examination, I'm not entirely sure this was meant to be public. It's not
idempotent or anything. I'll make pkg_manage deal with it another way
until it's been confirmed one way or the other by Marc.
like "3DBorder" and "[". (NB, the "3DBorder" problem has actually
been intention, it allowed for weird section names like "3xyzzy". We
don't have them, either.)
(Partially) Submitted by: taob@gate.sinica.edu.tw (Brian Tao)
file specifications when they've been extracted (enabling you to get a file
fast if it occurs somewhere close to the front).
Submitted by: Marc van Kempen <wmbfmk@urc.tue.nl>
> * the gdb-4.13 of current (compiled and used under 2.0R) can not attach to my
> own processes (it works only then i'm root - else i get open failed - for my
> own processes)
how embarassing ! This turns out to be a bug in infptrace.c. Below
is a patch. Could some kind soul apply it ?
Submitted by: "Gary J." <garyj@rks32.pcs.dec.com>
of the linker to enforce linking of modules in command line order it is
not possible to link gdb shared with -lcompat.
*HACK ALERT*
Removed -lcompat from LDADD and bring in the necessary functions out of
libcompat as a source module until the linker can be fixed.
underlying bugs which are caused by mixing static/shared libraries with
this change in place.
The shlib code is not capable of supporting this feature in it's present
state and will need significant modifications in order to do so.
register ourselves as an NIS version 1 UDP server to pacify older SunOS 4
ypbinds that seem to insist on having one around. All this does is allow
ypserv to respond to DOMAIN_NONACK requests that are periodically
transmitted by ypbind: the server will not actually work as an NIS v1
server in any other way.
Unlike the mainline code, which implements this as a compile-time
option, this feature can be turned on with the newly-added -k flag
at runtime.
Bunped version number to 0.13. (What the hell.)
Updated the man page to reflect this change, also made a couple of small
edits to reflect the recent changes in the /etc/rc* setup.
ypxfr can't easily be reduced down to one file like yppush because it
needs to do certain special things (such as binding to a specific
machine (the NIS master)) which the yp_*() functions in libc don't
allow.
in libc, we can get rid of the private/special copies of yp_*.c
files and rpcgen them at compile time instead. This leaves us with
just one unique source files: yppush.c
date: 1995/02/04 20:27:23; author: phk; state: Exp; lines: +1 -1
added *.info and *.db to the default "ignore" list in cvs to avoid obviously
common mistakes.
that ypxfr is supposed to log messages to /var/yp/ypxfr.log if it exists,
using syslog() makes more sense, especially since ypserv does the same
thing already. Try to use stderr by default, and use syslog() if stderr
is not a tty.
Also update the man page to reflect this change.
NIS maps (get rid of extraneous slash a la /var/yp//domainname).
Have ypxfr log all output to /var/yp/ypxfr.log if stdin is not a
tty. This should allow logging to be done when ypxfr is called from
inside ypserv in response to a yppush request.
Update man page to reflect the change (and fix a typo).
use it. :-)
It now explicitly requires the specification of a directory to import
from, either as an argument to the script, or by asking the user about
it. (Previously, it implicitly used `.', like cvs import does.)
Also implemented an option `-n', which does essentially the same like
the overall CVS option `-n': show only what would have been done,
don't do any commitment. Note that since the modules' database is
checked out in place (and not commited back), it will erroneously be
reported as to be imported, too:
cvs import: Importing /home/ncvs/ports/foobar/foo/modules
I ports/foobar/foo/modules/CVS
N ports/foobar/foo/modules/modules
This is an unwanted side-effect, but gives the user the option to see
if the `ed' magic did the right thing when editing modules/modules.
Rod, can you please check the function ``checktag'' in the script if it
will be restritctive enough?
interpret it. I've preserved the bugs that perl must be installed
to build part of perl and that it must be installed in the wrong place
(no ${DESTDIR}).
members over shared library members. This modification causes the linker
to use the first definition it sees for a symbol instead of having
priorities based on the library type. This modification should allow
gdb to compile again.
Obtained from:
Email conversation with Paul Kranenbury, but implemented completely by
me. If it doesn't work, it's my fault not his.
Remove private mkdir command for /usr/include/g++, this is now
handled by mtree.
Make the whole file fit in 80 column output, sort the SRCS list and
split into .c and .cc sources.
Use $Id$ instead of $FreeBSD$ since we pulled support for this.
Add DPADD to match LDADD and now include <bsd.prog.mk> to define
the DPADD values (This is a hack until the .mk stuff can be corrected
so that ${LIB*} is visiable in bsd.lib.mk.)
Optimize beforeinstall target by eliminating a subshell.
default switches, template functions get EXTERNAL linkage in each file
in which they occur, causing multiple definition errors during
linking. The enclosed patch (from gnu.g++.bug) appears to solve the
problem (I enclose the accompanying message as well).
This patch fixes the multiply defined template functions bug
which was introduced in 2.6.1.
Submitted by: "Justin T. Gibbs" <gibbs@estienne.cs.berkeley.edu>
Obtained from: Jason Merrill at cygnus support on G++ mailing list
one is much more intelligent, not only that it would accept multiple
man page locations, it also behaves like ``make'' in that it will only
deal with cat pages that are out of date (by default).
Wolfram also wrote a man page for it.
Submitted by: wosch@cs.tu-berlin.de (Wolfram Schneider)
- Don't define NO_IMPLICIT_EXTERN_C here. It is already the default
(defined in i386/bsd.h).
- Don't lose the fixed comment about FUNCTION_PROFILER.
- Don't lose the define of NO_PROFILE_DATA.
Replace the unused define of COMMENT_BEGIN by the less-unused define
of ASM_COMMENT_START. COMMENT_BEGIN was only defined in i386-specific
files and was not used in any part of gcc-2.6.3. ASM_COMMENT_START
is defined for several targets and is used for stuff that we don't
support (dwarf).
stuff. I'd like to have it in CVS, and i figured that this might be
the best place to go.
Someone (phk?) could install it into /usr/local/bin on freefall, for
convenience.
Suggested by: phk
basic-block profiling:
1. use a .stabs(25) symbol to link all the data structures together with.
The regular method isn't safe for the kernel.
2. add a BB before the prologue and add a BB after the epilogue, this
alows us to find the length of any counted BB. This is a cheap and somewhat
reasonable measure of actual cost.
if a signal is received.
This fixes a bug where killing the process would cause a
"No manual entry for XXX" to be printed even if the manpage
was found.
first place and we were too long in finding out. Now we know, and the
damage is hard to fix. This is part one: ld will not link gcc dynamic,
if specified as "-lgcc".
Suggested by: dyson & davidg
disables dysfunctional disinformed namei's,
needlessly negating namei cache."
These hacks cuts the number futile attempts made by cc and ccp to find
cross-compilers and other weird stuff. A make of the BOOTFLP kernel
has 20% less namei calls now, that is from 30647 down to 24563 calls.
NetBSD ld code except for local changes for dlopen() and friends and
the hashing on the minor value of the shlibs. We should be binary
compatible now with all their libraries.
Obtained from: NetBSD
the same as the changes made in the repository. This is often seen by
people with remote CVS trees that have applied their local patches to the
master site. a 'cvs update' will show bogus conflicts.
Obtained from: CVS mailing list, Stig<stig@inse.com>
In diffutils 2.6 and 2.7, diff3 -A complains about identical overlapping
changes. They're different from the ancestor but not from each other...
Why bother? The patch below fixes this nonsense and preserves [B]ackwards
compatiblity with the -B flag (also --show-bogus-conflicts).
Party on...
Stig
i reported today earlier..tested and works OK..
( To those who want to experience bug try running aub
with old version of socket.ph and with new one or just any
perl script "requiring " <sys/socket.ph> or <sys/cdefs.ph> )
correctly (specified wrong fields to awk). Note that the files in question
are noe the local /etc/master.passwd and /etc/passwd files: this Makefile
expects there to be a seperate master.passwd file under /var/yp for NIS
database creation.
executes after it finishes updating the raw master.passwd file. The script
is just there to invoke /var/yp/Makefile to build new maps and yppush them.
We could have yppasswdd run /var/yp/Makefile directly, but this allws a bit
more flexibility: the user may decide to run some other commands too.
This is a ported/modified version of the yppush program from the
yps-0.21 package from the NYS project. This program is used to propagate
updated NIS maps from an NIS master to an NIS slave. It's normally invoked
by /var/yp/Makefile.
This version of yppush has been modified in the following ways:
- Cleared up several Linux/BSD incompatibilities, largely involving
header files.
- converted from GDBM to DB with extreme predjudice. (well, not really...)
- removed lots of ugly debugging code that really didn't do anyone any good.
- Fixed a couple of inaccurate/badly formatted error messages.
- Renamed some functions to avoid collisions with certain YP routines
hidden inside libc.
- Small signal handling kludge: Linux has different struct sigaction
that us.
- Incorporated some functions from the yps-0.21 library that yppush was
dependent on.
Like ypxfr, this works, but could use come cleaning up.
This is a ported/modified version of the ypxfr program from the yps-0.21
package from the NYS project. This program is normally invoked by ypserv
when it receives a yppush command from an NIS master. It can also be
run from the command line to grab copies of maps when initializing a
slave server.
This program has been hacked in the following ways:
- rpcgen'ed new yp_xdr.c, yp_svc.c and yp_clnt.c files. The old ones were
rather grody.
- Changed certain function names (prefended a _ to them) to avoid conflicts
with certain functions lurking within libc. One major problem here is
that ypxfr needs to bind to a YP master in order to work correctly,
but it can't use the _yp_bind function inside libc because that
function only lets you bind to a domain, not a specific host. Lots
of head scratching here.
- Converted from GDBM to DB at gunpoint.
- Removed lots of really nasty looking DEBUG code to try to reduce clutter.
- Incorporated some of the library code supplied with yps-0.21 on which
ypxfr was dependent.
This program still needs to be cleaned up just as a matter of principle:
I get all icky just looking at it sometimes.
This is a ported/modified version of yppasswd from the NYS yppasswd-0.5
package. This package has code in it from both Olaf Kirch and Theo
de Raadt. There are GPL references and BSD-style copyright all over the
place... hopefully I won't get flamed into oblivion for commiting this.
This program has been modified from the original in the following ways:
- Changed the ALLOW_CHFN and ALLOW_CHSH compile-time options into
run-time options.
- Demolished the password update functions and replaced them with
routines to handle FreeBSD-style passwordd databases. It is expected
that a seperate master.passwd file will be maintained for use with
the NIS maps. yppasswd will have to be told where it is:
% yppasswdd -m /var/yp/master.passwd
A /var/yp/passwd file will be generated from /var/yp/master.passwd by
/var/yp/Makefile. When yppasswdd has finished modifying the master.passwd
file, it will invoke /usr/libexec/yppwupdate, which is a script that
will run /var/yp/Makefile to generate new maps and push them.
Note that there are copies if pw_util.c and pw_copy.c here. This is
deliberate: they are *not* identical to the originals. Very similar, yes,
but not identical. *sigh*
This is a hacked-up port of the ypserv-0.11 server from the NYS project
written by Peter Eriksson.
The original package included some map creating and dumping tools and
was based on GDBM. This version has been modified in the following
ways:
- GDBM replaced with DB and many weird hacks made to the read_database()
function because of this.
- implimented the ypxfr service (using ypxfr from the yps-0.21 package,
aso from the NYS project)
- added code to check the TCP port from which NIS requests originate:
the server will refuse to serve the master.passwd.{byname|byuid} maps
if the request doesn't come from a privileged port. Normally, only the
superuser can issue such a request. Requests for the passwd.{bynam|byuid}
maps aren't affected. There will be a small change made to getpwent.c
in libc to complement this.
- added code to do DNS lookups via actual resolver queries instead of
relying on gethostbyname() and friends. The author noted in the original
documentation that a loop condition could arise where the server would
query itself for hostsname lookups. Using direct DNS lookups prevents
this from happening.
- added code to properly fork() the server into the background unless
invoked with the -debug flag.
- Added combined syslog/perror function.
- fixed a few bugs (which were probably introduced by all the other
changes)
- Created a bmake Makefile.
Note that this package can be linked against the tcp_wrapper package
to provide address-based authentication, but this isn't done by default
since the tcp_wrapper package isn't part of FreeBSD.
This program is used for both generating and dumping NIS maps. It's very
similar to the 'makedbm' command in SunOS. This program was ported from
the yps-0.21 package. It's close to the original except for the GDBM to
DB conversions. This was simple compared to the other YP components.
the version installed from /usr/share. It's hard to eliminate old versions
- few Makefiles have `uninstall' targets and sup/ctm tends to blow away
old Makefiles.
This Makefile needs more work. Stuff is built at install time...
Don't initialize CLEANFILES here. Many FONTFILES are sources and required
special clean rules to avoid cleaning.
Makefile.tty:
Initialize CLEANFILES. All tty FONTFILES are objects.