takes an int arg and is prototyped in <string.h>. It has the opposite
interface botches to psignal(3) which takes a bogus unsigned arg but is
prototyped in the right place.
This is not the last of the interface problems for strsignal(). We
obtained it from NetBSD, but NetBSD has moved its prototype to
<unistd.h>. strsignal() should return const char *, but it returns
char * for historical reasons. NetBSD declares it as returning
__aconst char, where __aconst is normally empty but can be set to
`const' to give better error checking. glibc-2.1.1 prototypes
strsignal() in <string.h>.
when I made the absence of the clean flag sticky in rev.1.88. This
was a problem main for "mount /". There is no way to mount "/" for
writing without using mount -u (normally implicitly), so after
"mount -f /" of an unclean filesystem, the absence of the clean flag
was sticky forever.
each and every xxx_genassym.c file to seperately define these and
also to promote uniformity and a level of abstraction.
Symbols are created as unsigned long by default and overridable on
a per file basis.
/usr/games on purpose. All tools in /usr/games are built as part of
the tool stages to support building world on machines without games.
This fixes any build problems that have been caused by non-standard
paths and also removes the primary objection for not using absolute
paths.
o Add genassym to the list of cross-tools
o Remove sh hashing work-around, we don't need it anymore
o Clean more directories in WORLDTMP when NOCLEAN is specified
The sh hashing work-around is not needed anymore, because we don't
trigger the bug anymore.
When NOCLEAN is not defined, we wipe out the complete WORLDTMP,
including the object directories of the tools we have built. When
NOCLEAN is defined, we remove anything that we install anyway, which
is usr/bin, usr/games, usr/include, usr/lib and usr/sbin.
- In uhci_intr() check to see if sc->sc_bus.bdev is NULL, and if it is,
ack any pending interrupts and disable them, then return. It is possible
for interrupts to be delivered the moment a handler is set up at attach
time in uhci_pci.c, particularly when attempting to kldload the usb.ko
module after the system is already up. However the driver isn't ready
to field interrupts at that time and certain pointers in the softc
struct aren't initialized yet, and we invariably end up falling off
the end of one of them. The effect is that kldloading the usb module
will panic the system in uhci_intr(). This added sanity check stops
this from happening: I can now kldload the usb.ko module without any
problems and load/attach other USB drivers after it.
Of course the uhci driver has no detach method, but that's another
problem.
- In uhci_run(), set the UHCI_CMD_MAXP bit in the command register to
allow 64-byte packets to be used for full speed bandwidth reclamation.
Certain high speed devices (in this case the ADMtek USB ethernet
adapter) require this bit to be set, otherwise babble errors occur
at the end of large (between 1100 and 1500 byte) transfers. This
should not affect other devices, although supposedly it is less efficient
than the 32-byte setting. Unfortunately, this is a per-bus setting,
not a per-device setting, so we can't just enable it for certain
devices on the USB bus.
pr_input() routines prototype is also changed to support IPSEC and IPV6
chained protocol headers.
Reviewed by: freebsd-arch, cvs-committers
Obtained from: KAME project
lobotomized environment, say booted from a floppy with no /etc full
of password and group files, give sensible fallbacks for roots uid
and operators gid.
This might fix sysinstall.
this makefile update which should have been together with the file
removal.
Removed vlimit.3 and vtimes.3. Removed vlimit.c and vtimes.c from
the "MISSING" list. These were old variants of get/setrlimit() and
getrusage(), respectively, and were never implemented in FreeBSD.
vlimit.3 referred to <sys/vlimit.h> which was removed recently.
vtimes.3 referred to <sys/vtimes.h> which never existed in FreeBSD.
the "MISSING" list. These were old variants of get/setrlimit() and
getrusage(), respectively, and were never implemented in FreeBSD.
vlimit.3 referred to <sys/vlimit.h> which was removed recently.
vtimes.3 referred to <sys/vtimes.h> which never existed in FreeBSD.
Add support, kinda, for megaheartz xjack nic cards. This support
works well for one machine per ethernet segment because it hard codes
the MAC address. The pccardd in -current doesn't have support to
parse the ethernet address from the CIS in the funky way that the
megaheartz card does things (it includes it in the info tuple, as
ascii, which is non-standard). I'd rather kludge this for the moment
and work to read the CIS from the kernel rather than mess with
pccardd.
The isa attachment is untested. The pccard attachment is known to
work since I'm committing over it.
Card Obtained from: Chris D. Faulhaber <jedger@fxp.org>
now. On one machine with <825a> and <875> controllers, `sym' correctly
attached. On another one with only a <ncr 53c810 fast10 scsi>, the `ncr'
driver correctly attached.
of changing the search dirs. This also removes an used search dir,
removes unneeded redundancy, and a bugus dir we enherited on the i386
by baseing off of svr4.h.
We went from:
install: /usr/libexec/(null)
programs: /usr/libexec/<OBJFORMAT>/:/usr/libexec/:/usr/bin/:/usr/libexec/
libraries: /usr/libdata/gcc/:/usr/libexec/:/usr/ccs/lib/:/usr/lib/
to:
install: /usr/libexec/(null)
programs: /usr/libexec/<OBJFORMAT>/:/usr/libexec/
libraries: /usr/libexec/:/usr/lib/
working. It was, as I predicted, a stupid bug and thanks to the
submitter for spotting it. I'll also re-roll some 3.4-RELEASE install
floppies for this.