that want a y.tab.h file. This want must be specified by putting y.tab.h
in SRCS (and defaulting to or putting -d in YFLAGS). This only works if
there is only one yacc parser, of course. One improvement: copy y.tab.c
to foo.c instead of renaming it, so that `#line...y.tab.c' statements in
it refer to an existing file.
Regress to not generating explicit rules for .l and .y sources containing
slashes. This case is unusual and hard to handle properly.
Don't generate an unused dependency when -d is not in YFLAGS.
libraries, so that `ld -f' in can create correct dependencies for
yet-to-be-built libraries.
Use `DIR!= cd ...libbind; make -V .OBJDIR' to find libbind's object dir
if it doesn't seem to be in its usual place relative to ${.OBJDIR}.
This fixes `cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/nslookup; mkdir obj; make'.
is broken. It omits the SCSI_DATA_IN flag in the SCSI READ ELEMENT
STATUS command, which makes the 'chio status' command fail.
PR: 6528
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Hans Huebner <hans@artcom.de>
Reverse the VFS_VRELE patch. Reference counting of vnodes does not need
to be done per-fs. I noticed this while fixing vfs layering violations.
Doing reference counting in generic code is also the preference cited by
John Heidemann in recent discussions with him.
The implementation of alternative vnode management per-fs is still a valid
requirement for some filesystems but will be revisited sometime later,
most likely using a different framework.
Submitted by: Michael Hancock <michaelh@cet.co.jp>
in termios.h, but it's prototype in termcap.h and the main file use
the underlying definition (which is now an int, not a long for
compatibility with NetBSD). Really termcap.h should use speed_t too,
but I guess that this might break sources that don't include termios.h
first.
Support >8G drives in CHS mode. This is done by guesstimating the
cylinder count from the LBA size reported. It works on my shiny
new Maxtor 11.5G drive, YMMV.
Reports from users of other big drives (read Quantum bigfoot's)
are welcome...
FreeBSD needs a few groups that NetBSD doesn't provide by default. This
is annoying because it is the only thing that you need to do to a
NetBSD/Alpha system to bootstrap build FreeBSD/Alpha. Oh well, it
wouldn't be Unix without gratuitous differences, would it?
Implement -s option
Keep going if a file is not found
Append ':' to printed filenames
Include backslash in terminal characters
Make exit status dependent on a match having been found
Revise manpage accordingly