The uart(4) driver has the advantage of supporting a wider variety of
hardware on a greater amount of platforms. This driver has already been
the standard on platforms such as ia64, powerpc and sparc64.
I've decided not to change anything on pc98. I'd rather let people from
the pc98 team look at this.
Approved by: philip (mentor), marcel
dcons(4): very simple console and gdb port driver
dcons_crom(4): FireWire attachment
dconschat(8): User interface to dcons
Tested with: i386, i386-PAE, and sparc64.
All functionality from the previous system has been preserved, and
users should still customize their system boot with the familiar
methods, rc.conf, rc.conf.local, rc.firewall, sysctl.conf, etc.
Users who have customized versions of scripts that have been removed
should take great care when upgrading, since the compatibility code
that used those old scripts has also been removed.
as the previous line already tells us we are in rc.${MACHINE_ARCH}. This
also allows more syscons configuration messages during startup to fit on
one line.
Reviewed by: dougb
* Put quotes around each line
* Single quotes for lines with no variable interpolation
* Double quotes if there is
* Capitalize each word that begins a line
* Make echo -n 'Doing foo:' ... echo '.' more of a standard
No functionality changes
kernel modules for ibcs2_enable and svr4_enable.
Don't rely on a shell script to do the neglibly less simple
job of loading a kernel module and running one command for
linux_enable.
These shell scripts are going away.
happen with a keyboard and monitor the console change was not as needed
in the i386 case as the Alpha case. IMO >50% of Alpha installs are using
a serial console, the change matching rev 1.7 should not be backed out.
more comprehensive. Previously, at least colour changes were not
applied to all virtual consoles.
PR: 15066
Reported by: Andy Farkas <andyf@speednet.com.au>
Submitted by: yokota
case instead of test where appropriate, since case allows case is a sh
builtin and (as a side-effect) allows case-insensitivity.
Changes discussed on freebsd-hackers.
Submitted by: Doug Barton <Doug@gorean.org>
* All variables are now embraced: ${foo}
* All comparisons against some value now take the form:
[ "${foo}" ? "value" ]
where ? is a comparison operator
* All empty string tests now take the form:
[ -z "${foo}" ]
* All non-empty string tests now take the form:
[ -n "${foo}" ]
Submitted by: jkh