/usr/src/usr.sbin/sysinstall/menus.c:1323: initializer element is not computable at load time
/usr/src/usr.sbin/sysinstall/menus.c:1323: (near initialization for `MenuNetworking.items[9].aux')
Eliminate an old warning brought about by insufficient foresight when creating
the Menu structure. Have I ever mentioned that sysinstall really needs to
be rewritten?
1. Has a time-stamp to show when it was created
2. Sorts and uniq's the output to only contain single instances of a
given setting. This doesn't mean you still can't have settings which
override one another, that's still possible since it's too much
trouble to do the redundancy checking here.
Requested by: lots of people
a few cosmetic problems:
o Allow it to work with scripts (see man page or install.cfg file).
o Preserve old softupdates flag across newfs toggles
o Clean up partitioned/labelled flag handling
o Don't ask for MBR choice again if you've already written it out.
o Actually document the new features.
and also obey most of the rules of english in their construction.
Add a help screen for the security menu which gives the user a rough idea
just what the various security profiles do.
need to manually force the network_interfaces variable in /etc/rc.conf,
and it only ever gets in the way. rc.network and rc.network6 DTRT with
the default of 'auto'. This should have died over a year ago.
not right because rtermcap would be reading the *host* termcap, not
from the termcap in the src tree. Besides, /usr/sbin/sysinstall
(not the crunched one in /stand) should use the runtime termcap
not the precompiled set.
static version that installs in /stand. Also, don't use an extra
before-install target to create /stand.
- Add missing $FreeBSD$.
- Fix dependencies to handle keymap.h. (*)
Submitted by: obrien (*)
non-advertised option (F = "FreeBSD only"), and leave the A key with
standard partitioning. It seems people still want a runtime backdoo
to get to dangerously dedicated mode.
at people. This has been sitting in my tree for a few months now. I
have spoken with quite a few folks about this and the support for doing
this was pretty strong. I dont remember names though, so I cannot share
the blame :-(. Note that this does not *remove* DD mode, it just stops
waving it at new users. You can still set it via config files etc, and
the bootblocks and kernel still support it. You can still use disklabel
to make true DD disks.
no as a default. Sysinstall should be both less dangerous and less
annoying as a result of this change, though that's just my opinion
(since they're the defaults which annoy ME the least :).