/boot/device.hints in the bin dist during releases so that current snapshots
have a chance of booting up ok after installing. The real fix for this
problem is to rewrite userconfig in Forth, stick it in the loader, axe
userconfig from the kernel, and extract the hints from the booted kernel in
sysinstall similar to the way we generate /boot/kernel.conf right now. For
now, however, this will have to do.
world as was our old way, rather than when building a kernel.
Some people do not like the new way, and the release building still assumes
modules are built with the world.
from the sys Makefile's SUBDIRs. This is conditioned in make.conf by the
NO_MODULES variable and the existence of the modules directory. The
actual location of the modules is not modified. Changes in Makefiles
only, this does not affect Peter's recent changes.
Reviewed by: Peter Wemm, who warned me I would get some flack, and
he had the good idea for the NO_MODULES variable.
The new boot1/boot2 can load a.out and elf kernels directly.
I think the sys/pc98 version can go too as the sys/boot/pc98 code
appears to be functional, but I'll leave that for the pc98 folks.
"There can be only one."
All Makefiles now use MACHINE_ARCH for the target architecture.
Unification is required for cross-building.
Tags added to:
sys/boot/Makefile
sys/boot/arc/loader/Makefile
sys/kern/Makefile
usr.bin/cpp/Makefile
usr.bin/gcore/Makefile
usr.bin/truss/Makefile
usr.bin/gcore/Makefile:
fixed typo: MACHINDE -> MACHINE_ARCH
Remove /sys/boot from legacy-build.
Add btxld to build-tools.
In src/sys/Makefile:
Add /sys/boot for i386 ELF.
I'm still not sure why the new boot code was being built along with the
legacy stuff, which meant a completely wrong default environment for it.
This may well still be the wrong way to go about this, but it can't work
all that much worse than it has been.
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
All new code is "#ifdef PC98"ed so this should make no difference to
PC/AT (and its clones) users.
Ok'd by: core
Submitted by: FreeBSD(98) development team
libkern.a are now specified by listing their source files in
files.${MACHINE}. The list is machine-dependent to save space.
All the necessary object for each machine must be linked into the
kernel in case an lkm wants one.