- be safe with unlinking files (from freebsd)
- remove register
- clean up $NetBSD$'s.
- use inet_ntoa() in one place (from openbsd)
- nul terminate after a bunch of strncpy()'s
- #ifdef __STDC__ rather than #if (from freebsd)
- be safe with a bunch of string operations (from freebsd)
- use warn()/err() over home grown versions (some from freebsd)
- rename warn() to nodaemon() to remove conflict with above
- check errno from failed kill(2) against ESRCH (from freebsd)
- use getopt() rather than home grown versions (from freebsd)
- clean up a bunch of man pages (some from freebsd)
- check for hostname spoof (from freebsd)
- use POSIX wait() interfaces
- use sysconf(_SC_OPEN_MAX) in preference to NOFILE (from freebsd)
- deal with fork() failure
- index/rindex -> strchr/strrchr (some from freebsd)
- add B57600 and B115200 speeds (from freebsd)
- some KNF
- be safe with files passed in over the network (some from freebsd)
- check return value of malloc(), calloc() and strdup()
- Refer vnode disk as vnd0 instaed of vnd0c.
- Rename argument to specify vnode disk from special_file to vnode_disk.
- Explain that vnode_disk is a special file or name like vnd0.
- Add one example which uses vnd0 instead of /dev/vnd0c.
start address for a.out executables. This is useful in the case that
kernel text starts in the second physical page, in which case the
clever hack to work around the problem is defeated.
This option was patterned after the -T flag documented in the ld(1)
man page. (It does not support the undocumented '-Ttext <addr>'
usage, however, since that would require a parser or getopt(3) hacks.)
- Back to use `rdev' which the name of raw partition, since now opendisk(3)
initializes `buf' except in very trivial case (it is `buf' is NULL).
- Use `rdev' instead of `dev' in verbose output.
- Output `rdev' when warn ioctl failure.
- Use `dev' instead of `rdev' to warn, since latter may not initialized.
- Don't use device file name as a format of warn(). Instead, pass "%s"
explicitly.