. when switching from the base pkg_install to the pkgin pkg_install,
the version number changed, causing a compatability problem if the
old base system binary was inadvertently left behind.
. this change checks for that situation by specifically invoking
the pkgin instance of pkg_install and telling the user to install
it if it doesn't exist.
This patch include various fixes to NBSD includes.
- unistd.h: Avoid different linkages on non-_NETBSD_SOURCE
compilation;
- stdlib.h: remove devname declaration.
- sys/select.h: Add _MINIX specific flags.
- limits.h: Add SYMLOOP_MAX and SYMLINK_MAX
- time.h: Fix CLOCKS_PER_SEC and remove BSD's timer_t, as it
confuses minix own specific timers.
- utmp.h: Set Minix-specific paths and use Minix utmp format.
- param.h: Do not set BSD4_4, as this mostly means sa_len in
struct sock_addr.
- arch/i386/include/param.h: include <machine/vmparam.h> to
add PAGE_SIZE and related macros, defined round_page() and
trunc_page() for minix compatibility.
- dirent.h: remove DIRBLKSIZ and fix d_ino/d_fileno.
- sys/dir.h: ADD from existing includes and edit include
conditions.
- sys/dirent.h: include <minix/dirent.h>, fix d_ino/d_fileno.
- sys/fd_set.h: set default FD_SETSIZE at __MINIX_OPENMAX, as
the default NetBSD value is too big and cause vfs to return
an error.
- sys/cdefs.h: Always include <minix/ansi.h>
- minix/paths.h: Add Minix-specific paths.
- minix/dirent.h: ADD, keep only "direct" and "flex"definitions.
- minix/types.h: include <minix/ansi.h>
- sys/Makefile: add sys/dirent.h and statfs.h (forgot!)
- minix/Makefile: add minix/dirent.h
nbsd_include/minix-port.patch updated accordingly.
This patch fixes some wrong error code number in nbsd libc's sys/errno.h
and adds new ones.
As in NetBSD the errno.h is used to automatically generate errlist.c array,
EBADCPU set to 1000 to be a bit too large, so we instruct the awk script
to stop at EDEADEPT (ELAST).
This patch changes the NBSD libc stat implemenation and adds
fstat (and headers), taken from current libc.
It also adds weaks alias to functions in the resolver that
were removed from public use in NetBSD but that are still
used by Minix, and fixes a NetBSD non-REENTRANT bug in
in gen/initdir.c.
This patch add a few weak_alias forgotten, so that non-internal
symbols are defined to be used from application.
Modifying only the minix-specific part, this patch needs no update
to minix-port.patch.
This patch changes the system mk scripts to enable compilation
of programs using the BSD make system to compile with the new
libc.
In details, it does the following:
- it always defines the __MINIX make variable. This can be used,
in porting applications, to specialize Makefiles for Minix.
- If the environment variable NBSD is set to something different
than 'no' and if the compiler is not ack, set NBSD_LIBC to 'yes'.
This will set the destination lib directory to '/usr/netbsd/lib'
and set up CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS to use new libc's includes and
library directory.
This patch moves more includes (most of them, to tell the truth) to
common/include directory. This completes the list of includes needed
to compile current trunk with the new libc (but to do that you need
more patches in queue).
This patch also contains some modification (for compilation with new
headers) to the common includes under __NBSD_LIBC, the define used
in mk script to specialize compilation with new includes.
. helps debugging output; you can see the difference
between parent and child easily (it's sometimes
confusing to see an expected endpoint number with
an unexpected name, i.e. before exec())
. when processes crash after fork and before exec, it's
an instant hint that that's what's going on, instead of
it being the parent (endpoint numbers don't usually convey
this)
. name returns to 'normal' after exec(), so *F isn't visible
normally at all. (Except for for RS which forks apparently.)
This patch mainly copies and modifies files existing in
the current libc implementing minix specific functions.
To keep consisten with the NetBSD libc, we remove
namespace stubs and we use "namespace.h" and weak
links.