you MUST add the directory name and the .. entry to close the directory.
If you do not understand mtree files, do not modify them, it is very
easy to trash someones box with a mistake in here. Especially with
regards to .. entries.
some file names.
2. Add MAKEDEVS= that does all the /dev population so that this is not
duplicated in 2 or 3 places. Helps to keep it in sync too. Cleaned
up and fixed to not overflow inode tables.
3. Fix paths to the 2 crypt versions.
4. Init is sbin/init now instead of sbin/init.bsdi.
5. bdes is now in secure/usr.bin, will need to do something about telnet.
6. Incorporate 1.1.5.1 patches for EXTRACT.sh files.
7. Correct calls to make kcopy-flooppy to work with or without obj/.
8. Reorder src-clean: target so that it does not destroy the real obj
tree, but does rip out junk and obj links.
9. Incorporate 1.1.5.1 patche for srcbin tarball name.
10. Add chflags command to release-dirs target so the rm -rf can have a
chance to work.
With this and a few more commits I will have 2.0 bin tarballs.
be installed on, so they should be in /dev as well.
Removed the smoking remains of dcf*. I didn't realize that it had made it
into MAKEDEV. Gone from cdevsw long time ago, gone from /dev now.
the choice of building with the password scrambler or the DES
libraries. Folks outside the US can simply drop in the other
DES libraries. (stupid laws...)
Everything still keys off of the old NOCRYPT variable so building
a portable distribution remains the same.
Submitted by: pst
actually have a printer connected or online:
- MAKEDEV: remove all signs of lpa
add lpctl? devices (minor # = unit + 128)
- usr.sbin/Makefile add lptcontrol
- sys/i386/isa/lpt.c implement the LP_BYPASS flag: when a unit is
opened with this flag set, the printer is
not primed, and no check is made to see that
the printer is online. This can only be used
to pass ioctls. (giving us /dev/lpctl?)
- lptcontrol.c use /dev/lpctl? (LP_BYPASS)
-f flag removed, -u flag added
- lptcontrol.8 document changes in lptcontrol
rewrite using mandoc macros
Submitted by: Geoff.
1. Use ${MAKE} everywhere again. Whoops.
2. Replace multiple invocations of gzip ... split ... with one variable.
3. Add src-clean target for making the src tree presentable before
making a src tarball out of it.
upon disk type. In far more cases than not this is the optimal setting
for any disk drive made after 1990.
This now means all installs will have the disks newfs'ed with either:
newfs -b 8192 -f 1024 -d 0 -n 1
or
newfs -n 4096 -f 512 -d 0 -n 1
depending on what the user chooses for the blocking factor.
date!!) and rename them to something more eye-catching so people will read them
again (considering the previous state of affairs, I'm actually rather glad they didn't!).
1. Add to secr and bindists to possibly save the occasional fool who
doesn't RTFM and uses the wrong command to extract this (or even someone
who's legitimately using this to extract on top of a bindist somewhere
*else*).
2. Do the right thing with any symlinks in the src tree. Right now, we're
free of the buggers, but just in case.
2. Get kcopy and filesystem images from current directory since we
now build them here; a clean rule is now all that's needed to make
the crunch stuff complete.
The kernel configs already support this, so with a boot floppy or a utility
like booteasy, the user should be able to install and boot off the second drive.
Hurrah.
way I'm going to allow this to be set to secure. People blow their
password files away all the time, and I am not at all keen to lose the
ability to get them recovered with the simple expedient of a single-user
boot.
Without this entry init.bsdi don't ask root password when it goes
to sigle-user. This entry must present here in any case,
subject of arguing can be only default mode, I mean
"secure" or "insecure" here. Please consider this entry
like template and change "insecure" to "secure" if you
are _shure_, but not back out whole line.
# This entry needed for asking password when init goes to single-user mode
console none unknown off insecure