make -V FILES
from being useful (and given that every other variable can be
extracted using make -V, the behaviour was unusually inconsistent
given that the original reason for clearing it doesn't seem to be
relevant anymore)
- use <bsd.prog.mk> instead of directly including <bsd.files.mk>
(and possibly <bsd.man.mk> or <bsd.own.mk>)
- remove obsolete NOPROG
infrastructure and using that infrastructure in programs.
* MKHESIOD, MKKERBEROS, MKSKEY, and MKYP control building
of the infratsructure (libraries, support programs, etc.)
* USE_HESIOD, USE_KERBEROS, USE_SKEY, and USE_YP control
building of support for using the corresponding API
in various libraries/programs that can use it.
As discussed on tech-toolchain.
databases specified there. By default, the individual databases
are actually generated by forked children in this case, for
performance reasons. This feature can be switched off by new -f flag.
If the configuration file can't be parsed or doesn't contain any
_whatdb entries, the code falls back to /usr/share/man as before.
Added -C, which allows to specify alternate configuration file. This
is compatible with apropos(1) and whatis(1) flag of same name.
Update manpage accordingly and document behaviour a bit better.
Also add a HISTORY section, hopefully correct (done using CVS logs).
This solves toolchain/5231 by Tim Rightnour and bin/7696 by Allen Briggs.
appears in, as commonly used for architecture-specific manpages.
The subdirectory is deliberately printed such that the entry is suitable
for cut&paste for man(1).
Fixes bin/9744 by John Hawkinson and misc/14997 by Hiramatsu Yoshifumi.
- mlst shouldn't return cdir or pdir for type, only dir
- mlst should always provide a full path name
- mlsd should provide a full path name for the cdir entry. (providing a
full path name for the pdir entry is optional, and i punted on that).
* There is no -indent option to .Bd or .Bl, although you would
never know that from its frequent use in this tree. There is a
"-offset indent" combination that makes sense, and you can certainly
say "-width indent".
* Also, you can't markup the -width option argument, tho you CAN
use a callable macro. So "-width Ar filename" doesn't make sense,
but either "-width Ar" or "-width filename" does, as might something
like "-width xxfilename" for a little extra space.
* There are a lot of needlessly complex hanging tag macros in man4 used
to create simple item lists. Those should be simplified one of these
days before someone copies and edits yet another man4 page.
and with a non-NULL file pointer. active transfers now work correctly again,
passive transfers work, and the data stream is only closed after a PASV or
EPSV if a successful connection was initiated with dataconn().
round has been tested on Solaris/x86 and Linux hosts.
* Add host tools cap_mkdb, ctags, m4, uudecode.
* Protect __RCSID() and __COPYRIGHT() better.
* Reduce the number of places that need to include "config.h", to keep
sources closer to their "vanilla" versions.
* Add more compat #defines and autoconf-checked functions.
on ELF platforms.
This file was created using the following revisions:
ld.h,v 1.2 1998/12/17 23:36:38 pk
malloc.c,v 1.7 2000/11/28 06:01:34 mycroft
rtld.c,v 1.82 2001/09/20 20:55:29 wiz
shlib.c,v 1.18 2000/05/27 06:53:30 matt
shlib.h,v 1.1 1998/12/15 23:16:14 pk
arm32 specific files:
md-static-funcs.c,v 1.1 1997/10/17 21:25:42 mark
md.c,v 1.11 1999/02/27 03:34:05 tv
md.h,v 1.4 2000/05/28 01:53:05 matt
mdprologue.S,v 1.1 1997/10/17 21:25:59 mark
descriptor was set by dataconn(). this fixes a problem for clients (such
as lynx and netscape) that only sent PASV/EPSV after a transfer (RETR, LIST,
STOR) started and returned 150. certain command sequences could return 550
(etc) before setting up the dataconn(), and would run into this bug. netbsd's
ftp didn't hit this bug because it always sends PASV/EPSV before a new
transfer command.