By default, we will end up with a duplicate set of hints if people have
a properly populated /boot/device.hints. So for now, remove the hints
here until Peter revisits the new hints processing from mid-June that
broke Alpha booting.
device search code i introduce nearly six years ago in rev 1.8. Bruce
suggested to rather use the device name of the root filesystem instead
which is certainly the most sensible default. Since there are many
possible cases for a root filesystem name (device with and without
slices, consider /dev/vinum/root even though it currently could not
work as such), there's some heuristic using a RE in order to find out
the canonical device name from the mounted name. This probably won't
quite fit for a NFS root (can't test that right now), but then,
there's hard to find a good default for those machines anyway. ;-)
This unbreaks the functionality of rev 1.2 i once broke in 1.8. :)
getopt(3) (and can't be converted without breaking compatibility), and
it's very irritating to have it silently DTWT if one combines options
together (e.g., "-msS domain,server").
Fold -xwidth functionality into -width. .Bl now tests whether
string immediately following a leading dot starts with a valid
macro name.
Added similar functionality to the -column list's column width
specifiers. For example, the following now works as expected:
.Bl -column ".Va hw.crusoe.percentage" ".Vt integer" "Changeable"
.It Sy "Name\tType\tChangeable\tDescription"
.It Va hw.crusoe.longrun Ta Vt integer Ta yes Ta "LongRun mode:"
.It Ta Ta Ta "0: minimum frequency mode"
.It Ta Ta Ta "1: power-saving mode"
.It Ta Ta Ta "2: performance mode"
.It Ta Ta Ta "3: maximum frequency mode"
.It Va hw.crusoe.frequency Ta Vt integer Ta no Ta "Current frequency (MHz)."
.It Va hw.crusoe.voltage Ta Vt integer Ta no Ta "Current voltage (mV)."
.It Va hw.crusoe.percentage Ta Vt integer Ta no Ta "Processing performance (%)."
.El
This is especially useful for groff devices with variable width
fonts, like -Tps or -TX100.
a bunch of frames. In this case, the dc_link flag is cleared, and dc_start()
stops draining the if_snd send queue, which results in lots of 'no buffers
available' errors being reported to applications. The whole idea behind
not draining the send queue until the link comes up was to avoid having
the gratuitous ARP being lost while we're waiting for autoneg to complete
after the interface is first brought up. As an optimization, change the
test in dc_start() so that we only bail if dc_link is not set _and_ there
are less than 10 packets in the send queue. If the queue has many frames
in it, we need to drain them. If the queue has a small number of frames
in it, we can hold off on sending them until the link comes up.
MFC after: 1 week
reading old a.out core files, which are totally 100% non-understandable
to the gdb floating-point reader if you have SSE turned on.
This should be the last of the world build breakers...
we are required to do if we let user processes use the extra 128 bit
registers etc.
This is the base part of the diff I got from:
http://www.issei.org/issei/FreeBSD/sse.html
I believe this is by: Mr. SUZUKI Issei <issei@issei.org>
SMP support apparently by: Takekazu KATO <kato@chino.it.okayama-u.ac.jp>
Test code by: NAKAMURA Kazushi <kaz@kobe1995.net>, see
http://kobe1995.net/~kaz/FreeBSD/SSE.en.html
I have fixed a couple of style(9) deviations. I have some followup
commits to fix a couple of non-style things.
to be included into this one. This works the same way as #include
does in C; as far as the user is concerned, the included file is
inlined into the current one.
Since config(8) is no longer limited to working on one user-supplied
file, printing just a line number in an error message is not
sufficient. The new global variable yyfile represents the file
currently being parsed, and must be printed as well.
Reviewed by: imp
Obtained from: OpenBSD