Commit graph

6 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lionel Sambuc 433d6423c3 New sources layout
Change-Id: Ic716f336b7071063997cf5b4dae6d50e0b4631e9
2014-07-31 16:00:30 +02:00
Lionel Sambuc 84d9c625bf Synchronize on NetBSD-CVS (2013/12/1 12:00:00 UTC)
- Fix for possible unset uid/gid in toproto
 - Fix for default mtree style
 - Update libelf
 - Importing libexecinfo
 - Resynchronize GCC, mpc, gmp, mpfr
 - build.sh: Replace params with show-params.
     This has been done as the make target has been renamed in the same
     way, while a new target named params has been added. This new
     target generates a file containing all the parameters, instead of
     printing it on the console.
 - Update test48 with new etc/services (Fix by Ben Gras <ben@minix3.org)
     get getservbyport() out of the inner loop

Change-Id: Ie6ad5226fa2621ff9f0dee8782ea48f9443d2091
2014-07-28 17:05:06 +02:00
Thomas Cort f5dbfe789e uname: normalize release and version
Most systems provide the full version number in the
'release' field and the kernel version in 'version'.
Minix used to split the full version number between
release and version which caused problems for pkgsrc
and other applications. This patch brings Minix's
uname in line with other systems such as NetBSD.
It also brings the getty banner in line with NetBSD.

Old Minix uname:
	sysname->Minix
	nodename->10.0.2.15
	release->3
	version->2.1
	machine->i686

New Minix uname:
	sysname->Minix
	nodename->10.0.2.15
	release->3.2.1
	version->Minix 3.2.1 (GENERIC)
	machine->i686

Change-Id: I966633dfdcf2f9485966bb0d0d042afc45bbeb7d
2014-03-01 09:04:55 +01:00
Thomas Veerman 9b58157579 Rewrite osrelease.sh to parse Minix version 2012-06-18 10:53:36 +00:00
Ben Gras a2d1372680 Import NetBSD usr.bin/login 2012-04-11 20:02:15 +02:00
Evgeniy Ivanov 7f2d47d84c Remove libkern, leave just header.
Boot stuff dependencies from NetBSD.

Patch by Antoine Leca. Relocated to src/sys.

The port is using the same libminc.a as usual MINIX services (and does
not use NetBSD libkern); the headers imported from NetBSD sys/ tree
have been kept to a minimum (still numbers higher than 30 though.)

Note the peculiar way to use libraries (libsa, libi386, etc.): the
source code is shared, but each component builds its own copy of the
library, with its own set of preprocessor defines.
2012-02-09 18:54:42 +01:00