manpage does not describe the builtin wait command provided by either
of the standard shells. There is already an entry for wait.1 in the
builtins.1 MLINKS list.
commit and those which cause ugly nroff output have been fixed, since
the purpose of the style guideline which they contravene is to reduce
the sizes of deltas.
Reported by: bde
reference vfs_check_export
change license to my own, (ok'd by dfr) and remove advert clause.
remove extra Id tags and emacs cruft, this should be a fresh file.
VFS_CHECKEXP.9, now used to check export credentials
VFS_FHTOVP.9, only used for filehandle to vnode, no access checks are done.
VFS.9, inform people of the vfs_std* functions available to avoid
ugly casts to eopnotsup and making of dummy functions to return 0.
* Consistently misspell built-in as builtin.
* Add a builtin(1) manpage and create builtin(1) MLINKS for all shell
builtin commands for which no standalone utility exists. These MLINKS
replace those that were created for csh(1).
* Add appropriate xrefs for builtin(1) to the csh(1) and sh(1) manpages,
as well as to the manpages of standalone utilities which are supported
as shell builtin commands in at least one of the shells. In such
manpages, explain that similar functionality may be provided as a
shell builtin command.
* Improve sh(1)'s description of the cd builtin command. Csh(1) already
describes it adequately. Replace the cd(1) manpage with a builtin(1)
MLINKS link.
* Clean up some mdoc problems: use Xr instead of literal "foo(n)"; use
Ic instead of Xr for shell builtin commands.
* Undo English contractions.
Reviewed by: mpp, rgrimes
2) s/MODLOAD/KMODLOAD/ to be consistent with the rest of the variables
(KMOD, KMODOWN, KMODGRP, etc) and definition of MODLOAD/UNLOAD in the
Makefile of the ATAPI module
3) textual fixups
the Davicom DM9100 and DM9102 chipsets, including the Jaton Corporation
XPressNet. Datasheet is available from www.davicom8.com.
The DM910x chips are still more tulip clones. The API is reproduced
pretty faithfully, unfortunately the performance is pretty bad. The
transmitter seems to have a lot of problems DMAing multi-fragment
packets. The only way to make it work reliably is to coalesce transmitted
packets into a single contiguous buffer. The Linux driver (written by
Davicom) actually does something similar to this. I can't recomment this
NIC as anything more than a "connectivity solution."
This driver uses newbus and miibus and is supported on both i386
and alpha platforms.
SiS 900 and SiS 7016 PCI fast ethernet chipsets. Full manuals for the
SiS chips can be found at www.sis.com.tw.
This is a fairly simple chipset. The receiver uses a 128-bit multicast
hash table and single perfect entry for the station address. Transmit and
receive DMA and FIFO thresholds are easily tuneable. Documentation is
pretty decent and performance is not bad, even on my crufty 486. This
driver uses newbus and miibus and is supported on both the i386 and
alpha architectures.
Add back "src-eBones" to "cvs-supfile" and "secure-cvs-supfile".
Even though the eBones tree is disused, it still has files in the
repository. People fetching the repository might want them.
It's not supported any more. It was never ported to CAM, and that
functionality has been taken over by the da driver. So the man page can be
removed.
Reviewed by: ken
PCI fast ethernet controller. Currently, the only card I know that uses
this chip is the D-Link DFE-550TX. (Don't ask me where to buy these: the
only cards I have are samples sent to me by D-Link.)
This driver is the first to make use of the miibus code once I'm sure
it all works together nicely, I'll start converting the other drivers.
The Sundance chip is a clone of the 3Com 3c90x Etherlink XL design
only with its own register layout. Support is provided for ifmedia,
hardware multicast filtering, bridging and promiscuous mode.
- increase the default timeout from 10 seconds to 60 seconds
- add a new kernel option, SCSI_PT_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT, that lets users specify
the default timeout for the pt driver to use
- add two new ioctls, one to get the timeout for a given pt device, the
other to set the timeout for a given pt device. The idea is that
userland applications using the device can set the timeout to suit their
purposes. The ioctls are defined in a new header file, sys/ptio.h
PR: 10266
Reviewed by: gibbs, joerg
- Sort xrefs
- FreeBSD.ORG -> FreeBSD.org
- Be consistent with section names as outlined in mdoc(7).
- Other misc mdoc cleanup.
PR: doc/13144
Submitted by: Alexey M. Zelkin <phantom@cris.net>
of the AUTHORS section in mdoc.samples(7) to document how the
authors name should be specified.
PR: docs/13131
Pointed out by: Alexey M. Zelkin <phantom@cris.net>
> The route(4) manpage says:
>
> User processes can obtain information about the routing entry to a spe-
> cific destination by using a RTM_GET message, or by reading the /dev/kmem
> device, or by issuing a getkerninfo(2) system call.
>
> IMHO, the above sentence should probably be altered by replacing the
> first comma with a period, and throwing away the rest of it.
No one's objected, so I've made this change. This sort of fixes docs/12220,
by removing the reference to the undocumented getkerninfo(2) call. So I'll
close the PR as well.
PR: docs/12220