Major changes are:
- better detection of double applied patches
- rejects remain unified diffs for unified patches
- far less limitations, e.g. patch lines may be arbitrary long
This addresses PR standards/11220 by changing patch -b behavior to be
POSIX compliant. Old behavior can be obtained using --suffix, which
works since NetBSD 1.4. pkgsrc has been adjusted accordingly.
i386 "unsigned long x = 0x800000000UL;" passed lint and gcc complains
(rightfully). Validate quad as well to allow using a potentially larger
type to store the value.
first year that NetBSD 5.0 is out)
- add release date of NetBSD 4.0
XXX There are several UK "Bank Holidays" in calendar.holiday. Could
somebody update those and give an indication of when they are, please?
(I found a script which tries to figure out the byteorder of a box
by "od -An | grep", but it is POSIX anyway.)
There is a little behavioural change: The whitespace without any arguments
is like "-to2" now; before it was custom. It's not worse imho.
1. Don't add changelog and other implementation specific nvi files because
this have changed from 1.79 and are probably not relevant in 1.81
2. Put back virecover.
3. Descend regularly to subdirs instead of Makefile hacks
4. Use USD.doc stuff from the 1.81 docs except for vi.ref which has
unfortunately been converted to texinfo. For that, we preserve
the original documents because we want to still be able to make
section 13 (building texinfo is not acceptable because it will not
have the same look and feel as the rest of the book)
5. Since the texinfo reference is probably better maintained, build
that too as a texinfo document.
* define NOfoo before .including <bsd.own.mk> or anything else that
might (indirectly) .include it, not after.
* defining MKfoo=no isn't what Makefiles are supposed to do
(yes, both mistakes were present :)
in "vmstat -s" output when run on the active kernel.
The reason we can't easily provide these values out of a crash
dump, is that these fields are no longer proper members of
struct uvmexp, but rather are estimated by and dependent on
the currently active page replacement policy in the kernel.