licence in a way that makes ipf not free according to the rules we
established over 5 years ago, at www.openbsd.org/goals.html (and those
same basic rules govern the other *BSD projects too). Specifically,
Darren says that modified versions are not permitted. But software
which OpenBSD uses and redistributes must be free to all (be they
people or companies), for any purpose they wish to use it, including
modification, use, peeing on, or even integration into baby mulching
machines or atomic bombs to be dropped on Australia. Furthermore, we
know of a number of companies using ipf with modification like us, who
are now in the same situation, and we hope that some of them will work
with us to fill this gap that now exists in OpenBSD (temporarily, we
hope).
Remove creation of non-wsmouse device in MAKEDEV (/dev/lms{0,1}, /dev/mms{0,1}
/dev/psm0, /dev/pms0).
Remove cdevsw[] entries for the devices above, as new mouse protocols are only
accessible trough /dev/wsmouse. aaron@ ok.
6 are enabled by default. After these changes, to enable more you must
change the "option WSDISPLAY_DEFAULTSCREENS" in the kernel config file and
edit /etc/ttys to switch the new ones from 'off' to 'on'.
become default in a few moments once deraadt commits new kernel config files.
IMPORTANT NOTE: A few important pieces are still required to be worked out
over the next few days. Users (and developers) relying on X should probably
stay away from -current until further notice. This should not take long, but
here is your first heads up. If you decide to upgrade your kernel anyway,
be sure to update your /etc/ttys file to use vt100 instead of vt220. The
rest of the fallout from this should be minor.
/var/spool/lock becomes uucp.dialer, mode 1775, and serial devices
become uucp.dialer, mode 660.
(A couple of "dead" MAKEDEVs have been updated because they conformed the
the old permission scheme, while others have not because they didn't.)