Don't gratuitously pipe thru a cat(1) if NODOCCOMPRESS.
Only create _stamp.extra when necessary.
Get rid of SOELIMPP and OBJS.
Use Groff version of soelim(1); we need its -I option
for the following to work.
Don't needlessly chdir to SRCDIR. Only a few documents
need CD_HACK, and those that need it either use refer(1)
or .PSPIC macro which internally uses the .psbb call.
The closing comment is required only for long conditionally defined
code sections, with the exception of lint cases. Attempt to document
also the logic for using '!' before the SOMETIMESSOMETHGINGHERE.
The goal of these comments is to make complex cases more
comprehensible, not to require them in all cases. The rules here are
derived from behavior used in 90+% of the kernel source code.
Reviewed by and discussed with: jhb, bde, mike
linking.
* Fix disorder in the SEE ALSO sections of aio_*(2).
* Remove unnecessary cross-references from the SEE ALSO sections of
aio_*(2); config(8), kldload(8) and kldunload(8) are cross-referenced
from aio(4).
* Remove the KERNEL OPTIONS sections from aio_*(2), now that these
pages cross-reference aio(4), which contains suitable kernel linking
reference material.
associated with the TrustedBSD MAC Framework, as well as some credits
to developers and contributors.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
a server process bound to a wildcard UDP socket to select the IP
address from which outgoing packets are sent on a per-datagram
basis. When combined with IP_RECVDSTADDR, such a server process can
guarantee to reply to an incoming request using the same source IP
address as the destination IP address of the request, without having
to open one socket per server IP address.
Discussed on: -net
Approved by: re
which may surprise developers coming from Solaris, or other platforms
which have a similar interface, but slightly different rules.
Reviewed by: jhb, ru
to creating the tags file using ctags(1). Defaults to "gtags".
Made GTAGSFLAGS and HTAGSFLAGS overrideable, added CTAGSFLAGS.
Folded bsd.prog.mk version of `tags' into bsd.dep.mk.
PR: bin/42852
o describe additional argument in driver callbacks
o describe flow-control mechanism for processing crypto requests
o remove old cruft
o remove openbsd-specific cruft
o fixup some references
o yada yada ...
Fix the "@gprel relocation against dynamic symbol xxx" linker error.
Variables defined in the link unit and small enough to be put in the
short data section will have a gp-relative access sequence (using the
@gprel relocation). It is invalid to have @gprel relocations in shared
libraries, because they are to be resolved by the static linker and
not the dynamic linker. The -fpic option will cause @ltoff relocations
for @gprel relocations, but the side-effects are untested (if any).
Instead, disable/eliminate the short data section to achieve the same.
One bug fixed: Use getmicrouptime() to trigger reseeds so that we
cannot be tricked by a clock being stepped backwards.
Express parameters in natural units and with natural names.
Don't use struct timeval more than we need to.
Various stylistic and readability polishing.
Introduce arc4rand(void *ptr, u_int len, int reseed) function which
returns a stream of pseudo-random bytes, observing the automatic
reseed criteria as well as allowing forced reseeds.
Rewrite arc4random() in terms of arc4rand().
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
In "nroff" mode, italic font renders as an underlined text, which
makes it indistinguishable from the bold text on color monitors
(cons25 terminal type), yet it requires the less(1)'s -R option.
(Refer to the new grotty(1) manpage for details.)
So turn off the color support for now (when generating catpages),
until we figure out what do we do with this new feature. I have
a patch for grotty(1) that tells it to use the "reverse video"
attribute to render the italic font. Once this is accepted, we
can turn color support back on (if there won't be any objections
from the community).
This reduces the size of GENERIC's text space by 73999 bytes (about 2%).
The bloat is from approximately 3437 strings longer than 31 characters
being padded to a 32-byte boundary.