update paths; and include everything in the "base" distribution.
The "games" distribution being optional made sense when there were more
games and we had small disks; but the "games-like" games were moved into
the ports tree a dozen years ago and the remaining "utility-like" games
occupy less than 0.001% of my laptop's small hard drive. Meanwhile every
new user is confronted by the question "do you want games installed" when
they they try to install FreeBSD.
The next steps will be:
2. Removing punch card (bcd, ppt), phase-of-moon (pom), clock (grdc), and
caesar cipher (caesar, rot13) utilities. I intend to keep fortune, factor,
morse, number, primes, and random, since there is evidence that those are
still being used.
3. Merging src/games into src/usr.bin.
This change will not be MFCed.
Reviewed by: jmg
Discussed at: EuroBSDCon
Approved by: gjb (release-affecting changes)
This makes a tiny percentage of entries in calendars ugly for latin1
users, but fixes them for UTF-8 users.
This badly needs a solution involving locale-dependent re-encoding.
noticed that a "whereis -qs qemu" matched the distfiles subdir of qemu
rather than /usr/ports/emulators/qemu.
It now ignores all dot entries in /usr/ports, plus all entries
starting with a capital letter (maintenance stuff like Templates, but
also includes subdir CVS), plus /usr/ports/distfiles which is simply a
magic name in that respect.
This is basically a ``C compilation'' of the former whereis.pl file,
employing the same algorithms, and aiming at being mostly
UI-compatible to the old (legally tainted) 4.3BSD whereis(1). In
comparision, the 4.4BSD-Lite version is just another variant of
which(1) only, where in particular the option to search for source
directories is sorely missing.
While i was at it, i added two more options which i contemplated doing
long since. -x will suppress the run of locate(1) to find sources
that could not be found otherwise, potentially saving a lot of time
(but obviously, risking to not find some sources that are well hidden
in the tree). -q will omit the leading name of the query, so in
particular, you can now do something like:
cd `whereis -qs ls`
I'd explicitly like to thank johan for his review which was quite a
bit more than an average review, including sending me a lot of diffs.
Reviewed by: johan
OpenBSD's implementation lacks -p, and we don't want to
support the option now, only to lose it if/when we later
switch to OpenBSD's implementation.
This functionality is provided by which(1).
Approved by: sheldonh (mentor)
intentional, this behaviour is far too obnoxious given the number of
filenames such as rpc.statd we have.
Submitted by: Chris Costello [3]chris@calldei.com (bin/11303)
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
Turn off error messages from locate(1), we can't do very much about
its database not being ok anyway at this time.
Closes PR # bin/2183: whereis returns environ...
the 4.3BSD command. Rewritten from scratch after the old man page,
taking account for the different situation with man pages and source
tree hierarchy (re: /usr/src/gnu) of the FreeBSD project.
Reviewed by: wosch (actually loooong time ago)