directory before the specified config file. This is implemented by
opening DEFAULTS as stdin if it exists, and if so resetting stdin to the
actual config file when DEFAULTS is fully parsed via yywrap(). In short,
this lets us create DEFAULTS kernel configs in /sys/<arch>/conf that can
enable certain options or devices by default and allow users to disable
them via 'nooptions' or 'nodevice' rather than having to create kludge
NO_FOO options.
Requested by: scottl
Reviewed by: scottl
allows us to specify the machine_arch as well as machine. If
specified then a second link will be made, similar to machine, from
$MACHINE_ARCH to $S/$MACHINE_ARCH/include.
This is for ports where MACHINE != MACHINE_ARCH (pc98 today, others in
the future?).
Reviewed by: arch@, nyan@
remaining consumers to have the count passed as an option. This is
i4b, pc98/wdc, and coda.
Bump configvers.h from 500013 to 600000.
Remove heuristics that tried to parse "device ed5" as 5 units of the ed
device. This broke things like the snd_emu10k1 device, which required
quotes to make it parse right. The no-longer-needed quotes have been
removed from NOTES, GENERIC etc. eg, I've removed the quotes from:
device snd_maestro
device "snd_maestro3"
device snd_mss
I believe everything will still compile and work after this.
a SEMICOLON token (a newline or semicolon, or one of these preceded
by a comment and/or whitespace). The input stream was switched too
early and the parser was expecting a SEMICOLON in the included file
instead of after the filename in the include directive.
Submitted by: Stefan Farfeleder <stefan@fafoe.narf.at>
Kept alive by: Adam C. Migus <adam@migus.org>
is common in British English, while "toward" is the preferred form in
American English. Use the American form for consistency.
Correct the date on the manual page.
Submitted by: Tom Rhodes <trhodes@freebsd.org>,
underway@comcast.net (Gary W. Swearingen)
from .c files. Actually, this is overkill, as the .ln file targets
are assumed from .? (any) files. This is not a problem in practice,
merely a bit untidy, as the linting rules DTRT. See the sys/conf/*
and sys/mk/* files for usage.
and due to buffering they would sometimes come out after the actual
error message when mkheaders() failed due to an unknown device, so you'd
get an error messages followed by 20 or 30 lines of harmless warnings.
There are lots of other warning messages in config(8) that are printed
on stdout, but these were the most egregious (at least with LINT).
Fixed memory leak in the "nodevice" option implementation.
Use these instead of sed(1) in MD NOTES.
Use a single makefile (sys/conf/makeLINT.mk) to generate
LINT for all architectures. (Previous versions missed
the LINT dependency on Makefile, and i386 version also
missed the dependency on ${NOTES}.)
Fixed bugs in the previous NOTES conversion using the
"nodevice" token and sed(1):
- i386 LINT lost "device pst".
- pc98 LINT lost SC_*, MAXCONS and KBD_DISABLE_KEYMAP_LOAD
options, and got needless DPT_* options.
- Added nooptions PPC_DEBUG, PPC_PROBE_CHIPSET, KBD_INSTALL_CDEV
to sparc64 LINT so that it has a chance to config(8).
This basically returns us to where we were before.