kernel builds so as not to confuse with perl4 when bootstrapping from old
systems. I don't know if this is still applicable but it shouldn't hurt
to be consistant at least.
Also copy vnode_if.sh to vnode_if.pl. Doing a 'sh vnode_if.sh' when it
was a perl script was kinda silly.
The target machine is represented by TARGET_ARCH. MACHINE_ARCH always
represents the host machine. When TARGET_ARCH is not defined, it is
assumed to be equal to MACHINE_ARCH. This means that we're building a
native toolset by default. We're creating cross-compilation tools when
MACHINE_ARCH != TARGET_ARCH.
TARGET_ARCH is defined when building binutils as part of the bootstrap
build and is set to reflect the architecture we're currently cross-
building. With this change binutils is ready for cross-building.
o minor formatting nits
o remove the bus_map/unmap calls. FreeBSD doesn't need them.
o Fix most of the compiler warnings remaining (some still remain, but they
are releated to calling functions that are going to change, so I did
not bother).
do not pollute the interface further.
o Run if_detach at splnet().
o Creatively swipe the relevant parts of the netatm atm_nif_detach
which will delete the relevant references to the interface going
away.
repeat of an earlier commit which apparently got lost with the last
import. It helps solve the frequently reported problem
pid 4032 (mail.local), uid 0 on /: file system full
(though there appears to be a lot of space) caused by idiots sending
30 MB mail messages.
Most-recently-reported-by: jahanur <jahanur@jjsoft.com>
Add $FreeBSD$ so that I can check the file back in.
Rejected-by: CVS
o Cancellation flags were not getting properly set/cleared.
o Loops waiting for internal locks were not being exited
correctly by a cancelled thread.
o Minor spelling (cancelation -> cancellation) and formatting
corrections (missing tab).
Found by: tg
Reviewed by: jasone
o Don't call signal handlers with the signal handler access lock
held.
o Remove pending signals before calling signal handlers. If
pending signals were not removed prior to handling them,
invocation of the handler could cause the handler to be
called more than once for the same signal. Found by: JB
o When SIGCHLD arrives, wake up all threads in PS_WAIT_WAIT
(wait4).
PR: bin/15328
Reviewed by: jasone
quite dangerous, since the process may hold locks at the point,
and if it is stopped in that tsleep the machine may hang. Because
the sleep is so short, the PCATCH is not required here, so it has
been removed. For the future, the FreeBSD team needs to decide
whether it is still reasonable to stop a process in tsleep, as that
may affect any other code that uses PCATCH while holding kernel locks.
Submitted by: Dmitrij Tejblum <tejblum@arc.hq.cti.ru>
Reviewed by: Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>
1003.1c-1995.
Undefine _POSIX_THREAD_SAFE_FUNCTIONS, since we do not implement all of the
necessary interfaces. At least getgrgid_r(), getrnam_r(), getpwuid_r(),
getpwnam_r(), getc_unlocked(), getchar_unlocked(), putc_unlocked(),
and putchar_unlocked() are missing. Due to a likely typo in 1003.1c-1995,
we are not technically allowed to define _POSIX_THREADS without defining
_POSIX_THREAD_SAFE_FUNCTIONS, but either way we're non-compliant, so I'm
leaving _POSIX_THREADS defined.
PR: bin/8281
the 3c450-TX HomeConnect. Like the 3cSOHO100-TX OfficeConnect, this NIC
uses the same ASIC as the 3c905B/3c905C but is targeted for a particular
market segment (home users). It is somewhat less expensive than the
3c905B/3c905C ($49, according to the 3Com web site), comes with its
own custom driver kit and is bundled with various goofy Windows software
packages designed to demonstrate the niftyness of home networking (networked
game demos, etc...).
Changes are:
- Add PCI ID to list in if_xlreg.h.
- Update xl_devs table in if_xl.c.
- Update xl_choose_xcvr() to consider the HomeConnect the
same as all the other 10baseT/100baseTX cards.
IPv6 specific library functions addition.
(getnameinfo(), getaddrinfo(), and IPv6 transport support is not yet)
Reviewed by: freebsd-arch, cvs-committers
Obtained from: KAME project
generate the NFSv3 Version id. boottime itself may change, sometimes
once every tick if you are running xntpd, which really throws off
clients. Clients will tend to throw away what they believe to be
stale data too often, and can get into long loops rewriting the same
data over and over again because they believe the server has rebooted
over and over again due to the changing version id.
Approved by: jkh
broken bit work-around enabled.
* Fixed a bug that made MDP not work. (However, MDP is actually not tested
due to lack of hardware using this feature).
* Chip table changed to support the C1010 B0 w/o the U3EN bit work-around
enabled.
* Add the SYM_SETUP_MAX_LUN, SYM_SETUP_LP_PROBE_MAP (used to tell the
driver about chips that are to be claimed with lower priority than old
PCI bus based driver (typically the ncr)), SYM_SETUP_SCSI_DIFF, and
SYM_SETUP_PCI_PARITY options.
Submitted by: Gerard Roudier <groudier@club-internet.fr>
buildworld doesn't break because the host doesn't have any
games installed,
o Add a new build stage: TMAKE. TMAKE builds all the build-tools
targets in the respective makefiles. Note that these targets
don't use the bootstrap tools,
o Add elf2exe to the bootstrap-tools when cross-building Alpha on
other platforms,
o Add ${WORLDTMP}/usr/games to TMPPATH,
o Remove ${WORLDTMP}/usr/bin even when NOCLEAN is defined. This
prevents using any bootstrap-tools previously installed. Most
importantly, it prevents using the cross-compiler when we still
need the native compiler.
The current stages are BMAKE, TMAKE, XMAKE and IMAKE in that order.
BMAKE builds bootstrap-tools that either solve compatibility problems
or are needed as cross-tools,
TMAKE builds the support tools necessary by some parts in the source
tree and also performs the cleandir and par-obj targets,
XMAKE builds the includes, libraries and everything (resp.), and
IMAKE installs the world. This stage needs further work if it's to be
used to install -current over -stable for example.
This is the last major update towards cross-building.