This driver includes the following patches submitted by:
1.0 Hideyuki Suzuki <hideyuki@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
Japanese Cable support
2.0 Keith Sklower <sklower@CS.Berkeley.EDU>
Minor update to the BSDI section so it compiles cleanly on BSDI
3.0 Joao Carlos Mendes Luis <jonny@coppe.ufrj.br>
ioctl interface to select video format , NTSC, PAL, etc...
ISSUES:
An example and better explansion on how to specify a user's login
class in /etc/master passwd is needed.
(As I don't seem to be specifiying it right, I can't do it).
Support VJ slot id compression.
Previously, ppp would negotiate a max slot between 2 & 15
(if asked), and would agree to slot id compression (if asked).
It would then proceed to use 16 slots and no compression
anyway. The result was a rather unusable connection.
of the system to be rebuilt anyway, this is a good time to introduce
LOG_NTP.
The reasoning for a separate facility is that xntpd can sometimes
cause exaggerative log message at high prioritites which are,
depending on your environment and available clock sources, not
necessarily as important as other LOG_DAEMON messages. However, they
used to clutter log files and system console in the existing setup.
Note that this situation could not be resolved using the !xntpd option
(think about it).
xntpd(8) is supposed to automatically pick up the change, it had
already all necessary #ifdef's.
The chosen value does, as far as my inquiries yielded, not clash with
any other operating system.
Did I ever spam this file good with that last commit. Despite 3
reviewers, we still managed to revoke the eBones fixes, TCL 8.0 support,
libvgl and a host of other new things from this file in the process of
parallelizing the Makefile. DOH! I think we need more pointy hats - this
particular incident is worthy of a small children's birthday party's worth of
pointy hats. ;-)
I certainly intend to take more care with the processing of aged diffs
in the future, even if it does mean reading through 20K's worth of them.
I might also be a bit more anal about asking for more up-to-date changes
before looking at them. ;)
pointy hat last? :-]
When one is selecting (or polling) for write, it helps if we use the
write side of the pipe when requesting wakeups instead of the read side.
This broke ghostview (at least) - I'm suprised it wasn't noticed for
so long.
Reviewed by: Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
- CPU_CYRIX_NO_LOCK enables weak locking. If this option is not set and
FAILESAFE is defined, NO_LOCK bit of CCR1 is cleared.
- CPU_WT_ALLOC enables write-through allocation.
sysctl option 'fakes' like a card was removed and inserted when the
machine is brought up again from a suspend. It is disabled by default,
and the old code is used.
Obtained from: PAO
speaker. Cirrus Logic PCIC chips must enable this. There is also a Low
Power Dynamic Mode bit that claims to reduce power consumption by 30%,
so enable it and hope for the best.
PR: 4650
Submitted by: Nick Sayer <nsayer@quack.kfu.com>
instead of the first available, like Win95 does. This appears to help
on some machines, and avoids potential problems with built-in serial
ports which tend to live at IRQ 3, which is usually picked with the
old method.
o LcpLayerDown() no longer does a NewPhase(PHASE_TERMINATE).
Instead, it's done in LcpLayerFinish(). LayerFinish() gets
called by the FSM after the LCP FSM goes through the Stopping
and Stopped states.
o -direct and -background mode exit at PHASE_TERMINATE, not
PHASE_DEAD.
The result is that LCP, CCP & IPCP are brought down cleanly on both
sides of the link (not just our side). Killing ppp rather than just
closing it still makes it get out after the LCP SendTerminateReq().
I'll have a look at that soon. We're probably not actually sending
the REQ :-(
provides for a means to specify an argument for crunchide's -k option.
(This is required by ntpdate.)
Submitted by: peter@rhiannon.clari.net.au (Peter Hawkins)