does bad things to /etc/make.conf in certain situations. Also
soften the "don't install crypto from the USA!" messages since,
except for RSA (which is still noted), that's not so true anymore.
build process in too many cases. Adding mtree to bootstrap-tools
to solve this breaks the upgrade path because mtree needs a
libc that has strtofflags and fflagstostr.
kernel config file.
- Add WORLD_FLAGS and KERNEL_FLAGS so you can build world and kernel with
extra make options such as -jX to speed up release builds.
- When building kernels, allow their hints to tag along, and use this to
install hints onto the boot floppy. Since the boot floppy doesn't load
loader.4th, we have to change device.hints to strip comments and change
each line to an explicit set command.
1. Correct FTP site for 4.0-stable snapshots and delete sentence
fragment immediately following.
[ not applicable to HEAD ]
2. Add FDDI section to table of contents (see #5 below) and add
one line of whitespace.
3. In userland section, document csh->tcsh, more->less, and
colorized ls.
4. In Ethernet section, do:
s/gigabit ethernet/Gigabit Ethernet/
s/fast ethernet/Fast Ethernet/
s/ethernet/Ethernet/
5. Pull DEC DEFPA/DEFEA *FDDI* cards out of the *Ethernet* section
and into their own second-level section.
6. Add missing period in section header in ATM section.
7. Tweak upgrading sectio with some new text, not sure if this is
much better though.
8. Add a blurb about the -stable mailing list.
[ changed to -current list in HEAD ]
PR: 20015
Submitted by: Bruce A. Mah <bmah@cisco.com>
the building of the crunched binary.
I'll add examples when I add the post-include mechanism, since the
crunch.mk environment stomps on the pre-included crunch.inc's variables
at the moment.
objects, to simplify working with PicoBSD.
Add the ability to put make instructions in crunch.inc to pass to the
build process.
Now explicitly make the objects in our own object tree, since we want to
build the objects with our own defines, and allow this to occur in a
common object tree for all PicoBSD builds, if required. This is
controlled by the COMM_OBJ variable, for those who don't want this -
setting it to /usr/obj again will just pick up the objects from your
last make buildworld, as before.
for read-only src tree.
While I'm there:
1) Use kgzip, not kzip, since kzip certainly doesn't make bootable
kernels anymore. loader still isn't built separately, let alone without
forth support. This needs to be fixed.
2) Expand the mount/vnconfig examples to be the defacto way of making
sure the filesystems are mounted, unmounted, or not configured. This
needs more work.
3) quieten the build substantially, so errors are more prominent
4) Start of '-j' ability. Current style isn't quite in the correct
dependency format for this, but obvious mistakes (changing directories
in main shell) are fixed.
Approved by: grog, dwhite, luigi (no objections to me doing a makeover)
over flowing its britches. So remove all ppbus bits except those for PLIP
(untested), and all USB bits as SRM does not know what USB is. Also remove
/dev/random as I don't think we need it just for whacking bits onto a disk.
Approved by: JKH
IPv6 configuration is only done by rtsol. Does someone really
need manual configuration? :-)
You can specify IPv6 DNS server as well.
We have only one server ftp7.jp.freebsd.org that speaks IPv6
in this time. ftp7.jp speaks IPv4 as well and also listed as
Japan #7.
Approved by: jkh
- Add a note about supporting USB out of the box during installs and
beyond.
- Add a note about the changes to the i386 bootstrap to work around the
1024 cylinder problem. Note that boot0 is now 2 sectors long.
Reminded by: kkenn
controller chip. This chip is currently being used on the NetGear
FA312-TX adapter, which I guess is a replacement for the FA310-TX
(PNIC-based).
I added support for this chip by modifying the sis driver since
the SiS 900 and the NS DP83815 have almost the same programming
interface (the RX filter programming and PHY access methods are
different, but the general configuration, DMA scheme and register
layout are identical).
I would have had this done a lot sooner, but getting the damn MAC
address out of the EEPROM proved to be more complicated than expected.
rc and login.conf files from the /etc directory on the floppy.
This prevents the overwrite yes/no prompt from occuring in gzip.
(some PicoBSD disks use gzip and some use minigzip, so the gzip -f flag (force)
is not an option. minigzip has a different meaning for the -f flag.}