default for now. Default flags create missing directories.
Remove comment about doing this in etc/rc.d/var.
Unlike in the PR, I chose to do this in the lpd script where we reliably
have /usr available.
PR: conf/71488
Submitted by: RZ-FreeBSD0904 at fh-karlsruhe dot de
to hit this case when /usr is remote and thus hasn't been mounted (since
you're supposed to have /var before mounting remote file systems).
Normal machines that don't have a /var for some reason will have /usr
already available because it's local.
automaticly created at boot. There's no need to maintain a list of
files and permissions in multiple places. This also means binary
updates won't stomp on log files.
For the record, utmp is created in etc/rc.d/cleanvar, wtmp and lastlog
in etc/rc.d/var, and the reset via etc/rc.d/newsyslog.
- Enable it by default, running newsyslog with -CN which creates files
that have the C flag specified in /etc/newsyslog.conf.
- Remove the "newsyslog -CC" call from etc/rc.d/var and the check for
newsyslog.
- Add the C flag to entries in /etc/newsyslog.conf that are currently
installed as part of the base system.
There are two effects from this change:
- Users who delete default syslog files to stop logging to them
will need to set newsyslog_enable=NO in rc.conf or remove the C
flag from those file in /etc/newsyslog.conf or they will come back
on the next boot.
- Diskless systems now create the same set of files that ordinary
systems have by default instead of every file in newsyslog.conf.
to create /var/log/lastlog.
- Also create /var/log/wtmp if missing.
- Attempt to create these files unless populate_var is NO rather then
only when /var is empty or populate_var=YES.
hosts to share an IP address, providing high availability and load
balancing.
Original work on CARP done by Michael Shalayeff, with many
additions by Marco Pfatschbacher and Ryan McBride.
FreeBSD port done solely by Max Laier.
Patch by: mlaier
Obtained from: OpenBSD (mickey, mcbride)
this can cause a really heavy load on system. Several kernel debugging
messages can be triggered even remotely (e.g. bad ARP replies).
Use kern.warning instead, so that really significant messages still
will be printed on console.
Reviewed by: current@
MFC after: 1 week
Security: this change fixes a DoS condition, when default system
console is serial, and box is flooded with bogus ARP
packets
frequencies are specified with performance_cpu_freq and economy_cpu_freq.
Of course, special values LOW and HIGH are also supported. Also, remove
old throttling support.
rc.d/mountcritlocal and sed(1) is placed in /usr/bin/. Other useful tools
for this task are also placed in /usr/ (tr(1), awk(1)), so I implemented
local_tr() function which works simlar to tr(1).
Reported by: Amir Shalem <amir@boom.org.il>
MFC after: 1 week
with the rest of the examples, so after discussion with him and gshapiro,
re-sort the examples, and add more comments to make things very obvious.
Also, divide the examples between example.{com|net|org} to make things
even more obvious, and use the same RFC 1918 block for all examples.
Pointed out by: Scot W. Hetzel <hetzels@westbend.net>
and so the fix committed in r1.42 was not quite correct for the case
where there are two or more DHCP consuming removable interfaces - dhclient
must be restarted so that the other interfaces continue to function
correctly.
Approved by: murray
MFC After: 7 days
user owns these directories or the sticky bit is unset may open security holes,
so simply create them at startup with the correct owner/mode.
MFC after: 1 day
reject. For example:
Checking for rejected mail hosts:
48 getherbalnow.info (451... resolve)
46 absorb.com (451... resolve)
4 tgmart01.codns.com (553... exist)
3 kali.com.cn (451... resolve)
2 genie.com (451... resolve)
1 zv.qy (553... exist)
1 zd.hinet.hr (553... exist)
....
The bit in parenthesis is the reject code and the last word on the line -
enough to give the admin a better chance of seeing real problems (hopefully!).
While I'm here, remove the "<" at the start of rejects coming from "from"
addresses without a name@ part.
I had to rewrite the patch given by the submitter as this script has been
sed'ified (used to be perl) and I think the reject code is useful....
PR: 17377
Idea from: root at ns dot internet dot dk
MFC after: 7 days
- add udav(4)
In the scsi-controller-regex:
- correct an entry
- move another one to the right place
- add a bunch of missing drivers
Glanced at by: trhodes (scsi-controller-regex part)
MFC after: 3 days
1. Feature: for flexibility reasons and as a prerequisite to clean
shutdowns, allow the configuration of a stop/shutdown command
via rc.conf variable "jail_<name>_exec_stop" in addition to the
start/boot command (rc.conf variable "jail_<name>_exec_start"). For
backward compatibility reasons, rc.conf variable "jail_<name>_exec"
is still supported, too.
2. Debug: Add the used boot/shutdown commands to the debug output of
the /etc/rc.d/jail script, too.
3. Security: Run the Jail start/boot command in a cleaned environment
to not leak information from the host to the Jail during startup.
4. Feature: Run the Jail stop/shutdown command "jail_<name>_exec_stop" on
"/etc/rc.d/jail stop <name>" to allow a graceful shutdown of the Jail
before its processes are just killed.
5. Bugfix: When killing the remaining Jail processes give the processes
time to actually perform their termination sequence. Without this the
subsequent umount(8) operations usually fail because the resources
are still in use. Additionally, if after trying to TERM-inate the
processes there are still processes hanging around, finally just KILL
them.
6. Bugfix: In rc.shutdown, if running inside a Jail, skip the /etc/rc.d/*
scripts which are flagged with the KEYWORD "nojail" to allow the
correct operation of rc.shutdown under jail_<name>_exec_stop="/bin/sh
/etc/rc.shutdown". This is analogous to what /etc/rc does inside a Jail.
Now the following typical host-configuration for two Jails works as
expected and correctly boots and shutdowns the Jails:
-----------------------------------------------------------
# /etc/rc.conf:
jail_enable="YES"
jail_list="foo bar"
jail_foo_rootdir="/j/foo"
jail_foo_hostname="foo.example.com"
jail_foo_ip="192.168.0.1"
jail_foo_devfs_enable="YES"
jail_foo_mount_enable="YES"
jail_foo_exec_start="/bin/sh /etc/rc"
jail_foo_exec_stop="/bin/sh /etc/rc.shutdown"
jail_bar_rootdir="/j/bar"
jail_bar_hostname="bar.example.com"
jail_bar_ip="192.168.0.2"
jail_bar_devfs_enable="YES"
jail_bar_mount_enable="YES"
jail_bar_exec_start="/path/to/kjailer -v"
jail_bar_exec_stop="/bin/sh -c 'killall kjailer && sleep 60'"
-----------------------------------------------------------
# /etc/fstab.foo
/v/foo /j/foo/v/foo nullfs rw 0 0
-----------------------------------------------------------
# /etc/fstab.bar
/v/bar /j/bar/v/bar nullfs rw 0 0
-----------------------------------------------------------
Reviewed by: freebsd-hackers
MFC after: 2 weeks
rebadged Xircom REM56 RealPort card. Short MFC timeout to beat the 4.11
code freeze.
PR: 53027
Submitted by: John Merryweather Cooper <coop9211 at uidaho dot edu>
Approved by: imp (mentor)
MFC after: 2 days
ifnet_rename() to support situations where rc.conf's $network_interfaces
variable is set to an explicit list of network interfaces (instead of
the default "auto").
Using "list_network_interfaces all" resulted in using
$network_interfaces for both interface _renaming_ and interface
_configuration_ which obviously cannot work either before (if the
new name is in $network_interfaces) or after (if the old name is in
$network_interfaces) renaming the interface.
can't be removed as ofw_console(4) and zs(4) use them so one has to
live with some complaints about non-existent devices at boot time and
remove the respective entries locally for now.
adapters from usbd.conf to devd.conf. USB ethernet devices were
already handled in devd.conf so this just removes their usbd.conf
entry.
PR: conf/73799
packet counts by pf(4).
This adds a ``daily_status_security_pfdenied_enable'' variable to
periodic.conf, which defaults to ``YES'' as the matching IPF(W) versions.
The output will look like this (line wrapped):
pf denied packets:
> block drop log on rl0 proto tcp all [ Evaluations: 504986 Packets: 0
Bytes: 0 States: 0 ]
> block drop log on rl0 all [ Evaluations: 18559 Packets: 427 Bytes: 140578
States: 0 ]
Submitted by: clive (thanks a lot!)
MFC after: 2 weeks
this feature for a jail named foo :
jail_foo_mount_enable="YES"
jail_foo_fstab="/etc/fstab.foo"
The second line is actually useless, since the code defaults to
using "/etc/fstab.$jailname" as the fstab file if none is specified.
MFC after: 3 days
Submitted by: Jeremie Le Hen <jeremie@le-hen.org>
These can be used to pass extra options to the mdmfs(8) utility,
to customize the finer details of the md file system creation
(i.e. to turn on/off softupdates, to specify a default owner for md
filesystem, etc).
Use these two new flags to mount tmpmfs and varmfs without
softupdates, since it doesn't make much sense to use SU on
malloc-backed file systems.
Reviewed by: mtm
Inspired by: J. D. Bronson, jbronson at wixb dot com
user (for creation of the zone journal file). This is separate from the
master/ directory for security. Give an example dynamic zone in the
sample named.conf.
Approved by: dougb
Noticed by: Eivind Olsen <eivind at aminor.no>
MFC after: 1 week
on the system.
To start/stop/check on a specific device give the device name as
the second argument to the script:
# /etc/rc.d/moused start ums0
To use different rc.conf(5) knobs with different mice use the device
name as part of the knob. For example, if the mouse device is ums0, then:
moused_ums0_enable=yes
moused_ums0_flags="-z 4"
moused_ums0_port="/dev/ums0"
Starting rc.d/moused without the device argument will use the standard
moused_* flags. So, this commit should not disrupt or change current usage.
To preserve current behaviour with respect to usb mice, which appear
automatically when inserted, there is a new knob, moused_nondefault_enable,
which will treat any devices without rc.conf knobs as enabled.
To minimize knobs in /etc/rc.conf, the device file and pid file are
auto-computed, so that in the typical case for a usb mouse you don't
need to add anything extra in /etc/rc.conf to get it working.
Additionally, this updates /etc/usbd.conf to use the rc.d/moused script so
people don't have to modify it to configure their usb mouse anymore.
MFC after: 1 month
unbreak /etc/rc.d/root for diskless systems that get their root
filesystem from a read-only NFS mount.
PR: conf/72927
Submitted by: Ralf Wenk <RZ-FreeBSD1004@fh-karlsruhe.de>
Reviewed by: brooks