zlib 1.2.2 has been released, which remedies a vulnerability to a
denial-of-service attack ( http://www.kb.cert.org/vuls/id/238678 ).
You can get the latest release here:
The Iyonix is a desktop machine from Castle Technology, based on a 600MHz
XScale[tm] 80321 processor.
* Uses the bootloader from NetBSD/acorn32, which is now 32-bit compatible.
* Currently boots multiuser with a serial console.
* Device support is not yet complete.
With help from abs.
MKSOFTFLOAT=yes). The main purpose of this feature is to let NetBSD work
in machines with the 68040LC chip (those that have the FPU bug).
All the work has been done by Bruce O'Neel <edoneel AT sdf.lonestar.org>,
with some very minor changes by me; the patches were being posted to the
port-mac68k mailing list. It has been tested for a long time by several
users, including me.
I have just verified that regular releases, as well as soft-float ones,
continue to build.
There have been no objections to this patch since I asked for them in July
in the port-mac68k list.
at the moment.
This includes the addition of two new wsdisplay ioctls, WSDISPLAY_{G,S}BORDER,
one to get the actual color and one to set it, respectively. Possible colors
match those defined by ANSI (and listed in wsdisplayvar.h).
It also adds two accessops to the underlying graphics device, getborder and
setborder, which mach their ioctl counterparts.
Two kernel options are added: WSDISPLAY_CUSTOM_BORDER, which enables the
ioctls described above (to customize the border color from userland after
boot), and WSDISPLAY_BORDER_COLOR, which sets the color at boot time.
The former is enabled by default on the GENERIC kernel, but not on INSTALL
(among others). The later is always commented out, leaving the usual black
border as a default.
wsconsctl is modified to allow accessing this value easily. For example,
'wsconsctl -d -w border=blue'.