file descriptors that are used for input and output. That allows
one, for example, to use nghook to bi-directionally pipe the
input and output into/from another non-netgraph-aware program.
to acpidb. The same problem exists in iasl. Add JIT patching there
too.
Add a comment to both makefiles to increase the chance that both
kludges are removed when a real solution is committed.
osunixxf.c on the fly. This avoids having to pull it from the vendor
branch or otherwise pollute the repository with new short-lived files.
This should hold until the real fix arrives.
If the value of OtherConfigFlag changes from FALSE to TRUE, the
host should invoke the stateful autoconfiguration protocol,
requesting information.
[RFC 2462 Section 5.5.3]
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 1 week
control whether to accept RAs per-interface basis.
the new stuff ensures the backward compatibility;
- the kernel does not accept RAs on any interfaces by default.
- since the default value of the flag bit is on, the kernel accepts RAs
on all interfaces when net.inet6.ip6.accept_rtadv is 1.
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 1 week
What is the HPET I hear you ask? It is the High Precision Event Timer
that is supposed to supplement and eventually replace the 8254 timer and
the RTC periodic interrupts. Among other things, it is 64 bit (can be
run in 32 bit mode for 32 bit cpus), and is suitable as a replacement for
the ACPI timer on SMP systems (the specs are much better) and as a
replacement for the ITC based synthetic clock for on ia64 systems.
It seems IA64 and AMD64 systems tend to have this. It is likely to start
showing up in i386 systems if it isn't already on some of them.
a constant string of little information these days.
This removes the need to #include <vm/swap_pager.h> which is due to
become a kernel only include file.
incoming remote telephone numbers and subaddresses ignored the configured
list completely since it was always terminated by a break at the end of
the first run (which was a leftover from the implementation of subaddresses).
Submitted by: Christian Ullrich <chris@chrullrich.de>
The output format specifier for the round-trip time in ping6 should be
changed to %.3f instead of %g since %g doesn't accurately represent the
precision of the number being output. In particular, %g truncates trailing
zeroes. 0.01 ms does not mean the same thing as 0.010 ms. Although they
are numerically identical, they do not have the same precision.
PR: bin/52324, bin/52750
Submitted by: dg
MFC after: 1 week
the scope of operation to the ARP entries on a particular
interface. It should be useful on machines with numerous
network interfaces, e.g., on inter-VLAN routers.
PR: bin/54151
Submitted by: Dmitry Morozovsky <marck at rinet.ru>
Discussed on: -net
MFC after: 2 weeks
(or possibly testing) the previous formula worked for the default
constants compiled into inetd, but if you recompiled with different
values of CHTSIZE and CHTGRAN the calculation might not have worked.
PR: 54354
Submitted by: Claus Assmann <ca@sendmail.org>
Submitted by: Jose Marcio Martins da Cruz <Jose-Marcio.Martins@ensmp.fr>
MFC after: 5 days
format of 'sccsid' lines so they consistently match style(9).
A minor Makefile change is needed so lptest.c can find lp.cdefs.h.
Reviewed by: discussed with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
format of 'sccsid' lines so they consistently match style(9)
Also the 'sccsid' line is formatted to match style(9), and
a 'From:' is removed so the sccsid returns to what it was back
in the days of '-r CSRG' (1996).
Reviewed by: discussed with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
programs, minor Makefile changes are needed to find lp.cdefs.h.
For lpf.c, the 'sccsid' line is formatted to match style(9), and
a 'From:' is removed so the sccsid returns to what it was back
in the days of '-r CSRG' (1994).
Reviewed by: discussed with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
format of 'sccsid' lines so they consistently match style(9)
guidelines. Note that this means you will have to add '-a' to
the 'strings' command when searching for rcs ids, eg:
strings -a /usr/sbin/lpc | grep '$FreeBSD'
Reviewed by: discussed on cvs-src & with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
'#ifdef lint/#endif' around the lines should not have been removed.
Also add blank lines where one (per file) was missing.
Reviewed by: First part noticed by bde, blank lines noticed by me
MFC after: 15 days
get from '-r CSRG', instead of having that sccsid as a comment.
(this is the sccsid from 1996 -- there have been many changes to
printcap.c since then!)
MFC after: 15 days
format of 'sccsid' lines so they consistently match style(9)
guidelines. Inspired by recent update to lpd.c by charnier.
Reviewed by: discussed on cvs-src & with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
source to use __FBSDID() for setting rcsids. Also fix the format
of 'sccsid' lines to consistently match style(9) guidelines.
Reviewed by: discussed with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
somewhat easier to build this lpr on other operating systems.
This simply includes <sys/cdefs.h> when that is appropriate,
and then checks for any cdefs-ish macros that lpr uses, and
defines them if they don't already exist. This is only a start
at making freebsd's lpr less of a hassle to port. It is mainly
added so all of lpr can be changed to use the __FBSDID() macro,
without making it *more* of a hassle to build on other OS's.
Reviewed by: discussed with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
I am the maintainer of CTM. There is a problem that when very large deltas
are created, that the program ctm_smail, which is responsible for mailing
the deltas out, will instead create a single message that says the delta
is too large. However, if the -q option is set, instead of placing this
message in the queue (as it would have done with the deltas), it mails it
out directly. This conflicts with the current working of CTM in that the
email address is set as %%REPLACE-ME%% so that the created mailing pieces
can be signed by gnu-pgp, and then have the mailing address changed.
This fix means that if the -q option is set, and the delta is too large,
the "too large" message is placed in the queue.
Also, I made the "too large" message a little more up to date.
Submitted by: Stephen Montgomery-Smith <stephen@math.missouri.edu>
PR: bin/50328
MFC After: 2 weeks
This option adds Postfix and Exim to the list, however, qmail is not added
due to license restrictions.
Collaborated with: Simon L. Nielsen <simon@nitro.dk>
Reviewed by: jhb, re@, -audit.
- Use getifaddrs() instead of rolling our own buggy one. Previously,
rarpd(8) would fail to see some interfaces because of a hardcoded limit.
It now successfully sees any interface in the system, and this also makes
the code _much_ simpler.
- Replace strncpy() calls with strlcpy() calls. Some uses of strncpy()
were bogus ; the code wasn't ensuring that the string was NUL terminated.
- Don't try to guard about select() FD_* macros being undefined.
- Use IF_NAMESIZE and ETHER_ADDR_LEN macros where appropriate.
- Add static keywords to function definitions for consistency, since
the prototypes have it (I wonder why GCC didn't complain about this).
- Remove compat code for very old BSD versions and SunOS.
- Remove code for systems not having the dirent.h header.
- The code is now WARNS=5 clean so mark it as such.
- Don't add -DTFTP_DIR="/tftpboot" to the build command line since it's
the default.
MFC after: 2 weeks
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)