Grrr. If the dbhash routines weren't grossly overengineered I wouldn't
even need to do this! :-(
Also now export the hash_stats routine. Manpage coming RSN - I promise.
New variables:
PATCH_SITES: patch equivalent of MASTER_SITES, overridable with
. MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE.
PATCHFILES: Additional files to fetch and give to patch before
. applying the ones in patches/patch-*. If name ends
. with ".gz" or ".Z", it will be piped through zcat first.
Plus PATCH_DIST_STRIP and PATCH_DIST_ARGS that serve the same functions
as PATCH_STRIP and PATCH_ARGS for patches in patches/patch-*.
In the documentation and echo messages, I used the term "distributed
patches" and "FreeBSD patches" to refer to ${PATCHFILES} and patches/patch-*.
If you can come up with better names, by all means go ahead and fix them.
"grep PATCH /usr/ports/*/*/Makefile" reveals seven ports (mule, jless,
jtcl, jtk, dgd, less, color_xterm, gee I wonder why I'm the one who
implemented this) that can benefit from this. I'm now diving headlong
into /usr/ports to fix their Makefiles.
installation script, DEINSTALL for the deinstallation script, and
REQ for the requirement script, will be added with appropriate
flags to PKG_ARGS if they exist under pkg/.
you to push the same host into its NFS export lists twice, but mountd
tries to do it anyway. This means that putting:
/some_file_system -ro host1 host1
in your /etc/exports file causes an error. This is bogus: mountd should be
smart enough to ignore the second instance of host1. This can be a problem
in some configurations that use netgroups. For example, each host in my
netgroups database is has two entries:
startide (startide,-,) (startide.ctr.columbia.edu,-,)
When mountd sees this, it tries to put startide.ctr.columbia.edu into the
export list *twice*. Just listing 'startide' /etc/exports list will also
screw up because mountd will try to resolve the netgroup 'startide' instead
of the hostname 'startide.'
My solution is watch for duplicate entries in get_host() and mark them
as grouptype GT_IGNORE, which do_mount() will now cheefully throw away.
This is a bit of a kludge, but it was the least obtrusive fix I could
come up with.
Also silenced a compiler warning: arguments passwd to xdr_long() should
be u_long, not int. :)
merged cache changes, and figure it out based on the B_VMIO buffer flag.
Fixes a problem where delayed write VMIO buffers would sometimes get
recopied into kernel-alloced memory.
Submitted by: John Dyson
use it. :-)
It now explicitly requires the specification of a directory to import
from, either as an argument to the script, or by asking the user about
it. (Previously, it implicitly used `.', like cvs import does.)
Also implemented an option `-n', which does essentially the same like
the overall CVS option `-n': show only what would have been done,
don't do any commitment. Note that since the modules' database is
checked out in place (and not commited back), it will erroneously be
reported as to be imported, too:
cvs import: Importing /home/ncvs/ports/foobar/foo/modules
I ports/foobar/foo/modules/CVS
N ports/foobar/foo/modules/modules
This is an unwanted side-effect, but gives the user the option to see
if the `ed' magic did the right thing when editing modules/modules.
Rod, can you please check the function ``checktag'' in the script if it
will be restritctive enough?
Report floppy/tape units on seperate lines as fdX:/ftX: to correct lots of
ways the current scheme failed to end the output with \n.
Add controller and/or drive designator to the fron of several messages
that come from this drive. [It's not fun to track down driver messages
using grep over the source tree.]
Reviewed by: joerg
before the rest of the system daemons are brought up and *after* the
network interfaces have been configured.
Also fix one other potential problem: the NIS services need to be started
relavively early since some of the other daemons might need them. The
automounter is a good example: if you use amd with NIS-based maps, you'd
better have NIS running before you start it. :) I think mountd might
need it too, now that netgroups can be read via NIS as well.
Forms now have their own local bindings table so that anything
declared within a form is local to that form. This means you can
have fields of the same name in different forms.
Added inlined attribute setting for strings e.g. "This is \bold bold"
Added entry and exit functions for fields.