If we have no UFS_ACL kernel, users who already uses UFS1/2 attributes
get confused since no access control is performed for an update install.
Still, pc98 and alpha doesn't have UFS_ACL since I don't know about them.
Nyan-san, if kern.flp on tatsu has enough spaces (4k or more spaces),
please back UFS_ACL for pc98 also.
Data collected from: 5.0-CURRENT-20030221-JPSNAP on snapshots.jp.FreeBSD.org
aacp is a passthrough driver for aac, but it seems that aac kernel
module has a feature provided by aacp; so it can be removed safely.
_KPOSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING provides P1003.1B realtime extension.
However, in an installation phase, it seems that it helps a little
for us, so we can remove this option from a kernel for floppy installation.
I know _KPOSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING option is defined in other architecture.
However, I don't touch them at this time; I can't test it.
Anyway here's result.
Before diet:
-rwxr-xr-x 1 matusita matusita 4849883 Feb 18 11:22 kernel
-rwxr-xr-x 1 matusita matusita 1727143 Feb 18 11:47 kernel.kgz
After diet:
-rwxr-xr-x 1 matusita matusita 4840949 Feb 18 09:48 kernel
-rwxr-xr-x 1 matusita matusita 1723911 Feb 18 11:47 kernel.kgz
We've got extra 3232 bytes (using 5-current as of Feb/18/2003).
In cooperation with: jwd (test ISO installation image)
Boot tested on: several PCs around myself
Installation tested on: VMware Workstation e.x.p build-4099
the BOOTMFS kernel. These help reduce the kernel size so things fit
in a floppy image. There are more low-hanging fruit to be had here
if things fail to fit again.
into the install kernel. Unfortunately pcn(4) also needs mii(4) so that
would also have to added to install kernel, which will bloat it up so that it
doesn't fit on the floppy any more. Turns out we grew a lnc(4) module since
I last looked. So handle it as a kld loadable module during install rather
than have it statically compiled into the kernel.
lnc(4) will attach to AMD PCnet/FAST NICs if pcn(4) does not attach.
I.e. pcn(4) gets first chance. There is a problem however in that pcn(4)
was moved out of the install kernel so that the module would be used.
This however causes bad installs if one has an AMD PCnet/FAST NIC.
release/${TARGET}/drivers.conf file which list drivers that have to
go into the third floppy.
Also shuffle i386/drivers.conf so that the floppies don't overflow
anymore. Anybody with real/better usage statistics is welcome to
shuffle it differently.
Reviewed by: ru
- Don't remove MATH_EMULATE and MSDOS from a 'SMALL' floppy.
- Use the pattern '<tab><device name><tab>' instead of '<device name>' to
avoid an unexpected matching.
Dike out support for DEC3000/300* Pelic* and the DEC3000/[4-9]00
Flamingo/Sandpiper families, SLIP, lance Ethernet (especially since `le'
based Alphas are diked out now too), POSIX P1003_1B real-time extentions,
and last but not least "NOBLOCKRANDOM" since the random device is removed.
This lets us fit [barely!]:
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Avail Capacity iused ifree %iused Mounted
/dev/vnn0c 1407 1386 21 99% 6 24 20% /mnt
*** Filesystem is 1440 K, 21 left
*** 80000 bytes/inode, 24 left
Created /R/stage/floppies/kern.flp
Remove `pmtimer' from the MFSROOT kernel as `apm' is already removed.
`pmtimer' also removed from the Alpha kernel incase it ever winds up there.
(could it ever?)
SCSI card (should it ever find its way into GENERIC); LPT (we don't need
to print during install time); the parallel 'geek' port; generic USB
driver (thus some attached USB devices will not be detected and thus the
user may wonder what is going on, we couldn't do anything with the device
if only ugen attached to it anyway and we are getting very, very low on
available space; USB "Human Interface Devices" as we don't do anything
with them during installation; and USB printers (same argument as LPT).
over flowing its britches. So remove all ppbus bits except those for PLIP
(untested), and all USB bits as SRM does not know what USB is. Also remove
/dev/random as I don't think we need it just for whacking bits onto a disk.
Approved by: JKH
IPv6 configuration is only done by rtsol. Does someone really
need manual configuration? :-)
You can specify IPv6 DNS server as well.
We have only one server ftp7.jp.freebsd.org that speaks IPv6
in this time. ftp7.jp speaks IPv4 as well and also listed as
Japan #7.
Approved by: jkh