Obtained from: Gunther Schadow and Luigi Rizzo
control program for Trust AmiScan BW (GI1904 chipset)
ASC - A device driver for a handy scanner
This is a device driver for GI1904-based hand scanners, e.g. the Trust
Amiscan Grey and possibly others. The driver is based on the "gsc"
driver and, partly, on a Linux driver.
The driver has a working select().
-Luigi Rizzo (luigi@iet.unipi.it)
to the target login's shell. This allows for "su -c".
Do it right this time and also explain this behaviour in the man
page. :)
Obtained from: bsm's work in FreeBSD 1.1.5.1
This gives us more room to breath with tty names, especially with drivers
that support large numbers of ports.. eg: specialix and digiboard.
This does not actually change the current tty names, it just allows room
for reporting more characters if the drivers use them.
correctly whether a user is local or NIS (or both, or neither). If you
have a user that exists locally but not in NIS, passwd(1) could get
confused and try to submit the password change to NIS. (Fortunately,
yppasswdd is smart enough to spot the error and reject the change.)
Bug reported by: Charles Owens <owensc@enc.edu>
NIS (or both, or neither). Also add support for -l and -y flags to
force behavior to local or NIS. use_yp() also goes out of its way to
retrieve the correct password database information (local or NIS)
depending on what the situation since getpwent() & co. can't
necessarily be trusted in some cases.
Also document new flags in man page.
syntax is slightly changed: -format is now -f format.
New option: -i name
This is a switch to control marked sections in SGML documents. Useful
for multi-lingual documents.
the installation floppy (and in any references in new user docs for
editing files) since tossing a novice into vi with no help or clue as
to what the key bindings are is both cruel and in violation of the
Hague Convention. It's also much SMALLER than vi and even supports emacs
key bindings for those so inclined.
Submitted by: "Hugh F. Mahon" <hugh@nsmdserv.cnd.hp.com>
Telnet has nothing to do with this, it's telnetd and telnetd
doesn't use KLUDGELINEMODE so that theory is washed up. Anyway,
back out previous commit and slink away with red face.
and graft it into chpass.
Chpass can now tell when it's being asked to operate on an NIS
user and it displayes the appropriate message in the editor
template ("Changing NIS information for foo"). After the changes
have been made, chpass will promte the user for his NIS password.
If the password is correct, the changes are committed to yppasswdd.
Hopefully, this should make NIS more transparent to the end user.
Note that even the superuser needs to know a user's password before
he can change any NIS information (such is the nature of yppasswdd).
Also, changes to the password field are not permitted -- that's what
yppasswd is for. (The superuser may specify a new password, but
again, he needs to know the user's original password before he can
change it.)
I do some digging out on this subject and found that remote
rlogind may reduce big speeds to 38400 by itself and (as more often
rlogind variant) speed setting ioctl fails, so speed left on 9600.
In all cases it doesn't do any real harm.
Look at error return of kread() and stop on error.
Fix warning in kread() to not output "kvm_read:" twice.
Killed PCB cache misses stat as we no longer have it.
at install time. This will allow `install -C' to avoid replacing the
installed copy if the new copy is the same. `install -C' would actually
work right if `strip' is already installed, but the Makefile doesn't
know that and has to work for plain `install'.
Stripping should be done by default at link time, but complications
would still be required for installing `strip' in case the default is
overridden.
>Description:
A machine with uptime >1 year appears wrong in the ruptime list
Fixes bin/626: ruptime doesn't like big ...
Reviewed by:
Submitted by: root@xaa.stack.urc.tue.nl
Obtained from:
their ambiguity and makes the output more consistent with other
calendars (e.g. cal in Emacs).
Reviewed by:
Submitted by: wosch@cs.tu-berlin.de (Wolfram Schneider)
Obtained from:
a gethostbyname() on it. That can take a long time... (especially
if the reason the IP address is in there in the first place is because
login/rlogind/telnetd couldn't find it either....)
This patch reduces the gethostbyaddr lookup time to 2 seconds, the idea being
that if the local nameserver knows the answer, it'll answer within that time,
otherwise we dont care... :-)
This change doesn't do anything about whether or not w should do this in the
first place, but at least it will make the current behavior less painful.
Reviewed by: David Greenman
but usually got confused with "eom". It didn't ring the warning bell
saying: "You are probably going to mark your whole tape as deleted
right now."
A warning message pointing to "weof" and "eom" is issued instead.
to su to root by authenticating as themselves (using a password or S/Key)
rather than by using the root password. This is useful in contexts like
ours, where a large group of people need root access to a set of machines.
(However, the security implications are such that this should not be
enabled by default.)
The code is conditionalized on WHEELSU.
isn't used in systat or in the kernel (it was replaced by a sysctl()
call involving VM_METER) and will go away when I clean up bogus
common variables in the kernel.
> The command:
>
> touch -t 199504011200 testfile
>
> gives the error message:
>
> touch: out of range or illegal time specification: [[CC]YY]MMDDhhmm[.SS]
Submitted by: mpp@legarto.minn.net (Mike Pritchard)
complain about an 'illegal line count' becuase it's looking
at the wrong end pointer (ep) to detect any extra characters
after the NNN.
Submitted by: Rich Murphey <rich@freebsd.org>
This should probably get pulled into 2.0.6 and 2.1.0
symbolic links for each cross reference label in the source file, thus
allowing external documents to link to a more or less fixed target,
rather that the numbered files which can change whenever the target
document is modified.
Bug fix: warn when a reference is made to a nonexistant label.
The version 2 support has been tested (client+server) against FreeBSD-2.0,
IRIX 5.3 and FreeBSD-current (using a loopback mount). The version 2 support
is stable AFAIK.
The version 3 support has been tested with a loopback mount and minimally
against an IRIX 5.3 server. It needs more testing and may have problems.
I have patched amd to support the new variable length filehandles although
it will still only use version 2 of the protocol.
Before booting a kernel with these changes, nfs clients will need to at least
build and install /usr/sbin/mount_nfs. Servers will need to build and
install /usr/sbin/mountd.
NFS diskless support is untested.
Obtained from: Rick Macklem <rick@snowhite.cis.uoguelph.ca>
Change things slightly so this message says "local" or "YP" as needed
so we can use it for both NIS and local password changes without
confusing people.
password strings when DES isn't used; somehow the encrypted password
is corrupted and it winds up containing control chars, which yppasswdd
subsequently rejects. This breaks yppasswd on non-DES FreeBSD systems
using NIS.
Fix: scrap getnewyppasswd() entirely and use getnewpasswd() from
local_password.c, since it already works properly and is virtually
identical to getnewyppasswd() anyway. (Wish I'd noticed this sooner.)
This fixes a problem just reported on comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc.