- keep the case consistent between the actual name and what's referenced.
e.g, if it's `foo', don't use '.Nm Foo' at the start of a sentence.
- remove unnecessary `.Nm foo' after the first occurrence (except for
using `.Nm ""' if there's stuff following, or for the 2nd and so on
occurrences in a SYNOPSIS
- use Sx, Ic, Li, Em, Sq, and Xr as appropriate
pull in just about all of the differences from the crypto-us telnet
suite (which includes Kerberos 4 and connection encryption support).
Also bring in the Kerberos 5 support from the Heimdal telnet, and
frob a little so that it can work with the non-Heimdal telnet suite.
There is still some work left to do, specifically:
- Add Heimdal's ticket forwarding support to the Berkeley Kerberos 4
module.
- Add connection encryption support to the Heimdal Kerberos 5
module. Hints on this can be taken from the MIT Kerberos 5
module which still exists in crypto-us.
However, even with the shortcomings listed above, this is a
better situation than using the stock Heimdal telnet suite,
which does not understand the IPSec policy stuff, and is also
based on much older code which contains bugs that we have already
fixed in the NetBSD sources.
adding support for Heimdal/KTH Kerberos where easy to do so. Eliminate
bsd.crypto.mk.
There is still a bunch more work to do, but crypto is now more-or-less
fully merged into the base NetBSD distribution.
setuid telnet(1).
i'm not sure why it is here (maybe someone reused this code from
other setuid'ed program, or someone cut-and-pasted the code from
somewhere else?), it was from revision 1.1 (= 4.4BSD).
briefly discussed in: tech-net?
- We must include bsd.own.mk to get EXPORTABLE_SYSTEM from mk.conf.
Noted by Bernd Ernesti.
- If we're only generating man pages, we should deal with obj
directories as appropriate. Both Perry Metzger and I found this
independently.
This completes the tasks necessary to close PR 5519.
of the domestic build process. No domestic program actually builds its
own man pages but instead relies on those built in the exportable tree.
The result is missing telnet(1) and telnet(8) pages.
Fix this problem descending into the telnet and telnetd directories
regardless of whether we're doing an exportable build or not. Once there,
we generate only the man pages if we're building a non-exportable system.