categories, view packages, mark packages for installation, de-installation,
or re-installation, calculate and track dependencies, as well as ability to
review selections.
Still to come is the actual processing of selections (performing the
various actions associated with the user's selections, such as installing
dependencies first, then selections, etc.).
it's not used by anything within bsdconfig nor any modules (rather, the
script.subr include is designed to be used externally -- nonetheless we
want to track it in the modular graph outputs showing includes).
missing from the graph, but it also unfortunately forces yet another bug
in graphviz dot(1) to appear. When edge labels are enabled (using '\T')
with this many edges, dot(1) will do bad things in init_rank() and often
crash. So while we're here, let's disable edge labels for the include-
relationship graph feature.
X11 side of things from bleeding into Xdialog(1) stderr output). It should
be duely noted that such errors are not a by-product of anything in the
Xdialog(1) utility or API, but optional libraries that it can link against
(such as Gtk1 versus Gtk2; if you compile xdialog from ports against Gtk2
AND misconfigure your fonts or generally make Gtk2 unhappy, these warning
messages can bleed into the captured stderr -- that is we we sanitize!).
possible to save keystrokes. Second, overhaul startup/rcdelete for much
improved performance. Last, but not least, kill-off useage of --clear
and implement --keep-tite in harmony to minimize jarring transitions.
Also, fix local variable names where necessary while we're here with
other minor comment-enhancements/typo-corrections.
improve debugging initialization. Also fixup USAGE statements while we're
here. Also, change initialization of main program to _not_ change working
directory, allowing the debugFile to be relative without confusion.
accessing files from various types of media nice and abstracted away from
the wet-work involved in preparing, validating, and initializing those
types of media. This will be used for the package management system module
and other modules that need access to files and want to allow the user to
decide where those files come from (either in a scripted fashion, prompted
fashion, or any combination thereof).
Heavily inspired by sysinstall and even uses the same reserved words so
that scripts are portable. Coded over months, tested continuously through-
out, and reviewed several times.
Some notes about the changes:
- Move network-setting acquisition/validation routines to media/tcpip.subr
- The options screen from sysinstall has been converted to a dialog menu
- The "UFS" media choice is renamed to "Directory" to reflect how sysinstall
treats the choice and a new [true] "UFS" media choice has been added that
acts on real UFS partitions (such as external disks with disklabels).
- Many more help files have been resurrected from sysinstall (I noticed that
some of the content seems a bit dated; I gave them a once-over but they
could really use an update).
- A total of 10 media choices are presented (via mediaGetType) including:
CD/DVD, FTP, FTP Passive, HTTP Proxy, Directory, NFS, DOS, UFS, Floppy, USB
- Novel struct/device management layer for managing the issue of passing
more information than can comfortably fit in an argument list.
GZIP compressed manuals to appear in ./src instead of the appropriate obj dir.
PR: conf/175844
Submitted by: Dominique Goncalves <dominique.goncalves@gmail.com>