for each option in the DHCP lease file. The DHCP lease parsing code
specifically ignores more than the first nameserver, but it didn't
previously deal with the case of more than one router. This caused
segfaults and a painful death when installing on a network with
multiple routers.
PR: misc/16003
interactive case. This already works for non-interactive installs,
but at least one user thinks it would be useful and it certainly seems
more correct to allow it here as well.
So, this will now work :
# sysinstall netDev=fxp0 tcpMenuSelect
PR: bin/30229
Submitted by: Mikhail Teterin <mi@aldan.algebra.com>
This will now allow sysinstall to work properly if a FreeBSD CD/DVD is
already mounted as /cdrom, instead of just crapping out when it tries
to mount as /dist and gets EBUSY.
PR: conf/28081
Tested by: jhb
useful for post install configuration or other cases that might not be
handled by usb.c. (usb.c already sets usbd_enable iff sysinstall
detects usb during install).
PR: bin/18946
Submitted by: Peter van Heusden <pvh@egenetics.com>
Reviewed by: jhb
and RTSOL in sysinstall. If the respective TRY_FOO variable is set to
"YES" then it will be tried without prompting the user.
However, if the TRY_FOO variable is set to "NO" then the user will not
be prompted for a choice. This is the correct behavior, since we want
people to be able to script sysinstall in either case.
However, the default TRY_FOO variable has been "NO" since 1999. This
is incorrect, and when the logic was corrected in tcpip.c this has the
effect of never giving the user a choice to use DHCP or IPv6. The
value should be undefined until it is set by a script or by the user.
Submitted by: Randy Pratt, Chern Lee, many others.
UPGRADE.TXT along with a YesNo dialog requesting confirmation of
the upgrade. During the transition to RELNOTESng, UPGRADE.TXT got
folded into a file that eventually renders as INSTALL.TXT, which
makes sysinstall complain about a non-existent file. As a
solution/workaround, point the user at INSTALL.TXT, and then request
confirmation.
Noticed by: rpratt (on 4.4-RC3)
Approved by: jkh
post-configuration "Startup" menu. In the event that diskcheckd is
removed, this can easily be trimmed also; in the mean time, it allows
diskcheckd to be easily disabled using our documented management
tool
the name for the moderate security profile is "moderate", not
"medium", so update this one reference to it as "medium".
This is a 4.4-RELEASE MFC candidate.
MFC after: 2 days
Add a timestamp to the comment so that it's possible to see when
changes were made.
e.g.:
# -- sysinstall generated deltas -- # Wed Aug 15 18:10:20 2001
conservative default, and actually prompt specifically for inetd rather
than handling it as a side effect of the security profile. Update the
help file to reflect this change.
o Rename "Fascist" to "Extreme" in the source code, to match the names
presented to the user.
o Remove portmap and inetd from profile management. Portmap is now
disabled by default, but automatically turned on if a feature requires
it (such as NFS, etc).
This is an MFC candidate for 4.4-RELEASE.
Reviewed by: freebsd-arch@FreeBSD.org
Approved by: re@FreeBSD.org
MFC after: 2 days
post-install config, reduce the potential confusion from the existence
of both configTTYs and configTtys by renaming configTTYs to
configEtcTtys. While this is not a C naming conflict, it was probably
a poor choice of names on my part.
system installation process. This allows users installing via serial
console to enable serial console login during the installation
process using an un-customized install. The user is not prompted to
modify /etc/ttys during a normal install, but is offered the
opportunity during post-install configuration.
- Introduce configTTYs(), which describes the benefits of editing
/etc/ttys, and asks for confirmation before spawning the editor.
- add configTTYs to the post-install configuration, as well as to
the global configuration index.
by providing the opportunity to edit inetd.conf during the system
installation process. The following modifications were made:
(1) Expand the Anonymous FTP description dialog to indicate that inetd
and ftpd must be enabled before it can be used.
(2) Introduce a new configInetd() pair of dialogs, the first describing
inetd, giving a couple of examples of services that require it, and
hinting at potential risk, then asking the user if they wish to
enable it. The second indicates that inetd.conf must be configured
to enabled specific services, and asks if the user would like to
load inetd.conf into the editor to modify it. Add this
configuration action to the index.
There are some further improvements that might be considered:
(1) Provide a more inetd.conf-specific configuration tool that speaks
inetd.conf(5). However, this is made difficult by the "yet another
configuration format" nature of inetd.conf, as well as its use of
commenting to disable services, rather than an in-syntax way to
disable a service without commenting it out. Submissions here
would probably be welcome.
(2) There's some overlap between settings in the somewhat obtuse
Security Profile mechanism and other settings, including the inetd
setting, and NFS server configuration. As features become
individually tunable, they should probably be removed from the
security profile mechanism. Otherwise, somewhat counter-intuitively,
sysinstall (in practice) queries multiple times whether inetd, nfsd,
etc, should be enabled/disabled. A possible future direction might
be to drive profiles not by degree of paranoia, rather, the set
of services desired. Or simply to remove the Security Profile
mechanism and resort to feature-driven configuration.
Reviewed by: imp, chris, jake, nate, -arch, -stable
blown over by the Hurricane and had a house dropped on you by the Tornado.
Now it's time to have your parade rained on by... the Typhoon!
This commit adds driver support for 3Com 3cR990 10/100 ethernet
adapters based on the Typhoon I and Typhoon II chipsets. This is actually
a port of the OpenBSD driver with many hacks by me.
No Virginia, there isn't any support for the hardware crypto yet. However
there is support for TCP/IP checksum offload and VLANs.
Special thanks go to Jason Wright, Aaron Campbell and Theo de Raadt for
squeezing enough info out of 3Com to get this written, and for doing
most of the hard work.
Manual page is included. Compiled as a module and included in GENERIC.