language-dependant SGML catalogs (in ${LANG_CODE}/share/sgml) and also
use a default.dsl stylesheet similar to what the rest of the DocProj
documents use.
Requested by: hrs, Alex Kapranoff <kapr@acm.org>
Reviewed by: hrs, dd
MFC after: 2 days
# I have deliberately not mentioned the kernel compile directory move;
# people using buildworld aren't affected, and those that aren't had
# better be reading cvs-all and/or src/UPDATING.
NO_SENDMAIL flag if set. The whole NO_FOO mechanism in /usr/src
is pretty bogus and needs to be re-examined in the context of a
larger argument about modularity, but that's something for another
time.
Submitted by: Peter Pentchev <roam@orbitel.bg>
notes build. Instead of having doc.relnotes.mk make a guess, hardcode
quite a bit (but as little as possible) in Makefile.inc's sprinkled
strategicly throughout the tree. This has the advantage of actually
working properly (which is a Good Thing(tm)), and the disadvantages of
more files in the repository and more hardcoded paths (which are both
Bad Things(tm)).
I get a link error on in6addr_<something> and i cannot find the
symbol in any of the libraries. It might be my mistake, but in any
case the crunched binary would overflow the floppy, so...
This applies to -current only.
Make sure hints are statically compiled into the kernel,
because the bootloader is not available in picobsd and so the
hints file cannot be found at run time.
(This is kind of inconvenient if you have to handle non PnP devices,
but fortunately these days non-PnP ISA cards are disappearing...)
This must have to do with the use of devfs in -CURRENT, but i
have no idea when the devfs is actually mounted (is it a
side effect of mount -t nonfs or what ?) and when /dev/fd0c becomes
available.
For the time being, let's use this hack. Once I understand how devfs
works, this can be reverted back to the previous value, and also the
part of the build script which creates device entries can be nuked.
This is for -current only.
better place to handle dependencies.
Make another step at helping cross-compiling: when the user specifies
an alternate source tree, the script takes care of creating include
files and libraries for the new tree.
Furthermore, build and use a version of the "config" program which
matches the new sources.
It takes a long time to create libraries, and it might even not do
the right thing at once, there might be some dependencies that i
have forgotten. At any rate, with this code i have been able to
build a working picobsd image using -CURRENT sources on -STABLE
MFC after: 3 days