I have commited a different version than in the PR, it lacks a license
but if it warrants one we can stick the TNF standard on it. It's just
a main() routine that calls revoke(2).
"yes", and abort if it is "no" - not vice versa.
XXX - when returning to the utilities menu loop, the menu message should
be output again, I think. I couldn't figure out how that is supposed to
be done though.
plist-based messages and to eliminate looping previously required to
receive a plist from the kernel:
- prop_dictionary_copyin_ioctl() and prop_dictionary_copyout_ioctl()
now take the cmd argument rather than the file open flag. The
read-ness or write-ness of an ioctl command is checked by these
routines to ensure that information is being passed to/from the
userland component properly.
- prop_dictionary_copyout_ioctl() now allocates the memory for the
XML plist on behalf of the userland component by way of uvm_mmap().
The XML plist is copied out to the newly-mapped anonymous region,
and the pointer returned via the plistref.
- prop_dictionary_recv_ioctl() is responsible for munmap()'ing the
region after parsing the XML plist into internal represenatation.
- A new prop_dictionary_sendrecv_ioctl() is added, allowing user space
code to send a dictionary to the kernel and receive one back as a
reply.
Update users of prop_kern for the API changes (Bluetooth).
This constitutes an ABI / protocol change -- but this will also be put
into NetBSD 4.0 so that the first proplib release will implement the new
scheme.
on (some) OpenFirmware 2.x machines.
Current macppccd.iso image doesn't boot on Openfirmware 2.x
(and probably 1.0.5) machines because it uses pre-compiled binary
which is based on old (and customized) bootxx.
It causes version mismatch against newer ofwboot whose load address
has been changed from 0x600000 to 0xe00000, as mentioned in the
following post:
http://mail-index.netbsd.org/port-macppc/2004/12/14/0020.html
There was also an raw binary which was passed to mkisofs as -boot-hfs-file.
To fix these issue, prepare a simple mkhfsboot program which creates
a boothfs file with the Apple partition map info for mkisofs,
and modify macppc_installboot to search the secondary ofwboot from isofs
and to put and modify the primary bootxx accordingly.
See PR toolchain/30245 for more details.
There are still some machines which don't boot from an iso image created
by this method (G3 machines with OF 2.0f1 etc.), but it's still better
than to keep ugly and obsolete hacks.
Ok'ed by macallan, and there is no other particular comment about this PR.
Fleming.
This one has some nice options -- for example, an admin can run right
after installing a system:
fpgen -D
and it will fingerprint a set of "common" system directories to the
default loaction. See the man-page for more stuff.
Performance-wise, here are results for both fpgen.sh (old) and this
new tool:
474.599u 574.335s 13:53.05 125.9% 0+0k 0+307io 0pf+0w
0.424u 0.131s 0:00.56 98.2% 0+0k 0+2io 0pf+0w
...guess which is which? (that's ~1500 times *faster*)
super-user and securelevel.
The securelevel part was compiled of text from both init(8) and OpenBSD's
securelevel(7), and brought in-sync with what we really do.
- have checkflist do a second possibly case insensitive check for
files which are missing from DESTDIR
- have postinstall require exact case matches for obsolete files
remove pseudo-device btdev(4) and inherent limitations
add bthub(4) which autoconfigures at bluetooth controllers as they
are enabled. bluetooth devices now attach here.
btdevctl(8) and its cache is updated to handle new semantics
etc/rc.d/btdevctl is updated to configure devices from a list
in /etc/bluetooth/btdevctl.conf