Kernel Interfaces Manual
This was needed because of a few man pages like keyboard(4)
which caused the header to become unreadable with the longer
description.
This has some (all?) of the DNSSEC key management/distribution mechanism
in place. (The SIG and KEY RR's)
Obtained from: Paul Vixie / ISC / ftp.isc.org
this will make it less likely to misinterpret arrow keys as seperate
keys when running over anything slower than a console.
This has been talked about for a while, I hope it's long enough but not
too long to be annoying.
do it themselves. (Some of these programs actually depended on this
beyond compiling the definition of struct ifinfo!) Also fix up some
other #include messes while we're at it.
as performed by the multicast kernel modifications. However, BSD
already had IPPROTO_ENCAP defined as 98 (RFC 1241 encapsulation).
This changes the use of IPPROTO_ENCAP to IPPROTO_IPIP, which is
the BSD name for IP proto 4.
fully registered.
(This is the second try, the first import ignored .info files but not .info-*
files, for some reason. I'm going to make this consistent.)
Reviewed by: core
Approved for: 2.2
Without this, compiled programs die with FP errors.
This is originally credited to: jlemon@netcom.com (Jonathan Lemon), and
has been forwarded to me by quite a few of people.
(implemented better, admittedly) with a new option, '-S'. If the
maintainers of traceroute (Van?) add a -S option, we will then be in
conflict.
Also added a too-brief description of the option in the man page. Someone
with a better command of English than I at the moment should probably look
over it and rephrase it.
Reviewed by: pst, jkh
#include_next <string.h> wasfailing since the /usr/include directory is
first on FreeBSD, and since it was already past it, it failed some of
the tests.
The symptom was an assembler warning
"GOT relocation burb: `___EXCEPTION_TABLE__' should be global"
followed (sometimes) by a core dump. The fix makes the compiler
generate the correct GOTOFF addressing for that symbol, rather than the
GOT addressing it was emitting before.
Warning: There is still at least one serious bug in the i386 exception
code for PIC. The exception code that is generated clobbers the GOT
register (%ebx) and then tries to use it later. That leads to core
dumps at program execution time. I know where the problem is, but I do
not have a fix for it at this time. Until it is fixed, exceptions will
not work in PIC code. This is a general problem for all i386 platforms;
it is not specific to FreeBSD.
I.e., "cvs -H init" went ahead and initialized the repository, and did
not print out a usage message. Not nice.
Also added the "init" command to the list that comes out when you type
"cvs --help-commands". There is still not a word about it in the manual
page.
Yes, I am sending these fixes to the FSF.