- NetBSD's "newfs" doesn't accept a second (non-option) argument.
Patch provided by Jeff Ito in PR bin/36241.
- Use "sd0" instead of "rp0" because NetBSD's doesnt have a disk driver
called "rp".
- Use "/dev/rst0" instead of "/dev/rst8". With NetBSD's device numbering
scheme a system would have to have 9 tape drives to get "/dev/rst8".
print out the values of the bytes that do not match.
Add comment explaining that there is no documented rationale for the
check.
fsck_msdos checks that several bytes are equal in the primary and
backup bootblock. There is no documented rationale. The kernel does
not enforce this when mounting a filesystem. I have a FAT32
filesystem on my disk (mounted as /share) which fails this check, but
is accepted by both Windows XP and NetBSD. My volume differs in bytes
71-81. The primary contains "SHARE " and the backup NUL bytes.
Further, fsck_msdos does not have code to repair the mismatch. As a
result such filesystems can be used not checked.
- pass WARNS=4 and lint
- use size_t/time_t where appropriate
- get/setprogname()
- before executing rc.shutdown, set the real user id to 0, because shutdown
scripts may depend on it (for example su depends on being root).
- use warn instead of perror, and make sure we use the right errno.
Also pass "-ppax" in an attempt to get improved performance,
but this doesn't really work in the typical case, because the
install ramdisk image contains a version of pax(1) that doesn't
support the -M flag. (MAKEDEV detects the failure and falls back
to using mknod(8) as usual.)
always print an error message. If bootable and -v flag was
specified, print a success message. If -v flag was specified
more than once, also try to decode more information from
the PBR.
Input from dsl and bad.
Removes a load of code that is easier done as a script.
Whenever init exits, use a different error number. Since it is difficult
for init to output messages when /dev/console is absent, having the exit
code reported by the kernel panic gives a chance of identifying the fault.
Also exit if MAKEDEV fails to create /dev/console.
archs) and add wedges for them. Similar to the kernel options
DKWEDGE_AUTODISCOVER and DKWEDGE_METHOD_BSDLABEL, and actually reusing
most of that code.
This means, for example, you can plug a sparc64 disk into an i386, run
this tool and mount the partitions (provided your kernel has the FFS_EI
option).
MAKEDEV, MAKEDEV.subr and MAKEDEV.local in the set of files that are
copied if they exist.
Now booting an INSTALL kernel with an embedded ramdisk correctly creates
/dev again, fixing a problem introduced when MAKEDEV.subr was created a
few days ago.
ffs_checkver() and later use it in the switch statement, just
use ffs_checkver.
* Remove unneded <sys/queue.h> header.
* Remove LFS from fstypes, it was never used.
* Increase SBCOUNT to 128, works faster.
* Remove unneded casts.
* (-F mode) close fd when the scan has finished or if pread() failed.
* (-F mode) print total size of file.
Here the bitmaps are written as
CLRI or BITS with c_count <= 512
ADDR* for the remaining blocks
Remove the bitmap handling from getfile(), remove xtrmap() and xtrmapskip().
Add new function getbitmap() modeled after getfile() that does bitmap
allocation, bitmap expansion and sets maxino.
Reviewed by: Manuel Bouyer <bouyer@netbsd.org>