freaks me out. But it turns out we might be able to generalize
a few of the other things RE uses to assemble the package trees
for releases if the DVDs use a naming theme close to what is used
for the CDROMS (disc1, disc2, etc). So change the name to dvd1.
Hopefully this way src/release/scripts/{package-split.py,package-trees.sh}
can be generalized instead of copied-and-hacked.
MFC after: 5 days
or not to build a tree used for the creation of a DVD image. If that is
enabled set up a DVD tree by installing everything we normally install
to the individual CDROM trees into the one DVD tree. The result is one
image with all the install bits, livefs bits, and doc bits suitable for
burning to a DVD instead of CDROM.
Enable building the DVD for amd64 and i386.
MFC after: 1 week
- Add support for .Fx, just in case somebody starts using it.
- Only add the arch information to the first para per manual page.
This improves output for axe(4), and generally seems to make sense
(I hope).
- Remove an unneeded line for non-compat mode.
This removes some vertical whitespace in the output.
Whitespace was intentionally not fixed in the SGML for the related
lists, to make the actual change more clear. This file is in need of
a major whitespace cleanup anyway.
complains about "Malformed numbers" while unpacking the dists and
what winds up on the disk isn't correct. Use this as an opportunity
to switch over to bsdcpio since at this point we don't even build
and install the gnu cpio by default. Note sysinstall needed to be
tweaked a bit (dropping tape block size setting) because it seems
bsdcpio doesn't do anything with block sizes, at least as far as
reading from archives goes. That wasn't really a problem since
installations from tape have been broken for a while and the rest
of sysinstall's tape support code will be removed shortly.
mininal set of ports required to make the docs. However,
we also need ports/sysutils/cdrtools in order to make the
ISO images. When a platform doesn't have packages, the
release will fail in that case. Add ports/sysutils/cdrtools
to RELEASEPORTSMODULE for the DOMINIMALDOCPORTS case to
handle the NOPORTS release build.
Note that this change doesn't try to handle the NOPORTS with
NODOC case. For we have NOPORTSATALL set and it seems wrong
to check out a ports module in that case.
- It is opt-out for now so as to give it maximum testing, but it may be
turned opt-in for stable branches depending on the consensus. You
can turn it off with WITHOUT_SSP.
- WITHOUT_SSP was previously used to disable the build of GNU libssp.
It is harmless to steal the knob as SSP symbols have been provided
by libc for a long time, GNU libssp should not have been much used.
- SSP is disabled in a few corners such as system bootstrap programs
(sys/boot), process bootstrap code (rtld, csu) and SSP symbols themselves.
- It should be safe to use -fstack-protector-all to build world, however
libc will be automatically downgraded to -fstack-protector because it
breaks rtld otherwise.
- This option is unavailable on ia64.
Enable GCC stack protection (aka Propolice) for kernel:
- It is opt-out for now so as to give it maximum testing.
- Do not compile your kernel with -fstack-protector-all, it won't work.
Submitted by: Jeremie Le Hen <jeremie@le-hen.org>
syscons(4) Colemak keyboard layout support,
jme(4) for JMicron JMC250 Gigabit/JMC260 Fast Ethernet controllers,
ISDN4BSD and netatm removal,
libarchive-based cpio added and GNU cpio renamed as gcpio,
jexec(8) -j option added,
ping6(8) return value is now the same as ping(8),
tar(1) --numeric-owner, -S, and -s options added, and
pkg_create(1) -n option added.
a bogus partition table and puts the file system on the whole
partition. geom_part doesn't expose the 'c' partition as it's an
artifact of the BSD label and not to be used. Secondly, gpart(8)
is the preferred tool for partitioning disks on ia64.
can't find fsck_4.2bsd because there was no fstab file saying what
filesystem type it is looking at so it got the filesystem type from
the disk's label. When that fails admins who haven't been in this
situation before are most likely to try "fsck -t ufs /dev/ad0s1a" because
ufs is the type used in fstab files on working systems but that also fails
complaining it can't find fsck_ufs.
This just sets it up so /stand in the MFS image (/sbin is a symlink
to /stand) includes hard links pointing fsck_4.2bsd and fsck_ufs to
fsck_ffs which is what is present in /sbin on installed systems.
Prodded by: obrien
MFC after: 1 day
shell. This would break them for floppy based fixit mode which still
seems to use /stand except that vi(1) and more(1) don't exist in /stand
on the fixit floppy so it really doesn't matter what these settings are
there. These paths work for CD-based fixit mode.
This is just "temporary" and on its way to 7.0-REL. I'm too chicken to
make what is probably the correct adjustment this close to release. It
seems /mnt2 is just a symbolic link, and stuff really gets mounted as
/dist. Adjusting paths to that for 8.X is probably the right thing to
do and I'll try that after 7.0 is done.
Noticed by: gallatin
MFC after: 1 day
binaries for the fixit floppy bin/ed/main.c causes a gcc warning
message about argc possibly being clobbered by longjmp or vfork.
We have threatened to ditch floppies for 8.0 but I don't want to
do quite that much rototilling yet so for now turn off -Werror while
building ed (and everything else) for the fixit floppy.
Thanks to jb for pointing out NO_WERROR.
is enabled). This saves around 80MB (for i386) on the ISO images.
Note that this is only from the install media, not the installed
system where the symbols are still installed, if part of the release.
Should anybody want the symbols which match disc1/livecd, they can
just be extracted from the kernel distribution files.
Reviewed by: kensmith
floppy types (in fact, we have only one left!)
Also cleanup some code, using || and && in some places, and
using "export VAR=value" instead of two separate lines.
- use proper make configuration for the build, using
${BINMAKE} as evaluated by ${VERSION}/src/Makefile
- remove -lmytinfo from crunch.conf
- remove support for login_access in tinyware/login
- remove "machine i386" from the kernel config file
It might actually be interesting to extend the script to do
a cross build for !i386 ...
MFC after: 3 days
- Mention tzdata2007h update. An in advance &merged; is
added so that we don't have to change this again when
it is actually MFC'ed.
Approved by: re (bmah)
unusability of OFW consoles. [1]
Try to use trademark entities where appropriate in the "Supported
Processors" section.
Submitted by: kris [1]
Approved by: re (implicitly)
- ng_h4(4) MPSAFE
- ng_ppp(4) MPSAFE + MFC
- zyd(4) added
- cpufreq(4) in GENERIC
Modified release notes:
- cached(8) renamed to nscd(8), also moved entry to now correct place
- Camellia is now supported in geli(8) as well
Approved by: re (blanket)
Updated release note: tzdata2007g [1].
[1] Technically I should remove the &merged; entity here but the commit has
a one-week MFC-after so I figure I can leave it this way for now.
Approved by: re (implicitly)
pointer to the installation chapter of the Handbook (it might be a
good idea to sprinkle a few more through this article).
De-emphasize the floppy disk part of installation media; it's
generally believed that most users install from CDROM or DVD
nowadays.
Use &arch.* entities where appropriate.
Bump copyright date while here.
Approved by: re (implicitly)
top-level release/doc directory. We were building in share/sgml first,
which caused us to autogenerate hardware notes entities in the wrong
format (we want to build these via ${RELNOTES_LANG}/hardware/Makefile,
in order to get the HWNOTES_MI variable).
Approved by: re (kensmith)
for quite some time. All relevant content has been moved to the
installation chapter of the FreeBSD Handbook, which will be the
single source of FreeBSD installation instructions.
In addition to removing redundancy, this change also removes the last
of the machine-dependent documents in the release documentation
set (the release notes and hardware notes were unified to produce
machine-independent documents).
Approved by: re (blanket for installation notes removal)
Nods from: blackend, brueffer, simon, trhodes
No objections on: doc@
Helpful hints from: blackend
floppies or ISO images). We retain the concept of MD
release documentation for now, although it's fairly unlikely
that we'll ever do this again.
Approved by: re (blanket for installation guide removal)
API change.
Modified release notes: Clarify architectures for nfe(4) note and
mention that it replaces nve(4) in i386/amd64 GENERIC [1].
Suggested by: Michael Plass [1]
Approved by: re (implicitly)
Add some more verbage with respect to jemalloc and resource limits [2].
Submitted by: delphij [1]
Collaboration with: jasone [2]
Approved by: re (implicit)
- tmpfs on i386,amd64
- gem(4) altq support
- AUDIT and SCTP in GENERIC
- FireWire MPSAFE
- netstat SCTP support
- dhclient RFC 3442 support (1)
Modified release notes:
- MFC markers: mxge(4) and netcat
- touch -A entry grammar fix (2)
- More manpage references used
Submitted by: Andrey V. Elsukov (1)
ceri (2)
Approved by: re (blanket)
/etc/rc.d/sendmail whether or not to run newaliases if the database
is missing or the aliases text file is newer than aliases.db.
In my opinion, the aliases file should never be automatically rebuilt.
The current text form could represent a work in progress. Therefore,
in FreeBSD 7.0, this new option will default to "NO". When this rc.d
change is MFC'ed, it will need to remain "YES" to maintain backward
compatibility.
PR: conf/86252
Approved by: re (kensmith)
MFC after: 3 days
- GCC SSP enabled by default
- X11BASE change
- touch -A
- fwip(4) and dcons(4) in GENERIC
- FireWire/dcons support in the i386/amd64 loader
Modified release notes:
- MFCs noted: newly supported ftpd RFCs, lagg(4), mpt(4) changes,
snd_atiixp(4) suspend/resume
- sa(8) entry moved to the correct place
- xorg 7.2 update
went away around the time of 5.0, when doing binary upgrades from
within sysinstall (at least from 4.X) was deemed hazardous due to the
huge differences between these two major versions.
It's much less risky now, and it's also high time that we mentioned
freebsd-update(8) too.