Changes are:
- rpc.umntall is called at the right places now in /etc/rc*
- rpc.umntall timeout has been lowered from two days (too high) to one
- verbose messages in rpc.umntall have been clarified
- kill double entries in /var/db/mounttab when rpc.umntall is invoked
- ${early_nfs_mounts} has been removed from /etc/rc
- patched mount(8) -p to print different pass/dump values for ufs filesystems.
(last patch recieved from dan <bugg@bugg.strangled.net>)
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mbr@imp.ch>, dan <bugg@bugg.strangled.net>
NICs. (Finally!) The PCMCIA, ISA and PCI varieties are all supported,
though only the ISA and PCI ones will work on the alpha for now.
PCCARD, ISA and PCI attachments are all provided. Also provided an
ancontrol(8) utility for configuring the NIC, man pages, and updated
pccard.conf.sample. ISA cards are supported in both ISA PnP and hard-wired
mode, although you must configure the kernel explicitly to support the
hardwired mode since you have to know the I/O address and port ahead
of time.
Special thanks to Doug Ambrisko for doing the initial newbus hackery
and getting it to work in infrastructure mode.
PC Card (PCMPC100). the entry was one character
short...the final ")" was missing.
Pointed out by: Chris D. Faulhaber - jedgar@fxp.org - jedgar@FreeBSD.org
of the SOA 'minimum' field. Now it's necessary to define $TTL seperately
to shut it up. Bind does reasonable things by default but it's annoying
still.
PR: 15834
Submitted by: Daniel Lewart <d-lewart@uiuc.edu>
in the 3.x branch. Also remove the dependency on /usr to find the
boot address/interface.
Mostly-submitted-abd-tested-by: MIHIRA Sanpei Yoshiro <sanpei@sanpei.org>
Improve the internal mknod() to understand being passed an (optional)
user:group specification.
Don't apply root:wheel to nodes explicitly anywhere, it's the default.
Remove an odd looking uucp:wheel assignment, as it's inconsistent with
all the other tty?? devices.
5in HD 2 heads, 77 cylinders, 8 sectors/track, 1024 bytes/sector
5/3.5in DD 2 heads, 80 cylinders, 8 sectors/track, 512 bytes/sector
Meanings of the rogrammer-readeble fd name were explained by Brian
Fundakowski Feldman and Peter Wemm in hackers list and NOKUBI
Hirotaka.
Reviewed by: nyan
Fixed some style bugs for cam (superflous umask and missing newline).
Fixed bogons for apm. The pattern "apm*" matched too many things; apm
and apmctl were both made twice by `MAKEDEV all'. Hopefully no one
depends on `MAKEDEV apm0' making apm or on `MAKEDEV apm' making apmctl.
more comprehensive. Previously, at least colour changes were not
applied to all virtual consoles.
PR: 15066
Reported by: Andy Farkas <andyf@speednet.com.au>
Submitted by: yokota
The current offical Sendmail Inc. version uses /var/mail/ and when we upgrade
our repository to that version, we will get the change. It is best to make
the path change in 4.0-R (which may not have the latest Sendmail Inc. version,
than to change in mid-4.x stream when we may upgrade.
Ok'ed by: Peter (quite a while ago)
The current offical Sendmail Inc. version uses /var/mail/ and when we upgrade
our repository to that version, we will get the change. It is best to make
the path change in 4.0-R (which may not have the latest Sendmail Inc. version,
than to change in mid-4.x stream when we may upgrade.
Ok'ed by: Peter (quite a while ago)
MAKEDEV can now run (with /sbin/chown and /bin/chgrp, still) without
any /usr. The default PATH for MAKEDEV is now "/sbin:/bin" to prevent
against further spammage of /usr programs in MAKEDEV. In the event
of an emergency, the variable "MAKEDEVPATH" can be used to replace
PATH, but I don't know what that emergency could be.
Let me know if you have any problems. I've tested it as well as
I could, which basically means everything except for RocketPorts.
Reviewed in principle by: peter
longer really suitable as a default to create the various /dev nodes
to be contained on the fixit floppy, since all our proud new devide
nodes finally made the fixit floppy run over...
So instead create a new target titled `fixit' which creates just the
dev nodes for a single unit per each default driver; whoever needs
more of them is free to create whatever he needs, perhaps after
killing unused nodes before. There were more than 700 /dev nodes on
the floppy before that action, and it's still around 350 now. I doubt
all the various /dev/ugen* entries are really useful on such a tool,
so people, please check, and if you feel like more could be eliminated
from that floppy, kill'em.
While i was at it, removed traces of ft(8) that still survived even
though the driver has long since been dead.
That's step #1. #2 will follow...
Currently we have a problem in that `dhclient' bails when configuring the
second interface as port 68 is already in use (by the `dhclient' started
for the first interface).
PR: 14810
Submitted by: n_hibma
same names:
rover# ls -l /dev/*wd0a
crw-r----- 1 root operator 3, 0 Nov 26 20:20 /dev/rwd0a
crw-r----- 1 root operator 3, 0 Nov 26 20:20 /dev/wd0a
Notice: Over time, no earlier than FreeBSD 5.0, the "r*" names may
be discontinued. A fair number of programs and scripts need to
(un)learn some tricks before then.
This will take no effect until you either run MAKEDEV by hand or
reinstall your system.
WARNING: Kernels older than approx November 22 will not be happy
about a /dev created with MAKEDEV after this commit. Please update
your /kernel.good etc.
rundown script 'reboot' or 'single'. ISO support (which never
worked) has been removed from mount_nfs. mount_nfs and umount
now use mounttab, which allows umntall to work properly. The
rc scripts now call umntall as appropriate.
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
/dev/usb. The actions are specified in the file /etc/usbd.conf.
usbd.c:
- Add event queue (/dev/usb) handling.
- Add comments
- Clean up code some more
usbd.8:
- Update manpage for the new command line flags
- Remove a duplicate FreeBSD tag from it).
usbd.conf, usbd.conf.5, Makefile:
- Add the usbd.conf configuration file and the man page for it.
NOTE: MAKEDEV already creates the /dev/usb device tree node, no change
needed there anymore.
daemons started. Move log_in_vain option there. It is needed to avoid
lot of connections to port 80 logged on production WWW server prior
Apache started from /usr/local/etc/rc.d
Been in production for 3 years now. Gives Instant Frame relay to if_sr
and if_ar drivers, and PPPOE support soon. See:
ftp://ftp.whistle.com/pub/archie/netgraph/index.html
for on-line manual pages.
Reviewed by: Doug Rabson (dfr@freebsd.org)
Obtained from: Whistle CVS tree
...
recover vi
msgs/bounds
update MOTD
rc.{arch}
rc.devfs
rc.local
$local.startup
securelevel
The motive behind this is to delay rc.{arch} as long as possible,
as it loads the screensaver, which kills the splash screen.
But at the same time, it can't be done after rc.devfs, as
that might depend on arch specific actions. rc.local and local.startup
also should come after these, and securelevel must be last of all.
this is no longer the right way to start Vinum unless you are doing some
kind of maintenance, and that's not the sort of thing that would go into
rc.conf.
case instead of test where appropriate, since case allows case is a sh
builtin and (as a side-effect) allows case-insensitivity.
Changes discussed on freebsd-hackers.
Submitted by: Doug Barton <Doug@gorean.org>
* All variables are now embraced: ${foo}
* All comparisons against some value now take the form:
[ "${foo}" ? "value" ]
where ? is a comparison operator
* All empty string tests now take the form:
[ -z "${foo}" ]
* All non-empty string tests now take the form:
[ -n "${foo}" ]
Submitted by: jkh
should be used from now on for anything security but not auth-related.
Included are updates for all relevant manpages and also to /etc files,
creating a new /var/log/security. Nothing in the system logs to
/var/log/security yet as of the time of this commit.
Reviewed by: rgrimes, imp, chris
respectively logging and dropping ICMP REDIRECT packets.
Note that there is no rate limiting on the log messages, so log_redirect
should be used with caution (preferrably only for debugging purposes).
Prompted by docs/12343, in which people seemed to get a little confused.
The original text in the file said:
[...]
# By default we use COM1 as our serial console port *if* we're going to use
# a serial port as our console at all. (0x3E8 = COM2)
#
#BOOT_COMCONSOLE_PORT= 0x3F8
[...]
From what I can make out, some people have assumed that means that if
they just uncomment the BOOT_COMCONSOLE_PORT then it will use COM2:
These same people then assume that "0x3F8" on that line is a typo for
"0x3E8".
What it actually means is that if you uncomment the line then the default
stays as "Ox3F8" (COM1:), and that you have to uncomment the line, *and*
change the value of the variable in order to use COM2:.
So I've made that a little bit clearer. I've also listed the hex values
for COM1: thru COM4:, snarfed from sys/isa/isareg.h.
PR: docs/12343
Submitted by: Bill Grunfelder <wjgrun@dippy.cyberwar.com>
Originally submitted by: Wayne Self <wself@cdrom.com>
Allow a ppp startup option in rc.conf.
Adjust sysinstall so that it appends to the end of ppp.conf
and uses the generated profile to start ppp in auto mode on
boot.
Submitted by: Josef L. Karthauser <joe@uk.FreeBSD.org>
example of their usage in the sample config. Merge the two examples
for the green internal auth service.
This commit failed the first time around because Brian beat me to the
punch on inetd.8 . I like my descriptions better and I'm pretty sure
Brian won't mind.
at least for now. I relegated the getcred sysctls to only root, but if
they're deemed to be "allowable" to export to users, I'll do so and
revert this change.
get a list of interfaces, and then automatically configure them if
${ifconfig_${ifn}} or /etc/start_if.${ifn} exists.
This makes it a lot easier to deal with machines that constantly change
their network configuration as you can leave ifconfig settings for all
the possible cards - just the ones that are present will be configured.
and set it to "/etc/pccard.conf.sample" in /etc/defaults/rc.conf.
Perhaps this default value can be inappropriate,
but I set to this value for the convenience of PC-card boot.flp users.
Please correct it if there are better solutions.
commentary. :) 3rd and final frob of this. Leave enough comments
behind that anyone running into trouble at least has some cited clues
on dealing with it and jump into the brave new world with uncommented
IANA port assignments.
twice to enable wrapping for internal wrapping as well. If the option is
not specified wrapping is turned off so that inetd will behave exactly
as it used to before TCP Wrappers was imported.
Change etc/defaults/rc.conf so as to encourage wrapping on new systems.
Clarify the use of TCP Wrappers in the IMPLEMENTATION NOTES of the
manual page.
Approved by: jkh
the old STREAM protocol has been obsoleted by "ST2" (RFC 1819)
Detected by: Andre Albsmeier <andre.albsmeier@mchp.siemens.de>
Suggested by: Matt Crawford <crawdad@fnal.gov>
after demand of two people and no objections:
- included all registered protocols, so it's now a useful reference as well
- renamed title to reflect new content
(deleted word "IP", since all registered internet protocols are included now)
- corrected URL (file isn't hosted by iana.org anymore)
Do discard standard output from the sysctl for approxy_all, and echo
what this sysctl is doing in the usual way. This fix is probably
backwards. We should probably just use the standard sysctl output
in all cases (it needs to have a newline filtered out).
Echo what the sysctls for nfs_reserved_port_only and nfs_access_cache
are doing.
default.
Despite their name it doesn't keep TCP sessions alive, it kills
them if the other end has gone AWOL. This happens a lot with
clients which use NAT, dynamic IP assignment or which has a 2^32
* 10^-3 seconds upper bound on their uptime.
There is no detectable increase in network trafic because of this:
two minimal TCP packets every two hours for a live TCP connection.
Many servers already enable keepalives themselves.
The host requirements RFC is 10 years old, and doesn't know about
the loosing clients of todays InterNet.