as a console, initalize as white-on-black so console messages are legible.
(Sean Davidson reports that rcons still messes up the display, perhaps
due to using the wrong pixel depth).
it to "."
- include sockio.h if needed to define SIOCGIFCONF (for svr4)
- use POSIX signals and wait macros
- add -S silent flag, so that the client does not print messages unless there
is something wrong
- use flock or lockf as appropriate
- use fstatfs or fstatvfs to find out if a filesystem is mounted over nfs,
don't depend on the major() = 255 hack; it only works on legacy systems.
- use gzip -cf to make sure that gzip compresses the file even when the file
would expand.
- punt on defining vsnprintf if _IOSTRG is not defined; use sprintf...
To compile sup on systems other than NetBSD, you'll need a copy of daemon.c,
vis.c, vis.h and sys/cdefs.h. Maybe we should keep those in the distribution?
if the version is <= SCSI-2. This should help some older SCSI
devices that previously needed the "NOLUNS" quirk. While this is
not strictly necessary on SCSI-2 devices, the spec allows it,
so we set it for SCSI-2 devices "just in case". See section 7.2.2 of
Draft X3T9.2 Rev 10L for details.
1. Start at the specified entry instead of entry 0.
2. Use the blue value instead of the green when setting the blue color entry.
3. Don't use the starting index again for storing the saved entry - the cmap
pointer was previously initialized using the starting index. This fixes
a hard hang on the maxine when console output is done after calls to
set the color map (usually by the X server).
"The mapping of IP Class D addresses to local addresses is
currently specified for the following types of networks:
[...]
o Any network that supports broadcast but not multicast,
addressing: all IP Class D addresses map to the local
broadcast address."