Remove the abberant call to endwin() in i386 md_update() that caused
echo to be left on. I've not removed the endwin from the other ports.
Only run MAKEDEV if etc.tgz installed.
Some extra sanity checks on an 'rm -rf %s'.
program/tool from "FOO" to "TOOL_FOO". The new variables are:
TOOL_ASN1_COMPILE TOOL_CAP_MKDB TOOL_CAT TOOL_CKSUM TOOL_COMPILE_ET
TOOL_CONFIG TOOL_CRUNCHGEN TOOL_CTAGS TOOL_DB TOOL_EQN TOOL_FGEN
TOOL_GENCAT TOOL_GROFF TOOL_HEXDUMP TOOL_INDXBIB TOOL_INSTALLBOOT
TOOL_INSTALL_INFO TOOL_M4 TOOL_MAKEFS TOOL_MAKEINFO TOOL_MAKEWHATIS
TOOL_MDSETIMAGE TOOL_MENUC TOOL_MKCSMAPPER TOOL_MKESDB
TOOL_MKLOCALE TOOL_MKMAGIC TOOL_MKTEMP TOOL_MSGC TOOL_MTREE
TOOL_PAX TOOL_PIC TOOL_PREPMKBOOTIMAGE TOOL_PWD_MKDB TOOL_REFER
TOOL_ROFF_ASCII TOOL_ROFF_DVI TOOL_ROFF_HTML TOOL_ROFF_PS
TOOL_ROFF_RAW TOOL_RPCGEN TOOL_SOELIM TOOL_SUNLABEL TOOL_TBL
TOOL_UUDECODE TOOL_VGRIND TOOL_ZIC
For each, provide default in <bsd.sys.mk> of the form:
TOOL_FOO?= foo
and for the ${USETOOLS}=="yes" case in <bsd.own.mk>, provide override:
TOOL_FOO= ${TOOLDIR}/bin/${_TOOL_PREFIX}foo
Document all of these in bsd.README.
This cleans up a chunk of potential (and actual) namespace collision
within our build infrastructure, as well as improves consistency in
the share/mk documentation and provision of appropriate defaults for
each of these variables.
This should stop the i386 code splatting all over the start of the disk
during upgrade.
Upgrade will still use partition 'a' (unless you loop through the install
far enough first!)
Actually this needs changing to use /usr/sbin/etcupdate (or similar),
but the script needs fixing first.
Might be better for sysinst to have its own copy, gets to be fun to run
because you have to pull the commands from the target FS.
Use swapctl() for all swap operations.
Remove md_upgrade_mbrtype() from arc and hpcmips ports.
(I haven't finalised what I'm doing about type 165 partitions, but the
existing code is borked.)
Remove pointless 'len' parameter from read_mbr and write_mbr.
Make read_mbr initialise mbr if it can't be read (delete MD code).
Make i386 always ask at least once about the bootcode.
Move LIB_MOVE and LIB_COUNT from md.h to aout2elf.c
Make same function return useful defaults if it can't find an answer.
Make all ports default to the useful defaults if bios geometry is unknown.
Move some messages to mbr set from mi set.
Fix i386 code that selects which bios disk, simplify interface to menus.
Remove now unnecessary global data from many ports.
4 times system memory). (These numbers need moving to a different menu still.)
Remove size of /usr from default sized / when /usr created.
Shrink swap in order to get partitions into available disk space.
Add twice ram size to / if space available (for system dumps).
Keep all but last partition cylinder aligned when the disk isn't a whole
number of cylinders.
Hack to give free space to a default sized /usr
Add extra space to / and /usr is any of the X sets are included.
Remove last reference to 'layoutkind == 3'.
I've also made the set selection happen first. This lets me test it!
also measn the selected sets could be used in the disk partition code.
Removed the 'with X' disk layout question (now too late to change the sets).
Fix menu size so that user defined partitions can be allocated instead of
standard ones (need > MAXPARTITIONS entries in menu).
Make partition size info static - with a view to including it in a longer loop.
Update lists for ramdisks to include the required files.
NB /usr/sbin/installboot is not used by sysinst and is only in ramdisk-big.
Increase the sizes of the ramdisks, there is plenty of space in all the
boot floppies except rescue-tiny (2k) and boot-tiny (32k).
This does change the default size of /, but I'm going to rewrite
make_bsd_partitions next to make it less user-hostile.
(I'm not sure adding in 2 * ram is actually useful! Especially size it left
/usr with a -ve size on all my test installs with 256MB ram and 1GB disk)
Make bootsel code delete menu names if the partition is unused.
Use raw device for cdrom access (I've a kernel that doesn't report an invalid
label so /dev/cd0a dosn't work).