LINK_SPEC. This solves a problem with the f77 frontend where
aproviding the -r8 option (use REAL*8) caused `cc' to ``forget'' to
pass the entry point to the linker.
Closes PR #gnu/644: f77 -r8
Reviewed by: watanabe@komadori.earth.s.kobe-u.ac.jp (Takeshi WATANABE)
comparisions have been made as string comparisions, even in cases
where both operands clearly qualified as integers.
The fix is to make the parser properly analyzing whether an operand is
a valid integer or not.
is 1996 EC harmonization. Also, the following timezones have been renamed:
Asia/Frunze -> Asia/Bishkek
Pacific/Cocos -> Indian/Cocos
Pacific/Belau -> Pacific/Palau
America/Navajo -> America/Shiprock
and one new timezone has been added:
Australia/Canberra
Basically all termios+termcap pgms needs it.
It set ospeed variable using nearest-matched stty speeds,
which helps termcap pgms works with non-fixed termios speeds
and not duplicate ospeed switch into every pgm.
Also it isn't standard function, its source code is too big to include it
in whole to every termcap+termios pgm.
I do some digging out on this subject and found that remote
rlogind may reduce big speeds to 38400 by itself and (as more often
rlogind variant) speed setting ioctl fails, so speed left on 9600.
In all cases it doesn't do any real harm.
Detect in nfsrv_readdirplus when a filesystem soes not support VFS_VGET and
return NFSERR_NOTSUPP so that the client will use ordinary readdir instead.
I get on this topic will go straight to /dev/null. This is absolutely the
last word on this topic you'll see from me. Too much time has already been
wasted.
flag. The getopt handling in here is actually pretty bogus (not Phil's
fault - it's original sin) but the general approach is working so I'm not
going to break it. Some small tweaks of my own to add error checking to what
was originally submitted. Strange how nobody noticed that the flag was
documented but completely missing from the code before! [jkh].
Submitted by: Phil Taylor <phil@zipmail.co.uk>
the slave server).
NOTE: This code should not be built, there is no documentation, and this
method of database transfer is highly suboptimal. It's here just
for those of us who actually have multiple K4 servers and want
something more secure than the other distribution mechanisms.
Obtained from: MIT Project Athena
kerberos databases to slave servers.
NOTE: This method was abandoned by MIT long ago, this code is close to
garbage, but it is slightly more secure than using rdist.
There is no documentation available on how to use it, and
it should -not- be built by default.
Obtained from: MIT Project Athena
Old variant returns 38400 for them, now it returns nearest matched
rounded down, expect speeds in range 0 > speed < 50 rounded up
to not produce hangup.
with interaction pty <-> serial driver with non-standard speed.
So, nothing protect us from garbadge in speed field, expect
checking for < 0 left in tty.c :-(