"keypad-delete". (This is not completely clean; for me these keys make
up perhaps a "function field", but no "keypad".)
This is the mapping expected by applications.
Proposed by Chris Jones via PR kern/6089 and Dave Sainty.
as with user-land programs, include files are installed by each directory
in the tree that has includes to install. (This allows more flexibility
as to what gets installed, makes 'partial installs' easier, and gives us
more options as to which machines' includes get installed at any given
time.) The old SYS_INCLUDES={symlinks,copies} behaviours are _both_
still supported, though at least one bug in the 'symlinks' case is
fixed by this change. Include files can't be build before installation,
so directories that have includes as targets (e.g. dev/pci) have to move
those targets into a different Makefile.
into sys/dev/dec and split into a clockfns layer and a "middle" layer
for other DEC systems which use mcclocks with each onchip byte
register padded out to a 32-bit word.
Clone alpha/alpha/mcclock (also duplicated in pmax port) into
sys/dev/dec, and ifdef for default clockrates on pmax and alpha.
Use new machinery on pmax for ibus,ioasic attached mcclocks.
* Move clockvar.h (header file for generic clock code) to sys/dev/dec.
* Move if_le_dec.c with DEC padded LANCE-dma (pmax/pmax, ioasic, vax 3400)
to sys/dev/dec. Remove from sys/dev/tc.
* Declare attribute le_dec_subr in /sys/dev/dec/files.dec,
use if_le_dec.c when it's defined.
* Move IOCTL asic declaration from pmax and Alpha MD machine
files to sys/dev/tc/files.tc.
* move TurboChannel and ioasic if_le attachments from pmax and Alpha machine
config files to /sys/dev/tc/files.tc. Add le_dec_subr attribute.
* Add if_le_dec attribute to if_le_ibus (pmax ds3100 pmax) LANCE attachment.
This can be disabled (to save a bit of space) with the NO_KERNEL_RCSIDS
options, which is present but commented out in the ALPHA config file.
In ELF-format kernels, these strings are present in the kernel binary but
are not loaded into memory. (In ECOFF-format kernels, there's no easy way
to keep them from being loaded, so they _are_ loaded into memory.)
Some of the stuff (e.g., rarpd, bootpd, dhcpd etc., libsa) still will
only support Ethernet. Tcpdump itself should be ok, but libpcap needs
lot of work.
For the detailed change history, look at the commit log entries for
the is-newarp branch.
a char *, because that's what was really intended, and because
if the print function modifies the string, various things could become
unhappy (so the string should _not_ be modified).