report the compression ratio as 0% instead of displaying
nonsense triggered by numeric overflow. This is common
when dealing with uncompressed files when the I/O blocking
causes there to be small transient differences in the
accounting.
Thanks to: Boris Samorodov
This avoids errors or __DECONST() from places with higher WARNS levels.
Adjust a local cache variable in ipcs to const as well
to compile in the new world order.
Suggested by: jhb
Reviewed by: jhb, kib, brueffer (man)
There's a parsing error for fields where addresses are not separated by
space. This is often produced by MS Outlook, eg.:
Cc: <foo@bar.com>,"Mr Foo" <foo@baz.com>
The following line now splits into the right tokens:
Cc: f@b.com,z@y.de, <a@a.de>,<c@c.de>, "foo" <foo>,"bar" <bar>
PR: bin/131861
Submitted by: Pete French <petefrench at ticketswitch.com>
Tested by: Pete French
Reviewed by: mikeh
MFC after: 2 weeks
utilities and related support files for manual pages, which were previously
controlled by MAN. For POLA, the default depends on MAN, i.e., WITHOUT_MAN
implies WITHOUT_MAN_UTILS and WITH_MAN implies WITH_MAN_UTILS. This patch
is slightly improved by me from:
PR: misc/145212
ar(1)'s dependencies on compressor libraries -lz, -lbz2 and -llzma and
fixes building HEAD on some versions of FreeBSD[78]. Option -j and -z
is now accepted but ignored.
Compressed ar(1) archives are not useful without a ld(1) that can read
them. Also, the current ar(1) compression scheme prevents random
access of archive members and needs to be redesigned anyway.
Submitted by: kientzle (original patch)
Reviewed by: delphij
Discussed on: -current mailing list
bottom of the manpages and order them consistently.
GNU groff doesn't care about the ordering, and doesn't even mention
CAVEATS and SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS as common sections and where to put
them.
Found by: mdocml lint run
Reviewed by: ru
- Upper case the first character of an description
- Section headings do not need to be quoted. From OpenBSD's make.1, revision 1.81
- Plural of suffix is suffixes. From OpenBSD's make.1, revision 1.61
- s/seperating/separating/
PR: 135165
Submitted by: Alan R. S. Bueno <alan.bsd@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Adjust dependencies for programs using libarchive
Add xz and linkage against liblzma to rescue system
Approved by: kientzle, delphij (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
This joint work of Dag-Erling Smørgrav and myself updates the
FFS quota system to support both traditional 32-bit and new 64-bit
quotas (for those of you who want to put 2+Tb quotas on your users).
By default quotas are not compiled into the kernel. To include them
in your kernel configuration you need to specify:
options QUOTA # Enable FFS quotas
If you are already running with the current 32-bit quotas, they
should continue to work just as they have in the past. If you
wish to convert to using 64-bit quotas, use `quotacheck -c 64';
if you wish to revert from 64-bit quotas back to 32-bit quotas,
use `quotacheck -c 32'.
There is a new library of functions to simplify the use of the
quota system, do `man quotafile' for details. If your application
is currently using the quotactl(2), it is highly recommended that
you convert your application to use the quotafile interface.
Note that existing binaries will continue to work.
Special thanks to John Kozubik of rsync.net for getting me
interested in pursuing 64-bit quota support and for funding
part of my development time on this project.
sigvec(2) references have been updated to sigaction(2), sigsetmask(2) and
sigblock(2) to sigprocmask(2), sigpause(2) to sigsuspend(2).
Some legacy man pages still refer to them, that is OK.