Commit Graph

534 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lionel Sambuc
36dcc4a4a9 Import locale tools and ressource files
This commit requires special steps, please checkout docs/UPDATING.

Tools:
 - gencat
 - locale
 - mkcsmapper
 - mkesdb
 - mklocale

Libs:
 - i18n_module
 - libintl

Ressources:
 - i18n
 - locale

Change-Id: I559d0399d8e98bcee15225cab786e43f31506207
2016-07-09 12:18:33 +02:00
David van Moolenbroek
6f3e0bcd3d MIB/libsys: support for remote MIB (RMIB) subtrees
Most of the nodes in the general sysctl tree will be managed directly
by the MIB service, which obtains the necessary information as needed.
However, in certain cases, it makes more sense to let another service
manage a part of the sysctl tree itself, in order to avoid replicating
part of that other service in the MIB service.  This patch adds the
basic support for such delegation: remote services may now register
their own subtrees within the full sysctl tree with the MIB service,
which will then forward any sysctl(2) requests on such subtrees to the
remote services.

The system works much like mounting a file system, but in addition to
support for shadowing an existing node, the MIB service also supports
creating temporary mount point nodes.  Each have their own use cases.
A remote "kern.ipc" would use the former, because even when such a
subtree were not mounted, userland would still expect some of its
children to exist and return default values.  A remote "net.inet"
would use the latter, as there is no reason to precreate nodes for all
possible supported networking protocols in the MIB "net" subtree.

A standard remote MIB (RMIB) implementation is provided for services
that wish to make use of this functionality.  It is essentially a
simplified and somewhat more lightweight version of the MIB service's
internals, and works more or less the same from a programmer's point
of view.  The most important difference is the "rmib" prefix instead
of the "mib" prefix.  Documentation will hopefully follow later.

Overall, the RMIB functionality should not be used lightly, for
several reasons.  First, despite being more lightweight than the MIB
service, the RMIB module still adds substantially to the code
footprint of the containing service.  Second, the RMIB protocol not
only adds extra IPC for sysctl(2), but has also not been optimized for
performance in other ways.  Third, and most importantly, the RMIB
implementation also several limitations.  The main limitation is that
remote MIB subtrees must be fully static.  Not only may the user not
create or destroy nodes, the service itself may not either, as this
would clash with the simplified remote node versioning system and
the cached subtree root node child counts.  Other limitations exist,
such as the fact that the root of a remote subtree may only be a
node-type node, and a stricter limit on the highest node identifier
of any child in this subtree root (currently 4095).

The current implementation was born out of necessity, and therefore
it leaves several improvements to future work.  Most importantly,
support for exit and crash notification is missing, primarily in the
MIB service.  This means that remote subtrees may not be cleaned up
immediately, but instead only when the MIB service attempts to talk
to the dead remote service.  In addition, if the MIB service itself
crashes, re-registration of remote subtrees is currently left up to
the individual RMIB users.  Finally, the MIB service uses synchronous
(sendrec-based) calls to the remote services, which while convenient
may cause cascading service hangs.  The underlying protocol is ready
for conversion to an asynchronous implementation already, though.

A new test set, testrmib.sh, tests the basic RMIB functionality.  To
this end it uses a test service, rmibtest, and also reuses part of
the existing test87 MIB service test.

Change-Id: I3378fe04f2e090ab231705bde7e13d6289a9183e
2016-06-18 12:46:59 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
37274f3cdb Import additional networking headers from NetBSD
While still a small subset of the NetBSD headers, this set should
allow various additional utilities to be compiled without too many
MINIX3-specific changes (even if those utilities will not yet work).

Change-Id: Idc70e9901d584e960cd406f75f561dcc9a4ddb7d
2016-06-18 12:20:46 +00:00
Jean-Baptiste Boric
a7a79fa1f5 Boot-to-ramdisk image generation scripts
Scripts for generating boot-to-ramdisk images are now available. These
can be used for example to boot from PXE or from a USB stick, as the
ramdisk are self-contained and do not rely on any block devices after
being loaded into RAM.

The image generation framework has also been slightly cleaned up in
order to better accomodate tarball sets bundling in images.

Change-Id: I65a176832bd0d6954b430fa8305f90af0bd606c1
2016-03-21 21:01:20 +01:00
David van Moolenbroek
7ecc6a9247 libc: enable all functionality in net/
Some functions in lib/libc/net were disabled on MINIX3 only, but with
a few added header files they build just fine, even though some of
them rely on system functionality that has not yet been implemented.
Since the functionality is unlikely to be used in practice (because
it typically requires the use of protocol families that themselves are
not yet supported, such as IPv6), already enabling it right now helps
in building packages that rely on the functionality being present at
compile time, while not posing any practical risk of breaking the same
packages at run time.

Change-Id: Idee8e3963c9e300bde9575429f0e77b0565acaef
2016-03-13 16:03:39 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
28aa92fd90 rc: start syslogd with -s (no UDP sockets)
Change-Id: I80f46c1c525d2573614676cdd612e284c16be481
2016-02-29 16:28:16 +00:00
rlfnb
59ca1d7542 moved service configuration out of system.conf
Change-Id: I996c0e700b087c5130ac6480ae39e1eefa771eff
2016-02-07 19:17:43 +01:00
Lionel Sambuc
6c380635c9 Server packages: Make sure /usr/pkg/var/run exists
If this directory doesn't exist, pid files are not created, which create
issues when shutting down or rebooting.

Change-Id: I52dddb57aca4368b1775606e22818fba99d05bf6
2016-01-22 12:24:03 +01:00
David van Moolenbroek
910831cb5c PM: generic process event publish/subscribe system
Now that there are services other than PM and VFS that implement
userland system calls directly, these services may need to know about
events related to user processes.  In particular, signal delivery may
have to interrupt blocking system calls, and certain cleanup tasks may
have to be performed after a user process exits.

This patch aims to implement a generic, lasting solution for this
problem, by allowing services to subscribe to "signal delivered"
and/or "process exit" events from PM.  PM publishes such events by
sending messages to its subscribed services, which must then reply an
acknowledgment message.

For now, only the two aforementioned events are implemented, and only
the IPC service makes use of the process event facility.

The new process event publish/subscribe system replaces the previous
VM notify-sig/watch-exit/query-exit system, which was unsound: 1) it
allowed subscription to events from individual processes, and suffered
from fundamental race conditions as a result; 2) it relied on "not too
many" processes making use of the IPC server functionality in order to
avoid loss of notifications.  In addition, it had the "ipc" process
name hardcoded, did not distinguish between signal delivery and exits,
and added a roundtrip to VM for all events from all processes.

Change-Id: I75ebad4bc54e646c6433f473294cb4003b2c3430
2016-01-16 14:04:10 +01:00
David van Moolenbroek
180e74704d Import NetBSD dev_mkdb(8)
Adapt libc devname(3) to make use of it, so that such device name
queries are now several orders of magnitude faster.  The database
is created and updated at system bootup time.

Change-Id: I0cbcb24c7d47577d4d6af9c8290c21ee4df9a0ff
2016-01-13 20:32:51 +01:00
David van Moolenbroek
d2532d3d42 Start using sysctl(3) throughout userland
This patch mostly removes MINIX3-specific workarounds for missing
sysctl support.

Change-Id: I21e35e887359619ba72c252aa43d9017301a46ac
2016-01-13 20:32:45 +01:00
David van Moolenbroek
e4e21ee1b2 Add MIB service, sysctl(2) support
The new MIB service implements the sysctl(2) system call which, as
we adopt more NetBSD code, is an increasingly important part of the
operating system API.  The system call is implemented in the new
service rather than as part of an existing service, because it will
eventually call into many other services in order to gather data,
similar to ProcFS.  Since the sysctl(2) functionality is used even
by init(8), the MIB service is added to the boot image.

MIB stands for Management Information Base, and the MIB service
should be seen as a knowledge base of management information.

The MIB service implementation of the sysctl(2) interface is fairly
complete; it incorporates support for both static and dynamic nodes
and imitates many NetBSD-specific quirks expected by userland.  The
patch also adds trace(1) support for the new system call, and adds
a new test, test87, which tests the fundamental operation of the
MIB service rather thoroughly.

Change-Id: I4766b410b25e94e9cd4affb72244112c2910ff67
2016-01-13 20:32:37 +01:00
Lionel Sambuc
0a390218fa Install xorg.conf which loads all extensions.
Change-Id: I4592dec88703a80e8852690bb004e07e818b1753
2016-01-13 20:32:24 +01:00
Lionel Sambuc
0a6a1f1d05 NetBSD re-synchronization of the source tree
This brings our tree to NetBSD 7.0, as found on -current on the
10-10-2015.

This updates:
 - LLVM to 3.6.1
 - GCC to GCC 5.1
 - Replace minix/commands/zdump with usr.bin/zdump
 - external/bsd/libelf has moved to /external/bsd/elftoolchain/
 - Import ctwm
 - Drop sprintf from libminc

Change-Id: I149836ac18e9326be9353958bab9b266efb056f0
2016-01-13 20:32:14 +01:00
Jean-Baptiste Boric
2d6bbeb0b9 Split minix distribution set
The minix set is now divided into minix-base, minix-comp, minix-games,
minix-kernel, minix-man and minix-tests.

This allows massive space savings on the installlation CD because only
the base system used for installation is stored uncompressed. Also, it
makes the system more modular.

Change-Id: Ic8d168b4c3112204013170f07245aef98aaa51e7
2015-10-12 11:25:54 +02:00
Jean-Baptiste Boric
69eead77ff New image framework generation
The CD now boots directly from the ISO 9660 filesystem instead of using
MBR partitioning with Minix file systems. This saves some space on the
CD and reduces memory requirements by some unknown amount as the root
ramdisk is completely eliminated.

The x86 hard drive image creation is also rewritten in the same
fashion.

The setup is modified to be more NetBSD-like (unpacking sets
tarballs instead of blindly copying the CD contents). Splitting MINIX
into sets is done in another commit due to it being a nightmare to
rebase.

Since MINIX lacks union mounts for now, a bunch of ramdisks are
generated at run-time to make parts of the filesystem writeable for the
CD. This solution isn't ideal, but it's enough for an installation CD.

Change-Id: Icbd9cca4dafebf7b42c345b107a17679a622d5cd
2015-10-10 19:09:35 +02:00
Lionel Sambuc
ebfedea0ce Importing crypto libraries
- crypto/external/bsd/heimdal
 - crypto/external/bsd/libsaslc
 - crypto/external/bsd/netpgp
 - crypto/external/bsd/openssl

Change-Id: I91dbf05f33e637edf5b9bb408d5baddd7ba8cf75
2015-10-07 23:37:12 +02:00
Jean-Baptiste Boric
b1d068470b isofs: reworked for better performance
isofs now uses an in-memory directory listing built on-the-fly instead
of parsing the ISO 9660 data structures over and over for almost every
request. This yields huge performance improvements.

The directory listing is allocated dynamically, but Minix servers aren't
normally supposed to do that because critical servers would crash if the
system runs out of memory. isofs is quite frugal, won't allocate memory
after having the whole directory tree cached and is not that critical
(its most important job is to serve as a root file system during
installation).

The benefits and elegance of this scheme far outweights this small
problem in practice.

Change-Id: I13d070388c07d274cbee0645cbc50295c447c5b6
2015-10-07 12:40:24 +02:00
David van Moolenbroek
d1e4d7ce7d Import NetBSD csh(1)
Jobctl warning commented out.  Largely untested.

Change-Id: I4dffe23a2855a374628c820703b51591633aed64
2015-09-29 18:15:52 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
bc2d75fa05 Rework getrusage(2) infrastructure
- the userland call is now made to PM only, and PM relays the call to
  other servers as appropriate; this is an ABI change that will
  ultimately allow us to add proper support for wait3() and the like;
  for the moment there is backward compatibility;
- the getrusage-specific kernel subcall has been removed, as it
  provided only redundant functionality, and did not provide the means
  to be extended correctly in the future - namely, allowing the kernel
  to return different values depending on whether resource usage of
  the caller (self) or its children was requested;
- VM is now told whether resource usage of the caller (self) or its
  children is requested, and it refrains from filling in wrong values
  for information it does not have;
- VM now uses the correct unit for the ru_maxrss values;
- VFS is cut out of the loop entirely, since it does not provide any
  values at the moment; a comment explains how it should be readded.

Change-Id: I27b0f488437dec3d8e784721c67b03f2f853120f
2015-09-28 14:06:59 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
93d36fc9d8 Import NetBSD rcmd, rcp, rsh, rshd
Change-Id: I83d908bbe17f04826e9b5c3a220a5bb2c3a51c80
2015-09-23 12:03:06 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
e4d99eb9b0 Basic live rerandomization infrastructure
This commits adds a basic infrastructure to support Address Space
Randomization (ASR).  In a nutshell, using the already imported ASR
LLVM pass, multiple versions can be generated for the same system
service, each with a randomized, different address space layout.
Combined with the magic instrumentation for state transfer, a system
service can be live updated into another ASR-randomized version at
runtime, thus providing live rerandomization.

Since MINIX3 is not yet capable of running LLVM linker passes, the
ASR-randomized service binaries have to be pregenerated during
crosscompilation.  These pregenerated binaries can then be cycled
through at runtime.  This patch provides the basic proof-of-concept
infrastructure for both these parts.

In order to support pregeneration, the clientctl host script has
been extended with a "buildasr" command.  It is to be used after
building the entire system with bitcode and magic support, and will
produce a given number of ASR-randomized versions of all system
services.  These services are placed in /usr/service/asr in the
image that is generated as final step by the "buildasr" command.

In order to support runtime updating, a new update_asr(8) command
has been added to MINIX3.  This command attempts to live-update the
running system services into their next ASR-randomized versions.
For now, this command is not run automatically, and thus must be
invoked manually.

Technical notes:

- For various reasons, magic instrumentation is x86-only for now,
  and ASR functionality is therefore to be used on x86 only as well.
- The ASR-randomized binaries are placed in numbered subdirectories
  so as not to have to change their actual program names, which are
  assumed to be static in various places (system.conf, procfs).
- The root partition is typically too small to contain all the
  produced binaries, which is why we introduce /usr/service.  There
  is a symlink from /service/asr to /usr/service/asr for no other
  reason than to let userland continue to assume that all services
  are reachable through /service.
- The ASR count field (r_asr_count/ASRcount) maintained by RS is not
  used within RS in any way; it is only passed through procfs to
  userland in order to allow update_asr(8) to keep track of which
  version is currently loaded without having to maintain own state.
- Ideally, pre-instrumentation linking of a service would remove all
  its randomized versions.  Currently, the user is assumed not to
  perform ASR instrumentation and then recompile system services
  without performing ASR instrumentation again, as the randomized
  binaries included in the image would then be stale.  This aspect
  has to be improved later.
- Various other issues are flagged in the comments of the various
  parts of this patch.

Change-Id: I093ad57f31c18305591f64b2d491272288aa0937
2015-09-17 17:15:03 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
abf8a7e7b3 RS/VM: proper preparation for multi-VM live update
Due to changed VM internals, more elaborate preparation is required
before a live update with multiple components including VM can take
place.  This patch adds the essential preparation infrastructure to
VM and adapts RS to make use of it.  As a side effect, it is no
longer necessary to supply RS as the last component (if at all)
during the set-up of a multicomponent live update operation.

Change-Id: If069fd3f93f96f9d5433998e4615f861465ef448
2015-09-17 14:01:06 +00:00
Cristiano Giuffrida
dc76d7e9da rs: Update recovery policies for sched and mfs.
Edited by David van Moolenbroek.

Change-Id: I7bbe543e2349dca3856a17abddc8366d1f19fe10
2015-09-17 13:34:59 +00:00
Cristiano Giuffrida
fb6bd596bf rs: New RS.
Change-Id: I46e335d5dac49104028d7cb0706b3e85de752bfe
2015-09-16 15:30:48 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
e94f856b38 libminixfs/VM: fix memory-mapped file corruption
This patch employs one solution to resolve two independent but related
issues.  Both issues are the result of one fundamental aspect of the
way VM's memory mapping works: VM uses its cache to map in blocks for
memory-mapped file regions, and for blocks already in the VM cache, VM
does not go to the file system before mapping them in.  To preserve
consistency between the FS and VM caches, VM relies on being informed
about all updates to file contents through the block cache.  The two
issues are both the result of VM not being properly informed about
such updates:

 1. Once a file system provides libminixfs with an inode association
    (inode number + inode offset) for a disk block, this association
    is not broken until a new inode association is provided for it.
    If a block is freed and reallocated as a metadata (non-inode)
    block, its old association is maintained, and may be supplied to
    VM's secondary cache.  Due to reuse of inodes, it is possible
    that the same inode association becomes valid for an actual file
    block again.  In that case, when that new file is memory-mapped,
    under certain circumstances, VM may end up using the metadata
    block to satisfy a page fault on the file, due to the stale inode
    association.  The result is a corrupted memory mapping, with the
    application seeing data other than the current file contents
    mapped in at the file block.

 2. When a hole is created in a file, the underlying block is freed
    from the device, but VM is not informed of this update, and thus,
    if VM's cache contains the block with its previous inode
    association, this block will remain there.  As a result, if an
    application subsequently memory-maps the file, VM will map in the
    old block at the position of the hole, rather than an all-zeroes
    block.  Thus, again, the result is a corrupted memory mapping.

This patch resolves both issues by making the file system inform the
minixfs library about blocks being freed, so that libminixfs can
break the inode association for that block, both in its own cache and
in the VM cache.  Since libminixfs does not know whether VM has the
block in its cache or not, it makes a call to VM for each block being
freed.  Thus, this change introduces more calls to VM, but it solves
the correctness issues at hand; optimizations may be introduced
later.  On the upside, all freed blocks are now marked as clean,
which should result in fewer blocks being written back to the device,
and the blocks are removed from the caches entirely, which should
result in slightly better cache usage.

This patch is necessary but not sufficient to resolve the situation
with respect to memory mapping of file holes in general.  Therefore,
this patch extends test 74 with a (rather particular but effective)
test for the first issue, but not yet with a test for the second one.

This fixes #90.

Change-Id: Iad8b134d2f88a884f15d3fc303e463280749c467
2015-08-13 13:46:46 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
a6fc634735 etc: create system log files
The new syslogd(8) does not create log files that do not already
exist, and thus, we adopt the NetBSD way of creating them.

Change-Id: Icd7fdba362726696df6a52dd55c049fd2bfcc2d3
2015-08-10 11:38:16 +00:00
Leonardo Fogel
4796287659 eMMC: add support to 8-bit mode.
Change-Id: I0470130eb5f8de319cd55c448a9aa1b9131e8e07
2015-07-26 15:53:37 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
3e07920fe2 Import NetBSD syslogd(8)
The primary reason for the import is a likely GPL taint of the
original MINIX3 syslogd.  As a result, this import may still
have some rough edges.

Change-Id: I5c8d26eca10fc2dd50ecc9eab44a1d483cf068a9
2015-07-26 11:57:04 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
da32b6c32e orinoco: retire
This code is MPL-licensed and thus does not belong in the MINIX3
source tree.

Change-Id: I10388b05e90e83b95414cf9b469e50f49bc1db31
2015-07-20 16:55:15 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
6d315cbf9e benchmarks: remove unixbench
This code appears to be GPL-licensed and thus does not belong in
the MINIX3 source tree.

Change-Id: I9e88c3ffd8eae8697b629899dba9728863a4413a
2015-07-20 11:05:28 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
da21d85025 Add PTYFS, Unix98 pseudo terminal support
This patch adds support for Unix98 pseudo terminals, that is,
posix_openpt(3), grantpt(3), unlockpt(3), /dev/ptmx, and /dev/pts/.
The latter is implemented with a new pseudo file system, PTYFS.

In effect, this patch adds secure support for unprivileged pseudo
terminal allocation, allowing programs such as tmux(1) to be used by
non-root users as well.  Test77 has been extended with new tests, and
no longer needs to run as root.

The new functionality is optional.  To revert to the old behavior,
remove the "ptyfs" entry from /etc/fstab.

Technical nodes:

o The reason for not implementing the NetBSD /dev/ptm approach is that
  implementing the corresponding ioctl (TIOCPTMGET) would require
  adding a number of extremely hairy exceptions to VFS, including the
  PTY driver having to create new file descriptors for its own device
  nodes.

o PTYFS is required for Unix98 PTYs in order to avoid that the PTY
  driver has to be aware of old-style PTY naming schemes and even has
  to call chmod(2) on a disk-backed file system.  PTY cannot be its
  own PTYFS since a character driver may currently not also be a file
  system.  However, PTYFS may be subsumed into a DEVFS in the future.

o The Unix98 PTY behavior differs somewhat from NetBSD's, in that
  slave nodes are created on ptyfs only upon the first call to
  grantpt(3).  This approach obviates the need to revoke access as
  part of the grantpt(3) call.

o Shutting down PTY may leave slave nodes on PTYFS, but once PTY is
  restarted, these leftover slave nodes will be removed before they
  create a security risk.  Unmounting PTYFS will make existing PTY
  slaves permanently unavailable, and absence of PTYFS will block
  allocation of new Unix98 PTYs until PTYFS is (re)mounted.

Change-Id: I822b43ba32707c8815fd0f7d5bb7a438f51421c1
2015-06-23 17:43:46 +00:00
Leonardo Fogel
07cbc27cb0 Add a driver for the eMMC on the BeagleBone Black
Change-Id: I30ab36ac048c65538718e372db9502fb8f51d41f
2015-06-21 11:04:16 +00:00
Thomas Cort
fc850d580c man: clean-out man1x category.
Removes the following man pages:

* awk.1x -- for a version of awk we no longer have
* kermit.1x -- seems gone altogether
* macros.1x -- not useful for anyone anymore

Moves the following man pages:

* mined.1x -- Moved to minix/commands/mined/mined.1
and reformatted to use the mdoc macros instead of the
Minix macros so that it displays properly.

Removes /usr/man/man1x from the directory tree.

closes #44

Change-Id: I59b8bd54cf5cba6d188e51e99a92b36e90c275c1
2015-03-25 06:53:44 +01:00
Jacob Adams
056ece2898 Update whatis/apropos database configuration
Change-Id: I2483cc0e9748ba68bd1acf0ceb39fde4afc2059b
2015-03-23 11:11:49 +01:00
Robin Karlsson
e3b78ef14f Import NetBSD games/rogue
Change-Id: Id4aef4950f250edef2d507910877aabc6b9580ea
2015-03-14 14:59:16 +01:00
David van Moolenbroek
4bf270019a dp8390: update, allow default port and IRQ
Bochs has switched from port base 0x240 to 0x300 for its default
NE2000 ISA configuration, and QEMU is using the same settings.

Change-Id: Ide6cdb14321eb4324d0bf6d6314c5970b3493e95
2014-12-04 12:10:46 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
cb796b7551 etc/usr/rc: fix argument passing for net drivers
The expected argument name would include the instance number, which
is not only redundant in many cases (FOOETHn_n=arg.., "n" being the
instance number) and conflicted with what netconf(8) does, but some
drivers need to be able to see the arguments for all instances of its
driver type--for example, dp8390 needs to know how many earlier
instances have been configured to use PCI.

Change-Id: I4830b823352722f554a032979464aba8b08fc166
2014-12-04 12:10:46 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
e321f65582 libfsdriver: support mmap on FSes with no device
This patch adds (very limited) support for memory-mapping pages on
file systems that are mounted on the special "none" device and that
do not implement PEEK support by themselves.  This includes hgfs,
vbfs, and procfs.

The solution is implemented in libvtreefs, and consists of allocating
pages, filling them with content by calling the file system's READ
functionality, passing the pages to VM, and freeing them again.  A new
VM flag is used to indicate that these pages should be mapped in only
once, and thus not cached beyond their single use.  This prevents
stale data from getting mapped in without the involvement of the file
system, which would be problematic on file systems where file contents
may become outdated at any time.  No VM caching means no sharing and
poor performance, but mmap no longer fails on these file systems.

Compared to a libc-based approach, this patch retains the on-demand
nature of mmap.  Especially tail(1) is known to map in a large file
area only to use a small portion of it.

All file systems now need to be given permission for the SETCACHEPAGE
and CLEARCACHE calls to VM.

A very basic regression test is added to test74.

Change-Id: I17afc4cb97315b515cad1542521b98f293b6b559
2014-11-15 11:19:52 +00:00
Lionel Sambuc
957802cd0c Import NetBSD shell environment files
With the import of Xorg, a proper separation between login-time and sub
shell-time of the environment setup is necessary.

Instead of re-developping this from scratch, I am taking the opportunity
to import the NetBSD default environment.

Change-Id: Ib6a8fbd9c2f407ccd59be57a52ef9df21c2c9ce7
2014-11-10 16:48:56 +01:00
Lionel Sambuc
123aceb045 Adding /usr/X11R7/lib to LD_LIBRARY_PATH
Change-Id: I94b91e9e89115f90142e284fca21df4c3c8e2060
2014-11-10 14:43:29 +01:00
Lionel Sambuc
86b0b2ca84 Adding /usr/X11R7 to PATH
Change-Id: Ifac54e59715f48bdfa4ab0a77d656d11f7289a2e
2014-11-10 14:43:29 +01:00
Lionel Sambuc
971bb1a587 Importing external/mit/xorg support rules
Change-Id: Ib11d8659485a444797bf3a2118182a1d4e316b50
2014-11-10 14:43:29 +01:00
Lionel Sambuc
9e77ef5013 Enhancing /proc/pci
- Adding missing fields for PCI device lookup
 - Adding the domain (for now set to zero) as part of the slot name

Change-Id: Iebaf3b21f6ab5024738cbc1dea66d5ad3ada175d
2014-11-10 14:43:27 +01:00
Lionel Sambuc
7eb99bda90 Importing lib/libpci
Change-Id: I21ae1e409286cec27c5e35677de3778a3f505d1e
2014-11-07 16:20:39 +01:00
David van Moolenbroek
eda6f5931d Import tmux
We have to use SOCK_SEQPACKET instead of SOCK_STREAM for client/server
communication, because UDS does things with control messages that tmux
does not expect.

Change-Id: I3edb1875d61fb976cf6485c650f4fd4b82fa354c
2014-10-03 10:01:08 +00:00
David van Moolenbroek
e985b92992 Import libevent
Change-Id: Ic75f4cac5eb07ffaba8f97d10673d7d7e2b1762d
2014-10-03 10:00:53 +00:00
Ben Gras
0d9602e04b Import NetBSD legal/COPYRIGHT.
Change-Id: Ic23e5f1902ade92402faa968bb945b7d873aaf6b
2014-09-28 16:28:05 +02:00
Ben Gras
588a35b929 Set the motd to point to a wiki page.
Change-Id: I12bc9d07c4d3d0bcb17a27521a0f06ad5abb5fda
2014-09-13 23:56:50 +02:00
Lionel Sambuc
684b2eb975 /usr/Makefile: prevent pkgin from hanging
Change-Id: Ida6086f3c2d3300609aaebb931d094fd779c73ea
2014-09-12 11:07:33 +02:00