to specify rules definition file for ipfilter. The default is
/etc/ipf6.rules. If there is a file which is specified by
'ipv6_ipfilter_rules', IPv6 rule is installed.
Reviewed by: Ronald van der Pol <Ronald.vanderPol@rvdp.org>
MFC after: 1 week
PR: 38919
Submitted by: Tommy Johnson
o IBM IDE CDROM
PR: 39537
Submitted by: Kevin Van Maren
o T-Sunus 130 card
PR: 41802
Submitted by: Oliver Schneider
o No-name OEM Prism card
o ActionTec Prism card
o ZoomAir 11Mbps High Rate wireless networking
PR: 41929, 41928
Submitted by: Bruce M Simpson
o Dynalink L100C16
PR: 41938
Submitted by: Marco van de Voort
1) Add new card entry for nortel eMobility wi card (from email
that I've lost the sender on :-(
2) put ata devices at config 0x1 rather than auto. This should be
better for nearly all cases.
MFC after: 3 days
xntpd_* -> ntpd_*
portmap_* -> rpcbind_*
Also change single_mountd_enable to mountd_enable.
We also include shims for all the old variable names.
Submitted by: Mike Makonnen <makonnen@pacbell.net>
Submitted by: matt peterson
While I'm here, kill the flags 0x10000 on all the prism based cards.
Both stable and current figure this out on their own and we've had at
least one releases where this is the case.
card behind it (without the pcmcia form factor). This entry gets to
the point of attaching, but there's something wrong with the '29
support, so it doesn't quite work yet.
fix a comment that suggested setting ipv6_ipv4mapping to blank. This
will aid in merging with rcng which requires all veriables to be
explicitly set.
Submitted by: Mike Makonnen
MFC after: 1 week
The Blue Concentric CF 802.11b card is a compactflash form-factored card
that does 802.11b, including 128bit encryption.
The Zonet modem pccard is a simple FAX/Modem card.
Both are sold in Guang-Hua Market in Taipei, and functions perfectly
with -current and -stable.
Add /etc/rc.d to the startup dirs list. It is a convenient place to put
custom startup scripts instead of hacking a shared rc.local. eg: ftpd in
listener mode, or maybe even sendmail or another mailer, etc.
<peril sensitive sunglasses off>
clientmqueue (submit mail queue).
The new mailq display is only active if both the old
daily_status_mailq_enable is set to "YES" and the new
daily_status_include_submit_mailq is set to "YES" so people who disabled
440.status-mailq won't have any surprises.
Likewise, the new queue run is only active if both the old
daily_queuerun_enable is set to "YES" and the new daily_submit_queuerun
is set to "YES" so people who disabled 500.queuerun won't have any
surprises.
While I am here, remove the [ ! -d /var/spool/mqueue ] checks from
both scripts as the queue directory isn't always /var/spool/mqueue for
the main daemon -- it can be set to anything in the sendmail.cf file.
MFC after: 1 week
again."
As an alternative to sendmail_enable=NONE, solve the boot time problem
for non-sendmail users completely by moving all of the sendmail startup
code from /etc/rc to /etc/rc.sendmail. The source for that script will
be kept in src/etc/sendmail/rc.sendmail so make.conf's NO_SENDMAIL will
prevent it from being installed. A new rc.conf variable,
mta_start_script specifies the script to run to start the user's
preferred MTA. For backward compatibility, it will default to
/etc/rc.sendmail. The specified script is called out of /etc/rc after
checking to make sure it exists. A new rc.sendmail.8 man page has also
been added which now houses the sendmail_* variable descriptions
formerly in rc.conf.5.
Use /etc/rc.sendmail in /etc/mail/Makefile to reduce code duplication.
Reviewed by: -current, -stable, obrien, peter, ru
MFC after: 1 week
at boot time.
Instead of rc.conf's sendmail_enable only accepting YES or NO, it can now
also accept NONE. If set to NONE, none of the other sendmail related
startup items will be done.
Remove an extra queue running daemon might be started that wasn't necessary
(it didn't hurt anything but it wasn't needed).
The new logic is:
# MTA
if ${sendmail_enable} == NONE
# Do nothing
else if ${sendmail_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_flags}
else if ${sendmail_submit_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_submit_flags}
else if ${sendmail_outbound_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_outbound_flags}
endif
# MSP Queue Runner
if ${sendmail_enable} != NONE &&
[ -r /etc/mail/submit.cf] && ${sendmail_msp_queue_enable} == YES
start sendmail with ${sendmail_msp_queue_flags}
endif
Discussed with: Thomas Quinot <Thomas.Quinot@Cuivre.FR.EU.ORG>,
Christopher Schulte <schulte+freebsd@nospam.schulte.org>
MFC after: 1 week
when running natd(8) out of the rc-files. It is perfectly valid for
the interface or alias address to be set in a natd(8) configuration
file, not on the command line. Also, loosen up the restrictions on
identifying an IP address argument in 'natd_interface.'
Fix the documentation, rc.conf(5), to reflect this change.
Take the bogus default for 'natd_interface' out of /etc/defaults/rc.conf.
MFC after: 3 days
at boot (sendmail_enable=NO), a localhost-only daemon may started
(sendmail_submit_enable) as it is needed to accept mail from command line
submissions. If this isn't desired, see etc/mail/README for more hints.
Optionally (sendmail_msp_queue_enable) start a queue runner for the
submission queue in case a daemon isn't available to accept command line
submitted mail at submission time.
Note that the syslog labels for all of these sendmail processes have been
uniquified for easier log parsing.
10 in -STABLE), pccardd's string comparison between
pccard.conf's entry and PC card's CIS tupple became strict
matching.
As influences of this commit, some PC cards don't work since
some /etc/default/pccard.conf's card identifiers entries are
incorrectly described.
- Lexar Media compact flash
- IO DATA CBIDE2 in 16 bit mode
- TOSHIBA Portable 24X Speed CD-ROM Drive PA2673UJ
- Hewlett Packard M820e (CD-writer)
Update these card configs.
PR: 33815
Obtained from: [bsd-nomads:16128]
# This card has the same PCMCIA and OEM id as ELSA XI300 wireless card, which
# appears to be listed elsewhere in this file.
Submitted by: Abe Toshiaki-san <ans@sun-tec.co.jp>
MFC After: 5 days
Try this out in -CURRENT, MFC, and then consider dropping the
'log_in_vain' knob all together. It really is something for
sysctl.conf(5).
PR: bin/32953
Reviewed by: -bugs discussion
MFC after: 1 week
We now do it as a "camcontrol rescan all" which is something ken
promised to implement; for the time being it's not worse than the old
"camcontrol rescan $device" which ended up in something like
"camcontrol rescan aic1". Currently, camcontrol misinterprets the
third non-numeric arg as number 0, and rescans bus 0, which is about
the best we could get at this time.
Approved by: imp
MFC after: 1 week
Submitted by: Michael Johansson <micke@nevermind.net>
o Sony PCWA-C100 WaveLAN card
Submitted by: "Jeremiah Gowdy" <jgowdy@home.com>
o Corega KK Wireless LAN PCCA-11 (version b?)
Submitted by: Masahide *MAC* Noda <mac@clave.gr.jp>
types (networkfs_types) with a version that includes the original
list.
This increases the scope for user error and also means that systems with
networkfs_types set in /etc/rc.conf will not benefit from changes to the
list in /etc/defaults/rc.conf on upgrade.
Instead, store the default list in /etc/rc itself and allow the operator
to append to that list by specifying her own list in networkfs_types.
Rename networkfs_types to extra_netfs_types accordingly, as the new name
better describes the purpose of the variable. Default the value to
'NO'.
the network is initialized. This was first implemented in rev 1.268
of src/etc/rc, but was backed out at wollman's request.
The objection was that the right place for the fix is in mount(8).
Having looked at that problem, I find it hard to believe that
the hoops one would have to jump through can be justified by the
desire for purity alone.
Note that there are reported issues surrounding nfsclient kernel
support and mount_nfs(8), which currently make NFS an ugly exception
to the general case.
With this change, systems with non-NFS network filesystems configured
for mounting on startup in /etc/fstab are no longer guaranteed to
fail on startup.
o uncommnent joy stuff (me)
o Add BONDWELL B236 joystick card (me)
o Add Buffalo WLI-CF-S11G wi card (me)
o CNF CD-m (submitted by gda)
Submitted by: Dmitry A Goncharov <gda@sani.ru>
of /etc/daily. Some time later, /etc/daily became a set of periodic(8)
scripts. Now, this evolution continues, and /etc/security has been
broken into periodic(8) scripts to make local customization easier and
more maintainable.
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: ru
dhclient and pccard_ether, introduce the concept of a "settle time" to
pccard_ether with the new pccard_ether_delay variable. Defaults to 5
seconds, which is enough time for the ed driver to finish its
autoconfiguration for newer Linksys based cards. This also can
eliminate the ed0: timeout messages that happen at startup as well.
MFC: after RE says OK.
appears to be another OEM version of the Netgear FA411. This is a
guess, since the original didn't include the flags, but this is too
similar to my netgear card...
Submitted by: neal@nelsonnet.org
discussed on the arch@ mailinglist (after repo-copy).
sys.mk will .error if it finds /etc/defaults/make.conf but include
it anyways (this is the same behaviour as with the make.conf.local
removal).
/usr/share/examples/etc/make.conf has BDEFLAGS commented out now,
since it's only an example file.
Adjust all textes that talk about make.conf or defaults/make.conf to
match the new situation.
value, it forces GCC to not optimize above this level. For intance, GCC
made with "WANT_FORCE_OPTIMIZATION_DOWNGRADE=1" is a good setting for the
Alpha platform when building ports.
us anyway because it doesn't work right on the x86 and alpha. On
K&R code, small ints would be promoted to int. ANSI-C doesn't require
this and the small ints can be passed taking 8 or 16 bits of stack
space. However, the x86 abi that we use *does* promote to 32 bit,
and the alpha ABI passes them in 64 bit registers so we dont have
that aspect of the problem here. Losing float precision by having it
cast down to int because the funtion prototype specifies int is the
least of our problems. -Wmissing-prototypes helps here anyway.
building a .cf file from a .mc file.
Include -D_FFR_TLS_O_T to enable tls policy control since the sendmail binary
build enables that FFR as well.
PR: conf/28361
MFC after: 1 week
for separating the startup scripts' list into individual filenames.
Run the shutdown scripts in reverse alphabetical order, so dependent
services are stopped before the services they depend upon.
Reviewed by: -arch, -audit
MFC after: 3 weeks
the following description in RFC2461:
AdvSendAdvertisements
A flag indicating whether or not the router sends
periodic Router Advertisements and responds to
Router Solicitations.
Default: FALSE
Note that AdvSendAdvertisements MUST be FALSE by
default so that a node will not accidentally start
acting as a router unless it is explicitly
configured by system management to send Router
Advertisements.
Submitted by: JINMEI Tatuya <jinmei@isl.rdc.toshiba.co.jp>
MFC after: 1 week
Make the default setting YES for now to get some experience with it.
Note: If people starts seeing disk errors because of this then it
should not be backed.
NO_MAKEDEV_INSTALL and NO_MAKEDEV_RUN. The former implying the latter.
The names imply what they do. The last commit by DES based on a PR defeated
the original idea behind NO_MAKEDEV, which was not to run MAKEDEV, but to do
the installation of MAKEDEV. This should satisfy both parties on the MAKEDEV
challenge.
Note that "right" in this case is not universally recognized, but
NTP-practittioners as opposed to theoretians generally agree that
getting "inside the window" using ntpdate is TRTTD on PC hardware.
PR: 25514
Submitted by: Chris Johnson <cjohnson-pr@palomine.net>
very specific scenarios, and now that we have had net.inet.tcp.blackhole for
quite some time there is really no reason to use it any more.
(second of three commits)
associated changes that had to happen to make this possible as well as
bugs fixed along the way.
Bring in required TLI library routines to support this.
Since we don't support TLI we've essentially copied what NetBSD
has done, adding a thin layer to emulate direct the TLI calls
into BSD socket calls.
This is mostly from Sun's tirpc release that was made in 1994,
however some fixes were backported from the 1999 release (supposedly
only made available after this porting effort was underway).
The submitter has agreed to continue on and bring us up to the
1999 release.
Several key features are introduced with this update:
Client calls are thread safe. (1999 code has server side thread
safe)
Updated, a more modern interface.
Many userland updates were done to bring the code up to par with
the recent RPC API.
There is an update to the pthreads library, a function
pthread_main_np() was added to emulate a function of Sun's threads
library.
While we're at it, bring in NetBSD's lockd, it's been far too
long of a wait.
New rpcbind(8) replaces portmap(8) (supporting communication over
an authenticated Unix-domain socket, and by default only allowing
set and unset requests over that channel). It's much more secure
than the old portmapper.
Umount(8), mountd(8), mount_nfs(8), nfsd(8) have also been upgraded
to support TI-RPC and to support IPV6.
Umount(8) is also fixed to unmount pathnames longer than 80 chars,
which are currently truncated by the Kernel statfs structure.
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
Manpage review: ru
Secure RPC implemented by: wpaul
Xircom CreditCard Netwave cnw
Intel PRO/Wireless 2011 (PRISM II) wi
3COM 3CRWE737A (PRISM II) wi
Note: I've had some reports that the latter two cards work, but I've not
been able to get them to work for me.
enable all harvesting options by default since having them on for
devices not present doesn't hurt anything. Leave them on by default
since for the most part they are not producing noticable slowdown,
and are about to get a lot more efficient.
Re-order part of the cheesy entropy process in preparation for
its complete removal.
during the boot process. We're turning it on by default, based on the
actual presence of a configured ethernet card, and/or ppp/tun devices.
Of course, it's easy to disable in rc.conf.
and Pentium II, III and IV processors (p2, p3, p4), as well as 'mmx' and
'3dnow' MACHINE_CPU tags as appropriate. In the near future this will
be used to control various ports which have MMX/3dNow optimizations,
instead of the ad-hoc methods currently used.
Reviewed by: peter
libssl, for example), and hide it behind a make.conf option,
WANT_OPENSSL_MANPAGES, instead of having it commented out. We still can't
install these by default because of clobbering of a number of system
manpages with the same name, but they're there for people who want them.
* Rip out MACHINE_CPU stuff from sys.mk and include a new <bsd.cpu.mk>
after we pull in /etc/make.conf. We need to do it afterwards so we can
react to the user setting of the:
* CPUTYPE variable, which contains the CPU type which the user wants to
optimize for. For example, if you want your binaries to only run on an
i686-class machine (or higher), set this to i686. If you want to support
running binaries on a variety of CPU generations, set this to the lowest
common denominator. Supported values are listed in make.conf.
* bsd.cpu.mk does the expansion of CPUTYPE into MACHINE_CPU using the
(hopefully) correct unordered list of CPU types which should be used on
that CPU. For example, an AMD k6 CPU wants any of the following:
k6 k5 i586 i486 i386
This is still an unordered list so the client makefile logic is simple -
client makefiles need to test for the various elements of the set in
decreasing order of priority using ${MACHINE_CPU:M<foo>}, as before.
The various MACHINE_CPU lists are believed to be correct, but should be
checked.
* If NO_CPU_CFLAGS is not defined, add relevant gcc compiler optimization
settings by default (e.g. -karch=k6 for CPUTYPE=k6, etc). Release
builders and developers of third-party software need to make sure not to
enable CPU-specific optimization when generating code intended to be
portable. We probably need to move to an /etc/world.conf to allow the
optimization stuff to be applied separately to world/kernel and external
compilations, but it's not any worse a problem than it was before.
* Add coverage for the ia64/itanium MACHINE_ARCH/CPUTYPE.
* Add CPUTYPE support for all of the CPU types supported by FreeBSD and gcc
(only i386, alpha and ia64 first, since those are the minimally-working
ports. Other architecture porters, please feel free to add the relevant
gunk for your platform).
Reviewed by: jhb, obrien
users should be configuring via m4 now. If set, use m4 to create the .cf
file. Also, if either SENDMAIL_MC or SENDMAIL_CF is set, 'make install' or
'make distribution' in src/etc/sendmail/ will install the appropriate .cf as
/etc/mail/sendmail.cf. This fixes some mergemaster problems.
PR: conf/13016
through the use of a new build directive, MACHINE_CPU, which contains a
list of the CPU generations/features for which optimizations are desired.
This feature will be extended to cover the ports tree in the future.
Currently OpenSSL provides optimizations for i386, i586 and i686-class
CPUs. Currently it has not been tested on an i386 or i486.
Teach make(1) to provide sensible defaults for MACHINE_CPU if it is not
defined (namely, the lowest common denominator CPU we support for each
architecture). Currently this is i386 for the i386 architecture and ev4
for the alpha. sys.mk also sets the variable as a last resort for
consistency with MACHINE_ARCH and bootstrapping from very old versions of
make.
Benchmarks show a significant speed increase even in the i386 case, with
additional improvements for i586 and i686 systems. For maximum performance
define MACHINE_CPU=i686 i586 i386 in /etc/make.conf.
Based on a patch submitted by: Mike Silbersack <silby@silby.com>
Reviewed by: current
it at boot time closer to the way we want it to be in the final version.
* Move the default directory to /var/db/entropy
* Run the entropy saving cron job every 11 minutes. This seems
to be a better default, although still bikeshed material.
* Feed /dev/random some cheesy "entropy" from various commands
and files before the disks are mounted. This gives /dev/random
a better chance of running without blocking early.
* Move the reseeding with previously stored entropy to the point
immediately after the disks are mounted.
* Make the harvesting script a little safer in regards to the
possibility of accidentally overwriting something other
than a regular file.
it can be used to reseed at boot time. This will greatly increase
the chances that there will be sufficient entropy available at
boot time to prevent long delays.
For /etc/rc, remove the vmstat and iostat runs from the attempt
to provide some cheesy randomness if the files fail, since
those programs are dynamically linked, and ldd seems to want
some randomness to do its magic.
Guidance and parameters for this project were provided by
Mark Murray, based on the requirements of the Yarrow
algorithm. Some helpful suggestions for implementation
(including the tip about iostat and vmstat) were provided
by Sheldon Hearn. All blame for problems or mistakes is
mine of course.
multifunction cards and I recieved reports that the card does not
workd by `config auto'. (MFPAO)
o Remove static assign of the IRQ number.
o Remove two duplicated entries.
o Join some entries using regex and fixed matching order problem.
These changes for boot.flp.
Suggested by: sanpei
require the addition of flag 0x80000 to their config line in
pccard.conf(5). This flag is not optional. These Linksys cards will
not be recognized without it.
Reviewed by: imp, iwasaki
from "PCMCIA SCSI MBH1040" to "PCMCIA SCSI MBH10401" "01". They are
based on the spc driver.
This will fix the conflicts of entry with REX-5536AM, REX-9836A,
and ICM PSC-2401 ("MBH10404" ones) which are based on stg driver.
The problem was pointed out in bsd-nomads several times since PAO2 days.
-Comment out the entry for "MBH10401" ones. The spc driver is
not supported yet.
-Add more comment about cards which has broken CIS
(some cards which has tuple of "PCMCIA SCSI MBH10404" "01").
Reported by: takachan@running-dog.net, y-nakaga@nwsl.mesh.ad.jp,
yuki@dayo.ne.jp
Obtained from: discussion in bsd-nomads mailing list
ENABLE_SUID_SSH being defined reenable it for those that want it.
This follows discussion favoring the change from September. It
is not usually necessary to be setuid root, possibly less safe,
and less convenient (cannot use $HOSTALIASES, for example).
Submitted by: jedgar
cosmetic changes
use /etc/pccard_ether for Xircom CreditCard Netwave
and 3Com Corporation" "3C562" (BUT NOT SUPPORTED).
fix `card line' of RATOC REX-5572 (as SCSI only)
use `config auto' for RATOC REX-5536AM, REX-9836A,
ICM PSC-2401 SCSI
- rtsol should be work for only one interface
- new variable ipv6_defaultrouter is added
- option name of rtadvd in comment are corrected
- ipv6_firewall_enable, ipv6_firewall_type, ipv6_firewall_script,
ipv6_firewall_logging are added to introduce rc.firewall6.
IPv6 firewall rule is just starting point and should be brushed up.
This commit includes PR18621, PR21694, PR22051.
PR: conf/18621, conf/21694, conf/22051
Reviewed by: asmodai
used in lower layer (scsi_low.c).
The flag of ncv for KME KXLC004 was chaged from 0x1 to 0x100.
The flag of nsp for PIO mode was chaged from 0x1 to 0x100.
This confilcted with the entry of non PIO mode.
If you want to use them in PIO mode comment out entry of the non PIO mode
and uncommnet the PIO mode entry.
and stg drivers. Also all config indexes for these cards are changed
to auto.
Note, still if you would like to use cards which has a comment;
# (Do not put this entry under Bustoaster)
you need some quick hack. Uncomment the entry above.
Reviewed by: sanpei@FreeBSD.org