then that target is invoked for each architecture rather than the
default action of building world and kernels for each architecture.
- Add a 'make toolchains' wrapper which uses UNIVERSE_TARGET to build
toolchains for all architectures.
- Document JFLAG, MAKE_JUST_KERNELS, and MAKE_JUST_WORLDS variables for
'make universe'.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 1 week
version of it. There is also a WG311v3 which uses a chipset covered by
malo(4). Along the way add the WG311T to the list which is also an
atheros chipset.
PR: docs/154589
Approved by: kib (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
calling thread's unique integral ID, which is similar to AIX function of
the same name. Bump __FreeBSD_version to note its introduction.
Reviewed by: kib
sbuf_new_for_sysctl(9). This allows using an sbuf with a SYSCTL_OUT
drain for extremely large amounts of data where the caller knows that
appropriate references are held, and sleeping is not an issue.
Inspired by: rwatson
Properly document what `make targets` is supposed to list to avoid
further confusion given the place the target sits. Should have happened
with r217125.
Requested by: imp [1]
Reviewed by: rwatson
may still return a non-zero value... You are not guaranteed to get a one
to one mapping between wakeup_one and zero return values...
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
reading. (This was already done for writing to a sysctl). This
requires all SYSCTL setups to specify a type. Most of them are now
checked at compile-time.
Remove SYSCTL_*X* sysctl additions as the print being in hex should be
controlled by the -x flag to sysctl(8).
Succested by: bde
option. We only support ro mounts for xfs, so it's nice if the examples
we show in the manpage are easy to copy/paste.
PR: docs/149106
Submitted by: amdmi3
MFC after: 3 days
Although not directly related the FreeBSD Foundation funded "Five New TCP
Congestion Control Algorithms for FreeBSD" project, the understanding and
inspiration required to write this documentation was significantly bolstered
by the Foundation's support.
Reviewed by: pjd
MFC after: 1 week
This allows specifying a %job (which is equivalent to the corresponding
process group).
Additionally, it improves reliability of kill from sh in high-load
situations and ensures "kill" finds the correct utility regardless of PATH,
as required by POSIX (unless the undocumented %builtin mechanism is used).
Side effect: fatal errors (any error other than kill(2) failure) now return
exit status 2 instead of 1. (This is consistent with other sh builtins, but
not in NetBSD.)
Code size increases about 1K on i386.
Obtained from: NetBSD