date: 1994/03/06 08:55:02; author: ache; state: Exp; lines: +4 -1
Stop count getty spacing problem, if we issue kill -1 1
----------------------------
revision 1.5
date: 1994/03/04 17:51:39; author: ache; state: Exp; lines: +9 -2
I got a lot of
"getty repeating too quickly on port %s, sleeping"
from init.bsdi, it means that getty start and exit in five seconds.
This is common situation for poor quality Russian phone lines:
modem got CONNECT message and after retries got NO CARRIER.
So I introduce spacing count, it means that this warning and
sleep occurse only after GETTY_NSPACE times of sequental attempts.
----------------------------
revision 1.4
date: 1994/02/28 21:53:52; author: ache; state: Exp; lines: +71 -10
I found (and fix) ugly bugs in init.bsdi (this bugs not present
in old init)
1) Init don't setup TERM environment variable for default terminal
type from /etc/ttys before calling getty/window.
2) When "kill -1 1" issued, init don't restart getty when
/etc/ttys parameters was changed (it only kill "off" end empty entries).
3) Small memory leak if "window" /etc/ttys parameter specified and
"kill -1 1" issued.
Obtained from: FreeBSD 1.x
being output if <= 1 rpos; there is a bug in the kernel which doesn't
quite get along with this. Changed default #rpos to 1, and fixed up
manual page. Converted nrpos to 1 if user specifies 0.
the use of the rotational position table.
2) Allow specification of 0 rotational positions (disables function).
3) Make rotdelay=0 and nrpos=0 by default.
The purpose of the above is to optimize for modern SCSI (and IDE) drives
that do read-ahead/write-behind.
DANGER WILL ROBINSON!
_PATH_UNIX is currently defined as the literal string "don't use this".
I am of two minds about this myself, but wanted to get something into the
tree as quickly as possible.
modload doesn't honor it's -p argument.
It also will destroy the input file when you don't specify an output
symbol file with -o.
Submitted by: John Kohl
arrange for that directory to get created by mtree. Also, process secure
directory after all the others, because the programs there may overlay
ones installed from the main part of the tree.
device driver cannot supply a label (real or faked). This allows
you to practice using fdisk on disposable media (e.g., "dd count=1
<dev/zero >/tmp/junk; fdisk /tmp/junk", "dd count=1 </etc/passwd
>/tmp/fix-up-the-mess; fdisk /tmp/fix-up-the-mess") and allows me
to test DOSpartitioning and labelling on floppies.
Also moved some KERBEROS related stuff inside the #ifdef.
Should we always try to do a reverse lookup (IP#->name) ?
It has som merit, but is probably against the tradition or huh ?
with DavidG, I've come to the conclusion that unless and until we define
a new directory to put these things in, /sbin is the right place.
(OSF/1 does a lot worse for non-executables in /sbin...).
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.