for me, but has gotten a bit flakey in bidirectional parallel port mode.
Fix a bug in bidirectional parallel port transfers, more work is still
needed here (testers welcome).
Minor cleanup.
- Improve support for multiple domains. (In preparation for new rpc.yppasswdd.)
yp_dblookup.c:
- Improve error reporting: be more selective as to what error code
we return when a (dbp->get) fails.
- Handle 'empty' maps more gracefully. By empty I mean a valid map that
just happens not to have any entries in it, such as you would get if
you built a map database from an empty file. Previously, trying to
ypxfr such a map would yield an 'NIS map/database error' which is not
the correct behavior.
ypxfr_misc:
- Make sure to free() or xdr_free() dynamically allocated memory in
ypxfr_get_master() as necessary.
drives require ST_Q_SNS_HLP, they also wrongly accept a blocksize of
1024 in the first place (for a QIC-150 cartridge), but complain later
about it. The hack is to only probe for 512 for them.
Reorder the entries in st_decide_mode() so that QIC >= 525 is properly
accepted as variable blocksize.
didn't correctly start background jobs anymore. Strange that nobody
was complaining...
Add a dummy target for `builtins' in the Makefile, to prevent it
from attempting to build this file by compiling builtins.c. :-/
the hp300 crash(8) man page in the lite-2 source tree.
Also removed man8/makedev.8 (this was vax specific and was replaced
by man8/man8.i386/MAKEDEV.8 a long time ago - it was just never removed
from the source tree).
vs unidirectional transfer modes. The kernel handles hardware, user mode
programs shouldn't get in the way.
This cleans up some really ugly grots that I hated too. :-)
Suggested by: Sujal Patel <smpatel@wam.umd.edu>
* this is my unoptimized driver, it works fine, it's not as fast as it
* could be (yet) -- I have yet to merge in ideas from other QuickCam
* developers.
* warning: this user interface is still in flux pending negotiations
* with other quickcam driver authors. It is _not_ compatible with the
* original linux interface due to the fact that it was too restrictive.