(${KERNEL_SUFFIXES}), put the list in a shell variable and use that.
Both bash (before 2.05a) and Solaris /usr/xpg4/bin/sh report a syntax
error otherwise.
(easier to read that large nested .if's
- use INSTALL_FILE, INSTALL_LINK and INSTALL_SYMLINK instead of INSTALL
- when creating release directories, don't bother setting owner and group
install-etc-files iso_image_mi iso-image_md_pre iso-image_md_post snap_kern
- add the following targets to the RELEASEDIR=="" check:
iso_image_mi iso-image_md_pre iso-image_md_post snap_kern
- improve comments around make .flow control statements (including adding
some helper # { ... # } comments around large .if statements for (ab)use
with vi showmatch mode)
- clean up whitespace
when building the kernel sets and placing gzip'd kernels in binary/kernels.
For example, if KERNEL_SUFFIXES were set to "ecoff srec", then the kernel
set would include:
netbsd
netbsd.ecoff (only if it exists in the kernel compile directory)
netbsd.srec (only if it exists in the kernel compile directory)
This is useful for packaging kernel sets for platforms which have
extra special requirements for loading the kernel.
more consistent. To quote the comment in etc/Makefile
that describes how it's done:
# This target builds the kernels specified by each port. A port may
# specify the following kernels:
#
# KERNEL_SETS The list of kernels that will be
# packaged into sets, named
# kern-${kernel}.tgz. These kernels
# are also placed in the binary/kernels
# area of the release package as
# netbsd-${kernel}.gz.
#
# EXTRA_KERNELS Additional kernels to place in the
# binary/kernels area of the release
# package as netbsd-${kernel}.gz, but
# which are not placed into sets. This
# allows a port to provide e.g. a netbootable
# installation kernel containing a ramdisk.
#
# BUILD_KERNELS Additional kernels to build which are
# not placed into sets nor into the
# binary/kernels area of the release
# package. These are typically kernels
# that are built for inclusion only in
# installation disk/CD-ROM/tape images.
#
the latter being called by the "distribution" target. This allows the
various /etc/... files to be installed manually in a convenient way, if
desired.
NOTE: It is INTENTIONAL that this target is not named "install".
or distribution.
Also, clean up the check and include <sys/endian.h> instead -- some platforms'
<machine/endian_machdep.h> pull in the definitions of _BIG_ENDIAN and
_LITTLE_ENDIAN, invalidating the test; this makes the check values uniformly
"4321" and "1234" respectively.
Shouldn't be needed, but install has no other good way to deal with
this.
Pointed out by Rob Windsor in PR 14394 -- I committed his patch plus
one for something he didn't hit yet.
the etc Makefile override that by putting USETOOLS into $.MAKEOVERRIDES
This way the default for kernel compiles is still to use the installed
toolchain instead of depending on $TOOLDIR. $TOOLDIR can be used by
simply adding USETOOLS=yes to the command line as usual.
Adjust each ports template to set the default no setting and also pull in
bsd.own.mk if they weren't already to ensure they'll build correctly
with the new toolchain setup.
- Resurrect /etc/changelist, even if it's an "empty" file by default,
because it's easier to use than /etc/mtree/special.local for adding
a couple of simple files. Back by popular demand (hi @@@! :-)
- Add /etc/rc.d/* to the list of "dynamic" files; this notices changes
in user-added scripts
- Only calculate the mtree -I nomail list once, and re-use
- Use "cat foo | while read file" instead of "for file in `cat foo`" ;
handles whitespace better...
Features:
- Add a bunch of stuff to /etc/mtree/special to enable removal of
/etc/changelist:
- files which we want to monitor for changes but don't want to
see the diffs of (master.passwd, ssh_host_key, ...) are
tagged with "nomail"
- files which we don't want to monitor are tagged with "exclude"
(such as netgroup.db, kvm.db, ...)
- monitor /etc/mtree/special.local, /root/.ssh/*
- remove /etc/changelist, and a bunch of XXX comments
- use mtree(8)'s -D, -I, and -E to generate lists of files to
actually do the changelist stuff on.
- support /etc/mtree/special.local as an optional user-provided
version of /etc/mtree/special (effectively, an enhanced
/etc/changelist)
- Add code to monitor: /etc/ifconfig.* /etc/raid*.conf /etc/rc.conf.d/*
including support for these files being added and removed at will.
- If /sbin/fdisk exists, backup the output of "fdisk $disk" for all
the active disk drives as part of $check_disklabels
- Check permissions on: ~/.ssh/* ~/.shosts
Details:
- Reorder initialisation of defaults
- Remove special case for /etc/master.passwd "monitor but don't email diffs"
with general case for other similar files.
- Keep all `autogenerated' files (such as disklabel.*, setuid.current, ...)
in "$backup_dir/work", to minimise name clashes.
- Add migrate_file(old, new) to do the hard work of migrating files
from the old `top level' /var/backups mechanism to the `full path'
mechanism recently added. Use this appropriately.
- Add backup_and_diff(file, printdiffs), to the hard work of backing-up
and diff-ing files.
- Cleanup use of shell redirects
- /bin/sh supports ~root globbing, so use it.
- Improve umask checking; use awk regex rather than awk math
endianness as compile target. This is primarily for cross compiles.
Hopefully this method (looking into
${DESTDIR}/usr/include/machine/endian_machdep.h) is okay.
Patch sent by Andrew Brown in bin/11454.
necessary, as /etc/rc.d/sendmail will already rebuild DB files
automatically if necessary, and doing aliases.db here just
totally breaks cross-compiling.
rm complains because it can't actually nuke the mount point. Anything serious
like permissions or I/O errors will get caught in the install's after this
anyways.