which document some of the sysctls available for configuring 4bsd, some
of the bullet features of ule, and that ule is considered experimental
still.
MFC after: 3 days
instructs the driver to avoid using Keyboard Interface Test command.
This command causes problems with some non-compliant hardware, resulting
in machine being abruptly powered down early in the boot process.
Particularly it's known that HP ZV5000 and Compaq R3000Z notebooks
are affected by this problem.
Due to popularity of those models this patch is good MFC5.4 candidate.
PR: 67745
Submitted by: Jung-uk Kim jkim at niksun.com
MFC after: 1 days
- Fix ifconfig commands. Replace 'mekmitasdigoat' with
'foobar'. While the former is more cool, the latter
makes example lines shorter.
Wording by: scottl
MFC after: 3 days
instances in a given devclass. This is useful for systems that want to
call code in driver static methods, similar to device_identify().
Reviewed by: dfr
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Update the description of the cdrom.1 target and add notes for cdrom.2
and cdrom.3.
- Document CD_PACKAGES_TREE (CD_EXTRA_BITS wasn't documented before).
- Document CVSARGS.
- Remove DISC[12]_{LABEL,NAME}.
- Remove NOPORTREADMES.
- Remove references to drivers.conf files and man page.
- Update version number for a CURRENT snapshot to 6.0.
variable, because it might be not obvious how to configure carp(4)
devices in rc.conf.
2. Remove the sentence about the not implemented "carpdev" option (this
was not imported from OpenBSD according to our source code) to avoid
confusion.
Reviewed by: glebius@
MFC after: 3 days
FreeBSD based on aue(4) it was picked by OpenBSD, then from OpenBSD ported
to NetBSD and finally NetBSD version merged with original one goes into
FreeBSD.
Obtained from: http://www.gank.org/freebsd/cdce/
NetBSD
OpenBSD
alignment restrictive, and help performance on some ethernet cards which
currently copy the entire packet a couple bytes to get the packet aligned
properly...
Wordsmithing by: dwhite
Obtained from: NetBSD (code only)
I'll clean it up later: rwatson
is the highest acceptable value for the ending of the resource being
allocated. One could also believe that it is the highest starting
value of the resource. The code definitely expects the former, but I
could find no documentation of this apart from TFSC.
to mistakes from day 1, it has always had semantics inconsistent with
SVR4 and its successors. In particular, given argument M:
- On Solaris and FreeBSD/{alpha,sparc64}, it clobbers the old flags
and *sets* the new flag word to M. (NetBSD, too?)
- On FreeBSD/{amd64,i386}, it *clears* the flags that are specified in M
and leaves the remaining flags unchanged (modulo a small bug on amd64.)
- On FreeBSD/ia64, it is not implemented.
There is no way to fix fpsetsticky() to DTRT for both old FreeBSD apps
and apps ported from other operating systems, so the best approach
seems to be to kill the function and fix any apps that break. I
couldn't find any ports that use it, and any such ports would already
be broken on FreeBSD/ia64 and Linux anyway.
By the way, the routine has always been undocumented in FreeBSD,
except for an MLINK to a manpage that doesn't describe it. This
manpage has stated since 5.3-RELEASE that the functions it describes
are deprecated, so that must mean that functions that it is *supposed*
to describe but doesn't are even *more* deprecated. ;-)
Note that fpresetsticky() has been retained on FreeBSD/i386. As far
as I can tell, no other operating systems or ports of FreeBSD
implement it, so there's nothing for it to be inconsistent with.
PR: 75862
Suggested by: bde