/etc filesystem isn't enough; consequently, add "-i 4096" to the newfs
command for /etc. This results in 1022 inodes, which should be enough
for the forseeable future (although I don't know why we would ever
have more than 1000 files in a default /etc).
Silence by: -current
and looks like no other Unix diskless configuration I've ever seen.
Thus allow a more traditional /etc.
Note, the use of an MFS /var should also be settable.
Otherwise installing ports(packages) is just a total PITA.
the null mount, we currently create a temporary mfs on /tmp, copy
/etc to /tmp, then mount /etc as mfs and copy everything back from
/tmp, then delete the /tmp mfs.
The patch eliminates the temporary /tmp mfs and the subsequent
copying and simply populates the /etc mfs by copying from
/conf/default/etc. This requires that /conf/default/etc contain a
complete copy of all the /etc stuff instead of just overrides. I
don't think that is too much of an extra step in setting up a
diskless environment.
* Provide the ability to make /tmp a memory filesystem independent
of /var. This removes the requirement that /tmp be a symlink to
/var/tmp and this makes the diskless code work with the default
filesystem layout. If a seperate /tmp memory filesystem is
created, the 'tmpsize' environment variable is used to determine
its size (default to 10 Meg).
* Reduce diffs between the -current and -stable versions of these
files to a bare minimum. Only the definition of the shell
function 'mount_md' is different.
Not Objected to by: -arch@, -small@
MFC after: 2 days
o create a simple wrapper function mount_md that makes it easy to
move from mount_mfs.
# NOTE: you will need to MAKEDEV md[0123] in order for this to work.
Reviewed by: bsd, keichii
default first, then network-specific files, then host-specific files.
I think this was the original intent, as Matt indicated the previous
code appeared to be a bug.
in the 3.x branch. Also remove the dependency on /usr to find the
boot address/interface.
Mostly-submitted-abd-tested-by: MIHIRA Sanpei Yoshiro <sanpei@sanpei.org>
case instead of test where appropriate, since case allows case is a sh
builtin and (as a side-effect) allows case-insensitivity.
Changes discussed on freebsd-hackers.
Submitted by: Doug Barton <Doug@gorean.org>
* All variables are now embraced: ${foo}
* All comparisons against some value now take the form:
[ "${foo}" ? "value" ]
where ? is a comparison operator
* All empty string tests now take the form:
[ -z "${foo}" ]
* All non-empty string tests now take the form:
[ -n "${foo}" ]
Submitted by: jkh