both define ttydefchars[] as globals. This was fixed in 1.1.5
by making ttydefchars[] static like it should always have been.
Submitted by: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
$Id$ information, and other code to make sound driver compile and work
correctly with FreeBSD.
Integrate changes obtained from Sujal Patel. These changes are:
o local.h: reverse option logic from EXCLUDE_* to AUDIO_*
o pas2_mixer.c: small addition
o ad1848.c: minor change with macro names
o sequencer.c: minor change with note check
o many spelling corrections in comments in about every other file
messages like this:
wdc0 at 0x1f0-0x1f7 irq 14 on isa
wdc0: unit 0 (wd0): <ST506>
wd0: size unknown, using BIOS values: 615 cyl, 4 head, 17 sec, bytes/sec 512
npx0 at 0xf0-0xff irq 13 on motherboard
npx0: changing root device to wd0a
^^^^^^
The spurious 'npx0: ' pops up if you have a 386 with a 387 FPU.
Make the sound configuration a little neater
(see /sys/i386/isa/sound/Readme.freebsd)
Add support for the Microsoft Sound Source.
Document the sound options again.
Submitted by: Sujal Patel <smpatel@wam.umd.edu>
Obtained from: Voxware
NetBSD ld code except for local changes for dlopen() and friends and
the hashing on the minor value of the shlibs. We should be binary
compatible now with all their libraries.
Obtained from: NetBSD
Don't print debugging messages by default.
Initialize the compatibility slice here and not in the machine-dependent
code.
Fix initialization of the label for the whole disk slice.
Make it clear that write protection of labels doesn't apply when there is
no label.
be 486 chip sets that can't tolerate bursts > cache line size.
This should really made dependent on the particular buggy
chip sets, but for now we'll play safe ...
Let "grey delete" be a function key (default is 0x7f)
Fix the xor cursor again..
Made the backspace key generate del as default
Made CTRL-space generate nul as default.
Feb. 10th snapshot. The keyboard probe in the bootblock seems to
have been singled out as the cause of these problems, so I've beefed it
up alittle. This pushes us right up to the edge of the size limit:
the second stage boot is now 7152 bytes in size, just 8 bytes under
the wire. On the other hand, the new probe now does almost exactly
what syscons does, so hopefully this will do the trick. It seems
to work properly on my hardware, but then so did the old probe.