so that they match the whole list of UUIDs against a record,
as according to the spec
each profile now supplies a list of UUIDs instead of just a
service class.
servers. Calling daemon() (i.e. fork()ing) inside a library can
cause nice surprises for e.g. threaded programs. As discussed with
Greg Oster & others.
directories and Makefiles from src/usr.sbin/bind to src/lib; make
BIND libraries build shared. Saves about 1MB-1.5MB per installed
executable, about 5MB for a base+etc minimal installation of NetBSD.
introduce ENVSYS_BATTERY_CHARGE, which is the same than an Indicator and
it's used to know if the battery is currently charging or discharging.
- Require two sensors at least for SME_CLASS_BATTERY to make the low-power
condition work: a ENVSYS_BATTERY_CAPACITY plus ENVSYS_BATTERY_CHARGE.
- Simplify sme_event_check_lowpower() and make it check the required
sensors in the SME_CLASS_ACADAPTER and SME_CLASS_BATTERY classes.
If the acadapter is not ready, trust the state returned by the battery
device.
Based on suggestion from joerg@.
for each node. Setting this to a small number can be used to
improve interactive performance on low-bandwidth links when performing
bulk data reads. Of course I could also open separate pipes for
bulk and other, but this was quicker and less intrusive and doesn't
require authenticating twice.
anymore do this if we fail to set size.
The whole lookup procedure should be done in a smarter fashion,
but this is the quickie fix to get things working again.
sensors (those that contain the 'want-percentage' object on its
dictionary), the 'critical-capacity' prop must be used instead.
- When setting a 'critical-{max,min}' property check if the value is
higher than the 'max-value' or lower than the 'min-value' on its
dictionary, raise an error if it's true.
- use one for temporary sensor dictionaries.
- use one as the dictionary that will be returned to send_dictionary().
This fixes multiple settings in multiple devices.
foo0 {
#
# CPU Temperature
#
sensor0 {
critical-max = 70C;
critical-min = 20C;
}
...
}
...
Removed the -m flag that was previously used to set properties for
sensors. Now the -c flag will process all properties specified in
the file (accepted as argument).
To remove all properties that were set, the new -S flag can be used.
This will restore default values for all devices.