpage), wpaul (not objected to), archie
Approved by: imp
Obtained from: NetBSD
Clarify comment about kind of color emulators for which vt*-co* entries
are for and about saving space.
Use direct \E[m instead of ...;m for dumb emulators.
(at least a new one) would expect the manual page to be called (even
if the device is lo#).
PR: 32453
Submitted by: Gary W. Swearingen <swear@blarg.net>
o Combine ufs.7 and ffs.7 into a single ffs.7 man page.
o Remove all references to `ufs' as a file system.
o Proper (lack of) capitalization for `ffs'.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sposnored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
types (networkfs_types) with a version that includes the original
list.
This increases the scope for user error and also means that systems with
networkfs_types set in /etc/rc.conf will not benefit from changes to the
list in /etc/defaults/rc.conf on upgrade.
Instead, store the default list in /etc/rc itself and allow the operator
to append to that list by specifying her own list in networkfs_types.
Rename networkfs_types to extra_netfs_types accordingly, as the new name
better describes the purpose of the variable. Default the value to
'NO'.
the network is initialized. This was first implemented in rev 1.268
of src/etc/rc, but was backed out at wollman's request.
The objection was that the right place for the fix is in mount(8).
Having looked at that problem, I find it hard to believe that
the hoops one would have to jump through can be justified by the
desire for purity alone.
Note that there are reported issues surrounding nfsclient kernel
support and mount_nfs(8), which currently make NFS an ugly exception
to the general case.
With this change, systems with non-NFS network filesystems configured
for mounting on startup in /etc/fstab are no longer guaranteed to
fail on startup.
unloaded kernel modules. Remove the example linux compat sysctls
because they break if the linux emulator is loaded as a module, rather
than compiled in. Add a BUGS entry indicating as much.
Reported by: jack <jack@germanium.xtalwind.net>
MFC after: 3 days
language about softupdates to reference this fact, as well as slightly
moderate the "recommend Softupdates for use on all filesystems" to
"most filesystems" so as to be consistent with what sysinstall selects.
for consistency with the rest of the document. Since we've already
described the properties of loader tunables elsewhere, remove the
duplicate description of it being a boot-time property.
MFC after: 3 days
LC_MESSAGES related data was installed to <locale>/LC_MESSAGES file.
Now it go to <locale>/LC_MESSAGES/SYS_LC_MESSAGES file. LC_MESSAGES
directory is supposed to be storage of message catalogs of userland tools.
This should allow us to avoid many potential problems with future
libintl related functionality introduction.
Thanks for useful suggestions about correct way how to replace plain
files with directories at installworld stage to: Ruslan Ermilov <ru>
translations. This will once again allow docproj trackers to use the
sample out-of-the-box to only download English.
Rapid MFC to avoid the coming freeze.
PR: 32329
Approved by: bmah
MFC after: 1 day
We don't install dot.nsmbrc or smbfs.sh.sample, since we already install
the former as /etc/nsmb.conf and the latter is unnecessary, since
boot-time mounts can be arranged directly within /etc/fstab without fear
of breaking the boot when the smbfs port (now unnecessary is removed).
The MFC reminder below is subject to <re@FreeBSD.org> approval
priod to 4.5-RELEASE.
MFC after: 1 week
16384/2048.
Following recent discussions on the -arch mailing list, involving dillon
and mckusick, this change parallels the one made over a decade ago when
the default was bumped up from 4096/512.
This should provide significant performance improvements for most
folks, less significant performance losses for a few folks and
wasted space lost to large fragments for many folks.
For discussion, please see the following thread in the -arch archive:
Subject: Using a larger block size on large filesystems
The discussion ceases to be relevant when the issue of partitioning
schemes is raised.
- Change the 'fopen' keyword to accept a mode parameter. Note that this
will break existing 4th scripts that use fopen. Thus, the loader
version has been bumped and loader.4th has been changed to check for a
sufficient version on i386 and alpha. Be sure that you either do a full
world build or install or full build and install of sys/boot after this
since loader.old won't work with the new 4th files and vice versa.
PR: kern/32389
Submitted by: Jonathan Mini <mini@haikugeek.com>
Sponsored by: ClickArray, Inc.
of /etc/daily. Some time later, /etc/daily became a set of periodic(8)
scripts. Now, this evolution continues, and /etc/security has been
broken into periodic(8) scripts to make local customization easier and
more maintainable.
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: ru
default now. Discuss why that's good. Note that there are still
some situations where turning it off may be advantageous, including
situations where there are network outages and it's desirable to
have TCP sessions last beyond the outage.
Reviewed by: fenner
Suggested by: silby
in some environments, this may result in the early termination of
legitimate TCP sessions during temporary network outages. However,
maintain a strong recommendation that this be used when many network
clients are dialup.
Requested by: fenner
libraries a little by not passing all of ${CFLAGS} to lint. Pass
only options matching -[DIU]*. The important -nostdinc option can't
be passed like I first thought because lint misinterprets as
"-n -o stdinc". The unimportant -B* option can't be passed because
lint doesn't support it. Otherwise, we pass the same options as
to mkdep, exept for a bug in the latter: -U* is not passed. All
this depends on option args not being separated from option flags
by a space.
The definition of character class digit requires that only ten characters
-the ones defining digits- can be specified; alternate digits (for
example, Hindi or Kanji) cannot be specified here. However, the encoding
may vary if an implementation supports more than one encoding.
The definition of character class xdigit requires that the characters
included in character class digit are included here also and allows for
different symbols for the hexadecimal digits 10 through 15.
Specifically, document the crshared() function and
fix the prototype and description of the crcopy()
function.
PR: docs/32275
Submitted by: Chad David <davidc@acns.ab.ca>
Reviewed by: jhb
This file is now generated using src/tools/tools/pciid/mk_pci_vendors.pl,
which merges the Boemler and Heckenbach lists used for rev 1.2.
For now, mk_pci_vendors.pl is called with the -l option, which uses
the entry with the longer description where the same device or vendor
is found in both lists.
If it turns out that this causes to much "back-and-forth" in future
deltas, we can drop the use of the -l option.
used so often that it's worth keeping it as a builtin.
Now that all the printf invocations from within the system startup
scripts, we can safely remove it.
Urged by: sheldonh :)
No MFC is planned so far because it may break compatibility and
violate POLA.
binary size increase is 3,784 bytes (about 0.6%).
I don't drop the printf builtin while I'm here because some /etc/rc.*
scripts seem to use it before mounting /usr where printf(1) resides.
Reviewed by: arch (sheldonh)
Inspired by: NetBSD, ksh
Clued by: ume (on how the printf builtin is used)
o Fix a number of wrong statements
o Clarify the structure of the files and the C structures theirselves
o Add cross-references to login(3), logout(3), logwtmp(3)
MFC after: 1 month
replaced with the new version in sendmail's distribution, vacation and
the necessary libraries (libsmdb and libsmutil) were changed so they
were always compiled. This broke people who didn't checkout
src/contrib/sendmail/. I don't know if it's best to think of NO_SENDMAIL
as no sendmail sources available or no sendmail binary. It is now the former.
Also, remove the sendmail chapter from System Managers Manual (SMM) if
NO_SENDMAIL is defined (for similar reasons -- source not available).
PR: 31863, 31865
Submitted by: matusita, Joe Kelsey <joe@zircon.seattle.wa.us>
MFC after: 3 days
hooks depending on ethertype. Great for prototyping protocols.
connects to the lower and upper hooks of an ethernet type of node.
Obtained from: Monzoon Networks.
Thanks to Andre Oppermann, May 2001.
Small tweaks to kldxref may be necessary to avoid the surprising (but harm-
less) behaviour of 'kldload foo' loading foo.ko.debug instead of foo.ko if
it is present in the kernel directory.
Approved by: a week of silence on -arch
MFC after: 2 weeks
target devices, not just individual devices and directories. This
permits activities such as:
ttyv0 0600 /dev/dsp*
Whereas previously that was not supported. This change is
backwards-compatible, except where device names included globbing
characters, which is not the case for any devices listed in MAKEDEV.
Submitted by: Maxime Henrion <mux@qualys.com>
MFC after: 3 weeks
The previous commit message should have said this too (the only BSDism
fixed was punctuation for non-sentences). Neither these changes nor
the ones in the previous commit were exactly as submitted by me.
reboots.
Also add a `NOTES' section that reminds the reader that this man page
just documents the system default, and that the hierarchy of a given
site is at the system administrators discretion.
PR: docs/29525
- Change lines referring to kernel configuration file:
device foo0 at isa port xxx irq yyy...
to
device foo
Describe resource "hints" in /boot/device.hints.
- Try to describe resource allocation and probe/attach behavior in the
newbus framework.
- bus_generic_map_intr.9. This has been undead for more than 3 years
following the changes in rev.1.4 of sys/bus.h.
- CONDSPLASSERT.9, SPLASSERT.9. These have been undead since SMPng.
They were even less useful than most section 9 man pages -- the
interfaces described in them have never been used in the FreeBSD
source tree.
name of a file containing ipfw rules.
2) Replace the use of a predictable temporary filename with one
generated by mktemp(1).
3) Only exit with a zero exit status if the rules were updated.
4) Use a pager to view the new rules, not an editor.
I was told by dcs that this script's original author is no longer
interested in FreeBSD and would not wish to review this patch.
1. To cross-build, one now needs to set TARGET_ARCH, and not the
MACHINE_ARCH. MACHINE_ARCH should never be changed manually!
2. Initialize DESTDIR= explicitly for bootstrap-tools, build-tools,
and cross-tools stages. This fixes broken header and library
dependencies problem. We build them in the host environment,
and obviously want them to depend on host headers and libraries.
The problem with broken header dependencies for bootstrap-tools
and cross-tools was already partially solved (see BOOTSTRAPPING
tests in bsd.prog.mk and bsd.lib.mk), but it was still there for
build-tools if the user ran "make world DESTDIR=/foo". Also,
for all of these stages, the library dependencies were broken
because of how bsd.libnames.mk define DPADD members.
We still provide a glue to install bootstrap- and cross-tools
under the ${WORLDTMP}.
Removed PATH overrides for bootstrap-, build-, and cross-tools
stages. There is just no reason why we would need to override
it, and the hacks to clean up the ${WORLDTMP} in the -DNOCLEAN
case are no longer needed with fixes from this step.
That is, we now never use ${WORLDTMP} headers and libraries,
and we don't use any ${WORLDTMP} installed binaries during
these stages. Again, these stages depend solely on the host
environment, including compiler, headers, and libraries.
3. Moved "miniperl" back from cross-tools (it has nothing to do
with a cross-compiler) to build-tools where it belongs. The
change from step 1 let to do this. Also, to make this work,
build-tools targets of "cc_tools" and "miniperl" were modified
to call "depend". Here follow the detailed explanations.
There are two categories of build tools, for now. In the first
category there are "cc_tools" and "miniperl". They occupy the
whole (sub)directory, and nothing needs to be done in this
subdirectory later during the "all" stage. They are also
constructed using system makefiles. We must build the .depend
early in the build-tools stage because:
1) They use (and depend on) the host environment.
2) If we don't do this in build-tools, the "depend" stage of
buildworld will do this for us; wrong library and header
dependencies will be recorded (DESTDIR=${WORLDTMP}) and,
what's worse, the "all" stage may then clobber the
build-architecture format tools (that we built in the
build-tools stage) with the target-architecture format
ones, breaking cross build.
In the second category there are all other build-tools. They
share their directory with the "main" module that needs them
in the "all" stage, and they don't show up themselves in the
.depend file. The portion of this fix was already committed
in gnu/usr.bin/cc/cc_tools/Makefile,v 1.52.
4. "libperl" is no longer a build tool, and "miniperl" is the
stand-alone application. I had to make this change because
build-tools and "all" stages share the same object directory.
Without this change, if we cross compile, libperl.a is first
built for the build architecture during the build-tools stage
(for the purposes of immediate linkage with "miniperl").
Later on, the "all" stage sees this library as up-to-date,
and doesn't rebuild it. The effect is that the wrong format
static libperl library is installed with installworld.
5. Fixed "includes" to install secure/lib/libtelnet headers if
required.
Reviewed by: bde
ethernet controllers. This adds support for the 3Com 3c996-T, the
SysKonnect SK-9D21 and SK-9D41, and the built-in gigE NICs on
Dell PowerEdge 2550 servers. The latter configuration hauls ass:
preliminary measurements show TCP speeds of over 900Mbps using
only normal size frames.
TCP/IP checksum offload, jumbo frames and VLAN tag insertion/stripping
are supported, as well as interrupt moderation.
Still need to fix autonegotiation support for 1000baseSX NICs, but
beyond that, driver is pretty solid.
Remove explicit mention of IP stack, since it might not be accurate for all
interfaces.
Change if_enable to if_capenable, as it is spelled.
Submitted by: jlemon
have version 1.x firmware. This might also need to go into the release
documentation, as many people seem to have been bitten by this.
MFC after: 3 days
- SC_CUT_SPACES2TABS - when copying text into the cut buffer convert leading
spaces into the tabs;
- SC_CUT_SEPCHARS="XYZ" - treat supplied characters as possible words
separators when the driver searches for words boundaries when doing cut
operation.
Also unify cut code a bit to decrease amount of duplicated code. This fixes
line cut mode, so that it is no longer pads line with useless spaces.
Approved by: ru
amdpm(4) and smb(4).
This device can be used with userland programs such as sysutils/lmmon
to retrieve sensor information from the motherboard.
PR: kern/23989
Obtained from: Matthew C. Forman <mcf@dmu.ac.uk>
Based on: alpm(4)
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Hi! How are you?
I send you this commit log in order to have your advice
See you later. Thanks
[-- Attachment #2: CVS Commit Log.doc --]
[-- Type: application/mixed, Encoding: base64, Size: 315K --]
Update SCM ID guidelines to reflect the newly added __FBSDID macro.
dhclient and pccard_ether, introduce the concept of a "settle time" to
pccard_ether with the new pccard_ether_delay variable. Defaults to 5
seconds, which is enough time for the ed driver to finish its
autoconfiguration for newer Linksys based cards. This also can
eliminate the ed0: timeout messages that happen at startup as well.
MFC: after RE says OK.
supposed to be edited by the user and didn't define important things,
thus we can just skip it (that's where it differs from the make.conf.local
change).
Submitted by: ru
discussed on the arch@ mailinglist (after repo-copy).
sys.mk will .error if it finds /etc/defaults/make.conf but include
it anyways (this is the same behaviour as with the make.conf.local
removal).
/usr/share/examples/etc/make.conf has BDEFLAGS commented out now,
since it's only an example file.
Adjust all textes that talk about make.conf or defaults/make.conf to
match the new situation.
1. Correctly handle commands initiated by the adapter. These commands
are defered to a kthread responsible for their processing, then are
properly returned to the controller.
2. Add/remove disk devices when notified by the card that a container was
created/deleted/offline.
3. Implement crashdump functionality.
4. Support all ioctls needed for the management CLI to work. The linux
version of this app can be found at the Dell or HP website. A native
version will be forthcoming.
MFC-after: 4.4-RELEASE
and MINUSLPAM must be kept in sync with the libraries linked to by libpam
to support static linkage.
Moved libmd to the end of LIBPAM and MINUSLPAM. It was before libopie,
but libopie references it, so static linkage only worked accidentally.
have been fatal since it gave a dependency on a nonexistent file, but it
worked because of an undocumented bugfeature in make(1): missing source
files named *.a are silently assumed to be up to date.
Fixed some style bugs (formatting).
vaccess(). This man page leaves something to be desired, as it doesn't
currently document the POSIX.1e evaluation algorithm, which will in
the future be incorporated, or cross-referenced.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
- mention koi8-u and cp866u fonts;
- describe 1024-byte limit on amount of data that is possible to paste from
the syscons cut buffer.
MFC after: 1 day
force ISA routing of interrupts. Warn the user that with ISA routing
of interrupts for PCI devices with more than one slot, polling mode is
in order. Minor markup fixes as well and some white space/sentence
break changes (I did these as one commit since this file has been in
the tree only 4 days and I doubt that translation has begun).
`struct xucred` with the credentials of the connected peer.
Obviously this only works (and makes sense) on SOCK_STREAM
sockets. This works for both the connect(2) and listen(2)
callers.
There is precise documentation of the semantics in unix(4).
Reviewed by: dwmalone (eyeballed)
.Op. None of the other manual pages do it when discussing options in
the main text, so this one shouldn't, either. Also, use .Pq instead
of another odd constructhyphenation isn't an issue here, since it's
desireable to have the contents of that digression appear together,
and it's already in another macro, anyway).
which were introduced 5 months ago. Looking at the descriptions,
these two look like the stupidest options to have arrived in a while,
but they must be documented now that they've been merged onto the
stable branch.
value, it forces GCC to not optimize above this level. For intance, GCC
made with "WANT_FORCE_OPTIMIZATION_DOWNGRADE=1" is a good setting for the
Alpha platform when building ports.
sys/i386/i386/mem.c: only the super-user may open /dev/io
regardless of the device permissions (just 4 years late!).
Also, add cross-reference to i386_{get,set}_ioperm(2).
PR: kern/13359
This fixes buildworld when src/games doesn't exist (this may not be
"officially" supported, but there's no sense in making it harder for
somebody that wants to do it).
PR: 29162
Submitted by: Stewart Morgan <stewart@nameless-uk.com>
Avoid using parenthesis enclosure macros (.Pq and .Po/.Pc) with plain text.
Not only this slows down the mdoc(7) processing significantly, but it also
has an undesired (in this case) effect of disabling hyphenation within the
entire enclosed block.
* Fix typo (defautls).
* Don't use hard sentence breaks in new text.
* Don't introduce the use of the second person (you).
* Use the standard "IMPLEMENTATION NOTES" section name instead of the
non-standard "TUNING".
Although it can go higher, it is not safe to so do on arrays with many
members. Compromise by adding a tunable, "hw.aac.iosize_max" that can be
set at boottime. Also document in the aac(4) manpage.
MFC after: 4 weeks
should not use a `%' in examples.
I don't know if this is the consensus of doc@, or just a unilateral decision
of committer that corrected my following of this example. Maybe a docs
person could review these files and see if they still show current guidelines.
who didn't realize that DDB_UNATTENDED just sets its starting
value.
This change is over 5 years late, and documents the original
semantics of debug.debugger_on_panic, which may have been changed
by the (again undocumented) change in rev 1.44 of kern_shutdown.c.
us anyway because it doesn't work right on the x86 and alpha. On
K&R code, small ints would be promoted to int. ANSI-C doesn't require
this and the small ints can be passed taking 8 or 16 bits of stack
space. However, the x86 abi that we use *does* promote to 32 bit,
and the alpha ABI passes them in 64 bit registers so we dont have
that aspect of the problem here. Losing float precision by having it
cast down to int because the funtion prototype specifies int is the
least of our problems. -Wmissing-prototypes helps here anyway.
net.link.ether.bridge_refresh variables. While I'm here, try to
make some of the markup on this page more consistent with the
new (markup-reviewed) content.
PR: 22060
Reviewed by: ru (for markup, on an earlier version of this delta)
MFC after: 2 days
blown over by the Hurricane and had a house dropped on you by the Tornado.
Now it's time to have your parade rained on by... the Typhoon!
This commit adds driver support for 3Com 3cR990 10/100 ethernet
adapters based on the Typhoon I and Typhoon II chipsets. This is actually
a port of the OpenBSD driver with many hacks by me.
No Virginia, there isn't any support for the hardware crypto yet. However
there is support for TCP/IP checksum offload and VLANs.
Special thanks go to Jason Wright, Aaron Campbell and Theo de Raadt for
squeezing enough info out of 3Com to get this written, and for doing
most of the hard work.
Manual page is included. Compiled as a module and included in GENERIC.
building a .cf file from a .mc file.
Include -D_FFR_TLS_O_T to enable tls policy control since the sendmail binary
build enables that FFR as well.
PR: conf/28361
MFC after: 1 week
functions shouldn't have the first word capitalized, and shouldn't
have a period at the end. This is how most of our programs, and most
(all?) of the 4.4BSD programs, are. In the past, we've even done
sweeps to change things to comply to this.
ppp in 4.x apparently does a close(2) after opening the tun device;
i4brunppp starts up with only file descriptors 0 and 1 open (to the rbch
device) -> tun gets opened as 2 -> tun gets closed -> later use results
in EBADF. A quick fix to i4brunppp.c makes the thing work (I know, this
is ugly, but I needed it up quick...):
Submitted by: Juha-Matti Liukkonen <jml@cubical.fi>
be malloc()ed, but they are now allocated using mmap(), just as the
default-size stacks are. A separate cache of stacks is kept for
non-default-size stacks.
Collaboration with: deischen
the SYNOPSIS hasn't had an example number of devices since rev 1.2 which
was over 5 and a half years ago, so remove a sentence claiming that the
example in the SYNOPSIS limited bpf to 16 devices.
MFC after: 3 days
to have the $FreeBSD$ keyword, as this is now enforced
by the CVSROOT/commit_prep.pl script.
Fold multi-word macro arguments into a single argument
by putting the surrounding double quotes - this speeds
up the -mdoc processing drastically (of course if used
systematically).
Use the new features of -mdoc: exact -width specifiers,
.In macro as an ``.Fd #include'' replacement.
for separating the startup scripts' list into individual filenames.
Run the shutdown scripts in reverse alphabetical order, so dependent
services are stopped before the services they depend upon.
Reviewed by: -arch, -audit
MFC after: 3 weeks
cd src/share; find man[1-9] -type f|xargs perl -pi -e 's/[ \t]+$//'
BTW, what editors are the culprits? I'm using vim and it shows
me whitespace at EOL in troff files with a thick blue block...
Reviewed by: Silence from cvs diff -b
MFC after: 7 days
date of the announcement)
couple of URL fixes. From: Petri Koistinen <pkoistin@cs.stadia.fi>
(http://www.byte.com/art/9410/sec8/art3.htm is now a dangling link.
any alternative URL?)
spdadd A B -P in ipsec esp/tunnel/C-D/use ah/tunnel/C-D/require;
does not work due to 1-bit validation bit we are using with inbound
policy checking.
Submitted by: itojun
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 1 week
possible when writing:
[EFBIG] An attempt was made to write a file that exceeds
the process's file size limit or the maximum file
size.
[EPERM] An append-only flag is set on the file, but the
caller is attempting to write before the current
end of file.
announcement from JKH (back when he was still working for Lotus)
http://minnie.tuhs.org/cgi-bin/newsread?23150
This also means that if, as Microsoft say, Linux is a Cancer, FreeBSD is
a Scorpio.
This work was based on kame-20010528-freebsd43-snap.tgz and some
critical problem after the snap was out were fixed.
There are many many changes since last KAME merge.
TODO:
- The definitions of SADB_* in sys/net/pfkeyv2.h are still different
from RFC2407/IANA assignment because of binary compatibility
issue. It should be fixed under 5-CURRENT.
- ip6po_m member of struct ip6_pktopts is no longer used. But, it
is still there because of binary compatibility issue. It should
be removed under 5-CURRENT.
Reviewed by: itojun
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 3 weeks
IPv6 transport-ready resolvers/DNS servers. Need careful configuration
when enable it. (default config is not affected).
See manpage for details.
XXX visible symbol __res_opt() is added, however, it is not supposed to be
called from outside, libc minor is not bumped.
Obtained from: KAME/NetBSD
Source rc.conf and use ${firewall_script} instead of rc.firewall.
Textwidth formatting of comments and text.
PR:
Submitted by: Maxim <maxim@news1.macomnet.ru>
(sorry if I got name/email/committer status wrong :)
(While there, I also moved the single suffix C rules beside the double
suffix ones so they are easier to find)
PR: 24438
Submitted by: Georg-W. Koltermann <gwk@sgi.com>
With a small disk being 20GB these days, chances are pretty good that
an ailing sector will not be read while still being recoverable by
the drive.
Diskcheck daemon will read disks in the background at a low rate and
that way give the diskdrive a chance to detect and correct soft read
errors before they become hard errors.
Idea by: phk
Written by: ben
gigabit ethernet controller chip. This device is used on some
fiber optic gigE cards from SMC, D-Link and Addtron. Jumbograms and
TCP/IP checksum offload on receive are supported. Hardware VLAN
filtering is not, because it doesn't play well with our existing
VLAN code. Also add manual page.
There is a 4.x version of this driver available at
http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/Level1/4.x if anyone feels adventurous
and wants to test it. I still need to do performance testing and
tuning with this device.
(For my next trick, I will make the 3Com 3cR990 sit up and beg.)
made the usage here incorrect.
Note that the change to install may cause other things to break, such as
the advice in src/etc/defaults/make.conf:
# Compare before install
#INSTALL=install -C
If users actually use this, any ${INSTALL} -d invocations in an installworld
will also fail.
Submitted by: David Wolfskill <david@catwhisker.org>
MFC after: 2 days
despite the fact that most people want to set exactly the same settings
regardless of which card they have. It has been repeatidly suggested
that this configuration should be done via ifconfig. This patch
implements the required functionality in ifconfig and add support to the
wi and an drivers. It also provides partial, untested support for the
awi driver.
PR: 25577
Submitted by: Brooks Davis <brooks@one-eyed-alien.net>
In the past 2 months or so, after rlogining into another host, the
environment has the geometry wrong. Peter suggested that this behavior
change was most likely caused by the PAM stuff that changed to run a proper
session with a forked child. And that for some reason the window size is
no longer being transferred via an OOB message on the socket.
This change fixes my problem and seems to be a good stopgap measure until
someone has time to ktrace/ktrace -i inetd to catch all the child processes
it spawns while doing an rlogin and change window size a few times to see
how far the change messages are getting.
At least some IBM drives support the Standby Condition Timer (i. e.
they allow for an automatic spindown).
Update copyright for 2001. I don't want to insert my name for just
one mode page definition, do people think that `The FreeBSD Project'
is OK?
to avoid polluting sys.mk. This directive controls the addition of
compiler warning flags to CFLAGS in a relatively compiler-neutral manner.
The idea is that WARNS can be set in Makefile.inc or in individual
Makefiles as they become clean, to prevent the introduction of new
warnings in the code. -Werror is added by default
- the changes that renamed libf2c to libg2c had not reached here
- there were no definitions for LIBDEVINFO, LIBMENU, LIBPANEL, LIBTINFO,
LIBUSB or LIBVGL. LIBUSB was used without it being defined, and
LIBDEVINFO and LIBVGL should have been used.
- the definitions of LIBDESCRYPT, LIBGCC_PIC, LIBGPLUSPLUS, LIBKZHEAD,
LIBKZTAIL, LIBSCRYPT and LIBSCSI were garbage.
Fixed some old bugs:
- LIBC_PIC and LIBCOM_ERR were assigned to using "=" instead of "?=".
- the definition of LIBC_R was disordered.
- LIBFORM was misspelled LIBFORMS (but not actually used).
and DP83821 gigabit ethernet MAC chips and the NatSemi DP83861 10/100/1000
copper PHY. There are a whole bunch of very low cost cards available with
this chipset selling for $150USD or less. This includes the SMC9462TX,
D-Link DGE-500T, Asante GigaNIX 1000TA and 1000TPC, and a couple cards
from Addtron.
This chip supports TCP/IP checksum offload, VLAN tagging/insertion.
2048-bit multicast filter, jumbograms and has 8K TX and 32K RX FIFOs.
I have not done serious performance testing with this driver. I know
it works, and I want it under CVS control so I can keep tabs on it.
Note that there's no serious mutex stuff in here yet either: I need
to talk more with jhb to figure out the right way to do this. That
said, I don't think there will be any problems.
This driver should also work on the alpha. It's not turned on in
GENERIC.
o replace `of possible' with `if possible'
o VOP_SETACL(9) is modified to say about `ACL' instead of `extended
attributed'
o EOPNOTSUPP of VOP_SETEXTATTR(9) is modified to say about
VOP_SETEXTATTR(9) instead of VOP_GETEXTATTR(9)
Reviewed by: Robert Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org>,
Chris Costello <chris@calldei.com>
It also has some instructions on how to setup the client and
the server. I have been using this code for over 2 years
on RELENG_3 and later RELENG_4. Have not tried on CURRENT, but
in case there are any issues these are in /etc/rc and
/etc/rc.diskless{12}
to the following locations:
Antarctica
Australia (additional historical comments)
Bangladesh (new spelling of Dhaka)
Brazil (multiple changes; America/Porto_Acre renamed America/Rio_Branco)
CNMI
Canada
Chile
Dominican Republic
East Timor
Falkland Islands
Fiji
France (additional history)
Guam
Israel (additional historical comments)
Latvia
Mexico
Moldova (Europe/Tiraspol removed)
Netherlands (additional history)
Paraguay
Philippines (additional history)
Tonga
United States (additional historical comments)
Obtained from: Arthur Olson; <ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/tzdata2001b.tar.gz>
so update the example to use the correct definition.
Add an example for documenting kernel compile options, along with
a small example of how to reference them in the main text of the
man page (I.e. the .Dv macro).
Inspired-by: a brief exchange I saw in in the commit messages mail
NO_MAKEDEV_INSTALL and NO_MAKEDEV_RUN. The former implying the latter.
The names imply what they do. The last commit by DES based on a PR defeated
the original idea behind NO_MAKEDEV, which was not to run MAKEDEV, but to do
the installation of MAKEDEV. This should satisfy both parties on the MAKEDEV
challenge.
Reflect this in the documentation.
NO_MAKEDEV_INSTALL and NO_MAKEDEV_RUN. The former implying the latter.
The names imply what they do. The last commit by DES based on a PR defeated
the original idea behind NO_MAKEDEV, which was not to run MAKEDEV, but to do
the installation of MAKEDEV. This should satisfy both parties on the MAKEDEV
challenge.
<sys/mutex.h> due to #include spam in <sys/mutex.h>. (More precisely,
<sys/time.h> is the prerequisite, but that is provided by standard
#include spam in <sys/param.h>.)
Fixed bitrot in prototype for mtx_init().
Some of the major changes include:
- The SCSI error handling portion of cam_periph_error() has
been broken out into a number of subfunctions to better
modularize the code that handles the hierarchy of SCSI errors.
As a result, the code is now much easier to read.
- String handling and error printing has been significantly
revamped. We now use sbufs to do string formatting instead
of using printfs (for the kernel) and snprintf/strncat (for
userland) as before.
There is a new catchall error printing routine,
cam_error_print() and its string-based counterpart,
cam_error_string() that allow the kernel and userland
applications to pass in a CCB and have errors printed out
properly, whether or not they're SCSI errors. Among other
things, this helped eliminate a fair amount of duplicate code
in camcontrol.
We now print out more information than before, including
the CAM status and SCSI status and the error recovery action
taken to remedy the problem.
- sbufs are now available in userland, via libsbuf. This
change was necessary since most of the error printing code
is shared between libcam and the kernel.
- A new transfer settings interface is included in this checkin.
This code is #ifdef'ed out, and is primarily intended to aid
discussion with HBA driver authors on the final form the
interface should take. There is example code in the ahc(4)
driver that implements the HBA driver side of the new
interface. The new transfer settings code won't be enabled
until we're ready to switch all HBA drivers over to the new
interface.
src/Makefile.inc1,
lib/Makefile: Add libsbuf. It must be built before libcam,
since libcam uses sbuf routines.
libcam/Makefile: libcam now depends on libsbuf.
libsbuf/Makefile: Add a makefile for libsbuf. This pulls in the
sbuf sources from sys/kern.
bsd.libnames.mk: Add LIBSBUF.
camcontrol/Makefile: Add -lsbuf. Since camcontrol is statically
linked, we can't depend on the dynamic linker
to pull in libsbuf.
camcontrol.c: Use cam_error_print() instead of checking for
CAM_SCSI_STATUS_ERROR on every failed CCB.
sbuf.9: Change the prototypes for sbuf_cat() and
sbuf_cpy() so that the source string is now a
const char *. This is more in line wth the
standard system string functions, and helps
eliminate warnings when dealing with a const
source buffer.
Fix a typo.
cam.c: Add description strings for the various CAM
error status values, as well as routines to
look up those strings.
Add new cam_error_string() and
cam_error_print() routines for userland and
the kernel.
cam.h: Add a new CAM flag, CAM_RETRY_SELTO.
Add enumerated types for the various options
available with cam_error_print() and
cam_error_string().
cam_ccb.h: Add new transfer negotiation structures/types.
Change inq_len in the ccb_getdev structure to
be "reserved". This field has never been
filled in, and will be removed when we next
bump the CAM version.
cam_debug.h: Fix typo.
cam_periph.c: Modularize cam_periph_error(). The SCSI error
handling part of cam_periph_error() is now
in camperiphscsistatuserror() and
camperiphscsisenseerror().
In cam_periph_lock(), increase the reference
count on the periph while we wait for our lock
attempt to succeed so that the periph won't go
away while we're sleeping.
cam_xpt.c: Add new transfer negotiation code. (ifdefed
out)
Add a new function, xpt_path_string(). This
is a string/sbuf analog to xpt_print_path().
scsi_all.c: Revamp string handing and error printing code.
We now use sbufs for much of the string
formatting code. More of that code is shared
between userland the kernel.
scsi_all.h: Get rid of SS_TURSTART, it wasn't terribly
useful in the first place.
Add a new error action, SS_REQSENSE. (Send a
request sense and then retry the command.)
This is useful when the controller hasn't
performed autosense for some reason.
Change the default actions around a bit.
scsi_cd.c,
scsi_da.c,
scsi_pt.c,
scsi_ses.c: SF_RETRY_SELTO -> CAM_RETRY_SELTO. Selection
timeouts shouldn't be covered by a sense flag.
scsi_pass.[ch]: SF_RETRY_SELTO -> CAM_RETRY_SELTO.
Get rid of the last vestiges of a read/write
interface.
libkern/bsearch.c,
sys/libkern.h,
conf/files: Add bsearch.c, which is needed for some of the
new table lookup routines.
aic7xxx_freebsd.c: Define AHC_NEW_TRAN_SETTINGS if
CAM_NEW_TRAN_CODE is defined.
sbuf.h,
subr_sbuf.c: Add the appropriate #ifdefs so sbufs can
compile and run in userland.
Change sbuf_printf() to use vsnprintf()
instead of kvprintf(), which is only available
in the kernel.
Change the source string for sbuf_cpy() and
sbuf_cat() to be a const char *.
Add __BEGIN_DECLS and __END_DECLS around
function prototypes since they're now exported
to userland.
kdump/mkioctls: Include stdio.h before cam.h since cam.h now
includes a function with a FILE * argument.
Submitted by: gibbs (mostly)
Reviewed by: jdp, marcel (libsbuf makefile changes)
Reviewed by: des (sbuf changes)
Reviewed by: ken
- modeventhand_t declares a pointer to a function, so it can't be
used as a forward declaration (d'oh!)
Submitted by: Harti Brandt <brandt@fokus.gmd.de>
manual section. If, for example, MANSECT is set to 8, the default
MAN1=${PROG}.1 feature of bsd.prog.mk becomes MAN8=${PROG}.8.
Useful for games, libexec, sbin and usr.sbin subtrees.
Reviewed by: bde
very specific scenarios, and now that we have had net.inet.tcp.blackhole for
quite some time there is really no reason to use it any more.
(second of three commits)
- These pages abused Ar macro (they should have used Fa).
- NULL and other numeric constants should be marked with Dv.
- VOP_* in the ERRORS section for the EOPNOTSUPP entry should be marked
with Fn.
Submitted by: ru
- These pages abused Ar macro (they should have used Fa).
- NULL constant should be marked with Dv.
- VOP_* in the ERRORS section for the EOPNOTSUPP entry should be marked
with Fn.
Submitted by: ru
- spell the abbreviation of 1003.1 as ``POSIX.1''
- fixed the description of -p1003.1-90; it was sold as ISO/IEC 9945-1:1990
- removed -p1003.1b; it only existed as 1003.1b-1993 (-p1003.1b-93), and
is part of 1003.1 since 1003.1-1996.
- replaced -p1003.1g (project) with -p1003.1g-2000 (approved draft)
- changed abbreviation of -isoC from ``ISO C'' to ``ISO C89''
- removed -iso9899 alias for -isoC
- IEC was missing from some names
- added abbreviation for -susv2 (``SUSv2'')
indicator are treated as strings, so "-offset 0" will set the offset
to the width of the string "0", as opposed to "no offset".
TIP: if offset is not needed, the -offset clause may be omitted.
on certain types of SOCK_RAW sockets. Also, use the ip.ttl MIB
variable instead of MAXTTL constant as the default time-to-live
value for outgoing IP packets all over the place, as we already
do this for TCP and UDP.
Reviewed by: wollman
- Kthread functions return an error status, they don't set errno to an
error status.
- Remove the BUGS section as all the bugs listed have been fixed now.
or comments, and some is as a result of simply documenting the
entropy harvester.
This still needs work: could a newbus guru pleazse follow up
and fix.extend my (no doubt) obvious mistakes!
resource_query_unit and improve the descriptions of the parameters
passed to these functions.
Plus a couple minor formatting/markup changes:
o Quote -1 as \-1.
o .Dq hints to match resource_int_value().
and Pentium II, III and IV processors (p2, p3, p4), as well as 'mmx' and
'3dnow' MACHINE_CPU tags as appropriate. In the near future this will
be used to control various ports which have MMX/3dNow optimizations,
instead of the ad-hoc methods currently used.
Reviewed by: peter
libssl, for example), and hide it behind a make.conf option,
WANT_OPENSSL_MANPAGES, instead of having it commented out. We still can't
install these by default because of clobbering of a number of system
manpages with the same name, but they're there for people who want them.
and add a sysctl to pppoe to activate non standard ethertypes
so that idiot ISPs (apparently in France) who use
equipment from idiot suppliers (rumour says 3com)
who use nonstandard ethertypes can still connect.
"yep, sure we do pppoe, we use a different identifier to that dictated in
the standard, but sure it's pppoe!"
sysctl -w net.graph.stupid_isp=1 enables the changeover.
packet flow into two unidirectional flows.
Part of a suite of nodes developed for packet flow control.
More to follow as I have time to port them to 5.x or
as others do so. The ipfw node will be the hardest..
Submitted by: "Vitaly V. Belekhov" <vitaly@riss-telecom.ru>
* Rip out MACHINE_CPU stuff from sys.mk and include a new <bsd.cpu.mk>
after we pull in /etc/make.conf. We need to do it afterwards so we can
react to the user setting of the:
* CPUTYPE variable, which contains the CPU type which the user wants to
optimize for. For example, if you want your binaries to only run on an
i686-class machine (or higher), set this to i686. If you want to support
running binaries on a variety of CPU generations, set this to the lowest
common denominator. Supported values are listed in make.conf.
* bsd.cpu.mk does the expansion of CPUTYPE into MACHINE_CPU using the
(hopefully) correct unordered list of CPU types which should be used on
that CPU. For example, an AMD k6 CPU wants any of the following:
k6 k5 i586 i486 i386
This is still an unordered list so the client makefile logic is simple -
client makefiles need to test for the various elements of the set in
decreasing order of priority using ${MACHINE_CPU:M<foo>}, as before.
The various MACHINE_CPU lists are believed to be correct, but should be
checked.
* If NO_CPU_CFLAGS is not defined, add relevant gcc compiler optimization
settings by default (e.g. -karch=k6 for CPUTYPE=k6, etc). Release
builders and developers of third-party software need to make sure not to
enable CPU-specific optimization when generating code intended to be
portable. We probably need to move to an /etc/world.conf to allow the
optimization stuff to be applied separately to world/kernel and external
compilations, but it's not any worse a problem than it was before.
* Add coverage for the ia64/itanium MACHINE_ARCH/CPUTYPE.
* Add CPUTYPE support for all of the CPU types supported by FreeBSD and gcc
(only i386, alpha and ia64 first, since those are the minimally-working
ports. Other architecture porters, please feel free to add the relevant
gunk for your platform).
Reviewed by: jhb, obrien
* Rip out MACHINE_CPU stuff from sys.mk and include a new <bsd.cpu.mk>
after we pull in /etc/make.conf. We need to do it afterwards so we can
react to the user setting of the:
* CPUTYPE variable, which contains the CPU type which the user wants to
optimize for. For example, if you want your binaries to only run on an
i686-class machine (or higher), set this to i686. If you want to support
running binaries on a variety of CPU generations, set this to the lowest
common denominator. Supported values are listed in make.conf.
* bsd.cpu.mk does the expansion of CPUTYPE into MACHINE_CPU using the
(hopefully) correct unordered list of CPU types which should be used on
that CPU. For example, an AMD k6 CPU wants any of the following:
k6 k5 i586 i486 i386
This is still an unordered list so the client makefile logic is simple -
client makefiles need to test for the various elements of the set in
decreasing order of priority using ${MACHINE_CPU:M<foo>}, as before.
The various MACHINE_CPU lists are believed to be correct, but should be
checked.
* If NO_CPU_CFLAGS is not defined, add relevant gcc compiler optimization
settings by default (e.g. -karch=k6 for CPUTYPE=k6, etc). Release
builders and developers of third-party software need to make sure not to
enable CPU-specific optimization when generating code intended to be
portable. We probably need to move to an /etc/world.conf to allow the
optimization stuff to be applied separately to world/kernel and external
compilations, but it's not any worse a problem than it was before.
* Add coverage for the ia64/itanium MACHINE_ARCH/CPUTYPE.
* Add CPUTYPE support for all of the CPU types supported by FreeBSD and gcc
(only i386, alpha and ia64 first, since those are the minimally-working
ports. Other architecture porters, please feel free to add the relevant
gunk for your platform).
Reviewed by: jhb, obrien
users should be configuring via m4 now. If set, use m4 to create the .cf
file. Also, if either SENDMAIL_MC or SENDMAIL_CF is set, 'make install' or
'make distribution' in src/etc/sendmail/ will install the appropriate .cf as
/etc/mail/sendmail.cf. This fixes some mergemaster problems.
PR: conf/13016
if (error = function(a1, a2))
since it causes a warning with -Wall. Change it so it has an explicit test
against zero,
if ((error = function(a1, a2)) != 0)
set the variable until you rebuild it, and the alternative is to be stuck
playing games with ``.if defined(MACHINE_CPU) && ... '' for all eternity.
We now set up the reasonable default for i386 and alpha here -- given this
it probably makes sense to remove the corresponding code from make(1).
through the use of a new build directive, MACHINE_CPU, which contains a
list of the CPU generations/features for which optimizations are desired.
This feature will be extended to cover the ports tree in the future.
Currently OpenSSL provides optimizations for i386, i586 and i686-class
CPUs. Currently it has not been tested on an i386 or i486.
Teach make(1) to provide sensible defaults for MACHINE_CPU if it is not
defined (namely, the lowest common denominator CPU we support for each
architecture). Currently this is i386 for the i386 architecture and ev4
for the alpha. sys.mk also sets the variable as a last resort for
consistency with MACHINE_ARCH and bootstrapping from very old versions of
make.
Benchmarks show a significant speed increase even in the i386 case, with
additional improvements for i586 and i686 systems. For maximum performance
define MACHINE_CPU=i686 i586 i386 in /etc/make.conf.
Based on a patch submitted by: Mike Silbersack <silby@silby.com>
Reviewed by: current
"FreeBSD.pfa" - the (postscript) font used to write "FreeBSD".
"beastie.fig" - a 4.3 BSD style Daemon in vector graphic.
"beastie.eps" - same converted to encapsulated postscript.
"poster.sh" - an example how to use this stuff.
"README" - the full story.
caught up with the changes to avoid storing socket addresses in mbufs,
although the VFS_CHECKEXP() code had to since it was committed 2 years
after those changes.
Fixed formatting in this prototype.
using bus_alloc_resource(), etc., are especially unobvious, but were
especially wrong (<sys/resource.h> has nothing to do with the resources
documented here...). Order and format the includes as correctly as
possible (a layering violation makes <machine/bus.h> a prerequisite for
<sys/rman.h>).
Added evil #define of ACCEPT_FILTER_MODULE to synopsis. Some of
the functions defined in this man page aren't declared unless
ACCEPT_FILTER_MOD is defined before including <sys/socketvar.h>.
user confusion, so specify it directly, i.e. change "3" to "3;0".
In this style "3;" or "3" must not cause repeating
(converted to \3, CHAR_MAX, \0)
Still not implemented and broken in localeconv()
user confusion, so specify it directly, i.e. change "3" to "3;0".
In this style "3;" must not cause repeating (converted to \3, CHAR_MAX, \0)
NOTE: still no proper conversion done in localeconv()
repeated forever according to SUSv2
Remove "0;0" - \0 means not "no grouping" but repeat forever previous char,
and added automatically. Empty string could be parsed later into CHAR_MAX
(real "no grouping") by localeconv()
en_CA, en_GB => en_US
en_AU, en_NZ => en_GB
fr_CA, fr_CH => fr_FR
There are separate links for `GB English' and `US English' because I
anticipate users of the former to potentially want a thousands_sep of
" " (to match modern British style) rather than ",".
XXX What about en_IE? ISO_8859-15?
LC_MONETARY (share/monetdef), LC_MESSAGES (share/msgdef). Now only
en_US.ISO_8859-1 and ru_RU.KOI8-R locales ready. I will find some time
in near future and'll try to make defintions for other locales.
to be the same as -ragged in the current implementation) to
-ragged. With mdocNG, -filled displays produce the correct
output, formatted and justified to both margins.
(e.g. ethernet nodes are persistent until you rip out the hardware)
Use this support in the ethernet and sample nodes.
Add some more abstraction on the 'item's so that node and
hook reference counting can be checked easier.
Slight man page correction.
Make pppoe type dependent on ethernet type.
Clean up node shutdown a little.
Move a mutex from MTX_SPIN to MTX_DEF (oops)
Fix small ref-counting bug.
remove warning on one2many type.
The new method is 'flood' (in addition to the old round-robin)
in which incoming packets are sent to more than one outgoing hook.
(I'm not sure what Rogier is using this for but it seems generally useful
and isn't much extra)
Submitted by: Rogier R. Mulhuijzen (drwilco@drwilco.net )
initialization until after malloc() is safe to call, then iterate through
all mutexes and complete their initialization.
This change is necessary in order to avoid some circular bootstrapping
dependencies.
punctuation, and explanations that are just plain wrong)
o Add missing entries
o Remove entries for directories that do not exist
Submitted by: Rich Morin <rdm@cfcl.com> (for the most part)
This version is functional and is aproaching solid..
notice I said APROACHING. There are many node types I cannot test
I have tested: echo hole ppp socket vjc iface tee bpf async tty
The rest compile and "Look" right. More changes to follow.
DEBUGGING is enabled in this code to help if people have problems.
current format. The new database also has subvendor/subdevice ID
information, which we aren't using for now. This adds 272 new vendors
and 376 new device identifiers, as well as cleaning out some of the
bad entries in the previous revision.
We now combine data from:
http://www.yourvote.com/pcihttp://members.hyperlink.com.au/~chart/pci.htm
<bde>
o Add comments in some places to clarify some points.
o Don't typedef sc_p. This isn't usually done in the drivers and may
cause problems in teh future if C goes the C++ route of requiring
one and only one definition for each and every type. Instead use
the current convetion of expanding struct ${1}_softc * inline needed.
o change some comments to be more style(9)-like.
o Define and use DEV2SOFTC to encapsulate storing/getting softc from a
dev_t. This also takes care of the missing cast from the examples.
o Define and use DEVICE2SOFTC, similar to DEV2SOFTC for getting the
softc from a device_t.
</bde>
We still should have this generate foo_{isa,pci,pccard,cardbus,eisa}.c
and foovar.h from templates of some sort, but I was too lazy to do
that in this commit. I did document it in the comments, however.
Note: bde-like corrections made with the help of my my portable
plastic bde icon. Results with the real bde may vary with use.
format version number. (userland programs should not need to be
recompiled when the netgraph kernel internal ABI is changed.
Also fix modules that don;t handle the fact that a caller may not supply
a return message pointer. (benign at the moment because the calling code
checks, but that will change)
This clears out my outstanding netgraph changes.
There is a netgraph change of design in the offing and this is to some
extent a superset of soem of the new functionality and some of the old
functionality that may be removed.
This code works as before, but allows some new features that I want to
work with and evaluate. It is the basis for a version of netgraph
with integral locking for SMP use.
This is running on my test machine with no new problems :-)
.PATH to ${.CURDIR}/[...]/kern , the "exists" expression will fail for the
form exists(${.CURDIR}/[...]/kern/). This appears to be happening because
make is searching for the argument to "exists" by using .PATH rather than a
relative search, because .PATH and the argument match at the beginning.
Additionally, make appears to consider a path that starts with ${.CURDIR}
as relative, even though it expands to an absolute path.
The reason that most people aren't seeing this problem is that the absolute
paths of /usr/src/sys and /sys are also searched, so as long as the kernel
source can be found in at least one of those places, no problems surface.
This problem was inadvertently introduced on 1 December 2000, with the
addition of the sysvipc modules.
by other tools as well).
Note that omissions and corrections for this file should be resolved
via http://www.yourvote.com/pci, as this is the master source for this
database, rather than by editing this file directly.
counter register in-CPU.
This is to be used as a fast "timer", where linearity is more important
than time, and multiple lines in the linearity caused by multiple CPUs
in an SMP machine is not a problem.
This adds no code whatsoever to the FreeBSD kernel until it is actually
used, and then as a single-instruction inline routine (except for the
80386 and 80486 where it is some more inline code around nanotime(9).
Reviewed by: bde, kris, jhb
Don't mark the word "file" up as a pathname in "/etc/group file". For
the sake of consistency with rev 1.18, use Nm instead of "Pa /etc/group"
and break "file" onto the next line.
ENABLE_SUID_SSH being defined reenable it for those that want it.
This follows discussion favoring the change from September. It
is not usually necessary to be setuid root, possibly less safe,
and less convenient (cannot use $HOSTALIASES, for example).
Submitted by: jedgar
code designation, as it's code 275.
Include the URL of the ISO3166 Maintenance Agency.
Remove FX, it's been deprecated.
Update the Palestine entry with the correct code and description.
PR: docs/22570
Submitted by: Laurent Wacrenier <lwa@victor.teaser.fr>
* xref sysctl
* do not mark kern.ipc.mbuf_wait up as a function argument.
* do not mix case of function argument names
* a mbuf -> an mbuf
* if -> whether
* typos
I have added support for finding non-PNP devices to this
sample loadable ISA driver.
PCI support will come later.
If someone with a clue about newbus were to look it over it would be
really cool.
While here, I also updated the kernel config style, although I wouldn't
recommend doing this for the whole of section 4 yet, since our kernel
config style is still in a state of flux.
Also introduce a bunch of (missed?) macros and functions.
This man page still needs a lot of work, most likely a re-ordering
of the macros/functions, and a more complete, more accurate, listing of
available routines.
A good and worthy start nonetheless.
<sys/proc.h> to <sys/systm.h>.
Correctly document the #includes needed in the manpage.
Add one now needed #include of <sys/systm.h>.
Remove the consequent 48 unused #includes of <sys/proc.h>.
bind distribution, but until now was not being built as a separate
entity. For documentation, see these man pages:
assertions(3), eventlib(3), heap(3), logging(3), memcluster(3), tree(3).
Reviewed by: jdp
This creates a skeleton ISA device driver.
I don't pretend that it's fully correct or even opitimal
but it at least creates (and compiles) a 'clean' ISA driver.
Hopefully PCI/PCCARD/etc. support will be added when I understand it.
Unlike the old version this just creates a module. The old one tried to
create a new kernel with the driver to be tested.
Instead of:
foo = malloc(sizeof(foo), M_WAIT);
bzero(foo, sizeof(foo));
You can now (and please do) use:
foo = malloc(sizeof(foo), M_WAIT | M_ZERO);
In the future this will enable us to do idle-time pre-zeroing of
malloc-space.
Approved by: rwatson
Obtained from: NetBSD source tree
Second part of the fsck wrappers commit. This commit enables the new fsck
code (removing the fsck/* code and replacing it with the netbsd fsck
wrapper code), and enabling some FFS-based utilities to compile.
Details:
* quotacheck, fsdb required modification to use the fsck_ffs/ code rather
than fsck/ . This might change later since quotacheck requires preen.c
which should exist in fsck/ rather than fsck_ffs/
* src/Makefile has fsck_ffs added to it so it it built as part of the tree
now
* share/doc/smm/03.fsck/ uses the SMM.doc/ stuff from fsck_ffs, not fsck.
I've tested this, and it shouldn't require any changes on your machine.
The fsck wrapper reads /etc/fsck and is command-line-compatible enough
to not require rc changes (well, most changes unless you want to do
anything nifty by specifying the fs types explicityly, read the man page
if you want further details on what it can do.)
This now allows us to support multiple filesystem types during bootup.
Replace all in-tree uses with <sys/mouse.h> which repo-copied a few
moments ago from src/sys/i386/include/mouse.h by peter.
This is also the appropriate fix for exo-tree sources.
Put warnings in <machine/mouse.h> to discourage use.
November 15th 2000 the warnings will be converted to errors.
January 15th 2001 the <machine/mouse.h> files will be removed.
Replace all in-tree uses with necessary subset of <sys/{fb,kb,cons}io.h>.
This is also the appropriate fix for exo-tree sources.
Put warnings in <machine/console.h> to discourage use.
November 15th 2000 the warnings will be converted to errors.
January 15th 2001 the <machine/console.h> files will be removed.
the appropriate documentation added to rc.conf(5). If all goes well
with this over the next few weeks, the PR will be closed with the
pullup of patches back to 4-STABLE.
PR: 20202
Submitted by: Gerhard Sittig <Gerhard.Sittig@gmx.net>
Reviewed by: Darren Reed <darrenr@freebsd.org>
Approved by: Darren Reed <darrenr@freebsd.org>
Obtained from: Gerhard Sittig <Gerhard.Sittig@gmx.net>
of the Am79c973 with "AlertIT Technology," whatever that is. Also mention
support for the PCnet/FAST III cards in the documentation. The
PCnet/FAST III chips have integrated 10/100 PHYs.
this just involves adding the chip ID to the supported list: the PCnet/PRO
is compatible with the PCnet/FAST+ and friends and should "just work"
with this driver.
Also try to handle mbuf allocation failures in the receive handler
more gracefully.
${LIB} library". "standard" tends to imply the one that is normally
used... but by default it is not the case - the .so would be the
"standard" library. Therefore, change this to 'static'. Another option
might be "conventional ${LIB} library".
Remove the entire copy of ip_fw.h and just point readers at it as it
gets out of date..
Add mentions of dummynet and the fwd actions.
Still to do: Whoever did the 'stateful' stuff might mention it..
sync with the implementation. Vnode locks *are* required for these
operations, as some underlying implementations will require them.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Previously, these cards were supported by the lnc driver (and they
still are, but the pcn driver will claim them first), which is fine
except the lnc driver runs them in 16-bit LANCE compatibility mode.
The pcn driver runs these chips in 32-bit mode and uses the RX alignment
feature to achieve zero-copy receive. (Which puts it in the same
class as the xl, fxp and tl chipsets.) This driver is also MI, so it
will work on the x86 and alpha platforms. (The lnc driver is still
needed to support non-PCI cards. At some point, I'll need to newbusify
it so that it too will me MI.)
The Am79c978 HomePNA adapter is also supported.
All periodic sub-scripts <larf> now have their return codes interpreted
by periodic(8). Output may be masked based on variable values in
periodic.conf.
It's also now possible to email periodic output to arbitrary addresses,
or to send it to a log file, examples of which can be found in
newsyslog.conf.
The upshot of it all should be no discernable changes to the default
behaviour of periodic(8).
PR: 21250
include:
* Mutual exclusion is used instead of spl*(). See mutex(9). (Note: The
alpha port is still in transition and currently uses both.)
* Per-CPU idle processes.
* Interrupts are run in their own separate kernel threads and can be
preempted (i386 only).
Partially contributed by: BSDi (BSD/OS)
Submissions by (at least): cp, dfr, dillon, grog, jake, jhb, sheldonh
-- Unknown
Now that the RSA algorithm is released into the public domain, build
librsaintl by default unless NO_RSAINTL is set in make.conf.
The native OpenSSL implementation of RSA is much faster, doesn't have
an artificial keysize limitation, has 30% fewer calories and tastes great!
configure FreeBSD so that various databases such as passwd and group can be
looked up using flat files, NIS, or Hesiod.
= Hesiod has been added to libc (see hesiod(3)).
= A library routine for parsing nsswitch.conf and invoking callback
functions as specified has been added to libc (see nsdispatch(3)).
= The following C library functions have been modified to use nsdispatch:
. getgrent, getgrnam, getgrgid
. getpwent, getpwnam, getpwuid
. getusershell
. getaddrinfo
. gethostbyname, gethostbyname2, gethostbyaddr
. getnetbyname, getnetbyaddr
. getipnodebyname, getipnodebyaddr, getnodebyname, getnodebyaddr
= host.conf has been removed from src/etc. rc.network has been modified
to warn that host.conf is no longer used at boot time. In addition, if
there is a host.conf but no nsswitch.conf, the latter is created at boot
time from the former.
Obtained from: NetBSD
stay broken for months without anyone noticing.
The boot-conf command was changed as to reproduce the behavior of builtin
loader words precisely. As a result, it now always need an argument, possibly
0 indicating that no other arguments are being passed. This broke in a
non-deterministic way (ie, it could go on working as if everything was fine).
* Clear extraneous argument to the Os macro.
* Place the name description on the Nd line.
* Mark sub-sections up with Ss, not Sh.
* Don't double-quote "Login" when "login prompt" is perfectly
good English.
by -n is nonexistant, then the following -d was misinterpreted with
a strange error. By putting double quotes (") around the argument,
we can be sure there is _something_ there that we can check a zero
length against.
cause the working directory to be used. Make it so.
When we're more convinced that it'll work, we might try this
to avoid a shell invocation:
.if defined(MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX) && !empty(MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX) &&
exists(${CANONICALOBJDIR}/)
Reported by: bde
Bump the MRU by 4 bytes to make room for the MP header
Down the autoload threshold to a practical value
Don't specify the ISDN bandwidth as 65536 (ahem!)
Don't specifiy a carrier period (the default of 6 seconds is fine)
SUPFLAGS when a 'make update' is run. This means that the supfile
doesn't need to be edited because the -h will override the
CHANGE_THIS.FreeBSD.org host.
Beyond changes to the build system, this includes fixing up the sample
freebsd.mc configuration for changes in defaults and syntax, removing
outdated documentation, and updating the release notes.
mostly unrelated to the attributed PR, and the attributed submitter
wasn't so much suggesting the patch for inclusion as providing it
for clarity.
PR: 9869
Submitted by: bde
related patches. These include:
* Mode page editting can be scripted. This involves two
things: first, if stdin is not a tty, changes are read from
stdin rather than invoking $EDITOR. Second, and more
importantly, not all modepage entries must be included in the
change set. This means that camcontrol can now gracefully handle
more intrusive editting from the $EDITOR, including removal or
rearrangement of lines. It also means that you can do stuff
like:
# echo "WCE: 1" | camcontrol modepage da3 -m 8 -e
# newfs /dev/da3
# echo "WCE: 0" | camcontrol modepage da3 -m 8 -e
* Range-checking on user-supplied input values. modeedit.c now
uses the field width specifiers to determine the maximum
allowable value for a field. If the user enters a value larger
than the maximum, it clips the value to the max and warns the
user. This also involved patching cam_cmdparse.c to be more
consistent with regards to the "count" parameter to arg_put
(previously is was the length of strings and 1 for all integral
types). The cam_cdbparse(3) man page was also updated to reflect
the revised semantics.
* In the process, I removed the 64 entry limit on mode pages (not
that we were even close to hitting that limit). This was a nice
side-effect of the other changes.
* Technically, the new mode editting functionality allows editting
of character array entries in mode pages (type 'c' or 'z'),
however since buff_encode doesn't grok them it is currently
useless.
* Camcontrol gained two new options related to mode pages: -l and
-b. The former lists all available mode pages for a given
device. The latter forces mode page display in binary format
(the default when no mode page definition was found in
scsi_modes).
* Added support for mode page names to scsi_modes. Allows names to
be displayed alongside mode numbers in the mode page
listing. Updated scsi_modes to use the new functionality. This
also adds the semicolon into the scsi_modes syntax as an
optional mode page definition terminator. This is needed to name
pages without providing a page format definition.
* Updated scsi_all.h to include a structure describing mode page
headers.
* Added $FreeBSD$ line to scsi_modes.
Inspired by: dwhite
Reviewed by: ken
explanations into a new file "refuse.README". Some users are simply
copying these files and expecting them to work -- without even
reading them. I don't want to spend any more time closing bogus
PRs from that.
Also correct an error or two in the patterns.
Simplify "rs" (\Ec will be fixed later in syscons, so this is intermedia step)
Remove "mh" - termcap must describe what device _actually_ have end left
emulation upon upper level program. "mh" is also conflicting with colors.
Don't remove "md" for mono consoles
dosansi:
Wrong "mh" -> good "mr"
cards. This basically involves switching to the 12.4.13 firmware, plus
a couple of minor tweaks to the driver.
Also changed the jumbo buffer allocation scheme just a little to avoid
'failed to allocate jumbo buffer' conditions in certain cases.
The tap driver is used to present a virtual Ethernet interface to the
system. Packets presented by the network stack to the interface are
made available to a character device in /dev. With tap and the bridge
code, you can make remote bridge configurations where both sides of
the bridge are separated by userland daemons.
This driver also has a special naming hack to allow it to serve a similar
purpose to the vmware port.
Submitted by: myevmenkin@att.com, vsilyaev@mindspring.com
whitespace changes, which should not be a problem because this
is only the second revision of the file and translators are
unlikely to have gotten started yet.
Reviewed by: abial
whitespace changes, which should not be a problem because this
is only the second revision of the file and translators are
unlikely to have gotten started yet.
Reviewed by: abial
up cam_fill_ctio usage to passed atio flags. Clear periph_priv area
of new ctio so if the kernel is dumb enough to look at them (this is
a SECURITY hole) the panic will be obvious instead of subtle.
3.3volt PCI/cardbus chipsets similar to the 98715 (and they have
512-bit hash tables). Also update the man page to mention the 98727/98732
and the SOHOware SFA110A Rev B4 card with the 98715AEC-C chip.
PR: 19894
Submitted by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
2. "brackets" -> "angle brackets" when referring to < and >.
3. Clean up the bit about creating the usage() message. After clarifying a
couple of points the sentence became rather long, and rather poor English, so
it was converted to a enumerated list instead.
parts 1, 2, 3:
Reviewed by: sheldonh
and remove sysctl oids at will during runtime - they don't rely on
linker sets. Also, the node oids can be referenced by more than
one kernel user, which means that it's possible to create partially
overlapping trees.
Add sysctl contexts to help programmers manage multiple dynamic
oids in convenient way.
Please see the manpages for detailed discussion, and example module
for typical use.
This work is based on ideas and code snippets coming from many
people, among them: Arun Sharma, Jonathan Lemon, Doug Rabson,
Brian Feldman, Kelly Yancey, Poul-Henning Kamp and others. I'd like
to specially thank Brian Feldman for detailed review and style
fixes.
PR: kern/16928
Reviewed by: dfr, green, phk
MAKE_foo for things like MAKE_KERBEROS etc. Use that. I managed to
confuse myself last time and made make.conf different to the code. ;-(
Reported by: Jun Kuriyama <kuriyama@FreeBSD.org>
* Clear the Os macro, which is assumed gracefully at run-off time.
* Use quotes to reduce the long name description (Nd) to a single
argument.
* Use meaningful arguments to the -width option of the Bl macro.
* Mark rc.conf up with Xr instead of Pa so that it is obvious that
further help on that file is available.
* Explicitly indicate that mediaopt is a command modifier (Cm) of
the ifconfig(8) utility.
* Do not mark up half-duplex and full-duplex as arguments (Ar),
since they are allowed values for an argument.
* Fix various grammar and spelling mistakes.
controller chip. This chip is currently being used on the NetGear
FA312-TX adapter, which I guess is a replacement for the FA310-TX
(PNIC-based).
I added support for this chip by modifying the sis driver since
the SiS 900 and the NS DP83815 have almost the same programming
interface (the RX filter programming and PHY access methods are
different, but the general configuration, DMA scheme and register
layout are identical).
I would have had this done a lot sooner, but getting the damn MAC
address out of the EEPROM proved to be more complicated than expected.
the command-line arguments to be used for the call to df(1) when
daily_status_disks_enable is set to YES.
The name of the new variable was chosen by the maintainer of our
periodic hierarchy, Brian Somers.
PR: 19631
acting as a left control key. Many want a control key in the "real"
place, but still want the keymap to match the printed keys as much
as possible.
Inspired by obrien's us.pc-ctrl.kbd keymap, although I've had these
in my tree for a long time (since the left control key on my laptop
stopped working :)
The only change in the default functionality should be that
the output reports are slightly more verbose WRT files deleted.
Not objected to by: freebsd-arch
diagnostic lists (Bl -diag) so that there is one per section.
Since this change creates a large delta, enforce line-breaking
style while I'm here.
These changes have blanket approval from (but were not reviewed
by) the author.
world as was our old way, rather than when building a kernel.
Some people do not like the new way, and the release building still assumes
modules are built with the world.
bus_release_resource.9 contains a paragraph obtained from a mail
by Warner Losh <imp@FreeBSD.org> to myself.
Reviewed by: asmodai, hoek; in parts by msmith, mdodd and imp
Fix typo.
Fix description.
VFS_FHTOVP.9:
Fix order in which the manpage says the calls should be made.
PR: 18590
Submitted by: Anatoly Vorobey <mellon@pobox.com>
there happens to be a source file named install.sh. The null rule
for "install" in the NOINFO case must not be completely null, since
then it may be overridden by the implicit .sh rule.
quoting it all and adding commas).
Don't say that the expression in KASSERT() is an int. It is a collection
of tokens forming a C expression that can be compared with 0.
to tcsh(1) upgrade. The following commands were added as builtins:
bindkey
builtins
complete
echotc
filetest
hup
log
ls-F
printenv
sched
settc
setty
telltc
uncomplete
where
The printf builtin was removed.
key marked "Caps Lock" acting as a left control key. Many want a control
key in the Real place, but still want the keymap to match the printed keys
as much as possible.
. use real function names as `.Nm' macro argument in NAME section. It allows
them to appear in apropos(1) or whatis(1) output.
. replace empty lines with `.Pp' macro.
. replace hardcoded standard names with their `.St' macro equivalents.
. sort cross references in SEE ALSO section
maintained, and has been replaced by msun. The libm sources
shouldn't be removed just yet as there are parts that should be
merged into msun first.
PR: misc/17848
Discussed with: phk & bde
from the sys Makefile's SUBDIRs. This is conditioned in make.conf by the
NO_MODULES variable and the existence of the modules directory. The
actual location of the modules is not modified. Changes in Makefiles
only, this does not affect Peter's recent changes.
Reviewed by: Peter Wemm, who warned me I would get some flack, and
he had the good idea for the NO_MODULES variable.
are two supported chips, the NetChip 1080 (only prototypes available)
and the EzLink cable. Any other cable should be supported however as they
are all very much alike (there is a difference between them wrt
performance).
It uses Netgraph.
This driver was mostly written by Doug Ambrisko and Julian Elischer and
I would like to thank Whistle for yet another contribution. And my
aplogies to them for me sitting on the driver for so long (2 months).
Also, many thanks to Reid Augustin from NetChip for providing me with a
prototype of their 1080 chip.
Be aware of the fact that this driver is very immature and has only been
tested very lightly. If someone feels like learning about Netgraph however
this is an excellent driver to start playing with.
via the MODULE_VERSION() and MODULE_DEPEND() macros that both the loader
and kld system know how to deal with. The old DT_NEEDED tag is still
supported by the loader (and will remain supported for a while) - but the
kernel side presently doesn't know how to deal with DT_NEEDED.
file names with its FreeBSD equivalents.
Remove references to some debuging tools which would never appear in FreeBSD.
Use mdoc(7) macros in proper places.
Give a credit to Youshinobu Inoue for his efforts on KAME kit integration to
the FreeBSD main source tree.
Correct derivation of Eighth Edition Research UNIX. According to dmr,
it was derived from 4.1cBSD; according to the 4.4BSD book, it was
derived from 4.1BSD. Since dmr did the work, he's more likely to be
correct.
Correct typos.
Remove dead URLs.
The makefile contains a reference to /sys/dev/ppbus. What really should
be done is copy the header files to /usr/include/sys/dev/ppbus.
PR: kern/16767
Submitted by: Jin Guojun (FTG staff) <jin@gracie.lbl.gov>
purpose of the hook was to provide the ability for a shell program to
instantiate the firewall rules instead of forcing them to be
statically coded. This functionality was already present through the
use of ${firewall_script}, and I see no need to keep the
${firewall_type} hook around.
Reminded by: Dag-Erling Smorgrav <des@freebsd.org>
do not have the kernel you wish to compile against in either
/usr/src/sys or /sys, then you will need to set SYSDIR to point to the
sys directory of the source tree that contians the source.
Also, minor tweaks to the load/unload targets from Bruce.
I've had this through several make worlds, as well as using it on a
daily basis for the past couple of weeks to build modules needed for
testing at Timing Solutions.
Reviewed and revised by: bde
Work sponsored by: Timing Solutions
From the README:
Any IEEE 802.11 cards use AMD Am79C930 and Harris (Intersil) Chipset
with PCnetMobile firmware by AMD.
BayStack 650 1Mbps Frequency Hopping PCCARD adapter
BayStack 660 2Mbps Direct Sequence PCCARD adapter
Icom SL-200 2Mbps Direct Sequence PCCARD adapter
Melco WLI-PCM 2Mbps Direct Sequence PCCARD adapter
NEL SSMagic 2Mbps Direct Sequence PCCARD adapter
Netwave AirSurfer Plus
1Mbps Frequency Hopping PCCARD adapter
Netwave AirSurfer Pro
2Mbps Direct Sequence PCCARD adapter
Known Problems:
WEP is not supported.
Does not create IBSS itself.
Cannot configure the following on FreeBSD:
selection of infrastructure/adhoc mode
ESSID
...
Submitted by: Atsushi Onoe <onoe@sm.sony.co.jp>
for pccardd.
Please install /etc/defaults/pccard.conf and update /etc/defaults/rc.conf
as well.
Note that old pccard.conf.sample still remains for while but
no longer to be maintained.
Reviewed by: imp, -mobile ML and nomads ML in Japan.
contains the ADMtek Pegasus AN986 USB chipset. The
adapter supports both 10BaseT and 100BaseT (including
full-duplex). The product code for these adapters is
0x2206.
These got replaced by BUS_SETUP_INTR().
This once again illustrates an API change without informing -doc, so
that these sort post cleanup actions could've been avoided.
And then people wonder why the docs suck so much at times.
Reviewed by: peter
reserve, in maximal NFS packets. Originally only 2 packets worth of
space was reserved. The default is now 4, which appears to greatly
improve performance for slow to mid-speed machines on gigabit networks.
Add documentation and correct some prior documentation.
Problem Researched by: Andrew Gallatin <gallatin@cs.duke.edu>
Approved by: jkh
o Comment out display of fortune by default.
o Synch root's .cshrc/.login and non-root's .cshrc/.login in terms of
gratuitous variables set (EDITOR).
o Remove some commented out variables set inconsistently or gratuitously,
such as Interviews settings, 8-bit German locale for root only.
o Synchronize comments in header, as well as references to appropriate man
pages.
o Remove MANPATH setting as apparently /etc/manpath.config does all that
already.
Similar changes probably need to be made in other dot.* files for root
and skel, as all of these files seem to set different aliases, environmental
variables, prompts, and have different semantics.
As a result of this patch, leaving aside the setting of a special prompt
for root, users of csh and tcsh should find similar environments when
logging in or su'ing to any account using that shell.
Reviewed by: asmodai, nbm, will
On a K6-2/450 with fairly fast SCSI disks, building+installing src/share/
takes 2m51.3s, where src/share/doc/ is 1m9.9s of that.
However on a slow Alpha (233MHz) the times are 7m39.3s and 4m58.3s
respectively.
This commit allows one to speed up their build time, without not getting
any important and required changes if one used "NOSHARE".
Get rid of the "char *" before level which made no sense. Change
"char *msg" to the properly const-unpoisoned one.
Just SPLASSERT.9:
Add an Xref to CONDSPLASSERT(9). Change the function name "rtredirect"
to the correct "rtalloc".
it into a ``shared'' .ko file. This intermediate file can be directly
linked into a static kernel. This isn't all that useful yet but will
become much more interesting shortly.
not the current BPF device should report locally generated packets or not.
This allows sniffing applications to see only packets that are not generated
locally, which can be useful for debugging bridging problems, or other
situations where MAC addresses are not sufficient to identify locally
sourced packets. Default to true for this flag, so as to provide existing
behavior by default.
Introduce two new ioctls, BIOCGSEESENT and BIOCSSEESENT, which may be used
to manipulate this flag from userland, given appropriate privilege.
Modify bpf.4 to document these two new ioctl arguments.
Reviewed by: asmodai
``Depending on the setting of the sysctl variable `net.inet.ipfw.one_pass'
Packets coming from a pipe ...''
into
``... the sysctl variable `net.ipfw.one_pass', packets coming from ...''
while the other half used `vap', and in one case resulted in code that
made no sense. Replaced all of them with `vap'.
(Typically, `vpp' is a pointer to a pointer to a struct vnode anyway).
* Apply sentence breaking style.
* Add missing periods to the ends of sentences.
* Replace bogus use of Nm with Em and Pa as appropriate.
* Rename the EXAMPLE section to EXAMPLES.
* Tidy up wording and fix spelling errors.
* Use an Rs -> Re block instead of Xr for the SourceForge URL.
* Correct the SourceForge URL.
* Improve the compilation instructions for the SourceForge utilities.
Approved by: n_hibma