sparc64 looked for the nonexistent sparc64/lb1spc.asm file instead
of the sparc/lb1spc.asm file.
arm probably looked for arm/arm/lib1funcs.asm instead of arm/lib1funcs.asm
ia64 probably looked for ia64/ia64/lib1funcs.asm instead of ia64/lib1funcs.asm
i386 and alpha don't seen to use the LIB1ASMSRC.
yields incorrect behaviour. The hardwiring was present in the very
first commit that implemented msgrcv() (revision 1.4) and hasn't been
changed since. The native implementation was complete at that time,
so there doesn't seem to be a reason for the hardwiring from a
technical point of view.
Submitted by: Reinier Bezuidenhout <rbezuide@yahoo.com>
release Giant around vm_map_madvise()'s call to pmap_object_init_pt().
o Replace GIANT_REQUIRED in vm_object_madvise() with the acquisition
and release of Giant.
o Remove the acquisition and release of Giant from madvise().
files in each ${local_startup} directory, it also reverses the order of the
directories.
Suggested by: jhb
Reviewed by: jake
Approved by: dougb
MFC after: 1 week
kernel BOOTP option. The format will be:
FreeBSD:<MACHINE>:<osrelease>
this way people can tune their DHCP server to server up root file systems
via the OS, machine type and version.
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 3 weeks
returns, exit gracefully with 0.
This fixes the behavior you see when you specify libc.so. It occurs
because ldd(1) itself is linked with libc.so.
$ ldd /usr/lib/libc.so
/usr/lib/libc.so:
ldd: /usr/lib/libc.so: (null)
/usr/lib/libc.so: exit status 1
Reviewed by: silence of audit@
of wtmp.0 is done as mode 600.
This ensures that tight permissions set in /etc/newsyslog.conf for
wtmp logging aren't ``betrayed''.
Suggested by: lumpy <lumpy@the.whole.net>
MFC after: 3 days
The change was introduced in src/etc/security 1.53 almost a year ago
in an attempt to see ipfw deny message logs.
However, ipfw deny/reject logs have been displayed since version 1.13
of the same file as a separate ``job'' and have since moved to
src/etc/periodic/security/500.ipfwdenied.
MFC after: 3 days
to using arithmatic to determine buffer sizes to encode into.
Diane Bruce pointed out to me that BSD/OS did MIME too, so I want to match
their output, too, since my decision of 8 output groups was wholly arbitrary.