paragraph clarifying that portsnap does not behave the same way as
cvs and cvsup where local modifications are concerned.
Submitted by: peter
Feet shot: peter, kris, obrien, + many others
too small for today's standards. While loading packages sysinstall
blows past this by a LOT but I think (hope...) that's caused by other
bugs. I'll look more into why sysinstall's memory use has gotten so
out of control as it loads packages but independent of that there really
is no reason to leave the limits on datasize and stacksize in place. And
they can cause problems for some of the things "modern packages" might
be doing via pkg_add which gets run by sysinstall and would inherit the
limits.
Another insta-MFC probably coming, this is holding up 6.3-RC2. Sysinstall's
memory use is so out of control it blows past the current limit before it
finishes loading either of the meta-packages kde or gnome...
manual's Appendix D ("Old Features Supported but not Encouraged") in
the Seventh Edition Unix Programmer's Manual (January, 1979) by
retiring the " = {" method of of action specification in favor of a
plain "{". It is no longer necessary for this bootstrap program to
be compatible with 6th Edition systems. Some yaccs in the wild do not
support this old syntax any more, and compatibility with those systems
is more important these days (as there are easily 7 orders of magnitude
more of them than real v6 systems today).
Reviewed by: jhb@ and dds@ (the latter gave the reference).
"build dependencies" field is 5,108 characters which overflows the
length of the junk buffer by a teeny bit. This whole section needs
much more error checking but for now just completely ignore stuff
we have no interest in instead of copying it to someplace we don't
use in the process.
Insta-MFC probably coming since this is holding up 7.0-RC1...
1. Start mergemaster
2. Interrupt it
3. < Somehow the temproot directory disappears >
4. mergemaster -r
Many bad things can happen, especially if the -i option is in use.
Therefore, add a check to make sure it still exists before we start
comparing files.
Brought to my attention by:
PR: bin/40538
Submitted by: Cyrille Lefevre <cyrille.lefevre@laposte.net>
xorg-server doesn't include any video drivers so install xorg-drivers as
well. And if font-alias isn't installed the X server won't start,
complaining it can't find the font "fixed".
Insta-MFC coming, this was tested with a RELENG_6_3 release build and
the necessary packages as part of the first round of testing for 6.3-RC2.
for the port to drain).
+ Handle "*" as a priority properly.
+ Test what is free'ed.
+ Dynamically determine length vs. hardcoding it.
+ Free the previous message buffer (f_prevline) only after logging all the
messages and just before the process exit. Also check f_prevline for NULL
before using it.
+ The time displayed is not synchornized with the other log destinations.
+ Fix a comment.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks
approval. These changes were approved by adding it as port to
ports/ tree, but not for src/. I talked to PR submitter and miwi@
some days ago and explained the reasons for it, the both were agree
to add it to ports/ only.
order. This allows direct comparison of the output of two different
runs, regardless of the order in which readdir(2) returns directory
entries.
MFC after: 3 weeks
to autoamu_autofs_prot.h. It is easier to just create shell header within
the Bmake framework.
For now it's a stub - fill out when we know our Autofs direction.
- Print a warning if the version number recorded in the log is not what the
tool expects.
- Print a tidier error message when an unrecognized event is encountered
in the log.
- Don't print a spurious 'Unknown error: 0' when exiting after a parse
error.
doesn't use the default CFLAGS which contain -fno-strict-aliasing.
Until the code is cleaned up, just add -fno-strict-aliasing to the
CFLAGS of these for the tinderboxes' sake, allowing the rest of the
tree to have -Werror enabled again.
shared object files which have the same name as currently-installed
shared object files should be reinstalled after binaries are rolled
back. The order for rolling back updates is therefore
1. Install any old shared object files which can be installed without
overwriting a new shared object file.
2. Rollback everything which isn't a shared object or kernel file.
3. Rollback any shared object files which we didn't deal with in (1).
4. Rollback to the old kernel.
Bug reported by: Jan Henrik Sylvester
MFC after: 3 days
upgrading to new releases. Important parts of this code include
* automatically determining which optional components (e.g., src,
info, proflibs) are installed.
* merging changes in files which are modified locally and have
changed between the currently running and new release.
* prompting the user to rebuild all 3rd party software before
deleting old shared libraries.
Yes, this is compatible with "freebsd-update rollback" -- you can
test a new -BETA and roll back to the old release if you don't
like it.
Subject to re@ approval, this will be MFCed before 7.0-BETA3 and
6.3-RC1.
MFC after: 2 days