Remove the now defunct mailinglist "freebsd-libh" from the documentation.
The mailinglist archive will still be available, though.
Requested by/patch provided by: David Wolfskill (david ett catwhisker dott org)
Announce the new mailinglist "freebsd-wireless":
"The FreeBSD-wireless list focuses on 802.11 stack (sys/net80211), device driver
and tools development. This includes bugs, new features and maintenance."
Requested by: David Wolfskill (david ett catwhisker dott org)
Patch provided by: David Wolfskill (david ett catwhisker dott org)
Undo Revision 1.74 for the moment. Seems some of the entities
- a.alpha
- a.qa
- a.smp
are still used somewhere in the documentation.
So removing will cause build failures in these documents (a.qa for example is referenced in articles/releng).
The three public technical mailing lists:
freebsd-alpha
freebsd-qa
freebsd-smp
have been removed. While their archives remain, it is no longer
possible to post to or receive messages from them.
Based on a patch provided by: David Wolfskill (david att catwhisker dott org)
More specifically:
- mentions of old versions of FreeBSD in historical context are left in tact
- remove section about KerberosIV
- remove section about SAP R/3
- remove mentions of XFree86
- only support gvinum
- update examples to 7.X or 8.X
- remove Alpha support
- add COMPAT_FREEBSD[67] kernel options
- csup(1) now only in the base system
- update (tty) device names, add warnings for 7.X
- remove MD5 from the port checksum algorithms
- update port versions (probably not all)
- add definitions for ctm-src[5-8] to mailing-lists.ent
Reviewed by: bcr, joel, remko, simon
Add the new mailinglist "freebsd-tilera":
"This mailinglist is for disussions regarding the Porting FreeBSD to the Tilera family of CPUs".
Requested by: David Wolfskill (david att catwhisker dott org)
New mailing list freebsd-toolchain. From the agenda of the list:
"This is the mailing list for discussions related to the maintenance of the
toolchain shipped with FreeBSD. This could include the state of Clang and GCC,
but also pieces of software such as assemblers, linkers and debuggers."
Requested by: David Wolfskill (david att catwhisker dott org)