but adapted to run within cvs instead of rcs.
The stuff I hacked together didn't strip out "/Attic/" for files
on branches when the HEAD version was cvs rm'ed.
on maintaining contributed software.
The merge from our FreeBSD maintained v1.81 to the author's v2.0
yielded only one small difference (a duplicate inclusion of errno.h
in btreeop/btreeop.c) which for now I will leave alone and submit
back to the author; we'll catch it on the vendor branch in v2.1.
Reviewed by: jdp
The print_nfs.c changes are pretty extensive; this is partially because
LBL did a lot of cleanup and partially because I removed lots of
pointless changes away from the LBL style.
PR: 3371
mostly-Submitted by: Chris Timmons <skynyrd@opus.cts.cwu.edu>
log messages after they've been entered. This is more flexible than
using the editinfo script since it works for all log message types
and doesn't have to deal with trying to run the editor for the user.
The problem is that the verifymsg script can't modify the file like
editinfo can, which makes it useless for cleaning up the message (as is
needed for remote commits etc). This change causes the verifymsg handler
to read back the message after the verify script has run and returned an
"OK" exit code.
(they're currently in src/contrib/ipfilter/ipfilter/ by mistake, if someone
from core would like to delete that directory with three files as I'm not
meant to do that :)
few more memory leaks and cleaned up getopt usage. These were done shortly
after the last one I imported. Very little has changed other than that.
(except for some doc updates)
Obtained from: cyclic.com
When using a local repository that is only written to by CVSup - which
I assume doesn't do the cvs locking protocol - this option might be a
speedup since cvs will not create lock files.
such as within an anoncvs server, or from a CDROM repository.
Cyclic (the cvs maintainers) do not like this approach and have an
alternative read-only system, but that requires a read/write repository to
work (which rules out CDROM).
Obtained from: OpenBSD
controls the RCSINCEXC encironment variable for our rcs version, and
also convert the rest of the checkout enhancements from rcs into cvs's
fast checkout code. (yes, cvs doesn't call 'co' anymore)
We now have fine grained individual keyword expansion control and can
set the keyword to anything the user wants.
Also, a new keyword, $CVSHeader$ comes in from rcs, it's like $Header$
except that it shows the pathname relative to the cvsroot. eg:
$FreeBSD: src/bin/ls/ls.c,v 1.10.2.14 1997/05/17 13:15:45 peter Exp $
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The idea for this comes from $XFree86$ which expands like $CVSHeader$.
The "local id" string can be set to expand like Id, Header or CVSHeader.
(Matching support for this is apparently happening in cvsup right now)
This is not complete yet in that it doesn't drive our version of RCS
completely, but it does work fine when you do the appropriate magic.
Obtained from: OpenBSD source tree
"-pg" and gprof(1) instead. FreeBSD does not support plain "-p" or
prof(1).
Plain "-p" is still allowed when just compiling. In the compile
phase, "-p" is identical "-pg". It is used by <bsd.lib.mk> for
building profiled object files.
Change "Found end of tape. Load next tape ..." messages to say
"volume" instead of tape. Running cpio off of /dev/fd0 and having
it say "give me the next tape" is kind of ludicrous.. :-)
and opened the archive file. This allows "cpio -o -O output_file"
to create the output file with the callers proper umask.
Closed PR# 1391
Add setlocale LC_ALL (from ache).
- Fix gross spelling and typographical errors pointed out by Keith Bostic.
- Mention -l, --link is only usable with "-p".
Obtained from: old gnu/usr.bin/cpio v2.3.
stops regular files with unrepresentable rdevs from being rejected
and makes the output independent of unpreservable metadata.
Don't output a file if the major, minor or totality of its rdev would be
truncated. Print a message about the skipped files to stderr but don't
report the error in the exit status. cpio's abysmal error handling doesn't
allow continuing after an error, and the rdev checks had to be misplaced
to avoid the problem of returning an error code from routines that return
void.
Minor numbers are limited to 21 bits in pax's ustar format and to 18
bits in archives created by gnu tar (gnu tar wastes 3 bits for padding).
pax's and cpio's ustar format is incompatible with gnu tar's ustar
format for other reasons (see cpio/README).
Submitted by: bde via old gnu/usr.bin/cpio v2.3.