freebsd-skq/etc/sysconfig

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#!/bin/sh
#
# This is sysconfig - a file full of useful variables that you can set
# to change the default startup behavior of your system.
#
# $Id: sysconfig,v 1.27 1995/10/28 12:41:40 peter Exp $
######################### Start Of Local Configuration Section ###########
# Location of local startup files.
local_startup=/usr/local/etc/rc.d
######################### End Of Local Configuration Section #############
######################### Start Of Syscons Section #######################
# Choose keyboard map from /usr/share/syscons/keymaps/* or NO if default.
keymap=NO
# Set keyboard rate to: slow, normal, fast or NO if default.
keyrate=NO
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# Change function keys default values (or no change if NO)
# Syntax: "<funkey_number> <new_value> [<funkey_number> <new_value>]..."
keychange=NO
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# Desired cursor type {normal|blink|destructive}, NO if no change
cursor=NO
# Choose screen map from /usr/share/syscons/scrnmaps/* (or NO for none)
scrnmap=NO
# Choose font 8x16 from /usr/share/syscons/fonts/* (or NO for default)
font8x16=NO
# Choose font 8x14 from /usr/share/syscons/fonts/* (or NO for default)
font8x14=NO
# Choose font 8x8 from /usr/share/syscons/fonts/* (or NO for default)
font8x8=NO
# Set blank time (in seconds) or "off" to turn it off (or NO for default)
blanktime=NO
# Set to screen saver desired: blank, green, snake, star (or NO for none)
saver=NO
# General russian setup for example:
# (koi8-r keyboard with cp866 screen font mapped to koi8-r)
#
# keymap=ru.koi8-r
# keyrate=fast
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# keychange="61 "
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# cursor=destructive
# scrnmap=koi8-r2cp866
# font8x16=cp866b-8x16
# font8x14=cp866-8x14
# font8x8=cp866-8x8
# blanktime=600
# saver=snake
######################### End Of Syscons Section #######################
######################### Start Of Netconfig Section #######################
# Set to the name of your host - this is pretty important!
hostname=myname.my.domain
# Set to the NIS domainname of your host, or NO if none
defaultdomainname=NO
#
# Some broken implementations can't handle the RFC 1323 and RFC 1644
# TCP options. If TCP connections randomly hang, try disabling this,
# and bug the vendor of the losing equipment.
#
tcp_extensions=YES
#
# Set to the list of network devices on this host. You must have an
# ifconfig_${network_interface} line for each interface listed here.
# for example:
#
# network_interfaces="ed0 sl0 lo0"
# ifconfig_ed0="inet 10.0.0.1 netmask 0xffffff00"
# ifconfig_sl0="inet 10.0.1.0 netmask 0xffffff00"
#
network_interfaces="lo0"
ifconfig_lo0="inet localhost"
#
# Set to the list of route add lines for this host. You must have a
# route_${static_routes} line for each static route listed here.
#
static_routes="multicast loopback"
route_multicast="224.0.0.0 -netmask 0xf0000000 -interface ${hostname}"
route_loopback="${hostname} localhost"
# Set to the host you'd like set as your default router, or NO for none.
defaultrouter=NO
# These are the flags you'd like to start the routing daemon with
routedflags=-q
# timed flags, or NO if you don't want to start the time daemon
timedflags=NO
# xntpd flags, or NO if you don't want to start the xntpd daemon
xntpdflags="NO"
# this is inoperative unless xntpd is enabled; NO to disable
tickadjflags="-Aq"
# Set to the site you'd like to syncronize your clock from (gatekeeper.dec.com,
# for example) or NO for no such site.
ntpdate="NO"
# Set to YES if you want to run rwhod
rwhod=NO
# Default sendmail flags. -bd is pretty mandatory, -q<n>m sets the queue scan
# time in minutes. If set to NO, don't start sendmail at all.
sendmail_flags="-bd -q30m"
# Set to appropriate flags if you want to use AMD
amdflags="NO"
# Set to YES if this machine will be an NFS client
nfs_client=NO
# Set to YES if this machine will be an NFS server
nfs_server=NO
# Set to appropriate flags if you want to start NIS for a client
nis_clientflags="NO"
# Name of host to ypset to, if no YP server on this wire
nis_ypsetflags="NO"
# Set to appropriate flags if you want to start NIS for a server
nis_serverflags="NO"
# Set to appropriate flags for yppasswdd, if you wish to run it.
# Typical flags might be "-m /var/yp/master.passwd -s -f"
yppasswddflags="NO"
# Set to appropriate flags for named, if you have a full-time
# connection to the Internet.
# For most hosts, flags should be "-b /etc/namedb/named.boot"
namedflags="NO"
# Set to YES if you run PC-NFSD (see /usr/ports/net/pcnfsd) for
# sharing filesystems with DOS/Windows PCs.
pcnfsd=NO
# Set to YES if you have the Apache WEB server (see /usr/ports/net/apache)
# installed and want to run it at system startup time (this is better than
# running it from inetd if you're running a dedicated WWW server).
apache_httpd=NO
# Set to YES if you want to run the X-10 power controller daemon
xtend=NO
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# Set to the name of the device for kernel crashdumps, or `off' to
# disable any statically configured dumpdev, or NO for no change.
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# The device should normally be one of the swap devices specified
# in /etc/fstab.
dumpdev=NO
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# Set to YES if you want kernel crashdumps to be saved for debugging
savecore=NO
# Set to YES if you want to run Kerberos authentication
kerberos_server=NO
# If you want this host to be a gateway, set to YES.
gateway=NO
# Set to YES if you want to run gated
gated=NO
# Set to YES if you wish to check quotas. NOTE: For now this probably
# doesn't work and should be left disabled.
check_quotas=NO
# Set to YES to turn on accounting. NOTE: For now this probably
# doesn't work and should be left disabled.
accounting=NO
######################### End Of Netconfig Section #######################
######################### Start Of Misc Section #######################
# Set to YES if you want ibcs2 (SCO) emulation loaded at startup
ibcs2=NO
# Set to YES if you want Linux (a.out) emulation loaded at startup
linux=NO
# Set to a string representing the interrupts you are going to use
# for generating entropy in the kernel (or NO to ignore).
# The keyboard (IRQ 1) is good if it used a lot.
# If the machine is networked, the ethernet card is good.
# The IRQ on an intelligent hard disk controller is good.
# The IRQ's on most sound devices are good.
#
# The following choices are BAD:
# THe IRQ's on COM-ports (SIO devices), the IRQ used by an IDE
# disk or CDROM, and the IRQ on the system clock.
#
# Experiment with the rest. The best interrupts are the ones that
# happen fairly irregularly, and never occur in very high-speed bursts.
#
# You'll have it right when you have a good supply of numbers from
# /dev/random, and no problems on your system, like slowdowns,
# Sluggish net/disk activity, perhaps even errors.
rand_irqs="-s 1"