"Modify the man page to match the behaviour of "ls -q",
(done by yamt@ previously)
...
modify both the behaviour and documentation for "ls -b" and "ls -B" to
make spaces readily apparent. This could be done by adding VIS_WHITE
to the flags passed to strvis(3) in the safe_print() function in
src/bin/ls/util.c."
'ls -b' now yields foo\sbar (whitespace) foo\tbar (tab) foo\rbar (CR).
'ls -B' now yields foo\040bar foo\011bar foo\015bar.
The writer daemon, if it does not need to flush the whole filesystem,
now only writes the vnodes for which the pagedaemon has requested pageouts
(although it does not pay attention to the page ranges the pagedaemon
supplies).
by Michel Oey, in which an aged LFS writes up to an extra Ifile block for
every file created; and paves the way for the truncation of the Ifile when
many files are deleted.
* Correct (weak) segment lock assertions in lfs_fragextend and lfs_putpages.
* Keep IN_MODIFIED set if we run out of avail in lfs_putpages.
* Don't try to (re)write buffers on a VBLK vnode; fixes a panic I found
while running with an LFS root.
* Raise priority of LFCNSEGWAIT to PVFS; PUSER is way too low for
something the pagedaemon is relying on.
gpioow(4), attaching a bit-banging driver via a GPIO pin. Also,
owtemp(4) which supports some of the 1-Wire temperature sensors, including
the DS18b20 and DS1920 - temperatures are returned via the envsys(4)
framework.
Original drivers by Alexander Yurchenko (grange@openbsd), with envsys(4)
support and a fix to the 1-wire search algorithm (for discovering
devices on the bus) by me.
As discussed on tech-kern earlier this week.
These sources are ported from FreeBSD/ia64 code.
See individual source files for credits.
In addition, code from NetBSD/alpha NetBSD/sparc64,
NetBSD/i386 and NetBSD/amd64 were used as templates,
along with my own additions.
These sources are ported from FreeBSD/ia64 code.
See individual source files for credits.
In addition, code from NetBSD/alpha NetBSD/sparc64,
NetBSD/i386 and NetBSD/amd64 were used as templates,
along with my own additions.