/usr/bin/lock can be used to lock a terminal much like xlock does
for your X-windows session. Problem is, /usr/bin/lock cannot lock
your terminal indefinately. Rather you must specify a timeout
value, after which, your terminal is unlocked and become unsecured.
I have added a ``-n'' no timeout option to /usr/bin/lock
Currently the only way to get this functionality is to use a huge
timeout value and hope it is long enought (in time). This method
also requires you to know the maxium number of minutes you are
allowed to specify.
Submitted by: David E. O'Brien <obrien@Nuxi.cs.ucdavis.edu>
for gcc >= 2.5 and no-ops for gcc >= 2.6. Converted to use __dead2
or __pure2 where it wasn't already done, except in math.h where use
of __pure was mostly wrong.
ISO-8859-1, since the characters are simply being passed on to
groff
. introduce an option to override the silly default to `psroff' as
the post-processor
. document the new option
RPC calls to rpc.yppasswdd, but when using the special superuser-only
AF_UNIX socket access method, the server will properly handle all the
additional fields, including pw_change.)
I would also like to take this opportunity to say that Sprint sucks.
copy.
Dont leave stray INS@xxxx temp files around, especially when installing
something less than 8MB and the destination runs out of space, etc.
It still doesn't clean up the temp files on SEGV or other signals etc.
installing. mmap'ing stuff over a nfs mount took out my machine during
a 'make world' last night while I was asleep. I started out with a list
of fs's to avoid, when I realised that I really didn't know which ones
were safe with mmap, so I went for the ones I knew and implemented a
fallback compare.
"." means the object directory, so it is just confusing to use it
when nothing is included from the object directory unless the object
directory is also the source directory. It is confusing for "."
not to mean the source directory anyway, so used `-I.'s should be
replaced by `-I${.OBJDIR}'.
faster IO due mmap(2) [-m | -s]
better error check for damaged databases
support for databases in network byte order (SunOS/sparc)
optional case insensitve search [-i]
optional multiple databases
optional multiple pattern
new enviroment variable LOCATE_PATH for database(s)
[-S] print some statistic about the database
[-l number] limit output to number file names
[-c] suppress normal output; instead print a count of matching file names
Documented PWD. MACHINE and MAKEOBJDIR are are still undocumented
except in main.c. I will be changing MAKEOBJDIR back to its old
behaviour so that the comment in main.c actually applies.
Removed irrelevant misformatted text about make's name being argv[0].