Replace all in-tree uses with necessary subset of <sys/{fb,kb,cons}io.h>.
This is also the appropriate fix for exo-tree sources.
Put warnings in <machine/console.h> to discourage use.
November 15th 2000 the warnings will be converted to errors.
January 15th 2001 the <machine/console.h> files will be removed.
* Do not use explicit paragraphing (Pp) to separate list items.
* Do not use semi-colons to punctuate list items; the use or
periods eases maintenance.
* Do not mark up external shell commands as internal commands
(Ic).
* Do not introduce new hard sentence breaks.
breaking a cross-build caused by taking the X libraries on the
build machine. In general this means that we never compile with
X support. The user has to manually compile doscmd for that.
Suggested by: bde, imp (among others)
Add a title "DOS" to the X window.
Submitted by: Parag Patel <parag@cgt.com>
PR: bin/8486
Note: The pr was closed a long time ago when the original patch was
applied, rather than the amended one.
doscmd heavily depends on struct sigcontext which luckily is mostly passed
between functions as usion regcontext_t. By redefining union regcontext_t in
terms of mcontext_t almost all bases are covered.
It also seems to me that doscmd was in a transitional state. The redundant
definitions made it difficult to get a clear overview and could easily cause
oversight. To make sure my changes were ok, I went as far as to complete the
transition. It was not exactly necessary, but I expect to have to come back
here some more ("whistle" if I'm wrong :-).
track.
The $Id$ line is normally at the bottom of the main comment block in the
man page, separated from the rest of the manpage by an empty comment,
like so;
.\" $Id$
.\"
If the immediately preceding comment is a @(#) format ID marker than the
the $Id$ will line up underneath it with no intervening blank lines.
Otherwise, an additional blank line is inserted.
Approved by: bde
doscmd that was affected by the SA_SIGINFO changes (which made many
lines longer).
This application is in need for general code reformatting and warning
fixes.
Submitted by: Warner Losh <imp@village.org>
`ld ... <fudged ${LDFLAGS}>' to invoke the linker. This gets the
flags and standard library paths right without complications.
Unfortunately, it doesn't help for the X11 library paths -- cc
only appends /aout for standard library paths.
since it means -s (strip), and static linkage is forced correctly
anyway. Other things in ${LDFLAGS} are still bogusly passed to ld.
This only affects the aout case.
o When reporting a int21 function we don't know about yet, report
AH as the major and AL as the minor, as opposed to reporting AL
as the major.
o Add support for 21:44:7: ioctl check output status. We
optimistically say that output is always ready.
o Add half support for 21:23: get file size. We always now return
failure. This function isn't supported, according to the interrupt
list, by the DOS box in windows, so I don't feel too bad.
o Remove init printf
o Don't set optind from return value for do_args. getopt has already
done this.
o Bump EMS memory from 1M to 10M (this really should be a command line
option).
o Open /dev/null when requested to open emmxxxx0 to allow many programs
checking to see if EMS is installed to find it.
o Route int67 to ems_entry to allow EMS to be used when DOS is emulated
as well as when DOS is booted. This may obviate the need for the
driver doing anything at all in a really booted situation and won't
hurt that case.
I can now run the DOS program I'm interested in running with enough
EMS memory that its "advanced" functions are enabled and working.
o Make the dos emulation treat c: and C: the same way. Sourcer was doing
a chdir("c:\\") rather than a chdir("C:\\");
o use drlton() in all places where we used to use -'A' so that we're always
case independent.
o use drntol() in all places where we used to use + 'A' for similar reasons
used to check to see if windows 3.x if running. We always return 0,
which means that neither Windows 3.x nor Windows/386 2.x is running. It
also means, btw, that XMS version 1 isn't installed, which is true since
we don't implement that either.
Move a.out libraries to /usr/lib/aout to make space for ELF libs.
Make rtld usr /usr/lib/aout as default library path.
Make ldconfig reject /usr/lib as an a.out library path.
Fix various Makefiles for LIBDIR!=/usr/lib breakage.
This will after a make world & reboot give a system that no
longer uses /usr/lib/*, infact one could remove all the old
libraries there, they are not used anymore.
We are getting close to an ELF make world, but I'll let this
all settle for a week or two...
linkage rule is overridden. The -L option must be in ${DPADD} so that
`make checkdpadd' works. Actually use ${DPADD}.
FIxed missing dependencies for doscmd. Use ${LIBCRT0} instead of a
hard-coded path in the rule for doscmd.
Added comments about the kludges used to build 2 binaries and 2 data
files in one directory. It shouldn't be done this way. The dependencies
on sources took extra work to get right, and the dependencies on objects
are still broken (one set is missing and the other has the wrong libs).
Fixed some style bugs while I'm here:
- don't override the (correct) default for MAN1.
- use `beforeinstall', not `afterinstall' to install auxiliary files.
`afterinstall' is for fixing messes made by `install'.
interface for callbacks to doscmd from DOS, obsoleting the instbsdi
redirector. (redir.com replaces it)
A temporary hack is in place so the instbsdi program will (hopefully) work
in the short term.
Submitted by: Helmut F. Wirth <hfwirth@ping.at>
include directory, rather than X11BASE. This fixes the build for people
who only have the shared X11 distribution installed.
Requested-by: A Joseph Koshy <koshy@india.hp.com>