the pv lists in the vm_page, even unmanaged kernel mappings. This is so
that the virtual cachability of these mappings can be tracked when a page
is mapped to more than one virtual address. All virtually cachable
mappings of a physical page must have the same virtual colour, or illegal
alises can be created in the data cache. This is a bit tricky because we
still have to recognize managed and unmanaged mappings, even though they
are all on the pv lists.
struct uuid defined in <sys/uuid.h>.
Use uuid/UUID instead of guid/GUID to emphasize that the
identifiers are DCE version 1 identifiers and also to avoid
inconsistencies as much a possible.
'manck' from ports does just about everything these tools ever did.
(I did have these 90% working about 5 years ago, but manck came along.....)
The only file of interest might be sp.ignore, but it can be pulled
from the attic if anyone has that much interest.
Inspired by: Mark Murray's deletion of share/man/man0
This only affects the -current early adopters and developers who have
done a 'make world' in the last few weeks and as a result installed a
gcc-3.1 version of /usr/bin/c++ but without the corresponding library
support that this now requires. This is a temporary hack that should be
deleted within a few weeks. In this case we will use the existing
gperf/groff one last time around for the early stage1 bootstrap. (This
isn't so bad, because we were unconditionally using the host one before)
to work at least for the non-hairy stuff. The main wrinkle here is that
a whole mess of include files get installed and under different names.
An earlier version of this built a shadow include tree first in the obj
directory, but this depends on the 'make includes' functionality.
More tweaking is certainly going to be needed.
date: 2002/05/28 12:42:39; author: augustss;
Change DMAADDR macro slightly.
Update the $NetBSD$ tags to reflect this and make slight changes to
usb_mem.h so that we're in sync with each other.
- float ynf(int n, float x) /* wrapper ynf */
+float
+ynf(int n, float x) /* wrapper ynf */
This is because the __STDC__ stuff was indented.
Reviewed by: md5
is currently conditional on both the GEOM and GEOM_GPT options to
avoid getting GPT by default and having the MBR and GPT classes
clash.
The correct behaviour of the MBR class would be to back-off (reject)
a MBR if it's a Protective MBR (a MBR with a single partition of type
0xEE that spans the whole disk (as far as the MBR is concerned).
The correct behaviour if the GPT class would be to back-off (reject)
a GPT if there's a MBR that's not a Protective MBR.
At this stage it's inconvenient to destroy a good MBR when working
with GPTs that it's more convenient to have the MBR class back-off
when it detects the GPT signature on disk and have the GPT class
ignore the MBR.
In sys/gpt.h UUIDs (GUIDs) for the following FreeBSD partitions
have been defined:
GPT_ENT_TYPE_FREEBSD
FreeBSD slice with disklabel. This is the equivalent of
the well-known FreeBSD MBR partition type.
GPT_ENT_TYPE_FREEBSD_{SWAP|UFS|UFS2|VINUM}
FreeBSD partitions in the context of disklabel. This is
speculating on the idea to use the GPT to hold partitions
instead if slices and removing the fixed (and low) limits
we have on the number of partitions.
This commit lacks a GPT image for the regression suite.