used. ${LIBFL} is set to a weird value in an attempt to inhibit
its use, but only breaks properly in some contexts.
Fixed the usual style bugs for DPADD and LDADD (disorder, and += for the
initial assignment).
`make world' by about 14% here (down to 4490 seconds real on a
K6/233). Temporarily skip this optimization when building with
-j, since there are still many broken makefiles.
Fixed NOCLEANDIR option. Cleaning of `.depend' was broken.
Put -nostdinc in CFLAGS, not in CC, and don't override the default
CC. This fixes enforcing use of ${WORLDTMP}/usr/include.
Don't install library man pages in ${WORLDTMP}.
arguments are given.
Note that usage() and the manpage disagree...
PR: bin/6294
Suggested by: Ruslan Ermilov and Bruce Evans
Submitted by: Ruslan Ermilov (partly)
to free the suffix. I think, it is a very strange idea. (Or, maybe, it is a
POSIX requirement?) And it is done incorrectly. Apparently, it even don't
update the list of known suffixes (but it is an other bug).
PR: 4254, 4692, 4783
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Dmitrij Tejblum <dima@tejblum.dnttm.rssi.ru>
against the "master map" to get the list of mount point/amd map
correspondences, and using that list as command-line arguments to start
amd.
When I tried to do this with the existing /etc/rc* scripts, I found that
I couldn't do this by modifying only /etc/rc.conf: that file gets
sourced very early by /etc/rc, well before any networking functionality
is present, let alone NIS. Further, I wasn't able to figure out a way
to use various levels & types of quoting to defer evaluation of the
string to a point subsequent to NIS initialization.
As a result, I resorted to hacking /etc/rc.network -- but I did it in a
way that ought to be reasonably general, and avoid breakage for anyone
else.
PR: 6387
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: David Wolfskill <dhw@whistle.com>
Note odd `sigmask()' line in synopsis. `sigsetops(3)' is better suited
for `sigprocmask' and is already referenced from the manual page.
(`sigmask()' is useful for the older (& deprecated) `sigsetmask()' API).
PR: 6395
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Joseph Koshy <koshy@india.hp.com>
allowed external hosts to send packets to the 127.0.0.0/8 subnet on the
firewall host.
Renumber the lo0 rules to guarantee they appear first.
PR: 6406
Submitted by: Archie Cobbs <archie@whistle.com>
It is important that we keep the ability to send packets to a remote
server and that the packets come from our well-known port, also in
that case.
Reviewed by: peter, rgrimes.