Add flags "-b" and "-I" to dumplfs, to allow the user to specify the
location of the superblock and Ifile inode, respectively.
Don't print "corrupt segment header" any more for leftover slivers of
space too close to the next segment to write a partial-segment. In the
event that there was no such sliver, the segment still ends; recognize
this and print out the segment number, and superblock if asked.
Document all the flags in the man page.
Print the partial-segment write flags (SS_DIROP, SS_CONT).
Make the "-a" flag output look slightly better.
Change all hex numbers to lowercase, instead of having some upper and
some lower.
+ Make depend required all the source files to be built before
the dependencies were generated due to some sub-optimal logic
in the version generation.
Fix from Bernd Ernesti in private mail.
+ Make the version string contain ${PROG} as originally intended
and not "ntpd" for all 7 programs.
Also move version generation to Makefile.inc to stop having 7 copies
of exactly the same thing.
to mention here. notable changes are like below.
kernel:
- make PF_KEY kernel interface more robust against broken input stream.
it includes complete internal structure change in sys/netkey/key.c.
- remove non-RFC compliant change in PF_KEY API, in particular,
in struct sadb_msg. we cannot just change these standard structs.
sadb_x_sa2 is introduced instead.
- remove prototypes for pfkey_xx functions from /usr/include/net/pfkeyv2.h.
these functions are not supplied in /usr/lib.
setkey(8):
- get/delete does not require "-m mode" (ignored with warning, if you
specify it)
- spddelete takes direction specification
file, make command specified, and no flags or attrs-which-cause-inclusion
are spec'd. The notion is, if you change either of the last 2, it will
probably have very undesirable results, so only allow the make command to
be changed. override by clobbering the make command in the previous entry.
also, fix a bug where line number of original entry would get clobbered on
dup entry, so that if you had multiple dups the later ones would get bogus
initial definition info.
fhopen() and flock(). This means that if you kill lockd, all locks will
be relased (but you're supposed to kill statd at the same time, so
remote hosts will know it and re-establish the lock).
Tested against solaris 2.7 and linux 2.2.14 clients.
Shared lock are not handled efficiently, they're serialised in lockd when they
could be granted.