bypass some extra anti-foot-shooting measures. Currently, its only
effect is to allow detaching a device while it's still open (e.g.,
mounted). This is useful for testing how the system reacts to a disk
suddenly going away, which can happen with some removeable media.
At this point, the force option is only checked on detach, so it
would've been possible to allow the option to be passed with the
MDIOCDETACH operation. This was not done to allow the possibility of
having the force flag influence other tests in the future, which may
not necessarily deal with detaching the device.
Reviewed by: sobomax
Approved by: phk
Avoid using parenthesis enclosure macros (.Pq and .Po/.Pc) with plain text.
Not only this slows down the mdoc(7) processing significantly, but it also
has an undesired (in this case) effect of disabling hyphenation within the
entire enclosed block.
post-install config, reduce the potential confusion from the existence
of both configTTYs and configTtys by renaming configTTYs to
configEtcTtys. While this is not a C naming conflict, it was probably
a poor choice of names on my part.
o Add consts where appropriate.
o Rename some variables that were shadowing global declarations.
o Remove register storage-classes.
o Make errmsg a const, so we can just set error messages instead
of using sprintf/strcpy.
o Set WARNS=2
Reviewed by: bde, des
into sadb_x_sa2_sequence from sadb_x_sa2_reserved3 in the sadb_x_sa2
structure. Also the output of setkey is changed. sequence number
of the sadb is replaced to the end of the output.
Obtained from: KAME
filename passed in via the module loader functions in the GDB
"sharedlibrary" support structures. This isn't good, since the pointer
would become stale in almost every case (not the pre-loaded case, of
course).
Change this to malloc()ed copy of the string and finally fix the reason
that gdb -k's "sharedlibrary" command stopped working.
Obtained from: LOMAC/FreeBSD (cf. NAI Labs)
It didn't implement the proper /dev/fd functionality (which would be to
include in the directory listing /dev/fd/n if the process has fd n open)
anyway.
Anything needing access to /dev/fd/n where n > 2 can use the optional
fdescfs module, which implements this properly and does not cause any
trouble with devfs.
Discussed with: phk