value, it forces GCC to not optimize above this level. For intance, GCC
made with "WANT_FORCE_OPTIMIZATION_DOWNGRADE=1" is a good setting for the
Alpha platform when building ports.
: 2001-08-14 Ruslan Ermilov <ru@FreeBSD.org>
:
: * tmac/doc.tmac (Ex): New implementation.
: * tmac/doc-common, tmac/groff_tmac.man: Updated.
This adds a new macro, .Ex (Exit Status), for use in the
DIAGNOSTICS section of section 1, 6 and 8 manpages.
Prodded by: dd
o Because of export controls, TELNET ENCRYPT option is not supported outside
of the United States and Canada.
o Because of export controls, data encryption
is not supported outside of the United States and Canada.
src/crypto/README revision 1.5 commit log says:
> Crypto sources are no longer export controlled:
> Explain, why crypto sources are still in crypto/.
and actually telnet encryption is used outside of US and Canada now.
Pointed out by: OHSAWA Chitoshi <ohsawa@catv1.ccn-net.ne.jp>
Reviewed by: no objection on doc
: 2001-08-13 Ruslan Ermilov <ru@FreeBSD.org>
:
: * tmac/doc.tmac (Rv): Implement support for 0 or more than 1
: argument.
: * tmac/groff_tmac.man: Updated.
All of the following are now valid:
.Rv -std f1
.Rv -std f1 f2
.Rv -std f1 f2 f3
.Rv -std
The last form is useful where the standard return behavior is applicable
to all of the functions described in this particular manpage. Look, for
example, at the stat(2), setresuid(2), and utimes(2) manpages.
The form with >1 functions is useful in a mixed environment. See the
fhopen(2) manpage for an example.
Prodded by: yar
Avoid using parenthesis enclosure macros (.Pq and .Po/.Pc) with plain text.
Not only this slows down the mdoc(7) processing significantly, but it also
has an undesired (in this case) effect of disabling hyphenation within the
entire enclosed block.
I am not sure who thought that making FreeBSD depend on ISC's libbsd
was a sensible thing to do.
Thus I have ripped out the define of gettimeofday() and isc__gettimeofday()
out of this file, since we:
1) Don't use nor build libbsd (FreeBSD might give a hint in its name as to
why)
2) Our gettimeofday() is the same in semantics as prototyped in ISC's
libbsd.
This was something which could have been fixed before it was released if
we had at least some insight into the development process. But my praying
fell on deaf ears it seems.
Of course, if I am wrong I welcome the corrections to my thinking, gladly
even.
+* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
+* modification, are permitted provided that this entire copyright notice
+* is duplicated in all such copies.
Obtained from: ftp://ftp.porcupine.org/pub/security/tcp_wrappers_license
to do what they are supposed to: under some circumstances output data would
be truncated, or the buffer would not actually be flushed (possibly leading
to overflows when the caller assumes the operation succeeded). Change the
semantics so that these functions ensure they complete the operation before
returning.
Comment out diagnostic code enabled by '-D reports' which causes an
infinite recursion and an eventual crash.
Patch developed with assistance from ru and assar.
o Fixed `nfrontp' calculations in output_data(). If `remaining' is
initially zero, it was possible for `nfrontp' to be decremented.
Noticed by: dillon
o Replaced leaking writenet() with output_datalen():
: * writenet
: *
: * Just a handy little function to write a bit of raw data to the net.
: * It will force a transmit of the buffer if necessary
: *
: * arguments
: * ptr - A pointer to a character string to write
: * len - How many bytes to write
: */
: void
: writenet(ptr, len)
: register unsigned char *ptr;
: register int len;
: {
: /* flush buffer if no room for new data) */
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
: if ((&netobuf[BUFSIZ] - nfrontp) < len) {
: /* if this fails, don't worry, buffer is a little big */
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
: netflush();
: }
:
: memmove(nfrontp, ptr, len);
: nfrontp += len;
:
: } /* end of writenet */
What an irony! :-)
o Optimized output_datalen() a bit.
(ironically, the assumption is in a code block which is conditional on its
converse). This isn't strictly the correct fix; it's more of a workaround
to prevent an infinite loop. The correct fix (see
ports/editors/nvi-devel/files/patch-vi-relative r1.1) would take a file off
the vendor branch, but since the result for this version of nvi is
identical, this route was elected.
PR: 28687
Approved by: -developers
: 2001-07-18 Ruslan Ermilov <ru@FreeBSD.org>
:
: * tmac/groff_mdoc.man: Document new -width and -column syntax.
: Some other minor fixes.
: * tmac/an-old.tmac: Add `AT' and `UC' macros.
to std{err,out} will not spam /etc/resolv.conf.
Ted Lemon fixed the problem in version 3 of the client, but only for the
pre-daemonized case. Thanks to Brian for pointing that out and helping
to make our future dhclient (v3) better.
Submitted by: brian
Fold -xwidth functionality into -width. .Bl now tests whether
string immediately following a leading dot starts with a valid
macro name.
Added similar functionality to the -column list's column width
specifiers. For example, the following now works as expected:
.Bl -column ".Va hw.crusoe.percentage" ".Vt integer" "Changeable"
.It Sy "Name\tType\tChangeable\tDescription"
.It Va hw.crusoe.longrun Ta Vt integer Ta yes Ta "LongRun mode:"
.It Ta Ta Ta "0: minimum frequency mode"
.It Ta Ta Ta "1: power-saving mode"
.It Ta Ta Ta "2: performance mode"
.It Ta Ta Ta "3: maximum frequency mode"
.It Va hw.crusoe.frequency Ta Vt integer Ta no Ta "Current frequency (MHz)."
.It Va hw.crusoe.voltage Ta Vt integer Ta no Ta "Current voltage (mV)."
.It Va hw.crusoe.percentage Ta Vt integer Ta no Ta "Processing performance (%)."
.El
This is especially useful for groff devices with variable width
fonts, like -Tps or -TX100.