segment should succeed even if the segment would be marked removed; use this
to implement the Linux-compatible semantics of shmat(2)
this fixes the old Linux VMware3 graphics problem with local display,
and possibly other local Linux X clients using MIT-SHM
Use it for ST3200822A, which has a broken firmware and return an error
when accessing sector 0xfffffff with a LBA command.
Patch tested by David Brownlee.
for Linux-compatible shmat() behaviour - shmat() for the removed shared memory
segment must work from all callers, the shared memory id could be passed e.g.
to native X server via MIT-SHM
temporarily remove the functionality, the Linux-compatible semantics
will be reimplemented differently
sync with FreeBSD/OpenBSD
- Add a standard option list and make appropriate changes to the
body of the description.
- Document "-G netgroup".
- Miscellaneous grammar and mdoc fixes.
Some option resorting by yours truly.
getgrouplist(3) with *grpcnt==0, so don't _DIAGASSERT(groups != NULL).
Tweak API used between getgrouplist(3) and the back-end nsswitch methods;
move the public return value to the start of the va_list and reserve the
'void *retval' for "internal use" (e.g, errno passing or some other need).
the reset condition are processed properly; this fixes PR#26687 by
Jan Schaumann
many thanks to Mark Davies, who tracked the offending change down
and helped test patches
while here, g/c unused sigtrapmask and rearrange some code to pre-r1.190 form
for better readability
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.