work of Luke Mewburn.
This includes, but is not limited to :
- commandline editing and history.
- local and remote filename completion.
- a new progress display.
- the ability to access files using either the ftp or http protocols,
and use http proxies for ftp transfers.
The FreeeBSD "restricted ports" functionality was preserved.
Obtained from: NetBSD
nothing good except of opening a can of (potential or real) security
holes. People maintaining a machine with higher security requirements
need to be on the console anyway, so there's no point in not forcing
them to reboot before starting maintenance.
Agreed by: hackers, guido
unless defined out - including while a telnet
session with a -auto ppp is in effect. If you
don't create ppp.secrets, you deserve what you
get.
telnet connection capabilities will be configurable
per system soon.
Suggested by: Terry Dwyer <tdwyer@omen.net.au>
were returning EFAULT, when it is a completely acceptable thing to do.
Also, at the same time, be a *bit* optimizing and don't allocate any
"stackgrap" memory if we're not going to use it.
This is another Oracle-discovered problem.
Submitted by: Steven Wallace
rather than hard-code it in the message text. Optinally include
the host name in the message if SHOW_HOSTNAME is defined.
The origianl idea and sample code submitted by Angelo Turetta
<ATuretta@stylo.it>.
it also sets RUN_DEPENDS (USE_GMAKE is BUILD_DEPENDS only).
The (immediate) purpose of this is to avoid having to change 70
zillion ports when the version of perl changes. Also, when perl5 is
pulled into -current, this will become a no-op in -current's
bsd.port.mk.
Reviewed by: jfitz
Updated README file with additional helpful information from Steve Passe
and added patches from Robert Sexton to eliminate case sensitivity of
the xten command.
o Style police
o Make hangup abort the current connection, not
necessarily exiting (-auto/-ddial).
o Trap HUP and INT during DoChat and abort the
connection attempt. This means you can now
type "dial" and change your mind with ^C, or
HUP the process to stop it dialing.
Slapped into doing it by: Chuck Robey <chuckr@glue.umd.edu>
This makes configuration of mfs /tmp on diskless clients more intuitive
for people like me, that have used this feature on NetBSD and SunOS.
Using the -T option and /dev/null, while already supported,
is neither intuitive nor documented in the handbook.
Obtained from: NetBSD