set to use DHCP have no carrier. This can cause grief as it may take
some time for link to be established, and defaultroute may terminate
before this happens.
Introduce a defaultroute_carrier_delay variable and then wait that long
in defaultroute before bailing if no interfaces have carrier. With the
default settings defaultroute will wait for five seconds for this, and
the original 30 second wait for a default route to appear is unchanged.
Note that there is in discussion an alternative approach to the broader
problem of waiting for DHCP-configured routes. However, this change
addresses a real problem in the current defaultroute script.
Discussed on: freebsd-rc@
- looking for partition with 'bootonce' attribute alone (without 'bootme'
attribute), removing it and logging that we successfully booted from this
partition.
- looking for partitions with 'bootfailed' attribute, removing it and
logging that we failed to boot from this partition.
Reviewed by: arch (Message-ID: <20100917234542.GE1902@garage.freebsd.pl>)
Obtained from: Wheel Systems Sp. z o.o. http://www.wheelsystems.com
MFC after: 2 weeks
The $ip6addrctl_policy is a variable to choose a pre-defined address
selection policy set by ip6addrctl(8).
The keyword "ipv4_prefer" sets IPv4-preferred one described in Section 10.3,
the keyword "ipv6_prefer" sets IPv6-preferred one in Section 2.1 in RFC 3484,
respectively. When "AUTO" is specified, it attempts to read
/etc/ip6addrctl.conf first. If it is found, it reads and installs it as
a policy table. If not, either of the two pre-defined policy tables is
chosen automatically according to $ipv6_activate_all_interfaces.
When $ipv6_activate_all_interfaces=NO, interfaces which have no corresponding
$ifconfig_IF_ipv6 is marked as IFDISABLED for security reason.
The default values are ip6addrctl_policy=AUTO and
ipv6_activate_all_interfaces=NO.
Discussed with: ume and bz
unless it is the current timer. When we have resumed successfully, restore
the previous timecounter hardware if it was changed earlier. Only the ACPI
timer is guaranteed to increase monotonically between S-state changes.
changes to the package database, i.e. any packages that
have been added, updated or deleted in the past 24 hours.
The format is intentionally simple and concise.
That information is particularly useful on servers that
are maintained by multiple administrators. When someone
adds, updates or deletes a package, the others will see
it in the daily periodic output.
This script is disabled by default.
PR: conf/113913
Submitted by: olli
Approved by: des (mentor)
MFC after: 3 weeks
(in /etc/rc.conf).
This fixes an apparent confusion between test(1) and sh(1) syntax for
AND/OR.
PR: conf/149036
Submitted by: pluknet
MFC after: 1 week
This commit merges the latest LLVM sources from the vendor space. It
also updates the build glue to match the new sources. Clang's version
number is changed to match LLVM's, which means /usr/include/clang/2.0
has been renamed to /usr/include/clang/2.8.
Obtained from: projects/clangbsd
shell script is the back end logic necessary for an installer. It
contains both query routines to allow a front-end installer to present
reasonable choices to the user and also action routines which allow
the front end installer to put a FreeBSD distribution onto a disk. It
supports installing onto the usual suspects, as well as advanced
features like Mirroring, ZFS, Encryprion and GPT labels.
While this is only the back-end of the installer, it can do unattended
scripted installations. In PC-BSD's world view, all installations are
scripted and all the front-end does is write the script. As such, it
is useful in its own right.
This has been extensively tested over the past several releases of
PC-BSD. However, differences between that environment and FreeBSD
suggest there will be a period of shake-out while those differences
are discovered and corrected.
A text-based front-end is in the works. For the GUI-based front-end,
you can use the PC-BSD distribution.
Kris' BSDcan paper on pc-sysinstall is linked off his talk on the
BSDcan site:
http://www.bsdcan.org/2010/schedule/events/173.en.html
The man page is written by Josh Paetzel, and I wrote the Makefiles for
the FreeBSD integration. Kris wrote the rest.
This represents version r7010 in the PC-BSD repo.
http://svn.pcbsd.org/pcbsd/current/pc-sysinstall
Submitted by: kris@
Sponsored by: iX Systems
Features:
- configurable amount of days between scrubs (default value or per pool)
- do not scrub directly after pool creation (respects the configured
number of days between scrubs)
- do not scrub if a scrub is in progress
- tells how to see the status of the scrub
- tells how many days since the last scrub if it skips the scrubbing
- warns if a non-existent pool is specified explicitely
(default: no pools specified -> all currently imported pools are
handled)
- runs late in the periodic run to not slow down the other periodic daily
scripts
Discussed on: fs@
utilities and related support files for manual pages, which were previously
controlled by MAN. For POLA, the default depends on MAN, i.e., WITHOUT_MAN
implies WITHOUT_MAN_UTILS and WITH_MAN implies WITH_MAN_UTILS. This patch
is slightly improved by me from:
PR: misc/145212
FILESYSTEMS (the default early_late_divider):
1. Move sysctl to run first
2. Move as many BEFOREs to REQUIREs as possible.
3. Minor effect, move hostid_save from right before mdconfig to right
after.
A lot of the early scripts make use of sysctl one way or another so
running this first makes a lot of sense given that system-critical
values are often placed in sysctl.conf.
My original purpose for working on this was that while doing some
debugging on other stuff I noticed that the order of execution was
different in the first pass through the early scripts and the second.
In practice that doesn't matter because the scripts are not executed the
second time. However this _can_ result in problems if the difference in
the rcorder moves a script from the late section to the early section in
the second pass (which would mean the script would not get executed).
So, I wanted to make the order of execution of the scripts in the early
section more deterministic.
In the course of debugging the ordering problems I noticed that moving
the BEFOREs to REQUIREs prevented the changes in order from the first
pass to the second pass without having to make any substantial changes.
(Of course it's no secret that I think BEFORE should be avoided as much
as possible, but this is a good example of why.)
Reviewed by: silence on freebsd-rc@
MFC after: 8.1-RELEASE
wlan interfaces) from being automatically reloaded via devd shutdown
event handlers.
- Revert part of my previous changes to call ifn_stop on subinterfaces
when an interface is detached. It is better to destroy the interfaces
first so that an 'ifconfig foo0.blah down' doesn't result in ifconfig
auto-loading if_foo.ko. The ifconfig command will not be invoked if
foo0.blah is gone when ifn_stop() is called. Furthermore, it is not
necessary to explicitly invoke ifn_stop() after the subinterface is
destroyed as devd will already do that.
- Pass -n to ifconfig when destroying interfaces so that destroying a
cloned interface does not kldload any drivers.
Reviewed by: dougb
MFC after: 4 days
Starting something that wants input on login seems strange and can be
dangerous. In some configurations, causing output can be bad, but it is not
as dangerous.
I do not expect this msgs invocation to be uncommented often.
PR: conf/96015
MFC after: 4 days
named_chrootdir IS set, named-checkconf fails because it
cannot find the conf file. Fix this by making checkconf a
variable that includes "-t $named_chrootdir" as needed.
Notice of the bug and suggested direction for the fix from [1].
Using required_files for named.conf is overkill ever since
I added the named-checkconf call, so rather than update the
logic to handle the case described above, remove it. This
also handles the case where named_chroot_autoupdate IS set
but the symlink doesn't exist yet.
PR: conf/145904
Submitted by: J R Matthews