"use" and replaces it with equivalent inline code. The reason is that
Perl has some very nasty circular dependancies, and I am trying to
get the System Perl upgraded by one maintenance level.
The basic rule, until I can find a way to solve this, is that
the build tools MAY NOT use any library code; it must all be inline.
Describe new scale letter for sizes: 's' (sector) instead of 'b'
(block). Both mean 512 bytes, but 'b' is deprecated because it's
confusing.
Document log file and environment variables.
If no file name is specified, create one and edit it with the editor
specified in the EDITOR environment variable, by default vi.
vinum_help:
Update.
Fix typos in messages.
has been done. This name can be overridden by the value of the
VINUM_HISTORY environment variable.
Print dates in log file according to the variable VINUM_DATEFORMAT, by
default %e %b %Y %H:%M:%S.
If a drive has gone down and has dirty buffers associated with it,
we'll get a panic when we try to vn_close it. Check for this
situation and discard any buffers; they're toast anyway.
Only complain about usage count if DEBUG_WARNINGS is set.
check_drive:
Change parameter name from drivename to devicename.
Get the check for a referenced drive right.
If the partition isn't a vinum drive, set the last error to ENODEV.
vinum_scandisk:
Change parameter name from drivename [] to devicename [].
resource. Avoids useless interrupts occurring between the allocation
of the interrupt resource and the final initialisation of the
kernel. Cause of these interrupts is unknown (a resuming device?).
Add an emply MAIN__() function. This avoid an unresolved reference error
during link phase when using fortran subroutines with non-fortran 'main()'.
Obtained from: src/lib/libF77/MAIN.c rev 1.1 by jmz
* Don't buffer "Digesting..." output - flush it immediately.
* Increase the number of repetitions by a factor of 100, and the block size by
a factor of 10 so as to give meaningful results on modern machines (108
seconds on my P120, and ~26 seconds on a P-II 350).
PR: bin/10604
Submitted by: Stanislav Shalunov <shalunov@lynxhub.lz.att.com>
range attributes after they have been extracted from the master.
Hook up the i686 MP code to do this for each AP.
Be more careful about printing the default memory type for the i686.
Suggestions from: luoqi
in libstdc++.
Until I have a chance to look at what that problem is and to carefully consider
the upgrade issues of turning it back on at a later date if we leave it turned
off for any extended peroid of time.
"passwordtime" is what passwd(1) has actually been using. I suspect
passwordperiod was the original intent. I can't figure-out which,
if either, BSDi uses. If anyone knows...