without root privs. This is done, among other things, replacing
the absolute paths in the symlinks with relative paths, so we
do not need to do a chroot to follow them.
Still need to update the manpage.
MFC after: 3 days
ports tree so that programs use libusb from the base by default. Thanks to
Stanislav Sedov for sorting out the ports build.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to 800069
Help and testing by: stas
have problems with kernels larger than 4MB.
Add a flag to avoid the /boot/loader and use the old method.
Add support for an additional makefile to perform custom manipulation
(this is not documented yet).
Add support for building an ISO image (not complete)
the whole disk) isn't available any more since it was redundant. Just
use /dev/md0 instead of /dev/md0c to build the filesystem on.
Consulted-with: marcel
2. Ensure all &arch entities end with ';' (no effect on output).
3. Ensure all &arch lists for drivers/features are comma-separated.
PR: docs/127840 (item 2 only)
MFC after: 1 week
port.
2. Increase the known working maximum memory configuration from
8gb to 32gb.
PR: docs/102148 (1)
Submitted by: Mike Meyer <mwm@mired.org> (1 - partially)
Reviewed by: hrs
Approved by: re (hrs)
MFC after: 1 minute
1. separating L2 tables (ARP, NDP) from the L3 routing tables
2. removing as much locking dependencies among these layers as
possible to allow for some parallelism in the search operations
3. simplify the logic in the routing code,
The most notable end result is the obsolescent of the route
cloning (RTF_CLONING) concept, which translated into code reduction
in both IPv4 ARP and IPv6 NDP related modules, and size reduction in
struct rtentry{}. The change in design obsoletes the semantics of
RTF_CLONING, RTF_WASCLONE and RTF_LLINFO routing flags. The userland
applications such as "arp" and "ndp" have been modified to reflect
those changes. The output from "netstat -r" shows only the routing
entries.
Quite a few developers have contributed to this project in the
past: Glebius Smirnoff, Luigi Rizzo, Alessandro Cerri, and
Andre Oppermann. And most recently:
- Kip Macy revised the locking code completely, thus completing
the last piece of the puzzle, Kip has also been conducting
active functional testing
- Sam Leffler has helped me improving/refactoring the code, and
provided valuable reviews
- Julian Elischer setup the perforce tree for me and has helped
me maintaining that branch before the svn conversion
freaks me out. But it turns out we might be able to generalize
a few of the other things RE uses to assemble the package trees
for releases if the DVDs use a naming theme close to what is used
for the CDROMS (disc1, disc2, etc). So change the name to dvd1.
Hopefully this way src/release/scripts/{package-split.py,package-trees.sh}
can be generalized instead of copied-and-hacked.
MFC after: 5 days
or not to build a tree used for the creation of a DVD image. If that is
enabled set up a DVD tree by installing everything we normally install
to the individual CDROM trees into the one DVD tree. The result is one
image with all the install bits, livefs bits, and doc bits suitable for
burning to a DVD instead of CDROM.
Enable building the DVD for amd64 and i386.
MFC after: 1 week
- Add support for .Fx, just in case somebody starts using it.
- Only add the arch information to the first para per manual page.
This improves output for axe(4), and generally seems to make sense
(I hope).
- Remove an unneeded line for non-compat mode.
This removes some vertical whitespace in the output.
Whitespace was intentionally not fixed in the SGML for the related
lists, to make the actual change more clear. This file is in need of
a major whitespace cleanup anyway.
complains about "Malformed numbers" while unpacking the dists and
what winds up on the disk isn't correct. Use this as an opportunity
to switch over to bsdcpio since at this point we don't even build
and install the gnu cpio by default. Note sysinstall needed to be
tweaked a bit (dropping tape block size setting) because it seems
bsdcpio doesn't do anything with block sizes, at least as far as
reading from archives goes. That wasn't really a problem since
installations from tape have been broken for a while and the rest
of sysinstall's tape support code will be removed shortly.