1999, or 2008 depending on what you count as break-up).
In any case in recent twenty years it was easier to get there
through Russia than through Georgia.
(Whether your government recognize it or not is another issue.
If you want to visit it these days, you have to enter Russia.
Following Ukrainians, even before the recent unrest and referendum
it was strongly advised not to discuss this topic with locals there.
At least it was advised not to call Krym a part of Ukraine.)
Fix Kerch' entry as well.
when generating html groff runs netpbm behind your back. Needless to
say we don't have netpbm in base, so this fails on a clean install; so
for now disable generating html for /usr/share/doc by default.
Workaround for PR 48970.
It seems that all available document preparation toolchains are made
of fail.
Move the documents that are papers to /usr/share/doc/papers.
Give them suitable names (including the author and year).
The key property of papers that distinguishes them from documentation
is that they're historical: they're published at a particular time and
aren't updated or maintained. (Except cosmetically.)
We should only ship papers that are of interest to users, either for
historical perspective or because they're the original research
writeup of stuff that went into the system and is still pertinent.
The ffs papers clearly meet this standard; the other one here (about
passwords, in 1978) is probably past its sell-by date.
Rename the following reference documents to match their programs:
shell -> sh
viref -> vi
and rename the following to match their topic better:
ipctut -> sockets
ipc -> sockets-advanced
Also, the old "timed" and "timedop" docs are now ref5/timed and
ref8/timed respectively, as the first of these documented the
protocol.
Move all the reference manuals to subdirs of /usr/share/doc/reference.
We have subdirs ref1-ref9, corresponding to man page sections 1-9.
Everything that's the reference manual for a program (sections 1, 6,
8), C interface (sections 2, 3), driver or file system (section 4),
format or configuration (section 5), or kernel internal interface
(section 9) belongs in here.
Section 7 is a little less clear: some things that might go in section
7 if they were a man page aren't really reference manuals. So I'm only
putting things in reference section 7 that are (to me) clearly
reference material, rather than e.g. tutorials, guides, FAQs, etc.
This obviously leaves some room for debate, especially without first
editing the docs with this distinction in mind, but if people hate
what I've done things can always be moved again.
Note also that while roff macro man pages traditionally go in section
7, I have put all the roff documentation (macros, tools, etc.) in one
place in reference/ref1/roff. This will make it easier to find and
also easier to edit it into some kind of coherent form.
Update the <bsd.doc.mk> infrastructure, and update the docs to match
the new infrastructure.
- Build and install text, ps, pdf, and/or html, not roff sources.
- Don't wire the chapter numbers into the build system, or use them in
the installed pathnames. This didn't matter much when the docs were a
museum, but now that we're theoretically going to start maintaining
them again, we're going to add and remove documents periodically and
having the chapter numbers baked in creates a lot of thrashing for no
purpose.
- Specify the document name explicitly, rather than implicitly in a
path. Use this name (instead of other random strings) as the name
of the installed files.
- Specify the document section, which is the subdirectory of
/usr/share/doc to install into.
- Allow multiple subdocuments. (That is, multiple documents in one
output directory.)
- Enumerate the .png files groff emits along with html so they can be
installed.
- Remove assorted hand-rolled rules for running roff and roff widgetry
and add enough variable settings to make these unnecessary. This
includes support for
- explicit use of soelim
- refer
- tbl
- pic
- eqn
- Forcibly apply at least minimal amounts of sanity to certain
autogenerated roff files.
- Don't exclude USD.doc, SMM.doc, and PSD.doc directories from the
build, as they now actually do stuff.
Note: currently we can't generate pdf. This turns out to be a
nontrivial problem with no immediate solution forthcoming. So for now,
as a workaround, install compressed .ps as the printable form.
"-Os" was specfied when gcc 4.5.x was imported and the commit log says
"-O2 produces much bigger code with gcc 4.5 than it did with gcc 4.1"
but "-Os" disables most inline declarations and makes some applications
much slower. "-O2 -fno-reorder-blocks" seems enough to reduce sizes
and disabling -freorder-blocks wouldn't cause particular performance
impact on ancient m68k machines with small cache memories.
See my post on port-m68k@ for more details:
http://mail-index.NetBSD.org/port-m68k/2014/06/22/msg000488.html
No objection in the thread and "seems fine to me" from mrg@.
Summary of changes in tzdata2014e (2014-06-12 21:53:52 -0700):
* Egypt's 2014 Ramadan-based transitions are June 26 and July 31 at 24:00.
(Thanks to Imed Chihi.) Guess that from 2015 on Egypt will temporarily
switch to standard time at 24:00 the last Thursday before Ramadan, and
back to DST at 00:00 the first Friday after Ramadan.
* Similarly, Morocco's are June 28 at 03:00 and August 2 at 02:00. (Thanks
to Milamber Space Network.) Guess that from 2015 on Morocco will
temporarily switch to standard time at 03:00 the last Saturday before
Ramadan, and back to DST at 02:00 the first Saturday after Ramadan.
* The abbreviation "MSM" (Moscow Midsummer Time) is now used instead of
"MSD" for Moscow's double daylight time in summer 1921. Also, a typo
"VLASST" has been repaired to be "VLAST" for Vladivostok summer time
in 1991. (Thanks to Hank W. for reporting the problems.)
* Changes affecting commentary.
Summary of changes in tzdata2014d (2014-05-27 21:34:40 -0700):
* Changes affecting documentation.