as dummies.
(If you do not have libcrypt in your system, you are now HOSED.)
People outside the USA can now freely SUP lib.
(The only bits of the tree with encryption stuff in are now rc/secure and
src/kerberosIV.)
Submitted by: Geoff.
revision. They caused redundant redeclaration warnings because I
forgot to declare them as extern and gcc-2.6.0 treats "extern int x[];"
slightly different from "int x[];" (this is probably a bug). The new
versions will cause RR warnings from gcc-2.4.5 because it does not
understand that the second declaration in "extern int x[]; int x[1];"
is not redundant. The variables don't actually need to be declared
in a header file because they are used in only one C source file and
one assembler source file, but I want all public variables and
comments about them to be findable by grepping *.h.
<machine/profile.h>. The old version was writing an incomplete
header without the profrate field that is necessary to handle the
current faster profiling clock. The counters that are where the
the profrate should be are usually 0 and gprof converts a profrate
of 0 to hz so the old version gave times too large by a factor of
profhz/hz = 10.24.
and then also add a declaration of ernno as an extern int, because we
lose that due to having KERNEL defined while we include errno.h.
Reviewed by: Geoff.
special ports building targets and will recurse properly. Sorry,
Julian E - no fancy prompts, just recursion! :-)
Added a `bundle' target. Purpose is as follows:
You want to give someone a complete tree sans distfiles (for
sticking on CDROM perhaps?) but the difficulty there is that
the first time the user types `make clean', all the unpacked
sources are gone again. Typing `make bundle' recreates the
original distfile if it can, so someone can "back up" their
unpacked tree easily with one command.
Whoops, just thought of something - it should warn if you
configured the working source.
Ok, next commit! :)
Submitted by: jkh
1) Fixed up some header locations
2) Replaced list of boot files with /kernel
3) Changed disklabel use in Makefile to conform to 4.4
4) Added size command in Makefile to get close estimate of bootblock
sizes. Total size of text and data must be below 64K, slightly
overestimated since a.out header subsequently gets stripped.
5) Various buffer sizes are set to 8192 bytes in sys.c. In 4.4 MAXBSIZE
is set to 64K which is too big for the bootblocks to deal with.
Submitted by: Paul Richards
1. New variable DEPENDS lets you list packages that this depends on,
relative to the top (lang/tcl, x11/tk, etc). These packages will
always get made first.
2. Don't configure again if you've already done so successfully.
3. Add pre-configure and post-configure hooks. You can now do a pre-configure,
a local configure, a port-provided configure and finally a post-configure
if you really really want to. I can't imagine anything this will leave us
not being able to do! :) [ Yes, I have actually found a use for at least
two of these in one port - see x11/tk!].
Submitted by: jkh