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Diffstat (limited to 'usr.sbin/xntpd/conf/Config.MONOMOY')
-rw-r--r-- | usr.sbin/xntpd/conf/Config.MONOMOY | 186 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 186 deletions
diff --git a/usr.sbin/xntpd/conf/Config.MONOMOY b/usr.sbin/xntpd/conf/Config.MONOMOY deleted file mode 100644 index 18dddffe6ff1..000000000000 --- a/usr.sbin/xntpd/conf/Config.MONOMOY +++ /dev/null @@ -1,186 +0,0 @@ -# Edit this file to reflect information specific to your installation. -# Then run 'make makeconfig' to propagate the information to all the makefiles, -# Config.MONOMOY,v 3.1 1993/07/06 01:03:43 jbj Exp - -# Config.bsdi by Bdale Garbee, N3EUA, bdale@gag.com -# -# Tested with the BSDI BSD/386 0.9.3 "gamma 4" revision. It should -# work fine with this or later revs of BSD/386. -# -# Definitions for the library: -# -# You must define one of -DXNTP_BIG_ENDIAN, -DXNTP_LITTLE_ENDIAN -# or -DXNTP_AUTO_ENDIAN depending on which way your machine's -# bytes go for the benefit of the DES routine. Most things -# sold by DEC, the NS32x32 and the 80386 deserve a -# -DXNTP_LITTLE_ENDIAN. Most of the rest of the world does -# it the other way. If in doubt, pick one, compile -# everything and run authstuff/authcert < authstuff/certdata. -# If everything fails, do it the other way. -# -# Under BSD, you may define -DXNTP_NETINET_ENDIAN to use -# netinet/in.h to determine which of -DXNTP_BIG_ENDIAN and -# XNTP_LITTLE_ENDIAN should be used. -# -LIBDEFS= -DXNTP_LITTLE_ENDIAN - -# -# Library loading: -# -# If you don't want your library ranlib'ed, chose the second line -# -RANLIB= ranlib -#RANLIB= : # ar does the work of ranlib under System V - -# -# Definitions for programs: -# -# If your compiler doesn't understand the declaration `signed char', -# add -DNO_SIGNED_CHAR_DECL. Your `char' data type had better be -# signed. If you don't know what the compiler knows, try it -# without the flag. If you get a syntax error on line 13 of -# ntp.h, add it. Note that `signed char' is an ANSIism. Most -# older, pcc-derived compilers will need this flag. -# -# If your library already has 's_char' defined, add -DS_CHAR_DEFINED. -# -# For SunOS 3.x, add -DSUN_3_3_STINKS (otherwise it will complain -# about broadaddr and will hang if you run without a -d flag -# on the command line. I actually can't believe the latter -# bug. If it hangs on your system with the flag defined, peruse -# xntpd/ntp_io.c for some rude comments about SunOS 3.5 and try it -# the other way). This flag affects xntpd only. -# -# For Ultrix 2.0, add -DULT_2_0_SUCKS. This OS has the same hanging -# bug as SunOS 3.5 (is this an original 4.2 bug?) and in addition -# has some strangeness concerning signal masks. Ultrix 2.3 doesn't -# have these problems. If you're running something in between -# you're on your own. This flag affects xntpd only. -# -# For SunOS 4.x, add -DDOSYNCTODR_SUCKS to include the code in ntp_util.c -# that sets the battery clock at the same time that it updates -# the driftfile. It does this by revving up the niceness, then -# sets the time of day to the current time of day. Ordinarily, -# you would need this only on non-networked machines. -# -# There are three ways to pry loose the kernel variables tick and tickadj -# needed by ntp_unixclock.c. One reads kmem and and is enabled -# with -DREADKMEM. One uses Sun's libkvm and is enabled with -# -DUSELIBKVM. The last one uses builtin defaults and is enabled -# with -DNOKMEM. Therefore, one of -DUSELIBKVM, -DREADKMEM or -# -DNOKMEM must be defined. Suns and recent BSD should use -# -DUSELIBKVM; others should use -DREADKMEM. If -DUSELIBKVM, use -# the DAEMONLIBS below to get the kernel routines. -# -# If your gethostbyname() routine isn't based on the DNS resolver (and, -# in particular, h_errno doesn't exist) add a -DNODNS. There -# doesn't seem to be a good way to detect this automatically which -# works in all cases. This flag affects xntpres only. -# -# The flag -DDEBUG includes some debugging code. -# -# The flag -DREFCLOCK causes the basic reference clock support to be -# compiled into the daemon. If you set this you will also want -# to configure the particular clock drivers you want in the -# CLOCKDEFS= line below. This flag affects xntpd only. -# -# To change the location of the configuration file, use a -# -DCONFIG_FILE=\\"/local/etc/ntp.conf\\" or something similar. -# -# Under HP-UX, you must use either -Dhpux70 or -Dhpux80 as, -# well as -DNOKMEM -# -# If your library doesn't include the vsprintf() routine, define -# NEED_VSPRINTF. -# -# Define -DPPS to include support for a 1-pps signal. Define -DPPSDEV -# to include a device driver for it. The latter requires a -# serial port and either a line discipline or STREAMS module. -# The PPS signal may also be generated via a reference clock -# module like DCF77. In that case a special define is required for -# the reference clock module (only one source of PPS signal should -# be used) -# -DEFS= -DBSDI -DUSELIBKVM -DDEBUG -DREFCLOCK -DPPS -DCONFIG_FILE=\\"/usr/local/etc/xntp.conf\\" -DNTP_POSIX_SOURCE - -# -# Authentication types supported. Choose from DES and MD5. If you -# have a 680x0 type CPU and GNU-C, also choose -DFASTMD5 -# -AUTHDEFS=-DDES -DMD5 - -# -# Clock support definitions (these only make sense if -DREFCLOCK used): -# -# Define -DLOCAL_CLOCK to include local pseudo-clock support -# -# Define -DPST to include support for the PST 1020 WWV/H receiver. -# -# Define -DWWVB to include support for the Spectracom 8170 WWVB receiver. -# -# Define -DCHU to include support for a driver to receive the CHU -# timecode. Note that to compile in CHU support you must -# previously have installed the CHU serial line discipline in -# the kernel of the machine you are doing the compile on. -# -# Define -DDCF to include support for the DCF77 receiver. This code -# requires a special STREAMS module found in the kernel directory. -# Define -DDCFPPS for PPS support via the DCF77 receiver -# (see also: -DPPS) -# -# Define -DGOES to support a Kinemetrics TrueTime 468-DC GOES receiver. -# -CLOCKDEFS= -DLOCAL_CLOCK -DPST -DWWVB -DCHU -DGOES # -DMX4200 -DAS2201 - -# -# For MIPS 4.3BSD or RISCos 4.0, include a -lmld to get the nlist() routine. -# If USELIBKVM is defined above, include a -lkvm to get the kernel -# routines. -# -#DAEMONLIBS= -lmld -DAEMONLIBS= -lkvm -#DAEMONLIBS= - -# -# Name resolver library. Included when loading xntpres, which calls -# gethostbyname(). Define this if you would rather use a different -# version of the routine than the one in libc.a -# -#RESLIB= -lresolv -RESLIB= - -# -# Option flags for the C compiler. A -g if you are uncomfortable -# -COPTS= -O - -# -# C compiler to use. gcc will work, but avoid the -fstrength-reduce option -# if the version is 1.35 or earlier (using this option caused incorrect -# code to be generated in the DES key permutation code, and perhaps -# elsewhere). -# -COMPILER= gcc -pipe -Wall -g -O -finline-functions -fdelayed-branch -fomit-frame-pointer -#COMPILER= cc -pipe -g - -# -# Directory into which binaries should be installed -# -BINDIR= /usr/local/bin - -# -# Special library for adjtime emulation. Used under HP-UX -# (remember to run make in the adjtime directory) -# -#ADJLIB= ../adjtime/libadjtime.a -ADJLIB= - -# -# BSD emulation library. In theory, this fixes signal semantics under -# HP-UX, but it doesn't work with 8.0 on a 9000s340, so there is now -# a work-around in the code (compiled when hpux80 is defined). In other -# words, use this for HP-UX prior to 8.0. -# -#COMPAT= -lBSD -COMPAT= - |