more IPv4 address from a ranged list in CIRD notation:
ipv4_addrs_ed0="192.168.0.1/24 192.168.1.1-5/28"
In the process move alias processing into new ipv4_up/down functions to
more toward a less IPv4 centric world.
Submitted by: Philipp Wuensche <cryx dash freebsd at h3q dot com>
The following repo-copies were made (by Mark Murray):
sys/i386/isa/spkr.c -> sys/dev/speaker/spkr.c
sys/i386/include/speaker.h -> sys/dev/speaker/speaker.h
share/man/man4/man4.i386/spkr.4 -> share/man/man4/spkr.4
Use . instead of ${.OBJDIR}.
Move DEFSDIR and BMIBSDIR under the resp. .if clauses so that they
get defined only if DEFS and BMIBS are defined.
Submitted by: ru
use in-tree as well as for 3rd party modules. This file is more or less
what was in usr.sbin/bsnmpd/modules/Makefile.inc with some modifications
and omissions. Usage examples can be found under usr.sbin/bsnmpd/modules/*.
Idea by: phk
Reported by: scottl
I'm not very fond of using the non-standard lockf(1) here, but I
have no better idea at the moment. NetBSD uses ln(1) to create a
lock file, but this approach can result in a deadlock if make is
interrupted, leaving an orphaned lock file.
probed and attached, not on the first call to device_get_softc().
- Add a cross reference to DEVICE_PROBE regarding the caveats of using the
softc in a driver's probe routine.
- Fix a grammar bogon.
PR: docs/87176 (1)
Submitted by: Devon H. O'Dell dodell at offmyserver dot com (1)
MFC after: 3 days
microtime to bintime. However, one standaline .Nm wasn't changed, and as
a result, the manpage claimed that bintime was added in both 5.0 and 3.0.
Fix by listing microtime explicitly.
- Fix a grammar bogon.
PR: docs/87147 (1)
Submitted by: Matthew Luckie (1)
MFC after: 3 days
where applicable. The main reason for this change is that
the location of make.conf is not constant and can be
modified via __MAKE_CONF. This change also improves
hyper-text linkage in our manpages.
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Remove references to cpu_critical_*() as they no longer exist.
- Explain that any preemptions that occur during a critical section are
deferred until the current thread exits the section.
- Remove a bogus example usage of a critical section.
- Note that one can interlock critical sections with spin mutexes in
certain situations.
MFC after: 3 days
system boot, and hook it up in the system.
The separate script is needed because in the presence of various
interface lists in rc.conf ($network_interfaces, $cloned_interfaces,
$sppp_interfaces, $gif_interfaces, more to come) it is hard to start
them orderly, so that pfsync is brought up after its syncdev, which
is required for the proper startup of pfsync.
Discussed with: mlaier on -pf
MFC after: 5 days
- Remove description of poll in trap feature.
- Tell that polling should be turned on and off with ifconfig.
- Move description of kern.polling.enable to the end and say
that this a deprecated way of turning polling on.
- Remove note that idle poll has some problems in CURRENT. I failed
to find them, while Sam and Luigi failed to remember what the
problem actually were there.
replacement and has additional features which make it superior.
Discussed on: -arch
Reviewed by: thompsa
X-MFC-after: never (RELENG_6 as transition period)
- Add arm and ppc to the list of archs not supporting operations on 64-bit
integers.
- Update the sample code for acquiring a mutex to be more recent and to
take into account the recent atomic_foo_ptr() changes.
MFC after: 1 week
so. If the full list of fe(4) options is documented we can revive the
entire section.
PR: docs/86228
Submitted by: n-kogane@syd.odn.ne.jp
Helped by: Masahiro Sekiguchi <seki@jp.fujitsu.com>
MFC after: 1 week
shutdown procedures (which have a duration of more than 120 seconds).
We have two user-space affecting shutdown timeouts: a "soft" one in
/etc/rc.shutdown and a "hard" one in init(8). The first one can be
configured via /etc/rc.conf variable "rcshutdown_timeout" and defaults
to 30 seconds. The second one was originally (in 1998) intended to be
configured via sysctl(8) variable "kern.shutdown_timeout" and defaults
to 120 seconds.
Unfortunately, the "kern.shutdown_timeout" was declared "unused" in 1999
(as it obviously is actually not used within the kernel itself) and
hence was intentionally but misleadingly removed in revision 1.107 from
init_main.c. Kernel sysctl(8) variables are certainly a wrong way to
control user-space processes in general, but in this particular case the
sysctl(8) variable should have remained as it supports init(8), which
isn't passed command line flags (which in turn could have been set via
/etc/rc.conf), etc.
As there is already a similar "kern.init_path" sysctl(8) variable which
directly affects init(8), resurrect the init(8) shutdown timeout under
sysctl(8) variable "kern.init_shutdown_timeout". But this time document
it as being intentionally unused within the kernel and used by init(8).
Also document it in the manpages init(8) and rc.conf(5).
Reviewed by: phk
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Replace 'process' with 'thread' everywhere.
- Update several places to note that that the fact that default mutexes
may adaptively spin isn't necessarily MD, but is just part of the
implementation as a whole.
- Clarify the text about MTX_SPIN mutexes only being appropriate for
INTR_FAST interrupts or other low level scheduler code to make the
jargon more FreeBSD-ish rather than BSD/OS-ish.
- Also, note that it is possible that interrupts aren't blocked but just
deferred when a spin lock is held (the whole blocked vs. deferred bit is
an MD implementation detail).
- Remove statements saying that spin locks must be released in the exact
opposite order that they were acquired. This stopped being true several
years ago when we first added critical sections that stored their state
in the current thread rather than in struct mtx.
- Note that a mutex must be initialized before it is passed to any other
mutex function, not just mtx_lock.
- Clarify that mtx_trylock() only operates on MTX_DEF mutexes.
- Simplify the text about possible preemption during a mtx_unlock().
- Use complete English sentences in place of phrases in a few places.
- Clarify that it isn't ever safe to sleep with a mutex held. The kernel
tends to panic when you do that.
Requested by: scottl (7)
MFC after: 3 days
- The first "alias" "Yes" should be "No**".
- Made "builtin echo command" consistent with csh and sh manpages.
- In group of 3 interactive commands, 2 used .Pa instead of .Ic.
- "Name" section now has "builtin" and "built-in" for better apropos.
- Added these builtins: !, %, ., :, @, {, }, local, return
PR: docs/85065
Approved by: keramida
MFC after: 3 days
appear in tmpmfs and varmfs default flags explicitly.
Explain why -M is good for these file systems (it maximizes
performance and makes the system more stable at low memory
conditions by reducing the chance of thrashing.)
Bump .Dd accordingly.
MFC after: 3 days
of the form "REFUSE foo" in portsnap.conf will result in parts of the
tree matching "^foo" being (a) not extracted by "portsnap extract", (b)
not updated by "portsnap update", and (c) not having any patches or new
ports downloaded by "portsnap fetch" or "portsnap cron". The example
shown in portsnap.conf demonstrates ignoring all the language categories.
As mentioned in portsnap.conf.5, the use of an imcomplete ports tree is
not officially supported; but this is something which many users have
requested, so I'm adding it anyway.
PR: bin/85619 (but not the patch provided therein)
MFC after: 1 month
o note all pci/cardbus parts are supported (modulo hal updates)
o use ath_rate_sample instead of ath_rate_onoe
o note SuperG support is missing
o note WPA not supported on 5210
o remove stuff about needing a better tx rate control algorithm
MFC after: 3 days
Files used both "securelevel" and either "secure level" or
"security level"; all are now "security level".
PR: docs/84266
Submitted by: garys
Approved by: keramida
MFC after: 3 days
commentary and to "Link" directives, but the latter should fix
reported problems with clean installs (by no longer installing those
links).
Obtained from: ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/tzdata2005m.tar.gz
Changes to historical dates in: Azerbaijan, B.I.O.T., China, Denmark,
Libya, and Poland.
Changes to current dates in: East Timor, Haiti, Israel, Kazakhstan,
Nicaragua, Paraguay, Samoa, Tunisia, Uruguay
Changes to future dates in: Australia, Iran, United States
Obtained from: ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/tzdata2005l.tar.gz
now run on any interface.
- Add a new ifconfig_<ifn> keyword, NOAUTO which prevents configuration
of an interface at boot or via /etc/pccard_ether. This allows
/etc/rc.d/netif to be used to start and stop an interface on a purely
manual basis. The decision to affect pccard_ether may be revisited at
a later date.
Requested by: imp, gallatin (removable_interfaces)
Discussed with: sam, Randy Bush (NOAUTO)
list of diagnostic messages sorted.
Document the recently introduced EOPNOTSUPP error return. Repair
sort ordering for the list of error descriptions.
MFC after: 3 days
packet in an ICMP reply. The minimum of 8 bytes is internally
enforced. The maximum quotation is the remaining space in the
reply mbuf.
This option is added in response to the issues raised in I-D
draft-gont-icmp-payload-00.txt.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Spnsored by: TCP/IP Optimizations Fundraise 2005
the IP address the packet came through in. This is useful for routers
to show in traceroutes the actual path a packet has taken instead of
the possibly different return path.
The new sysctl is named net.inet.icmp.reply_from_interface and defaults
to off.
MFC after: 2 weeks
does not return a list of ASCII NUL terminated strings.
Instead, a list of attribute names is returned, where each
list entry consists of one byte for the name length, followed
by the name, without a terminating ASCII NUL.
This in similar to change 1.17 to extattr_get_file.2
Reviewed by: rwatson, ru
settings can be displayed, near the end of the DESCRIPTION section,
immediately after the paragraph that describes how they can be set.
Add a reference to printenv(1) too (and the ``printenv'' csh builtin).
Submitted by: Gary W. Swearingen <garys@opusnet.com>
PR: docs/85008
rc.d/geli - configures encryption (ask for passphrases, etc.);
rc.d/geli2 - is called after file systems are mounted and mark devices for
detach on last close.
Sponsored by: Wheel Sp. z o.o.
http://www.wheel.pl
MFC after: 3 days
- Document how an event looks like that is received by devd(8) from acpi_ibm(4)
- Document the event codes as they occur on a T41p
- Add a note about sysctl.conf and an Xref to it
- Add an example section providing an example script and an entry for
devd.conf. This is an adapted version of the one in acpi_fujitsu(4).
- s/Fn-F4/Fn+F4/ for consistency sake
- Add a button description where refering to a T41p, remove it otherwise,
since it might vary from model to model
- Bump .Dd
Thanks for improvements to: brueffer, ru
Approved by: brueffer
fast, lightweight, and generally good way for users to keep their
ports trees up to date.
This is version 0.9.4 from the ports tree (sysutils/portsnap) with
the following changes:
1. The experimental pipelined http code is enabled. No seatbelts
in -CURRENT. (^_^)
2. The working directory has moved from /usr/local/portsnap to
/var/db/portsnap (as discussed on -arch two days ago).
3. Portsnap now fetches a list of mirrors (distributed as DNS SRV
records) and selects one randomly. This should help to avoid the
uneven loading which plagues the cvsup mirror network.
4. The license is now 2-clause BSD instead of 3-clause BSD.
5. Various incidental changes to make portsnap fit into the base
system's build mechanics.
X-MFC-After: 6.0-RELEASE
X-MFC-Before: 5.5-RELEASE
X-MFC-To: RELENG_6, RELENG_5, ports
discussed on: -arch and several other places
"yes please" from: simon, remko, flz, Diane Bruce
thinks this is a great idea: bsdimp
Hopes he didn't forget any files: cperciva
- Add a note about the organisation of the sections.
- Expand shell globs (they worked in a previous version of the delete-old
target, but not in this one).
- Use the correct way of checking for a native environment. [1]
- Add some more obsolete files.
- Fix some bad english. [1]
Suggested by: ru [1]
Approved by: mentor (joerg)
- removes obsolete files/dirs or libraries.
- works in interactive (default) and batch mode
- respects DISTDIR
- documented in UPDATING and build(7)
The head of the file ObsoleteFiles.inc contains instructions how to add
obsolete files/dirs/libs to the list. Obviously one should add obsolete
files to this list, when he removes a file/dir/lib from the basesystem.
Additionally add check-old target:
- allows re@ to check if a file on the obsolete list resurfaces
Design goals:
- allows full control by the user (default interactive mode)
- possibility of scripted removal of obsolete files (batch mode)
- opt-in removal of files (explicit list of files)
- seperate removal of libs (2 delete targets)
Important design decissions:
- structured list of files to remove instead of a plain text file:
* allows to remove additional files if a NO_foo knob is specified
without the need to change the targets (no NO_foo knob is respected
yet)
- not using mtree like NetBSD does:
* mtree doesn't has an interactive mode
Discussed on: arch (long ago), current (this year)
Additional input from: re (hrs)
Approved by: mentor (joerg)
and return a printable representation.
This fixes recognition of the PC Engines WRAP and improves the
recognition of the Soekris boards (Bios version can now be
seen in the dmesg output for instance).
Also, add watchdog support for PCM-582x platforms.
Submitted by: Adrian Steinmann <ast@marabu.ch>
Slightly changed by: phk
PR: 81360