when attepmting to add certain types of routes. This problem
only manifested itself in the presence of unconfigured point-to-point
interfaces.
Noticed by: Chuck Cranor <chuck@maria.wustl.edu>
of line.
Also, fix existing bug in ethers.byname, it was passing an unknown option
to yppush. This appears to have been a cut/paste slip intended for a
$(DBLOAD) command above it.
the FreeBSD Makefile.yp structure by me. This allows you to have a single
amd map for all machines in a cluster.
In /etc/sysconfig, it would look something like:
amdflags="-p -a /net -c 1800 -l syslog /host amd.host"
Saves about 280 butes of source per driver, 56 bytes in object size
and another 56 bytes moves from data to bss.
No functional change intended nor expected.
GENERIC should be about one k smaller now :-)
the obsolete() function to convert dump-style args to getopt-style
args doesn't check to see that 'f' really has an argument following
the option string in argv[1].
Submitted-By: jmacd
there is no target to make.
% make
make: make: no target to make.
%
Beause the function Punt() in main.c takes care of leading 'make:' and
trailing newline, so, there is no need to pass explicitly.
Submitted by: enami@ba2.so-net.or.jp
Obtained from: NetBSD GNATS
The old system had the misfeature that the only policy it could implement
was tail-drop; the new IF_ENQ_DROP macro/function makes it possible
to implement more sophisticated queueing policies on a system-wide
basis. No code actually uses this yet (although on my machine
I have converted the ethernet and (polled) loopback to use it).
with theirs (change the -I option to -s (but leave -I in for backwards compat.)
Also eliminate an make sane some magic numbers, and fix a small bug where we'd
send to an unopened socket.
Reviewed by: wollman
Obtained from: NetBSD
inspired by SunOS version of mount which uses option -p to
indicate that the mount information should be printed in fstab
format.
This is a neat way to create a new fstab file to use later when
one has modified the mount points or mount options or added or
removed mount some mount points. You just type
mount -p > /etc/fstab.new
and there is your new fstab file ready to be used though you
will of course have to add any necessary noauto flags manually.
[Committers note: This also seems to do the wrong thing for AMD
mounts, but in the more average case this is a nifty feature nonetheless
and one can always edit the bogus entries out]
Submitted-By: Jukka Ukkonen <jau@jau.csc.fi>
#ifdef DIAGNOSTIC case, and a warning only otherwise.
People who want them to break into the debugger can always set the
breakpoint explicitly. The existing behaviour was a misfeature from
the beginning, in the (wrong) assumption that the SCSI controller must
always be of essential importance to the entire system.
make it more intelligible, improve the partially bogus locking, and
allow for a ``quick re-acquiration'' from a pending release of timer 0
that happened ``recently'', so it was not processed yet by clkintr().
This latter modification now finally allows to play XBoing over
pcaudio without losing sounds or getting complaints. ;-) (XBoing
opens/writes/closes the sound device all over the day.)
Correct locking for sysbeep().
Extensively (:-) reviewed by: bde
Discourage the use of the EXB-2501 by now, and slightly improve the
formatting for this entry.
Correct some minor oddities for the Tandberg entries based on my input
data.
Minor addition to the <!-- tech> section for QIC.
RCS cannot deal with duplicate tags; the extra one always becomes
inaccessible and useless.
This will prevent the common mistake of specifying the same name
for the vendor tag and the release tag. The FreeBSD CVS repository
already contains zillions of files with this error. We don't need
any more of them.
of this patch, which had not actually been reviewed by Joerg or Paul!
(I'll better stop committing files after midnight ...)
I'm now commiting the latest code, which has been reported to work.
Minor correction to the previous commit message for this file:
The first PCI Lance in a system will get a name of lnc1, the second
will be known as lnc2 and so on. An arbitrary number of cards is
supported in a system ...
before attaching. Without this fix, 3c579(EISA) never make
any H/W inturrupt.
Reviewed by: "Justin T. Gibbs" <gibbs@freefall.freebsd.org>, nao@sbl.cl.nec.co.jp and owner-current on mailing list ;-)
Submitted by: amurai@spec.co.jp, nao@sbl.cl.nec.co.jp