Format for the include line in /etc/newsyslog.conf is:
<include> /etc/defaults/newsyslog.conf
Other notes of interest:
Globbing is supported in <include> statements.
Properly detect circular include loop dependencies.
Reviewed by: gad@
Approved by: wes@ (mentor)
MFC after: 2 months
the jail(8) command. [10:04]
Fix a one-NUL-byte buffer overflow in libopie. [10:05]
Correctly sanity-check a buffer length in nfs mount. [10:06]
Approved by: so (cperciva)
Approved by: re (kensmith)
Security: FreeBSD-SA-10:04.jail
Security: FreeBSD-SA-10:05.opie
Security: FreeBSD-SA-10:06.nfsclient
utilities and related support files for manual pages, which were previously
controlled by MAN. For POLA, the default depends on MAN, i.e., WITHOUT_MAN
implies WITHOUT_MAN_UTILS and WITH_MAN implies WITH_MAN_UTILS. This patch
is slightly improved by me from:
PR: misc/145212
can only be used when ntpd is compiled with DEBUG support.
PR: docs/138206
Submitted by: Oliver Pinter (oliver dot pntr at gmail dot com)
MFC after: 5 days
Approved by: roberto
bottom of the manpages and order them consistently.
GNU groff doesn't care about the ordering, and doesn't even mention
CAVEATS and SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS as common sections and where to put
them.
Found by: mdocml lint run
Reviewed by: ru
hid_get_data() now expects that the hid data passed in always contains
the report ID byte. Thus we should not skip the the report ID byte in
hid_interrupt(). Also, if HUP_KEYBOARD usage is an array, do not try
to modify the 'data' pointer, instead, increase the hid_item_t field
'pos' by 'report_size' before calling hid_get_data() during each
iteration.
PR: usb/146367
Reported and tested by: Alex Deiter
Pointy hat to: kaiw
Reviewed by: emax
This joint work of Dag-Erling Smørgrav and myself updates the
FFS quota system to support both traditional 32-bit and new 64-bit
quotas (for those of you who want to put 2+Tb quotas on your users).
By default quotas are not compiled into the kernel. To include them
in your kernel configuration you need to specify:
options QUOTA # Enable FFS quotas
If you are already running with the current 32-bit quotas, they
should continue to work just as they have in the past. If you
wish to convert to using 64-bit quotas, use `quotacheck -c 64';
if you wish to revert from 64-bit quotas back to 32-bit quotas,
use `quotacheck -c 32'.
There is a new library of functions to simplify the use of the
quota system, do `man quotafile' for details. If your application
is currently using the quotactl(2), it is highly recommended that
you convert your application to use the quotafile interface.
Note that existing binaries will continue to work.
Special thanks to John Kozubik of rsync.net for getting me
interested in pursuing 64-bit quota support and for funding
part of my development time on this project.
would crash in check_options() since dp == NULL for the V4: line.
This patch moves the check for options allowed on the V4: line to
ahead of where dp is used to avoid this crash.
Reported by: mamalos AT eng.auth.gr
MFC after: 1 week
L2/3/4 headers and can drop or steer packets as instructed. Filtering
based on src ip, dst ip, src port, dst port, 802.1q, udp/tcp, and mac
addr is possible. Add support in cxgbtool to program these filters.
Some simple examples:
Drop all tcp/80 traffic coming from the subnet specified.
# cxgbtool cxgb2 filter 0 sip 192.168.1.0/24 dport 80 type tcp action drop
Steer all incoming UDP traffic to qset 0.
# cxgbtool cxgb2 filter 1 type udp queue 0 action pass
Steer all tcp traffic from 192.168.1.1 to qset 1.
# cxgbtool cxgb2 filter 2 sip 192.168.1.1 type tcp queue 1 action pass
Drop fragments.
# cxgbtool cxgb2 filter 3 type frag action drop
List all filters.
# cxgbtool cxgb2 filter list
index SIP DIP sport dport VLAN PRI P/MAC type Q
0 192.168.1.0/24 0.0.0.0 * 80 0 0/1 */* tcp -
1 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0 * * 0 0/1 */* udp 0
2 192.168.1.1/32 0.0.0.0 * * 0 0/1 */* tcp 1
3 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0 * * 0 0/1 */* frag -
16367 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0 * * 0 0/1 */* * *
MFC after: 2 weeks
section holding the config file to sh_addralign bytes using NULs.
This bogusly triggers an assert. Break out of the loop when we hit an
NUL within that many bytes of the end.
MFC after: 3 days
will allow people with old config options to either have it just work
(if config is new enough), or get a version error (if their config is
about 7.0 or newer) rather than getting a cryptic error about
duplicated options in the options file, or getting an error about an
unknown option, at which point they'd update their config file only to
learn they need a new config, only to learn they didn't really need to
update their config file... All this because our version checking was
in the wrong place for the past decade...
# hopefully this is the last change, and we'll be able to config with an
# 8.0 GENERIC file on stable/8 after I merge this change and add the
# compat options.
MFC after: 3 days
versions of config. Remove support for the syntax OLD = NEW form the
options file, and instead have a new file $S/conf/options-compat.
This file will be parsed as OLD NEW on each line. Bump version of
config. Since nothing in -current ever used this, there's no hazards
for current users, so I'm not bumping the version in the
Makefiles.$MACHINE. No need, really, for this version bump in
-current, but this was introduced into -stable before I realized the
version check was ineffective there, so the verison bump doesn't hurt
here and keeps the two branches in sync, versionwise, after the MFC.
MFC after: 3 days
we've parsed the config file. Makefile generation is too late if
we've introduce changes to the syntax of the metafiles to warn about
version skew, since we have to try to parse them and we get an parse
error that's rather baffling to the user rather than a 'your config is
too old, upgrade' which we should get.
We have to defer doing it until after we've read the user's config
file because we define machinename there. The version required to
compile the kernel is encoded in Makefile.machinename. There's no
real reason for this to be the case, but changing it now would
introduce some logistical issues that I'd rather avoid for the moment.
I intend to revisit this if we're still using config in FreeBSD 10.
This also means that we cannot introduce any config metafile changes
that result in a syntax error or other error for the user until 9.0 is
released. Otherwise, we break the upgrade path, or at least reduce
the usefulness of the error messages we generate.
# This implies that the config file option mapping will need to be redone.
MFC after: 3 days
brings in support for an optional intent log which eliminates the need
for background fsck on unclean shutdown.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Yahoo!, and Juniper.
With help from: McKusick and Peter Holm
- Rework the wrapper support to check libpkg version as well as pkg_install
version.
- Add libfetch to _prebuild_libs.
- There are no new features introduced.
Notes: the API is not stable, so basically, do not use libpkg in your
projects for now. Also there's no manpage for libpkg yet, because the API
will change drastically. I repeat, do not use libpkg for now.
with all other corresponding CTF places by changing the corresponding
code which is generated by config(8). Or in short, move the '@' from
the variable definition to the use of the variable. [1]
While I'm here break up a long line. [2]
Discussed with: imp [1,2], bde [2]