head 1.2; access; symbols pkgsrc-2016Q4:1.1.1.1.0.46 pkgsrc-2016Q4-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2016Q3:1.1.1.1.0.44 pkgsrc-2016Q3-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2016Q2:1.1.1.1.0.42 pkgsrc-2016Q2-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2016Q1:1.1.1.1.0.40 pkgsrc-2016Q1-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2015Q4:1.1.1.1.0.38 pkgsrc-2015Q4-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2015Q3:1.1.1.1.0.36 pkgsrc-2015Q3-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2015Q2:1.1.1.1.0.34 pkgsrc-2015Q2-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2015Q1:1.1.1.1.0.32 pkgsrc-2015Q1-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2014Q4:1.1.1.1.0.30 pkgsrc-2014Q4-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2014Q3:1.1.1.1.0.28 pkgsrc-2014Q3-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2014Q2:1.1.1.1.0.26 pkgsrc-2014Q2-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2014Q1:1.1.1.1.0.24 pkgsrc-2014Q1-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2013Q4:1.1.1.1.0.22 pkgsrc-2013Q4-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2013Q3:1.1.1.1.0.20 pkgsrc-2013Q3-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2013Q2:1.1.1.1.0.18 pkgsrc-2013Q2-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2013Q1:1.1.1.1.0.16 pkgsrc-2013Q1-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2012Q4:1.1.1.1.0.14 pkgsrc-2012Q4-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2012Q3:1.1.1.1.0.12 pkgsrc-2012Q3-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2012Q2:1.1.1.1.0.10 pkgsrc-2012Q2-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2012Q1:1.1.1.1.0.8 pkgsrc-2012Q1-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2011Q4:1.1.1.1.0.6 pkgsrc-2011Q4-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2011Q3:1.1.1.1.0.4 pkgsrc-2011Q3-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-2011Q2:1.1.1.1.0.2 pkgsrc-2011Q2-base:1.1.1.1 pkgsrc-base:1.1.1.1 TNF:1.1.1; locks; strict; comment @# @; 1.2 date 2016.12.29.19.13.03; author wiz; state dead; branches; next 1.1; commitid kFYPk8EnajcmFUzz; 1.1 date 2011.04.06.09.10.27; author cegger; state Exp; branches 1.1.1.1; next ; 1.1.1.1 date 2011.04.06.09.10.27; author cegger; state Exp; branches; next ; desc @@ 1.2 log @Remove xenkernel and tools versions 3, 33, and 41. As discussed on pkgsrc-users. @ text @$NetBSD: patch-cc,v 1.1 2011/04/06 09:10:27 cegger Exp $ --- ../docs/man/xm.pod.1.orig 2009-01-05 11:26:58.000000000 +0000 +++ ../docs/man/xm.pod.1 @@@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@@@ in the config file. See L format, and possible options used in either the configfile or for I. I can either be an absolute path to a file, or a relative -path to a file located in /etc/xen. +path to a file located in @@XENDCONFDIR@@. Create will return B as the domain is started. This B mean the guest OS in the domain has actually booted, or is @@@@ -156,7 +156,7 @@@@ B xm create Fedora4 -This creates a domain with the file /etc/xen/Fedora4, and returns as +This creates a domain with the file @@XENDCONFDIR@@/Fedora4, and returns as soon as it is run. =item I @@@@ -388,7 +388,7 @@@@ file format, and possible options used i I. I can either be an absolute path to a file, or a relative -path to a file located in /etc/xen. +path to a file located in @@XENDCONFDIR@@. The new subcommand will return without starting the domain. The domain needs to be started using the B command. @@@@ -1068,7 +1068,7 @@@@ I is a dot-separated list of nam name pre-fix for the policy XML file. The preceding name parts are translated into the local path pointing to the policy XML file relative to the global policy root directory -(/etc/xen/acm-security/policies). For example, +(@@XENDCONFDIR@@/acm-security/policies). For example, example.chwall_ste.client_v1 denotes the policy file example/chwall_ste/client_v1-security_policy.xml relative to the global policy root directory. @ 1.1 log @Initial revision @ text @d1 1 a1 1 $NetBSD: patch-ce,v 1.2 2009/01/13 13:48:33 cegger Exp $ @ 1.1.1.1 log @The Xen virtual machine monitor allows running several virtual machines on a single physical machine. The xentools41 package contains the tools to create, destroy and control the virtual machines. This package contains the tools for Xen 4.1.x Release notes: The Xen team is pleased to announce the release of Xen 4.1. The result of nearly 12 months of development, new features include: * A re-architected and improved XL toolstack replacing XM/XEND * Prototype credit2 scheduler designed for latency-sensitive workloads and very large systems. * CPU Pools for advanced partitioning. * Support for large systems (>255 processors) * Support for x86 Advanced Vector eXtension (AVX). * New Memory Access API enabling integration of 3rd party security solutions into Xen virtualized environments. * Many IOMMU fixes (both Intel VT-d IOMMU and AMD IOMMU). * Many toolstack and buildsystem fixes for Linux and NetBSD hosts. * Thirdparty libs: libvirt driver for libxl has been merged to upstream libvirt. * HVM guest PXE boot enhancements, replacing gPXE with iPXE. * Even better stability through our new automated regression tests. Detailed release notes, including a more extensive feature list: http://wiki.xen.org/xenwiki/Xen4.1 To download tarballs: http://xen.org/products/xen_source.html Or the Mercurial source repository (tag 'RELEASE-4.1.0'): http://xenbits.xen.org/xen-unstable.hg And the announcement on the Xen blog: http://blog.xen.org/index.php/2011/03/25/xen-4-1-releases/ Thanks to the many people who have contributed to this release! Regards, The Xen Team @ text @@