again. This user/group is not required for install* targets, hence do not
add them to CHECK_UIDS/CHECK_GIDS in Makefile.inc1 (no need to annoy
people).
Discussed-on: -current
your (network) modules as well as any userland that might make sense of
sizeof(struct ifnet).
This does not change the queueing yet. These changes will follow in a
seperate commit. Same with the driver changes, which need case by case
evaluation.
__FreeBSD_version bump will follow.
Tested-by: (i386)LINT
ip6addrctl_enable is set to YES, address selection policy is installed
into kernel.
If there is /etc/ip6addrctl.conf, it is used for address selection
policy. Even if there is no /etc/ip6addrctl.conf, we install default
policy. In this case, if ipv6_enable is set to YES, we use address
selection policy described in RFC 3484 as default. Otherwise, we
install priority policy for IPv4 address.
The default of ip6addrctl_enable is NO for now. However, it may
better to enable it by default.
/usr/local/www
[1] Semi-arbitrary cutoff, but I didn't want to add every locale directory
used by ports, because a lot are only used by one or two, and it's less
intrusive for these ports to just clean up after themselves.
MFC after: 2 days
The reason for doing this is that (at least some) 4.x binaries are very
unhappy if host.conf does not exist, and if we create host.conf but not
nsswitch.conf, nsswitch.conf will be created at the next reboot, so it
is better to create a correct nsswitch.conf right away.
use the conf/* stuff for their firewall configuration.
Running ipfw before could seem to make sense in that it would allow
one to setup access to the NFS server on a "default-deny" kernel,
but it is pretty obvious to the casual observer that such a configuration
never makes it far enough to mount the NFS-root in the first place.
debug.watchdog since it is not created by hardware watchdog(4) devices.
The watchdog(4) device is always compiled in the kernel, so removing the
check should not cause any problems.
Approved by: phk
initdiskless. The output of several commands and if available the
contents of /entropy are feed into /dev/random to kickstart the PRNG.
/etc/rc.d/initrandom is left alone to maintain the previous behavior as
much as possiable.
Further work in this area is probably needed.
Discussed with: markm
and permissions specified per rc.conf(5) now apply both to the md
device and to the mountpoint directory, after the mount has completed.
This has to be done in two steps, because chown is not available
until after /usr has been mounted, but the mdconfig and newfs steps
have to complete before fstab processing.
(when new natd is started before old natd died) and allows to manage natd
without touching ipfw.
natd should probably be killed with SIGKILL when stopping natd.
- Use sendmail_foo variables after load_rc_config so that they actually work.
- Utilize sendmail_procname.
- Check sendmail_submit_enable instead of sendmail_enable when dealing
with mail submission MTA.