Turn this behavior off using '-Q'. This makes '-v' useless other than as
an ICMP-sniffer, which tcpdump is better at anyway.
Print out another couple of ICMP messages, and fix the printing of the
original packet (mostly byte order problems).
substitute.
(2) Bring the *_DEPENDS section up to the current state. Explain that
the pathname in the "path:dir" pair can be a full pathname if you
want a port to depend on something that isn't executable or an
executable that's not expected to be in the user's search path
(like /usr/local/libexec). Also, change the LIB_DEPENDS example
to use jpeg, tcl-7.3's appropriateness as an example is quite
outdated at this point. ;)
Here are the diffs for libc_r to get it one step closer to P1003.1c
These make most of the thread/mutex/condvar structures opaque to the
user. There are three functions which have been renamed with _np
suffixes because they are extensions to P1003.1c (I did them for JAVA,
which needs to suspend/resume threads and also start threads suspended).
I've created a new header (pthread_np.h) for the non-POSIX stuff.
The egrep tags stuff in /usr/src/lib/libc_r/Makefile that I uncommented
doesn't work. I think its best to delete it. I don't think libc_r needs
tags anyway, 'cause most of the source is in libc which does have tags.
also:
Here's the first batch of man pages for the thread functions.
The diff to /usr/src/lib/libc_r/Makefile removes some stuff that was
inherited from /usr/src/lib/libc/Makefile that should only be done with
libc.
also:
I should have sent this diff with the pthread(3) man page.
It allows people to type
make -DWANT_LIBC_R world
to get libc_r built with the rest of the world. I put this in the
pthread(3) man page. The default is still not to build libc_r.
also:
The diff attached adds a pthread(3) man page to /usr/src/share/man/man3.
The idea is that without libc_r installed, this man page will give people
enough info to know that they have to build libc_r.
hline() to draw the window split rather than fudging it with dashes.
This causes the line to be drawn in line-draw characters if the terminal
description has them.
Suggested by: ache
Always display IPX network number in decimal (industry standard).
Decode other PPP protocol types too.
Submitted by: peter, pst, John Hay <jhay@mikom.csir.co.za>