16384/2048.
Following recent discussions on the -arch mailing list, involving dillon
and mckusick, this change parallels the one made over a decade ago when
the default was bumped up from 4096/512.
This should provide significant performance improvements for most
folks, less significant performance losses for a few folks and
wasted space lost to large fragments for many folks.
For discussion, please see the following thread in the -arch archive:
Subject: Using a larger block size on large filesystems
The discussion ceases to be relevant when the issue of partitioning
schemes is raised.
have a USB mouse. Here's the deal on how this works: USB mouse have
moused run for them automatically by usbd so we don't need to setup moused
for them. We do need to setup moused for other mice though, so if the
user has a USB mouse, we don't need to do anything. Hence the wording
"Do you have a non-USB mouse installed?" for the question. The question
can be reworded as "Do you have a PS/2 or Serial mouse installed?" instead
if that is preferred.
(1) We don't need compat3x and compat4x as we build the bits on the proper
release now (vs. getting them from the XFree people).
(2) We handle the compat2x needs thru proper port dependancies now.
sysinstall will automatically expand the previous partition to take up
the freed up space. So you can 'D'elete /home and /usr will get the
combined space, or you can 'D'elete /tmp and /var will get the combined space.
This gives the user, developer, or lay person a huge amount of flexibility
in constructing partitions from an 'A'uto base. It takes only 3 or 4
keystrokes to achieve virtually any combination of having or not having
a /tmp and/or /home after doing an 'A'uto create.
Change 'A'uto creation of /var/tmp to 'A'uto creation /tmp, which should
be less controversial.
MFC after: 6 days
and SIGQUIT during shutdown", but rpc.umntall is also run at boot
time, so ignoring these signals is a really bad idea: it makes it
impossible to ^C the process as it waits for a server response. I
can't see any reason to block these signals during shutdown either.
MFC after: 3 days
defaults both in regards to the size of the partitions that are created
and in regards to safety and functional separation.
Still TODO: extend the previous partition to cover a deleted partition
if the previous partiton was auto-created, and supply some sort of
solution for /tmp.
Reviewed by: Just about everyone
Approved by: Nobody except maybe my pet mouse fred
Obtained from: God, so complain to HIM
MFC after: 1 week
of /etc/daily. Some time later, /etc/daily became a set of periodic(8)
scripts. Now, this evolution continues, and /etc/security has been
broken into periodic(8) scripts to make local customization easier and
more maintainable.
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: ru
for a remote print job. This change comes from OpenBSD (who got it from
Sebastian Krahmer of SuSE). In OpenBSD this avoids a tiny theoretical
security issue, but that security issue does not exist in FreeBSD's lpr
due to the changes which added 'ctl_renametf()' just before 4.4-release.
This change is still worth doing in our version, but it isn't fixing a
security issue.
MFC after: 4 days
It is still nessesary to supply the tracks as individual files, burncd
can't read .cue files yet, but now the infrastructure to do it is
present we just need a .cue file parser (hint hint)...
o prototype usage()
o move BUFSIZE define above the functions
o nuke externs that are defined in unistd.h
Approved by: rwatson
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
1) Use devfs to mount filesystems. If mounting devfs is fail,
fallback to old code.
2) When fscking filesystems, use 'fsck_ffs' explicitly. As a
result, we no longer need 'fsck' the wrapper program.
Reviewed by: jkh
Since userconfig feature is implemented by tweaking variables (hint.*)
with loader(8), we can put back an equivalent feature. Maybe the first
step for this is to commit yokota-san's patch (add userconfig command
for loader).
Approved by: jkh
to the routing socket.
The local address on a point-to-point interface is not actually a
gateway address - despite it appearing in the second column of
netstat -r's output. Providing a gateway to an RTM_CHANGE will
currently change the route's interface so that it's using the
specified gateway - not what we want.
Patiently explained to me by: ru
control-files will always start with 'cfA*'. It turns out that some
implementations of lpd (such as solaris) may send a control file which
starts with 'cfB*', or really 'cf<anyLetter>*'. Although such filenames
are very odd, we did used to accept them. This changes ctl_renametf to
work correctly with them, and fixes up 'lpc clean' to match.
PR: bin/32183
MFC after: 10 days
with the old behavior available via the -o option (it might still be
useful if one has many kernels and cares which messages came from
which). If the boot file is not used as the prefix, it is still
logged once at startup.
This change is prompted by the fact that the boot file is now much
longer ("/boot/kernel/kernel" vs. "/kernel"), which significanlty
bloats the syslogd output.
Reviewed by: peter
o remove extraneous extern's
o prototype functions
o combine multiple return (0)'s into a single return (0) at the
end of main()
Approved by: rwatson
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
'l' ("plain text which includes control characters") is somewhat more
appropriate for 'o' ("postscript files"), and in fact some printers treat
'l' as a request to print a postscript file.
MFC after: 1 week
with 'HEAD' method.
Actually, when http.c was born, it used 'GET' method. This was changed
with revision 1.4 (which was submitted as PR: 21449). I've confirmed
to Philipp Mergenthaler <philipp.mergenthaler@stud.uni-karlsruhe.de>,
the submitter of PR: 21449, and it's absolutely OK that we can use
GET method.
Add missing 'FreeBSD' tag, and copyright notice. This file is originally
submitted by PR: 11316; I've contacted to the PR originator to submit it.
PR: 32238
Submitted by: Christoph Weber-Fahr <christoph.weber-fahr@arcor.de> (patch),
and Philipp Mergenthaler <un1i@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de> (copyright)
MFC after: 1 week
was never technically true (it's snp(4) that required root, not
watch(8)), and after snp.c 1.64, isn't even effectively true, since
who can run watch(8) depends on the permissions of the snp device(s).
Sort options in SYNOPSIS and DESCRIPTION while I'm here.
Previously, watch would always use the first device it could
successfully open, but this isn't always desired. Specifically, it
may not be desired during debugging (of snp), or if a particular snp
device has different permissions (which makes since after snp.c 1.64).
up in the same way that we expect them to be when we read them.
This is a no-op on i386 and probably on alphas, as we currently
only support AF_INET and AF_INET6.
of 0.0.0.0.
The OpenBSD PF_ROUTE/NET_RT_DUMP sysctl is sending back routes with
RTAX_NETMASK set, but the corresponding sockaddr being 4 zero bytes
(with an address family of zero). ppp was getting confused by this
and ending up interpreting it as a 0.0.0.0/32 routing table
destination and subsequently failing to do anything with the route.
Specifically, after this fix, ppp under OpenBSD can successfully
change and delete the default route again !
ncprange structure.
Don't write() the netmask for IPv6 sockaddrs to the routing socket if
the prefixlen is 128.
It seems that messages written to the routing socket with the scopeid
set for link local addresses are not understood. Instead, we have to
put the scopeid in the 5th and 6th bytes of the address (see
adjust_linklocal() in ncpaddr.c). I think this may be a bug in the
KAME implementation - it should really understand both forms.
includes changing a struct timeval to an explicit structure of two
int32_t's. This requires using temporary timevals in several places
when calling gettimeofday(), settimeofday(), etc. With this timed now
works properly on 64-bit platforms such as Alpha.
Obtained from: NetBSD
file is still completely covered by a flock(2) style lock, but we'll tackle
that at a later date.
Submitted by: "Andrew P. Lentvorski" <bsder@allcaps.org>
be overridden on the command line. This is useful for setting up
chroot/jail environments.
PR: bin/23509
Submitted by: Seth Kingsley <sethk@pike.osd.bsdi.com>
MFC after: 1 week
use LIST_FOREACH,
add prototypes (functions should be made static probably),
change DEBUG=1 to LOCKD_DEBUG,
K&R function instantiation for functions with long args lists,
Move comments about functions from within to above the function,
Simplified some if/else logic and reduced nested blocks.
parens around 'return' argument (return FOO -> return (FOO))
of the rpc.lockd fully compliant with the old file locking semantics.
Andrew will dig into the statd code next and then will attack the split
locking.
This also backs out a lot of the work I've done on making the code
more conformant with non-written style rules, but we'll revisit that
later.
Submitted by: "Andrew P. Lentvorski" <bsder@allcaps.org>
an alternative to /tftpboot. This is useful it you're using tftpd
with an alternative root (using -s), and would like rarpd to respond
selectively to RARP requests using the same criteria as tftp.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
computed a a chunksize that didn't include the extended attribute
header. This was a non-fatal error, in that it was just writing out
zeros anyway, but did have the effect of not pre-allocating the
right amount of disk space. This fix calculates chunksize to include
the attribute header.
Submitted by: Dale Rahn
Sponsored by: DARPA, UPenn POSSE Project
Obtained from: OpenBSD