!= 32 bits. This might need a bit more thought (i.e. why use long here to
begin with, when int32_t might be a better choice), but for now it's good
enough. From Ross Harvey in PR 3450, extended by me to cover the rest of
the opcode constants and masks.
approximately match current reality. Also give some description of
HP-UX-style event format, with a table of key/button codes discovered
by experimentation with my keyboard/mouse. (Ain't great, but better
than what was there, which was zilcho.)
* Don't print DMA_OUT message in the `normal' case of a 16-byte residual.
* ioasic-connected 53c94 devices are always clocked at 25MHz even on
machines with 12.5MHz TurboChannel.
information in the same file by following the username with `allow'
or `deny'. Also, the user `*' can be used to set the default for
users not listed in the file. This is entirely backward compatable
with old /etc/ftpusers files.
Also, do the /etc/ftpusers and the valid login shell checks after
the password is verified, rather than before, so as not to give away
whether or not a particular user ID is present on the system.
* add "more" & "less" as synonyms for "page"
* move editline setup code into controlediting(), and call appropriately.
only setup setup terminal if going into interactive mode. inspired
by Todd Miller <todd.miller@courtesan.com>
in reset. If none there, try and get from the bus/platform specific code.
If a nonzero value for either, set the clock rate. This is why the PCI
card versions weren't working- they need to be set at 60MHZ, rather than
the default 40MHZ (which worked fine for the internal ISP chips on the
Alpha 8X00).
B) If a isp_poll returns failure (command never completed) to the caller
and no error is set in the xs struct, set XS_SELTIMEOUT. And then call...
C) Added isp_lostcmd function to try and ask the ISP chip about it's current
state as well as the state of commands for a particular target/lun. This is
going along to try and figure out why the very first command to the ISP always
seems to get swallowed up.