is common in British English, while "toward" is the preferred form in
American English. Use the American form for consistency.
Correct the date on the manual page.
Submitted by: Tom Rhodes <trhodes@freebsd.org>,
underway@comcast.net (Gary W. Swearingen)
(though probably not a good idea in general) to set the various
SENDMAIL_*_MC variables to /etc/mail/sendmail.mc or /etc/mail/submit.mc.
MFC after: 5 days
take advantage of the rc.subr(8) glue. They are renamed dhclient_program
and dhclient_flags.
o Rename them in rc.conf(5)
o Rename them in /etc/defaults/rc.conf
o Add the deprecated variables to /etc/rc.subr
o Isolate the use of the 'command' variable to the
NetBSD specific parts in /etc/rc.d/dhclient.
o Now that dhcp_flags has also been renamed it will
be applied properly by rc.subr(8) glue code.
Reported by: John Nielsen <john@jnielsen.net>
displays the 'hostname' of the jail, or a hyphen '-' to indicate
that the process is not jailed.
PR: docs/37470
Submitted by: Adrian Filipi-Martin <adrian@ubergeeks.com>
Approved and Reviewed by: des (mentor), re (bmah)
- Add a description of b0 / b1 fields.
- Do not use 'entry' to refer to both 'entry' and 'field'.
- Do not confuse people with heading 'Name' and entry 'Name'.
PR: 48104
Submitted by: Gary W. Swearingen <swear@attbi.com> (original version)
Approved by: re (blanket)
This is an optional feature, disabled by default.
This will be useful to people testing the various POSIX threading
libraries under -CURRENT but can easily serve other needs.
Both "product" and "build" ordering are rampant in /usr/src. This document
is not indented to be as strict as style(9) as historically BSD hasn't been
as consistent about Makefile as C code. Also there are too many variations,
exceptions and allowances in out existing Makefile style to be strict.
However there is a general level of consensus on what the general BSD style
of our Makefiles is. This manpage documents that "smell".
o Give the proper spelling for WARNS.
o Clarify using NO_WERROR.
o Embelish -D after -I verbage.
o Document preference of ${.ALLSRC} & ${.TARGET} vs. $< & $@.
Based on: brucification