CPU_ENABLE_TCC enables Thermal Control Circuitry (TCC) found in some
Pentium(tm) 4 and (possibly) later CPUs. When enabled and detected,
TCC allows to restrict power consumption by using machdep.cpuperf*
sysctls. This operates independently of SpeedStep and is useful on
systems where other mechanisms such as apm(4) or acpi(4) don't work.
Given the fact that many, even modern, notebooks don't work properly
with Intel ACPI, this is indeed very useful option for notebook owners.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
without IFCAP_VLAN_HWTAGGING. The previous version of the
leading comment in this file could lead to the opposite conclusion.
Fix some typos in the comment as well.
on the release media -- only put what is different in the crypto
version compared to the base version. This reduces PAM entries
in /usr/lib in the "crypto" distribution to:
libpam.a
libpam.so@
libpam.so.2
pam_krb5.so@
pam_krb5.so.2
pam_ksu.so@
pam_ksu.so.2
pam_ssh.so@
pam_ssh.so.2
The libpam.so* is still redundant (it is identical to the "base"
version), but we can't set DISTRIBUTION differently for libpam.a
and libpam.so.
(The removal of libpam.so* from the crypto distribution could be
addressed by the release/scripts/crypto-make.sh script, but then
we'd also need to remove redundant PAM headers, and I'm not sure
this is worth a hassle.)
ubd_devinfo_vp() is getting an empty string from its usbd_get_string()
call on the vendor, instead of NULL. This means usb_knowndevs in not
consulted.
Add lines between grabbing those char *s and the USBVERBOSE ifdef to
set vendor to NULL if it is the empty string (similarly for product).
This causes vendor to be filled-out, although the product name read
overrules usb_knowndevs (this appears to be a conscience decision made
by the NetBSD folks):
PR: kern/56097
Submitted by: Hal Burch <hburch@lumeta.com>
MFC after: 1 week
these are not fully implemented and ifdef'd out, the bugs have
never manifested themselves. Specifically:
- Fix a memory leak in the case where %a follows another
floating-point format.
- Make the %a/%A code behave like %e/%E with respect to
precision.
- It is no longer valid to assume that '-' and '0x' are
mutually exclusive.
- Address other minor issues.
"kerberize" and "dekerberize" in kerberos5/Makefile. These can
be used to recompile bits with optional crypto support with and
without crypto, respectively.
Reviewed by: markm
pain and suffering. Attempt to back it out by removing the 'if the
requested range is larger than the window, clip to the window' code.
This is a band-aide until the issues are better understood and the
issues with the lazy allocation patches are resolved.
and rebuilt some bits with crypto but without Kerberos support
(most notably SSH) during "make release", to put them into the
"crypto" distribution.
Now that we don't ship the separate "krb5" distribution anymore
(it's now part of the "crypto" distribuion), don't waste time
recompiling SSH bits without crypto and without Kerberos support
in an attempt to put them in the "base" distribution -- it just
doesn't work as SSH always uses crypto code.
We avoid this by not rebuilding KPROGS from kerberos5/Makefile in
release/Makefile and adding "libpam" to SPROGS in secure/Makefile
to ensure it's still rebuilt without crypto support for the "base"
distribution. (Disabling crypto (NOCRYPT) also disables building
of Kerberos-related PAM modules, and it's OK to depend on this.)
This should be a no-op change saving some "make release" time.
missing and there are multiple choices using multiple inference
(suffix transformation) rules.
This is known to fix compilation of s_log1p.o in lib/msun on i386,
as otherwise it attempted to use s_log1p.S as the source (which is
marked broken) instead of legal s_log1p.c which is in CFLAGS. The
normal case where .depend file exists is not affected.
Reviewed by: bde