boot kernel so it fits again. This actually gives us quite a bit of
breathing room, so some more ethernet drivers might be turned on now in a
later commit.
I had to be aggressively Draconian to succeed.
I diked out:
+ Multia, NoName, PC/EB 64, Aspen Alpine support.
+ SCSI tape support
+ AMI MegaRAID controller support
+ All parallel bus support (includes PLIP)
+ vx (3c590, 3c595), pcn (AMD Am79C97x PCI 10/100), sf (Adaptec AIC-6915),
sis (SiS 900/SiS 7016), ste (Sundance ST201 (D-Link DFE-550TX)),
wb (Winbond W89C840F) support.
If the removal of any of this support causes heartburn, please let me know.
Dike out support for DEC3000/300* Pelic* and the DEC3000/[4-9]00
Flamingo/Sandpiper families, SLIP, lance Ethernet (especially since `le'
based Alphas are diked out now too), POSIX P1003_1B real-time extentions,
and last but not least "NOBLOCKRANDOM" since the random device is removed.
This lets us fit [barely!]:
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Avail Capacity iused ifree %iused Mounted
/dev/vnn0c 1407 1386 21 99% 6 24 20% /mnt
*** Filesystem is 1440 K, 21 left
*** 80000 bytes/inode, 24 left
Created /R/stage/floppies/kern.flp
Remove `pmtimer' from the MFSROOT kernel as `apm' is already removed.
`pmtimer' also removed from the Alpha kernel incase it ever winds up there.
(could it ever?)
SCSI card (should it ever find its way into GENERIC); LPT (we don't need
to print during install time); the parallel 'geek' port; generic USB
driver (thus some attached USB devices will not be detected and thus the
user may wonder what is going on, we couldn't do anything with the device
if only ugen attached to it anyway and we are getting very, very low on
available space; USB "Human Interface Devices" as we don't do anything
with them during installation; and USB printers (same argument as LPT).
over flowing its britches. So remove all ppbus bits except those for PLIP
(untested), and all USB bits as SRM does not know what USB is. Also remove
/dev/random as I don't think we need it just for whacking bits onto a disk.
Approved by: JKH
IPv6 configuration is only done by rtsol. Does someone really
need manual configuration? :-)
You can specify IPv6 DNS server as well.
We have only one server ftp7.jp.freebsd.org that speaks IPv6
in this time. ftp7.jp speaks IPv4 as well and also listed as
Japan #7.
Approved by: jkh