* revision 1.56
the change of calculation of inodes per group in rev 1.52 was far too
aggressive; rework to be a bit less susceptable to round-off error.
now it's likely that the density might not be obtained with a small
filesystem with a large number of inodes (e.g -s 4M -i 1k), but that's
an extremely unlikely corner case that can easily be rectified with
command-line arguments.
fixed provided in private email by Takao Shinohara <shin@sm.sony.co.jp>
should resolve PRs [bin/14049] and [bin/14046]
[ this fixes a problem in makefs(8) that matt green reported ]
* revision 1.58
clamp bsize to MAXBSIZE
* revision 1.59
don't bother printing a warning about the cylinder group size being
restricted if -c isn't given; it just confuses a user of newfs (and
the cpg info is printed as part of the display anyway), and prints an
unnecessary warning for mount_mfs.
XXX: I must rework newfs/mkfs.c to make it easier to just .PATH into makefs(8)
for -d option: 350..2304 -> 256..2346 (default is 2304)
Fixed the range of RTS/CTS threshold (dot11RTSThreshold)
for -r option: 0..2047 -> 0..2347 (default is 2347)
based interfaces. Note: all other interface types work the same as before,
and no names are hardcoded.
When a if_spppsubr.c based interface is marked IFF_UP, but has not yet
reached phase NETWORK (i.e. it didn't connect yet or authentication has not
yet completed) do not call the ip-up script for it on the initial pass
over all IFF_UP interfaces.
This fixes a race condition on startup when ip-up/ip-down are statefull
and need to be called pairwise (for example if ip-up adds and ip-down
removes a default route).
functionality adds recognition of '_' and "pl" as pseudonyms for '.',
so that 1.2p2 == 1.2.2, and adds recognition of "pl" and "rc" strings,
which stand for "patchlevel" and "release candidate" respectively.
In addition, this version should handle alphabetic characters properly
(so that 1.2e == 1.2.5)
Normal NetBSD revision number processing has been retained (and is always
compared after all other tests have been performed).
64-bit integers are used internally for each component of the version
number.
<ufs/ufs/inode.h>, since the latter has a lot of cruft we don't need
and it #include's way more stuff in <sys/*> (etc) than is needed here.
yet another nail in the "let's make makefs a proper host tool" coffin.
- #include <ufs/[uf]fs/*.h> instead of "ufs/[uf]fs/*.h", and don't bother
with -I../../sys; we'll solve the hostprog problem another way and
unconditionally pulling in NetBSD-current's usr/src/sys on a host system
could be a Bad Thing.
- when calculating file size, round up to frag size not block size
- #define FFS_EI in makefs.h, and include that before [uf]fs/*.h
other stuff:
- round up final size to next block (instead of next sector)
- protect makefs.h from multiple inclusion
preprocessors complain bitterly when they are encountered.
For now, terminate all lines with \n (and make each line its own
string literal). The author of this code can figure out how to
do the sed trick another way.
Only sun3[x] was building it anyway, and now it's converted to
USE_NEW_TOOLCHAIN, where all ports (will) have it. The other reason to
descend is the man page, but what use is a man page if the program
doesn't get installed? [gnu/usr.sbin/dbsym has its own copy of the
man page.]
Ok'd by thorpej.
the term used in config(9), autoconf(9) and in Torek's paper.
Also remove (comment out) reference to the 4.4BSD config docs,
since they are not installed in usr/share/doc/smm/02.config and
possibly aren't relevant any longer. From comments made on
tech-kern by jhawk and tls.
ifconfig.pppoe* files.
Rename the source directory and files to match the primary purpose
of this utility - probably noone is using this for ISDN now anymore,
as isdnd has simpler ways to acomplish the same.
information and a link to the appropriate fsinode, and `fsinode' contains
the inode information and a reference count. multiple fsnodes may point
to the same fsinode. this replaces the 'dup' pointer in the previous code.
- Don't bother emitting "#define NFOO 0" for defflag foo (whether or
not "options FOO" was given); it's really useful as is.
Until I recently started converting stuff from defopt to defflag,
nothing used defflag, and because defopt doesn't provide NFOO for FOO,
the NFOO behaviour shouldn't be missed. The NFOO stuff also added
a lot of #define namespace pollution that we'd rather avoid.
- Remove a couple of unused vars
version. The new version supports products, 'g' (GB) and 't' (TB)
suffices, and `b' now means `blocks' instead of `bytes'.
Functionality requested by perry.
- debug is now a u_int instead of an int.
- Ensure that various numbers have sane upper limits (e.g, 99 for %, etc)
Monitors the routing socket for address changes of autonomous (kernel only)
interfaces (like PPPoE) and runs up/down scripts similar to what pppd
does for its interfaces.
The *_FOREACH macros got added post 1.5 and were pulled up into 1.5.2. This
makes it impossible to compile mtree local on a 1.5-release box as a cross
toolchain bit for bootstrapping to -current. (and why I never saw this problem
on my 1.5.2 machine)
This whole thing is solved via a compat lib for the tools for all netbsd bits
and/or trimming down a version of mtree to just the bits needed for building
the snapshots.
distrib Makefiles have been adjusted appropriately. This change made
block devices and char devices look the same to the naive user, and
it is not appropriate.
- Add -L to walk the tree `logically', by following symbolic links in
the heirarchy.
- Add -P to walk the tree `physically'. This is the current behaviour,
and the default.
- Add "-X excludes-file" to give mtree the ability to exclude files and
directories from its traversal. excludes-file contains fnmatch(3)
patterns to exclude from the walk.
- Add "md5digest" synonym for "md5".
- Add "rmd160" keyword for RMD-160 message digest, and "rmd160digest" synonym.
- Add "sha1" keyword for SHA-1 message digest, and "sha1digest" synonym.
- Don't try to compare() other attributes if the type doesn't match;
it's nothing but trouble, and no use anyway.
- In -c, only emit "/set" records if something has changed since the
previous one.
User interface changes by me:
- Check a device's parameters before checking uid/gid/mode.
- If updating (-u), modify the following to match the specification:
- Device type (retaining existing ownership).
- Symlink target.
Fixes from (or inspired by) FreeBSD:
- Use p->ftslevel instead of own code to keep track of the level ourself.
The previous code got majorly confused if fts(3) couldn't descend
into a subdir, resulting in leaf nodes getting attached to the wrong
directory.
XXX: This new method is much much more robust, even though it's not 100%
perfect; it might result in a couple of following entries in the spec
to be incorrectly tagged as missing.
- Pass a useful pathname to rlink(), so that logical (-L) traversal
doesn't confuse symlink checking.
- Consistently use MAXPATHLEN+1 sized buffers for pathnames, so that
there's room for the NUL.
- Use mtree_err() and strerror(p->fts_errno) to report errors during
the fts(3) walk.
Fixes by me:
- Remove now-unused `const char *name' argument from compare().
- Change crc_total from an int to a u_int32_t, to match usr.bin/cksum/crc.c.
- Remove trailing whitespace.
- Remove unnecessary (void) casts on functions.
- Reorder entries in the getopt() switch.
- Replace strtoq() with strtoll(), and use strtoul() appropriately.
- Renumber F_ flags to be in alphabetical order.
of tv's previous code, which skips uname or gname parsing if -W is enabled.
- rename "lineno" to "mtree_lineno", to reduce possibility of name
clashes in code that yanks in spec.c & misc.c (unlikely, but you never know)
check on the correct node
- apply_specentry(): if this node is a duplicate of another, apply the
changes to the `master' entry instead of this one.
- fix inotype() to DTRT
- comment out some debugging info that is too verbose
- use syslog after we become a daemon to write error messages.
- failure to open a device is not fatal.
- copy timeval, because select is allowed to change it.
- if we failed to blank all the devices we are monitoring, exit
It doesn't need any special privileges or kernel devices.
Only ffs image creation is supported at this time, although makefs has been
designed to allow the addition of other file system formats by writing new
back-ends.
This program was designed & implemented by Luke Mewburn of Wasabi Systems.
It doesn't need any special privileges or kernel devices.
Only ffs image creation is supported at this time, although makefs has been
designed to allow the addition of other file system formats by writing new
back-ends.
This program was designed & implemented by Luke Mewburn of Wasabi Systems.
It doesn't need any special privileges or kernel devices.
Only ffs image creation is supported at this time, although makefs has been
designed to allow the addition of other file system formats by writing new
back-ends.
This program was designed & implemented by Luke Mewburn of Wasabi Systems.