support to GDB ARM targets in general, and make corresponding changes to
NetBSD-specific code.
The first half of this has already been send to gdb-patches by Richard.
The second half is irrelevant to them since they don't yet have NetBSD/arm
support in their tree yet.
again:
- Special-case the attachment of CPUs, and logically attach them to
"mainbus", attaching them before any other devices. Otherwise,
CPUs would be found very late in the game on my Firepower.
- Sanity check the timebase-frequency property, printing a warning if
it's not the same on each CPU.
- Pass the correct CPU ID to cpu_attach_subr().
- Fetch the platform name from the OFW root node. We can key off this
later when we implement support for native drivers in the ofppc port.
- Use a table of "special" toplevel OFW nodes ... we skip these nodes
during the device configuration phase. This generally includes the
"options", "packages", etc. nodes. Inspired by sparc & sparc64 ports.
are generally only at the toplevel of the OFW tree, and are best handled
by the code that configures the toplevel (which often needs special
handling anyway).
+ remove some unused code in a comment.
+ add F_SHELL flag in userdel
+ use a separate local declaration for a temporary variable, rather
than overloading a variable that's used for something else.
various potential problems when intermixing full and relative paths
- changes to make it much easier to use spec() - the specfile parser - in
other programs (via .PATHing spec.c and misc.c):
- move excludetags, includetags and keys from mtree.c to misc.c
- implement mtree_err() using vwarnx() instead of assuming name is
"mtree"
- move inotype() and nodetype() from compare.c to misc.c
- add nodetoinode(), to convert from an mtree F_* type to a
mode_t S_IF* type
- clean up #include use; don't assume "mtree.h" pulls in some
standard includes
- change spec() to take a FILE * arg (where the specfile is read from)