u_quad_int instead of u_long for counters. (NetBSD's rev 1.15 - 1.18)
Deprecate register. (NetBSD's rev 1.13)
The diffs from NetBSD were not applied verbatim, because we don't care
about NO_QUAD right now.
PR: 12959
Reported by: Nicholas Barnes <nb@ravenbrook.com>
Obtained from: NetBSD
February.
If you do a web search for "lionheart crowned" you'll get lots of
conflicting information. Some sites say 3rd September, while others
say 27th February. Most of the "27th February" crowd seem to take their
information from other incarnations of this file on other operating
systems.
After a very pleasant afternoon spent lunching with my girlfriend's
parents, I availed myself of their extensive reference library.
You'd be surprised how hard it is to get concrete information about this.
The _Encyclopedia Brittanica_ doesn't mention the date, only the year, as
does _Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable_, as do all the other printed
sources I tried. One of them even said July 7th 1189! Microsoft's (yeah,
so sue me) Encarta '95 has quite a comprehensive entry, but again, no
day and month information
In desperation, I tried the web once more, and finally stumbled upon
http://www.btinternet.com/~timeref/hsttime2.htm. This revealed that
Henry II died on 6th July 1189 (presumably the source of the 7th July
entry in another reference), and that Richard was crowned on 3rd
September.
Best of all, this site gives references. So if any of you have a copy of
_The Life and Times of Richard I_, John Gillingham, pub. George Weidenfeld
and Nicholson Limited, 1974, then you can confirm this for yourselves.
For completenesses sake, I tried to find an ISBN number for the above
book. But Amazon and Barnes and Noble don't appear to stock it (although
it looks like a revised version, by the same author, is due out in October
1999, in case anyone's interested).
PR: docs/10488
Submitted by: solon@macaulay.demon.co.uk
that -E only operates for a specified variable. Useful since the -e option
will often pull-in many unwanted variable overrides (esp. in a make world
situation). Uses include overriding BINOWN (which cannot be done by normal
methods or through abuses of MAKEFLAGS) or likely for ports to honour CFLAGS
(provided they're running on a system whose make(1) has this option).
I originally coded this myself, and now I realize {Net,Open}BSD had already
coded this. I have tossed my version to reduce diffs between the projects.
Obtained from: OpenBSD 2.5
match with all of them, rather than only supporting a single user.
PR: 11121
Kinda submitted by: James Howard <howardjp@byzantine.student.umd.edu>
Reviewed by: DES
Remove some whitespace
Fix a problem where any event on the Last whatever of the month
was duplicated after the last day of the month (e.g. 32oct.)
PR: 4907
Submitted by: Mikhail Teterin mi@aldan.algebra.com
it also fixes that fact that this file badly needed to be regenerated due
to changes in yacc.
Not done by: pst (in misc/1380)
Almost done by: danny (in ftp.y)
aren't allowed and the right casts can be used for printf() statements.
Document the conversion specifier limitations and the fact that
arithmetic overflow causes a fatal error.
PR: 12611
Reported by: Frode Vatvedt Fjeld <frodef@acm.org>
Reviewed by: bde
the expected size of the magic(5) database agree with the
real world. Also, improve the behavior of the realloc
mechanism when the magic database does exceed expectations.
Reviewed by: Peter Jeremy, Matt Dillon
Obtained from: Peter Edwards <peter.edwards@isocor.ie>
procfs map file when object IDs were eliminated in the mega-commit
that included procfs_map.c revision 1.19.
The map file is a terrible hodge-podge. The fields that are used
mainly for kernel debugging should be moved out of it into a
separate file, so that the interface presented by the map file to
applications can remain stable in the face of VM system changes.
track.
The $Id$ line is normally at the bottom of the main comment block in the
man page, separated from the rest of the manpage by an empty comment,
like so;
.\" $Id$
.\"
If the immediately preceding comment is a @(#) format ID marker than the
the $Id$ will line up underneath it with no intervening blank lines.
Otherwise, an additional blank line is inserted.
Approved by: bde
doscmd that was affected by the SA_SIGINFO changes (which made many
lines longer).
This application is in need for general code reformatting and warning
fixes.
Submitted by: Warner Losh <imp@village.org>