first. This is necessary to avoid warnings with -fshort-enums. Casting
to an int really should be enough, but turns out not to be.
This change will be documented in doc/HACKS.
* There is no -indent option to .Bd or .Bl, although you would
never know that from its frequent use in this tree. There is a
"-offset indent" combination that makes sense, and you can certainly
say "-width indent".
* Also, you can't markup the -width option argument, tho you CAN
use a callable macro. So "-width Ar filename" doesn't make sense,
but either "-width Ar" or "-width filename" does, as might something
like "-width xxfilename" for a little extra space.
* There are a lot of needlessly complex hanging tag macros in man4 used
to create simple item lists. Those should be simplified one of these
days before someone copies and edits yet another man4 page.
Make sure that each va_start has one and only one matching va_end,
especially in error cases.
If the va_list is used multiple times, do multiple va_starts/va_ends.
If a function gets va_list as argument, don't let it use va_end (since
it's the callers responsibility).
Improved by comments from enami and christos -- thanks!
Heimdal/krb4/KAME changes already fed back, rest to follow.
Inspired by, but not not based on, OpenBSD.
revision 1.3
date: 1999/02/22 02:37:27; author: mrg; state: Exp; lines: +19 -1
if we are chrooting, write a symlink for the pid file so that ndc, etc,
continue to work as normal. this allows named to run in a chroot jail
with zero loss of functionality.
there's no real justification for most programs to spam /dev/console just
because syslog can't talk to syslogd isn't available, especially chatty
programs such as bind. (init, shutdown, reboot are probably exceptions here)
- resolve conflicts (there are many conflicts with $NetBSD$ tags -
dunno why they happen).
- type pedant (couple of typecasts).
correct yacc-generated file handling. remove bin/named/ns_parser.h,
use the header yacc generates at compilation time.
a static once-generated version instead. We know we have IPv6
headers available here.
The probing was problematical for several reasons:
o it probed the host headers, not the headers in the build or DESTDIR
tree (could be fixed in another way)
o the probe_ipv6 script mucks with PATH, which would be problematical
for cross compilation.
dig/host/whatever assumes that it is using BIND8 code. mixing BIND4 in
libc with BIND8 code will result in very strange behavior, or program panics.
it is not necessary for dig/host/whatever to obey /etc/nsswitch.conf, actually
dig(1) is explicit about it.
now dist/bind is almost clean BIND822p5, with the following exception:
- /etc/irs.conf will never be visited when running BIND8 toolchain,
to make it less complex. the search order for BIND8 toolchain is
defined in dist/bind/lib/irs/gen.c:default_map_rules().
and usr.sbin/bind compiles them in BSD make framework, with no tricks at all.