Searched hist:152286 (Results 1 - 5 of 5) sorted by relevance
/freebsd-10.1-release/etc/bluetooth/ | ||
H A D | hosts | diff 152286 Thu Nov 10 17:09:22 MST 2005 emax Start integrating Bluetooth into rc.d system. Introduce /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script to start/stop Bluetooth devices. It will be called from devd(8) in response to device arrival/departure events. It is also possible to call it by hand to start/stop particular device without unplugging it. Introduce generic way to set configuration parameters for Bluetooth devices. By default /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script has hardwired defaults compatible with old rc.bluetooth from /usr/share/netgraph/bluetooth/examples. These can be overridden using /etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file (system wide defaults). Finally, there could be another device specific override file located in /etc/bluetooth/$device.conf (where $device is ubt0, btccc0 etc.) The list of configuration parameters and their meaning described in the /etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file. Even though Bluetooth device configuration files are not shell scripts, they must follow basic sh(1) syntax. The bluetooth.device.conf(5) and handbook update will follow shortly. Inspired by: Panagiotis Astithas ( past at ebs dot gr ) Reviewed by: brooks, yar MFC after: 1 week |
H A D | protocols | diff 152286 Thu Nov 10 17:09:22 MST 2005 emax Start integrating Bluetooth into rc.d system. Introduce /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script to start/stop Bluetooth devices. It will be called from devd(8) in response to device arrival/departure events. It is also possible to call it by hand to start/stop particular device without unplugging it. Introduce generic way to set configuration parameters for Bluetooth devices. By default /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script has hardwired defaults compatible with old rc.bluetooth from /usr/share/netgraph/bluetooth/examples. These can be overridden using /etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file (system wide defaults). Finally, there could be another device specific override file located in /etc/bluetooth/$device.conf (where $device is ubt0, btccc0 etc.) The list of configuration parameters and their meaning described in the /etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file. Even though Bluetooth device configuration files are not shell scripts, they must follow basic sh(1) syntax. The bluetooth.device.conf(5) and handbook update will follow shortly. Inspired by: Panagiotis Astithas ( past at ebs dot gr ) Reviewed by: brooks, yar MFC after: 1 week |
/freebsd-10.1-release/etc/defaults/ | ||
H A D | bluetooth.device.conf | 152286 Thu Nov 10 17:09:22 MST 2005 emax Start integrating Bluetooth into rc.d system. Introduce /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script to start/stop Bluetooth devices. It will be called from devd(8) in response to device arrival/departure events. It is also possible to call it by hand to start/stop particular device without unplugging it. Introduce generic way to set configuration parameters for Bluetooth devices. By default /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script has hardwired defaults compatible with old rc.bluetooth from /usr/share/netgraph/bluetooth/examples. These can be overridden using /etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file (system wide defaults). Finally, there could be another device specific override file located in /etc/bluetooth/$device.conf (where $device is ubt0, btccc0 etc.) The list of configuration parameters and their meaning described in the /etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file. Even though Bluetooth device configuration files are not shell scripts, they must follow basic sh(1) syntax. The bluetooth.device.conf(5) and handbook update will follow shortly. Inspired by: Panagiotis Astithas ( past at ebs dot gr ) Reviewed by: brooks, yar MFC after: 1 week |
H A D | Makefile | diff 152286 Thu Nov 10 17:09:22 MST 2005 emax Start integrating Bluetooth into rc.d system. Introduce /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script to start/stop Bluetooth devices. It will be called from devd(8) in response to device arrival/departure events. It is also possible to call it by hand to start/stop particular device without unplugging it. Introduce generic way to set configuration parameters for Bluetooth devices. By default /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script has hardwired defaults compatible with old rc.bluetooth from /usr/share/netgraph/bluetooth/examples. These can be overridden using /etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file (system wide defaults). Finally, there could be another device specific override file located in /etc/bluetooth/$device.conf (where $device is ubt0, btccc0 etc.) The list of configuration parameters and their meaning described in the /etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file. Even though Bluetooth device configuration files are not shell scripts, they must follow basic sh(1) syntax. The bluetooth.device.conf(5) and handbook update will follow shortly. Inspired by: Panagiotis Astithas ( past at ebs dot gr ) Reviewed by: brooks, yar MFC after: 1 week |
/freebsd-10.1-release/etc/rc.d/ | ||
H A D | bluetooth | 152286 Thu Nov 10 17:09:22 MST 2005 emax Start integrating Bluetooth into rc.d system. Introduce /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script to start/stop Bluetooth devices. It will be called from devd(8) in response to device arrival/departure events. It is also possible to call it by hand to start/stop particular device without unplugging it. Introduce generic way to set configuration parameters for Bluetooth devices. By default /etc/rc.d/bluetooth script has hardwired defaults compatible with old rc.bluetooth from /usr/share/netgraph/bluetooth/examples. These can be overridden using /etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file (system wide defaults). Finally, there could be another device specific override file located in /etc/bluetooth/$device.conf (where $device is ubt0, btccc0 etc.) The list of configuration parameters and their meaning described in the /etc/defaults/bluetooth.device.conf file. Even though Bluetooth device configuration files are not shell scripts, they must follow basic sh(1) syntax. The bluetooth.device.conf(5) and handbook update will follow shortly. Inspired by: Panagiotis Astithas ( past at ebs dot gr ) Reviewed by: brooks, yar MFC after: 1 week |
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