Instead of trying to delete packages in the same order as they were specified
in the command line, reorder deletion in such a way that if package A depends
on package B then package A will be deleted before B no matter in which order
they were specified in the command line.
Reviewed by: jkh, will
Approved by: jkh
ports/INDEX,v is currently 19.97MB and will blow this limit on the next
update. Let's try doubling the limit again, to give us time to get
around to removing the limit altogether.
actually in the kernel. This structure is a different size than
what is currently in -CURRENT, but should hopefully be the last time
any application breakage is caused there. As soon as any major
inconveniences are removed, the definition of the in-kernel struct
ucred should be conditionalized upon defined(_KERNEL).
This also changes struct export_args to remove dependency on the
constantly-changing struct ucred, as well as limiting the bounds
of the size fields to the correct size. This means: a) mountd and
friends won't break all the time, b) mountd and friends won't crash
the kernel all the time if they don't know what they're doing wrt
actual struct export_args layout.
Reviewed by: bde
`PACKAGEROOT' env var which you would set to a proper mirror of
ftp.FreeBSD.org (say "export PACKAGEROOT=ftp://ftp3.FreeBSD.org"), to
fetch from an alternate place. This is easier to use than `PACKAGESITE'
for true mirrors, and can be used in your dot files across all versions
of FreeBSD.
user actually editing the output. Too many people were rampantly abusing
this feature via "pkg_version -c | sh" without really being cognizant
of the dangers involved (ports upgrade kits) or the fact that it
just plain wasn't designed for it (dependencies). We'll try to keep
people from shooting themselves in the foot.
Will be MFC-ed to RELENG_4 and RELENG_3 after cooling-off period.
names of installed packages;
- add new `-G' option to disable glob matching and revert to previous
behaviour (I have no idea why this could be necessary, though);
- add a new `-x' option, which instructs pkg_info(1) to treat supplied
arguments as a regular expressions.
For example:
$ pkg_info foo\* - displays information about all packages whose names start
from foo
$ pkg_info -G foo\*-1.1 - displays information about package named "foo*-1.1"
$ pkg_info -x ^foo.\* - displays information about all packages whose names
start from foo
Original idea submitted by: Edwin Groothuis <mavetju@chello.nl> (bin/24695)
Reviewed by: jkh, roam
Approved by: jkh
This works only because of bugs in current implementation: the
first .It after ``.Bd -unfilled'' re-enables filling mode and
does not restore (disable) it back afterwards.
to be the same as -ragged in the current implementation) to
-ragged. With mdocNG, -filled displays produce the correct
output, formatted and justified to both margins.
These are not enabled in the pkg_install Makefile as of yet;
adding the "sign" directory to the SUBDIR list will enable
building of sign.
Submitted by: Wes Peters
Obtained from: Original framework from OpenBSD 2.7, X.509 bits from DoBox.
Specifically, ``proxy'' modifier tells the code to delete only
Proxy ARP entry for the ``hostname''; the usual ARP entry will
be unaffected by this operation.
is called prior to sending a CCP configure request for a
given protocol. The default is to send the request, but
this is overridden for MPPE which checks to see if the lcp
negotiations agreed CHAP81, and if not fails.
Use the same function to decide if we should reject peer
requests for MPPE.
This should get rid of those boring messages about not being
able to initialise MPPE when we don't negotiate CHAP81.
CLOSE_NORMAL meanings. CLOSE_NORMAL doesn't change the currently
required state, the others do. This should stop ppp from entering
DATALINK_READY when LCP shutdown doesn't end up happening cleanly.
Bump our version number to reflect this change.
checksums (to see if it's been modified post-installation). Naturally,
this mechanism is only as secure as the contents of /var/db/pkg if you're
using it for auditing purposes.
Submitted by: Roman Shterenzon <roman@xpert.com>