With a keymap with accent key definitions loaded to syscons, you press
an accent key followed by a regular letter key to produce an accented
letter. Press an accent key followed by the space bar to get the
accent letter itself.
Code is based on the ideas and work by jmrueda@diatel.upm.es and
totii@est.is.
PR: i386/4016
- Added keywords for accent (dead) keys: dgra, dacu, dcir, dtil...
- Recognize accent map definitions.
<accent_map_definition> ::= <accent_key_name> <accent_char> <accent_map>
<accent_key_name> ::= dgra | dacu | dcir | dtil | dmac | dbre | ddot |
duml | dsla | drin | dced | dapo | ddac | dogo |
dcar
<accent_map> ::= <map_entry>
| <map_entry> <accent_map>
<map_entry> ::= ( <regular_letter_char> <accented_char> )
- Use ioctls PIO_DEADKEYMAP and GIO_DEADKEYMAP to set and get the accent
key map table in syscons.
- Made the output for the -L option more intelligible and look like
initializers in kbdtables.h.
- Reorganized print functions in order to print the accent key map.
o Allow a forth argument in ppp.secret, specifying a new
label. This gives control over which section of
ppp.link{up,down} is used based on the authenticated user.
o Support random address ranges in ppp.secret (not just in ppp.conf).
o Add a AUTHENTICATING INCOMING CONNECTIONS section to the man page.
o Add a bit more about DEFLATE in the man page.
o Fix the incorrect "you must specify a password in interactive
mode" bit of the manual.
o Space things in the man page consistently.
o Be more precice about where you can use MYADDR, HISADDR and INTERFACE
in the "add" command documentation.
not in -auto mode isn't a good idea, and that the
add should be done in ppp.linkup instead.
Change "add 0 0 HISADDR" to "add default HISADDR". It's
more intuitive.
interactive mode.
Use `netfd' in fcntl() and tc[gs]etattr() calls rather than
the hard coded descriptor 0.
Use _FILENO constants from unistd.h
This un-breaks things after my recent `close(0)' in interactive
mode.
Close STDIN_FILENO, and open _PATH_TTY O_RDONLY as `netfd'. This
has the effect of allowing `show route' to output more than about
a page of data (on FreeBSD, not OpenBSD....). I have no idea why,
except that it was a direct consequence of the tcsetattr() in
TtyCommandMode(). My previous fix (closing descriptor 0) `fixed'
this because all calls to tcsetattr() failed :-(
RTM_CHANGE if the RTM_ADD fails with an EEXIST.
Allow "delete! dst" (note the ``!'') to silently
fail if the RTM_DELETE fails with an ESRCH.
Also, make the ESRCH and EEXIST error conditions
more understandable to the casual observer.
interrupted with a SIGALRM. In fact, select() sets the
passed time to zero, making the previous implementation
terminate always after 1/10th of a second !
Also, deal with someone changing the clock while we're
sleeping (and restart the whole sleep).
Dangers pointed out by: Theo de Raadt <deraadt@cvs.openbsd.org>
When CCP is originally negotiated, the only thing we can be
sure about is that we've started adding data to the inflate
dictionary either before or at the same time as the peer. This
is ok, 'cos DEFLATE is a `sliding window' compressor.
Show the IP range (if specified) in "show ipcp".
Close unused descriptors 0 and 2 in interactive mode.
Pass (size_t *) rather than (int *) to sysctl().
Don't read(fd, buffer, 0) and think ppp has closed the
connection when `buffer' is full, instead, flush most of
buffer to the terminal and read() for a reasonable length.
This fixes "show route" when there's more than 2k of
routing output.
Based on the report from Dave Bodenstab.
- Turn off PnP COM device enumeration procedure if the user explicitly
specifies a protocol type with the "-t" option.
- Accept "-t auto". Now the user may entirely omit the "-t" option
in the command line, or specify "-t auto" in order to make moused
detect an appropriate protocol type automatically. In the
previous version, moused did so only if the "-t" option is absent
in the command line. ("-t auto" won't disable PnP COM device
enumeration.)
- Updated the man page.