Peter Wemm eb7f25e17e Emergency backout of rev 1.152. This is a 100% guaranteed way to totally
hose your system.  You end up with just about everything statically linked
(except for libpam.so), which then causes all the pam users to fail.
eg: login, sshd, su etc all stop working because dlopen no longer works
because there is no libc.so in memory anymore.

gcc passes -L/usr/lib to ld.  The /usr/lib/libxxx.so symlink is *not* a
compatability link.  It is actually the primary link.  There should be no
symlinks in /lib at all.  Only /lib/libXX.so.Y.

peter@daintree[9:27pm]/usr/bin-104> file yppasswd
yppasswd: setuid ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1 (FreeBSD), for FreeBSD 5.1.1, dynamically linked (uses shared libs), stripped
peter@daintree[9:27pm]/usr/bin-105> ldd yppasswd
yppasswd:
        libpam.so.2 => /usr/lib/libpam.so.2 (0x280d1000)
peter@daintree[9:28pm]/usr/bin-106>

Note no libc.so.5.  Hence libpam.so.2 has unresolved dependencies.

I believe this is also the cause of the recent buildworld failures when
pam_krb5.so references -lcrypto stuff etc and when librpcsvc.so references
des_setparity() etc.

This change could not possibly have worked, unless there are other missing
changes to the gcc configuration.  It won't work with ports versions of
gcc either.
2003-09-04 04:29:11 +00:00
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