Greg Lehey
b1356c97c6
Change the way of recognizing whether a plex was given to a volume
after the volume had been fully operational; involves a change in the use of the VF_NEWBORN flag. Now if you add a plex to a volume which is up, the plex will be down and the subdisks stale. You need to explicitly start the subdisks, which copies data from the good subdisks to the uninitialized ones. Stumbled-over-by: Ludwig Pummer <ludwigp@bigfoot.com> give_sd_to_drive: correct method to give the entire largest chunk of drive to the subdisk. Now it's enough to specify a length, and vinum will give you as much as it can. Not to be recommended except for empty drives. Correct a bogon which made vinum refuse to give the last sector of a drive to a subdisk. Last-reported-by: Ludwig Pummer <ludwigp@bigfoot.com> Change %q formats to %ll before the former go away. This doesn't make much difference, since kernel kvprintf currently doesn't support either, and the messages in question are just error messages.
This is the top level of the FreeBSD source directory. This file was last revised on: $Id: README,v 1.13 1998/09/13 09:38:34 markm Exp $ For copyright information, please see the file COPYRIGHT in this directory (additional copyright information also exists for some sources in this tree - please see the specific source directories for more information). The Makefile in this directory supports a number of targets for building components (or all) of the FreeBSD source tree, the most commonly used one being ``world'', which rebuilds and installs everything in the FreeBSD system from the source tree except the kernel and the contents of /etc. Please see the top of the Makefile in this directory for more information on the standard build targets and compile-time flags. Building a kernel with config(8) is a somewhat more involved process, documentation for which can be found at: http://www.freebsd.org/handbook/kernelconfig.html And in the config(8) man page. The sample kernel configuration files reside in the sys/i386/conf sub-directory (assuming that you've installed the kernel sources), the file named GENERIC being the one used to build your initial installation kernel. The file LINT contains entries for all possible devices, not just those commonly used, and is meant more as a general reference than an actual kernel configuration file (a kernel built from it wouldn't even run). Source Roadmap: --------------- bin System/User commands. contrib Packages contributed by 3rd parties. crypto Export controlled stuff (see crypto/README). etc Template files for /etc games Amusements. gnu Various commands and libraries under the GNU Public License. Please see gnu/COPYING* for more information. include System include files. kerberosIV Kerberos package. lib System libraries. libexec System daemons. release Release building Makefile & associated tools. sbin System commands. secure DES and DES-related utilities - NOT FOR EXPORT! share Shared resources. sys Kernel sources. tools Utilities for regression testing and miscellaneous tasks. usr.bin User commands. usr.sbin System administration commands. For information on synchronizing your source tree with one or more of the FreeBSD Project's development branches, please see: http://www.freebsd.org/handbook/synching.html
Description
Languages
C
60.1%
C++
26.1%
Roff
4.9%
Shell
3%
Assembly
1.7%
Other
3.7%