amd64/ramdisks/common/list.ramdisk.
Previously, the amd64 list.ramdisk used the small version of gzip from
distrib/utils/x_gzip, while the i386 list.ramdisk used the full version
of gzip built from usr.bin/gzip, and also used extra libraries needed to
make that work. Now, they both use the small version.
The only other difference was in the order of some PROG lines.
pre-define the LISTS variable if they do not want it to include
${.CURDIR}/lists. This opens the possibility of making some of the
many distrib/*/ramdisks/*/lists files shared in the future.
XXX: Some of the differences between these files seem to be unnecessary.
conversion of some constants to variables, this is identical to the code
that was previously present in both distrib/amd64/kmod/Makefile and
distrib/i386/kmod/Makefile.
Change distrib/amd64/kmod/Makefile and distrib/i386/kmod/Makefile to just
set some variables and .include "../../common/Makefile.minirootkmod".
to incorporate the OS name and version.
XXX should also not hardcode ${BOOTDISK} in the name, but that would
require reordering stuff and more testing than I have time for right now.
Another day.
As discussed on current-users@ back in March, with some adjustments.
depend on new devname_r(3) as heart. Add /dev/pts magic directly to
devname(3). While it can lead to returning non-existing paths, the
behavior is more consistent that way. Drop caching layer in devname(3),
it doesn't buy anything for the common case of having access to the
database. Teach devname(3) proper fallback behavior of scanning /dev.
Create both old-style and new-style database for now in /etc/rc.d/sysdb.
where configuration for crunchgen(1) is moved from ramdisk/ to common/.
For i386, only mbrlabel(8) and various LFS related binaries are added. Yes,
LFS. It was added to amd64 ramdisk 3 years ago, I believe it's for a good
reason... ?
Reasons being:
- INSTALL is GENERIC with an embedded ramdisk, and as such, can benefit from
features included within.
- INSTALL_FLOPPY has its own config(5) file, and is tailored for "small"
floppy images; it misses features/drivers that could be needed to boot
in a decent environment for recent x86 machines (like ACPI)
- makes it closer to floppies distrib available for amd64
While here, comment out INSTALL_FLOPPY and bootfloppy-big image build. NetBSD
does not use the 3.6MiB image for El Torito cdroms anymore.
Remove the FLOPPYMAX limit; i386 needs 4 floppies now. Modify boot.cfg and
release/contents to reflect reality.
See http://mail-index.netbsd.org/port-i386/2011/02/08/msg002307.html
No comments, no objections.
the full termcap distfile. In an attempt to reduce the madness
switch everyone (except the i386 cd install which does its own
thing) to the same (under 8K) termcap subset:
ansi ansi/pc-term compatible with color
dumb|unknown 80-column dumb tty
hp300h HP Catseye console
iris-ansi-ap IRIS ANSI in application-keypad mode
iris-ansi|iris-ansi-net IRIS emulating 40 line ANSI terminal (almost VT100)
sun|sun1|sun2|sun-il Sun Microsystems Inc. console with working insert-line
vt100|vt100-am DEC VT100 (w/advanced video)
vt220-8 DEC VT220 8 bit terminal
vt220|vt200|vt300 DEC VT220 in vt100 emulation mode
wsvt25 NetBSD wscons in 25 line DEC VT220 mode
wsvt25m NetBSD wscons in 25 line DEC VT220 mode with Meta
x68k|x68k-ite NetBSD/x68k ITE
xterm|vs100 xterm terminal emulator (X Window System)
Trying to provide similar functionality across all ports? It'll never
catch on...