some months ago and was incorporated to FreeBSD) has capitalized
weekdays names, but this is not correct according to the rules of the
Spanish language.
Also, the patch applies a small change to the "date_fmt" string, adding
a comma between the year and the hour.
PR: 7211
Submitted by: Jose M. Alcaide <jose@we.lc.ehu.es>
`-C' can be used both when creating and extracting files. Further,
a `-C' inside the argument list causes a `chdir()' to the named
directory before the subsequent filename arguments to be interpreted.
Eg:- "tar -cf a+b.tar -C /a . -C /b ."
PR: 7221
the rc.conf variable ``natd_interface''. rc.network will
determine whether it is an IP address or an interface name,
and invoke natd with the -a or -n flag as appropriate.
PR: 6947
Reviewed by: jkh@FreeBSD.ORG
(long)(u_long)(u_int)-4 = 0x00000000fffffffc on machines with 32-bit
ints and 64-bit longs.
Restored %z format for printing signed hex. %+x shouldn't have been
used since it is an error in userland.
Prepared to nuke %n format by cloning it to %r. %n shouldn't have
been used because it means something completely different in
userland. Now %+r is equivalent to ddb's original %r, and %r is
equivalent to ddb's original %n.
Ignore '+' flag in combination with unsigned formats %{o,p,u,x}.
you can specify the corefile name by using:
sysctl -w kern.corefile="format"
where format is a pathname (relative or absolute -- default is "%N.core"),
with "%N" (process name), "%P" (process ID), and "%U" (user ID) formats.
Reviewed by: Mike Smith, with strong requests by Julian :)
(nonstandard %n and '+' with %x), and ones not found by -Wformat on
386's (some db_expr_t's are still printed as ints).
I decided not to change the arg type for %n from [unsigned] int to
register_t, since about half of the uses of %n are to print plain
ints and casting to [unsigned] long for %n is no harder than for %x.
`XCC= <relative cc> -B<path to relative cc1> ...'. This is equivalent
when cc and cc1, etc. have just been bootstrapped by `make world'.
The relative versions normally won't work if the target system is
not binary compatible. Bootstrapping different versions of gcc
without going through `make world' is slightly more broken than
before.
Uniformized macro names (P1OBJS -> LIB1POBJS, etc.).
Don't give full paths to sources.
more cleanly integrated with stdio. This should be faster and cleaner
since it doesn't memcpy() the data into a seperate buffer. This lets
stdio allocate and manage the buffer and then hand it over to the user.
Obtained from: Todd Miller <Todd.Miller@courtesan.com> via OpenBSD
They have been bootstrapped by `make world' since long before the
hacks here were cloned from ../libgcc/Makefile. The versions just
built in "../*" normally won't work if the target system is not binary
compatible.
Don't use OBJS to defeat `make depend'; just put generated sources in
SRCS.
Added temporary files to CLEANFILES.
bootstrapped by `make world'. The version just built in ".."
normally won't work if the target system is not binary compatible.
The bootstrapped version has a better chance of working.
This makes the fixes and bugs in the previous 3 commits irrelevant.
Rev.1.11 was just wrong and rev.1.10 became unnecessary when
perl/perl was added to build-tools. Don't expect to build perl/usub
without using `make world' or equivalent if you don't have perl
installed.
bootstrapped by `make world'. The version just built in ".."
normally won't work if the target system is not binary compatible.
Don't build or install anything if _BUILD_TOOLS is defined. Then
we only want to build and install the mklocale binary, but the layout
of the mklocale tree forces recursing to mklocale/data for at least
the obj target even when _BUILD_TOOLS is defined.
bootstrapped by `make world'. The version just built in ".."
normally won't work if the target system is not binary compatible.
Don't build or install anything if _BUILD_TOOLS is defined. Then
we only want to build and install the colldef binary, but the layout
of the colldef tree forces recursing to colldef/data for at least
the obj target even when _BUILD_TOOLS is defined.
especially on a new install, where /var/msgs/bounds doesn't exist. I
moved my bounds file out of the way to create this before and after
on a quick 'n' dirty hack, which is probably the 23rd best way to do it,
but it works:
PR: 6963
Submitted by: Matthew Fuller <fullermd@mortis.futuresouth.com>