with 1.1.5:
revision 1.40
date: 1994/06/17 16:57:03; author: pst; state: Exp; lines: +4 -2
From: Gill Kloepfer Jr. <gil@limbic.ssdl.com>
Verified by: pst
> The DIOCSBAD ioctl sets a bad block table (is almost suredly called by
> the bad144 utility) and changes the memory-resident bad block table. The
> problem is that bad144intern() is not called after the "disk" structure has
> been changed, so that the internal bad144 table will become out-of-sync with
> the one in the disk structure.
----------------------------
revision 1.39
date: 1994/06/07 01:36:39; author: phk; state: Exp; lines: +3 -2
another place option !defined(DISKLABEL_UNPROTECTED) was needed.
has no effect now, and MROUTING should never be defined by default.
(Eventually the code should be dynamically loadable.)
Also, allow for Pentium CPUs in GENERICBT kernels.
Add an `install' rule to Makefile.i386, which looks like this:
mv /kernel /kernel.old
install -c -m 555 -o root -g root -fschg kernel /
I'd like comments on whether or not you think it's a good idea to have
the kernel be immutable by default; I'm happy either way.
CVS:
place.
Removed mount_pcfs until we have a replacement.
Removed fdisk until it is ported and/or replaced.
Now have to include many more libraries due to /bin/sh changes.
You need to fix the libio/_G_config.h file around lines 42-44. After
that everything should be OK. You should have seen many warning error
messages about this file. There are missing "short" "char" keywords
the file.
Michael:
Apply the following patch
rgrimes:
The patch to include/_G_config.h is highly questionable and has been
marked as such.
Reviewed by: rgrimes
Submitted by: L Jonas Olsson <ljo@ljo-slip.DIALIN.CWRU.Edu>
Submitted by: Michael Reifenberger <root@rz-wb.fh-sw.de>
you MUST add the directory name and the .. entry to close the directory.
If you do not understand mtree files, do not modify them, it is very
easy to trash someones box with a mistake in here. Especially with
regards to .. entries.
date: 1993/11/15 07:15:16; author: rgrimes; state: Exp; lines: +1 -0
From Andrew Moore
Make /usr/share/dict/words a symbolic link to web2
[This is now NECESSARY for games/boggle as it uses /usr/share/dict/words
as an input file]
Reviewed by: rgrimes
Submitted by: From 1.x, alm
device block which was stopping symbolic links working.
cd9660_readdir was incorrectly casting a pointer to the d_namlen field of a
struct dirent to a (u_short*) which caused the directory entries "." and ".."
to read incorrectly.
Submitted by: dfr
1) dir.c: get byte order right in mkentry()
2) pass1.c: When doing -c2 conversion, do secsize reads for a symlink -
not doing so was causing the conversion to fail because the device
driver can't deal with short reads.
revision 1.6
date: 1993/10/19 19:57:35; author: rgrimes; state: Exp; lines: +2 -1
Pull in ../Makefile.inc so that the whatis database ends up in the correct
place. Rich Murphy has a better fix for this, but I lost it!
multiple targets when dealing with creating a set of distribution files
from scratch. Another problem is *verifying* that a given file fetched
from its HOME_LOCATION is the one we wanted (what if the stupid ftp site
maintainer updated it in place?). Rich Morin pointed this out and suggested
some solutions. I need to think about it some more (suggestions?).
For now, we have a seperate `fetch' and `extract' target.
Submitted by: jkh
but termios speed range is [0..115200]. Of cource ospeed initialized
with wrong value too which cann affects terminals with padding, fixed.
57600,115200 added.
POSIX.2 looks pretty unequivocal to me, and it agrees with you.
Under the explanation of the "-p" option, it says, "Each dir operand that
names an existing directory shall be ignored without error." Under the
explanation of exit status zero, it says, "All the specified directories were
created successfully, or the-p option was specified and all the specified
directories now exist."
Seems to me POSIX requires exactly the behavior you want.
[ And I've made the change, which is also now compatible with 1.x - jkh ]
Reviewed by: jkh
Submitted by: jkh/tweten
>From Arne Bier <csar@cs.ru.ac.za>
while running more(1), if you enter ":a" to get the name of the file being
viewed, more dumps core when you hit enter (as prompted).
This is due to more(1) attempting to find the length of a NULL string.
Submitted by: Geoff.
>From: jtk@atria.com (John T. Kohl)
in rcmd:
It calls select() with a hardcoded "number of file descriptors" argument
of 32, rather than computing it based on the sockets about which it
cares.
- Now we work out the nfds arg, and do some error checking
Submitted by: Geoff.