o Added dd_pnpinfo, dd_location, dd_devflags, dd_flags and dd_state
o Copy/initialize these as necessary.
o Document the changes to the interface in devinfo.3.
and wide characters. These were already documented in the manual page,
with an entry mentioning that they were not implemented yet. The XSI
%S and %C synoyms have not been added.
or "POSIX", other European locales). Use __sgetc() and __sputc() where
possible to avoid a wasteful lock and unlock for each byte and to avoid
function call overhead.
get applications to move to the ISO C interfaces as well as have the
freedom to replace the rune interfaces with ones that support stateful
conversions some time in the future.
here in terms of mbrtowc(), wcrtomb(), and the single-byte I/O functions.
The rune I/O functions are about to become deprecated in favour of the
ones provided by ISO C90 Amd. 1 and C99.
under way to move the remnants of the a.out toolchain to ports. As the
comment in src/Makefile said, this stuff is deprecated and one should not
expect this to remain beyond 4.0-REL. It has already lasted WAY beyond
that.
Notable exceptions:
gcc - I have not touched the a.out generation stuff there.
ldd/ldconfig - still have some code to interface with a.out rtld.
old as/ld/etc - I have not removed these yet, pending their move to ports.
some includes - necessary for ldd/ldconfig for now.
Tested on: i386 (extensively), alpha
The new libpthread will provide POSIX threading support using KSE.
These files were previously repo-copied from src/lib/libc_r.
Reviewed by: deischen
Approved by: -arch
after adding __FBSDID().
Garbage-collected kvm_readswap(). This was once used by kvm_uread(), but
kvm_uread() now just reads /proc/<pid>/mem and procfs hopefully handles
swapped out pages.
next step is to allow > 1 to be allocated per process. This would give
multi-processor threads. (when the rest of the infrastructure is
in place)
While doing this I noticed libkvm and sys/kern/kern_proc.c:fill_kinfo_proc
are diverging more than they should.. corrective action needed soon.
KAME did the modification only to _dns_getaddrinfo(). However,
it is not sufficient, and res_queryN() should be modified, too.
So, I did same modification to res_queryN().
Obtained from: KAME
insure enough space is available for the response, or be prepared
to resize the buffer and retry as necessary.
Do the conservative thing and make sure enough space is available.
Reviewed by: silence on freebsd-audit
When it is called directly, gcc is smart enough to generate inline
code for it, which is why it wasn't noticed before that it was missing.
fabs() would probably better fit into libm, but it has traditionally been
in libc on FreeBSD, so there is probably software around that makes
assumptions about this by now.
of pointers to strings. These two arrays were fixed to the same size, but one
had an implicit zeroed trailer element, which was unused because the size was
used up by the ones before said zeroed trailer element. So the unused limb was
chopped off the over-sized-but-not-over-sized array, and everyone lived happily
ever after.
instead of on startup. This fixes binary compatibility of dynamically
linked binaries from before the signal code move.
Suggested by: wollman (a long time ago)
than 32 bits. It was trying to figure out things like the day of week
of when time_t is roughly 2^62 etc. Make a better guess for the starting
point for the binary search that works on both 32 and 64 bit types. I have
been using this for a while now.
bcopy(3) functions are prototyped in <strings.h> and not in
<string.h> anymore.
- Add a sentence about that to the respective HISTORY sections.
In the C source files:
- Include <string.h> or <strings.h> depending on what function
is to be compiled.
- Use ANSI-C function definitions.
.In string.h
with
.In strings.h
and adding a sentence to the HISTORY section.
- Use an ANSI-C function definition.
- Include <strings.h> instead of <string.h>.
- Apply style(9): Put a space after return keywords.
in the ANSI-C format.
- Change the code a bit to hopefully save some cycles.
I.e. (simplified) change
a = b + 1;
while (--b & 0x7)
/* ... */
to
a = b;
for (; b & 0x7; b--)
/* ... */
and
while (--a >= 0)
/* ... */
to
for (; a > 0; a--)
/* ... */
- Equip two function arguments of swab() with the 'restrict'
type qualifier in form of the '__restrict' macro. This is
specified by POSIX.1-2001.
<strings.h> as the associated header file.
The prototypes have been moved there from <string.h> because
POSIX.1-2001 said so.
- Conditionally include either <strings.h> or <string.h> based
on whether the [r]index() or str[r]chr() functions are
compiled, respectively.
- Style(9) tells us to
- put a space after the return keyword
- to check for a NUL character without using the ! operator.
- use NULL instead of (type *)NULL where the compiler knows
the type.
Apply these rules.
- Rather use ANSI-C function definitions than K&R ones.
- For index(3), correct second function argument's type; it was
declared to be a `const char' before and is now an `int'.
is <strings.h> and not <string.h> anymore.
- Tell the reader about this change in the HISTORY section.
- Switch to use an ANSI-C function definition.
- Include <strings.h> instead of <string.h> in the source file.
the prototypes for both functions are now in the <strings.h>
header, as required by IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.
- Add one sentence about that in the HISTORY section.
- Include <strings.h> in the source file to have the prototypes
in scope when the _ANSI_SOURCE macro is defined.
at file flags and replace it with functions that will avoid null
pointer checks.
MFC to be done by archie ;-)
PR: 42100
Reviewed by: archie, robert
MFC after: 3 days
file descriptor bit if poll() returns POLLERR, POLLHUP, or POLLNVAL.
Othewise, it's possible for select() to return successfully but
with no bits set.
Reviewed by: deischen
MFC after: 3 days
PR: bin/42175
on behalf of a thread, we should check the POLLERR, POLLHUP, and
POLLNVAL flags as well to wake up the thread in these cases.
Suggested by: deischen
MFC after: 3 days
to fail needlessly if a reverse DNS lookup of the IP address didn't
come up with a hostname. As a comment in the code clearly stated,
the "damn hostname" was looked up only for the purpose of netgroup
matching. But if that lookup failed, the function bailed out
immediately even though in many cases netgroup matching would not
be used.
This change marks the hostname as unknown but continues. Where
netgroup matching is performed, an unknown hostname is handled
conservatively. I.e., for "+@netgroup" (accept) entries an unknown
hostname never matches, and for "-@netgroup" (reject) entries an
unknown hostname always matches.
In the lines affected (only), I also fixed a few bogus casts. There
are others, and in fact this entire file would be a good candidate
for a cleanup sweep.
Reviewed by: imp (wearing his flourescent yellow Security Team cap)
MFC after: 2 days
called <machine/_types.h>.
o <machine/ansi.h> will continue to live so it can define MD clock
macros, which are only MD because of gratuitous differences between
architectures.
o Change all headers to make use of this. This mainly involves
changing:
#ifdef _BSD_FOO_T_
typedef _BSD_FOO_T_ foo_t;
#undef _BSD_FOO_T_
#endif
to:
#ifndef _FOO_T_DECLARED
typedef __foo_t foo_t;
#define _FOO_T_DECLARED
#endif
Concept by: bde
Reviewed by: jake, obrien
disklabel.h; broken originally by 1.87 of sys/disklabel.h, which
made the split between DKTYPENAMES and FSTYPENAMES.
Someone who knows disklabel.c: do we still need DKTYPENAMES to be
defined here now?
supplied buffer in case the size of it was equal to
the number of characters the converted address consumed.
The bug occurred when converting an AF_INET address.
- Remove the SPRINTF macro and use sprintf instead.
- Do not do string formatting using sprintf(3) and a
temporary buffer which is copied when the supplied
buffer provides enough space. Instead, use snprintf(3)
and the real destination buffer, thus avoid the copy.
Reported by: Stefan Farfeleder <e0026813@stud3.tuwien.ac.at> (1)
PR: misc/41289
definitions of the functions that convert strings to numbers
and are defined by IEEE Std 1003-1.2001.
- Use ANSI-C function definitions for all of the functions
mentioned above plus strtouq and strtoq.
- Update the prototypes in the manual pages.
public prototypes of setbuf(3) and setvbuf(3) using the
'__restrict' macro from <sys/cdefs.h> to be compliant with
IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.
- Replace the K&R with ANSI-C function definitions.
- Bring the manual page up-to-date.
strftime(3) for IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 compliance and remove
excessive usage of the 'const' qualifier that was neither
present in the prototype in the publice header, nor in the
local prototype just above the function definition.
- Replace the K&R function definition with a ANSI-C one.
- Update the prototype of strftime(3) in its manual page.
concatenation and copy functions using the '__restrict' macro.
This is to satisfy IEEE Std 1003-1.2001.
- Use ANSI-C function definitions.
- Add the 'restrict' keyword to the manual pages, too.
to the function definition of strxfrm(3) in form of our
'__restrict' macro.
- Use an ANSI-C function definition for strxfrm(3).
- Change the manual page accordingly.
of our __restrict macro to the prototypes and function
definitions of inet_pton and inet_ntop.
- Use ANSI-C function argument lists.
- Adjust the prototypes in the manual page.
to cause bugs when gcc is more aggressively optimising things.
There are still problems with dtoa mentioned in the PR - maybe
Dan could suggest a patch.
PR: 40209
Submitted by: Dan Lukes <dan@obluda.cz>
Approved by: bde
MFC after: 2 weeks
(unless someone tries to use libufs support functions without using
_fillout or _ctor to construct a uufsd.)
Obtained from: jmallett_libufs Perforce branch.
(I skipped those in contrib/, gnu/ and crypto/)
While I was at it, fixed a lot more found by ispell that I
could identify with certainty to be errors. All of these
were in comments or text, not in actual code.
Suggested by: bde
MFC after: 3 days
- Make getvfsbyname() take a struct xvfsconf *.
- Convert several consumers of getvfsbyname() to use struct xvfsconf.
- Correct the getvfsbyname.3 manpage.
- Create a new vfs.conflist sysctl to dump all the struct xvfsconf in the
kernel, and rewrite getvfsbyname() to use this instead of the weird
existing API.
- Convert some {set,get,end}vfsent() consumers to use the new vfs.conflist
sysctl.
- Convert a vfsload() call in nfsiod.c to kldload() and remove the useless
vfsisloadable() and endvfsent() calls.
- Add a warning printf() in vfs_sysctl() to tell people they are using
an old userland.
After these changes, it's possible to modify struct vfsconf without
breaking the binary compatibility. Please note that these changes don't
break this compatibility either.
When bp will have updated mount_smbfs(8) with the patch I sent him, there
will be no more consumers of the {set,get,end}vfsent(), vfsisloadable()
and vfsload() API, and I will promptly delete it.
#define EDOFUS 88 /* Programming error */
This can be used to signal error situations which indicate that the
program logic or assumptions is deficient.
label updates. Biba and MLS already supported this. This permits the
userland library to submit relative updates on MAC labels, rather
than submitting an entire label to replace the current label. This
also requires changes to the MAC modules, which are forthcoming.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
variables. Both symbols are set to the same value by the linker,
and _end symbol has less chances to clash with application defined
global symbols.
alpha, ia64 and sparc64 ports already use _end, i386 is now
consistent with them.
Reviewed by: bde
Approved by: obrien
Reported by: pirzyk
currently cached data. It allows a number of nice things, like: removing
fallback code from single locale loading, remove memory leak when LC_CTYPE
data loaded again and again, efficient cache use, not only for
setlocale(locale1); setlocale(locale1), but for setlocale(locale1);
setlocale("C"); setlocale(locale1) too (i.e. data file loaded only once).
towlower() and towupper() required by ISO C90 Amd. 1.
iswascii(), iswhexnumber(), iswideogram(), iswnumber(), iswphonogram(),
iswrune() and iswspecial() have also been implemented for consistency
with the BSD extensions in <ctype.h>.
2) Move incomplete check for / in locale name from env section to
loadlocale(), add check for "." and ".." too.
It allows to check any argument, not env only.
3) Redesing LOAD_CATEGORY macro to eliminate code duplication.
4) Try harder in fallback code: if old locale can't be restored,
load "C" locale
5) White space formatting, long lines, etc.
kernel access control.
Extensions to libc to provide basic MAC label manipulation facilities
for userland. These interface will be replaced in the next month
or two with more flexible interfaces, but provide sufficient support
to allow use of the Biba and MLS policies for user applications.
libc_r wrappers to follow.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
kernel access control.
Provide a library to manage user file system firewall-like rules
supported by the mac_bsdextended.ko security model. The kernel
module exports the current rule set using sysctl, and this
library provides a front end that includes support for retrieving
and setting rules, as well as printing and parsing them.
Note: as with other userland components, this is a WIP. However,
when used in combination with the soon-to-be-committed ugidfw,
it can actually be quite useful in multi-user environments to
allow the administrator to limit inter-user file operations without
resorting to heavier weight labeled security policies.
Obtained form: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
the PAM_ECHO_PASS option on-the-fly is a NOP (though it wasn't with the
old pam_get_pass(3) code). Instead, call pam_prompt(3) directly. This
actually simplifies the code a bit.
MFC after: 3 days
TCP clients. The problem was that a struct netconfig returned by
getnetconfigent() was being treated as a handle for __rpc_getconf(),
which certainly isn't right.
The tirpc-99 code uses __rpc_setconf("udp")/__rpc_getconf() to find
the IPv4 udp netconfig, but our implementation of these functions
seem happy to return IPv6 entries, so we can't use them. By reverting
to the old version, we are hard-coding the name of the udp4 netid.
Tracked down by: Bakul Shah <bakul@bitblocks.com>
This will make the behavior robuster if many addresses are added
after the size estimation of storage at the first sysctl.
Reviewed by: JINMEI Tatuya <jinmei@isl.rdc.toshiba.co.jp>
MFC after: 1 week
- use strlcpy.
- snprintf can return negative value, so cope with it.
- tweak interface index on interface locals (ff01::/16).
- removed unused macros.
- removed a macro that uses only once (in a trivial context).
- explicitly say goodbye to ENI_xxx.
- constify struct afd.
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 1 week
completeness and doesn't get us a working libc_r there because libc_r
uses setjmp() and setjmp() cannot be used for context switches on ia64
as-is (or sparc64). Rather than making setjmp/longjmp behave like
the *context() calls, it would be far better to make libc_r use *context()
directly which is what they are for.
Obtained from: marcel
info. This turned out to be rather useful on ia64 for tracking down
malloc/free problems.
Detect duplicate free()'s - otherwise these show up as a guard1 failure
and it looks like corruption instead of something simple like a second
free() where there shouldn't be.
Deal with libz using libc headers and not seeing the malloc/free stuff that
we provide in libstand. Do similar nastiness to what is done for bzlib.
Tested on: i386, ia64 (compile, run)
- add GLOB_NOMATCH return value and use it when we don't get a match
- rename GLOB_ABEND to GLOB_ABORTED and use it instead of returning 1
in some places
- add GLOB_NOESCAPE flag and retire GLOB_QUOTE to compatibility
section
Suggestions/advice on correct usage of POSIX defines: wollman
support creation times such as UFS2) to the value of the
modification time if the value of the modification time is older
than the current creation time. See utimes(2) for further details.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
Assembler macros are tidied up and made as similar as sanely possible.
The macros are translated into C (__inline static) functions for lint.
Declaration orders are made the same.
Declarations are all ISOfied and tidied up.
Comment contents have gratuitous diffs removed.
The net result is a bunch of crt1.c's that are 90% the same.
It may be possible to now encapsulate the differences in one
MD header, and have only one MI crt1.c file (although the macros
to do this may be ugly).
Helpful comments by: obrien, bde
Alpha tested by: des
i386-elf tested by: markm
It's silly to call sysctl() to get the value of _PATH_STDPATH from
<paths.h> when we can just use it directly. This greatly simplifies
the implementation. (This is also part of my grand scheme to get
rid of sysctl's `user' category, which should never have been created.)
Use strlcpy() instead of strncpy() as it has the exact semantics we want.
no punch_fw was used.
Fix another couple of bugs which prevented rules from being
installed properly.
On passing, use IPFW2 instead of NEW_IPFW to compile the new code,
and slightly simplify the instruction generation code.
file descriptors does not change upon dropping privilege, and include
a likely case of `setuid(non_superuser); exec(...);'.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
the build. It is here to compartmentalise functionality currently duplicated
in many notable programs in the base system. It currently handles block
reads and writes, as well as reading and writing of the filesystem superblock,
and the reading/lookup of inode data. It supports both UFS and UFS2. I
will be maintaining it, and porting programs to use it, however for now, it
is simply being built as part of world.
The ability to schedule multiple threads per process
(one one cpu) by making ALL system calls optionally asynchronous.
to come: ia64 and power-pc patches, patches for gdb, test program (in tools)
Reviewed by: Almost everyone who counts
(at various times, peter, jhb, matt, alfred, mini, bernd,
and a cast of thousands)
NOTE: this is still Beta code, and contains lots of debugging stuff.
expect slight instability in signals..
This code makes use of variable-size kernel representation of rules
(exactly the same concept of BPF instructions, as used in the BSDI's
firewall), which makes firewall operation a lot faster, and the
code more readable and easier to extend and debug.
The interface with the rest of the system is unchanged, as witnessed
by this commit. The only extra kernel files that I am touching
are if_fw.h and ip_dummynet.c, which is quite tied to ipfw. In
userland I only had to touch those programs which manipulate the
internal representation of firewall rules).
The code is almost entirely new (and I believe I have written the
vast majority of those sections which were taken from the former
ip_fw.c), so rather than modifying the old ip_fw.c I decided to
create a new file, sys/netinet/ip_fw2.c . Same for the user
interface, which is in sbin/ipfw/ipfw2.c (it still compiles to
/sbin/ipfw). The old files are still there, and will be removed
in due time.
I have not renamed the header file because it would have required
touching a one-line change to a number of kernel files.
In terms of user interface, the new "ipfw" is supposed to accepts
the old syntax for ipfw rules (and produce the same output with
"ipfw show". Only a couple of the old options (out of some 30 of
them) has not been implemented, but they will be soon.
On the other hand, the new code has some very powerful extensions.
First, you can put "or" connectives between match fields (and soon
also between options), and write things like
ipfw add allow ip from { 1.2.3.4/27 or 5.6.7.8/30 } 10-23,25,1024-3000 to any
This should make rulesets slightly more compact (and lines longer!),
by condensing 2 or more of the old rules into single ones.
Also, as an example of how easy the rules can be extended, I have
implemented an 'address set' match pattern, where you can specify
an IP address in a format like this:
10.20.30.0/26{18,44,33,22,9}
which will match the set of hosts listed in braces belonging to the
subnet 10.20.30.0/26 . The match is done using a bitmap, so it is
essentially a constant time operation requiring a handful of CPU
instructions (and a very small amount of memmory -- for a full /24
subnet, the instruction only consumes 40 bytes).
Again, in this commit I have focused on functionality and tried
to minimize changes to the other parts of the system. Some performance
improvement can be achieved with minor changes to the interface of
ip_fw_chk_t. This will be done later when this code is settled.
The code is meant to compile unmodified on RELENG_4 (once the
PACKET_TAG_* changes have been merged), for this reason
you will see #ifdef __FreeBSD_version in a couple of places.
This should minimize errors when (hopefully soon) it will be time
to do the MFC.
re-read from the stack mid copy. This may help mitigate the recent
Apache buffer overrun and future overruns of the sort.
Reviewed by: jdp
MFC after: 2 days
file descriptors in programs linked with libc_r with flags
other than the default ones. This kept, inter alia, freopen()
from working correctly when reopening standard streams.
reviewed by: deischen
PR: misc/39377
Use memcpy for all little-endian architectures, sys/kern/md5c.c indicates
this should be safe for all currently supported LE archs.
Change the Encode and Decode functions for other archs to use le32toh()
and htole32() functions instead of explicit byte shuffling.
On sparc64 this gives md5(1) about 8% speed increase.
filesystem expands the inode to 256 bytes to make space for 64-bit
block pointers. It also adds a file-creation time field, an ability
to use jumbo blocks per inode to allow extent like pointer density,
and space for extended attributes (up to twice the filesystem block
size worth of attributes, e.g., on a 16K filesystem, there is space
for 32K of attributes). UFS2 fully supports and runs existing UFS1
filesystems. New filesystems built using newfs can be built in either
UFS1 or UFS2 format using the -O option. In this commit UFS1 is
the default format, so if you want to build UFS2 format filesystems,
you must specify -O 2. This default will be changed to UFS2 when
UFS2 proves itself to be stable. In this commit the boot code for
reading UFS2 filesystems is not compiled (see /sys/boot/common/ufsread.c)
as there is insufficient space in the boot block. Once the size of the
boot block is increased, this code can be defined.
Things to note: the definition of SBSIZE has changed to SBLOCKSIZE.
The header file <ufs/ufs/dinode.h> must be included before
<ufs/ffs/fs.h> so as to get the definitions of ufs2_daddr_t and
ufs_lbn_t.
Still TODO:
Verify that the first level bootstraps work for all the architectures.
Convert the utility ffsinfo to understand UFS2 and test growfs.
Add support for the extended attribute storage. Update soft updates
to ensure integrity of extended attribute storage. Switch the
current extended attribute interfaces to use the extended attribute
storage. Add the extent like functionality (framework is there,
but is currently never used).
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
Reviewed by: Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@freebsd.org>
Fixed pow(x, y) when x is very close to -1.0 and y is a very large odd
integer. E.g., pow(-1.0 - pow(2.0, -52.0), 1.0 + pow(2.0, 52.0)) was
0.0 instead of being very close to -exp(1.0).
PR: 39236
Submitted by: Stephen L Moshier <steve@moshier.net>
e_powf.c:
Apply the same patch although it is just cosmetic because odd integers
large enough to cause the problem are too large to be precisely represented
as floats.
MFC after: 1 week
Since they were never documented and have never appeared in a FreeBSD
release, no repo-copy of the header is done. This removes namespace
pollution from <time.h>.
condense the redundant bits.
o Provide an example for using snprintf over sprintf. This may be
supplemented with an asprintf() example soon.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
a format string. This will later on be changed to a reference to the
FreeBSD Security Architecture after it has been committed.
PR: docs/39320
Sposnored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
rad_request_authenticator()
Returns the Request-Authenticator relevant to the most recently received
RADIUS response.
rad_server_secret()
Returns the Shared Secret relevant to the most recently received
RADIUS response.
Neither of these functions should be necessary, however, the
MS-MPPE-Recv-Key and MS-MPPE-Send-Key Microsoft Vendor Specific
attributes are supplied in a mangled (encrypted) format, requiring
this information to demangle.
It's not clear whether these functions should be replaced with a
rad_demangle() function or whether these attributes are one-offs.
Sponsored by: Monzoon
Hopefully, now it is more clear that the memory referenced by the
ptr argument of realloc(ptr,size) is freed and only the return value
of realloc() points to a valid memory area upon successful completion.
Submitted by: Martin Faxer <gmh003532@brfmasthugget.se>
which contains the socket descriptor, the input buffer and (yet unused)
SSL state variables. This has the neat side effect of greatly improving
reentrance (though we're not *quite* there yet) and opening the door to
HTTP connection caching.
This commit is inspired by email conversations with and patches from
Henry Whincup <henry@techiebod.com> last fall.
__dlfunc_t to dlfunc_t to match what I have proposed to the Austin
Group. (This also makes it easier for applications to store these
values before they decide what to do with them, e.g., in a wrapper
function.)
Add new dlfunc() interface, which is a version of dlsym() with a
return type that can be cast to a function pointer without turning
your computer into a frog.
Reviewed by: freebsd-standards
- float ynf(int n, float x) /* wrapper ynf */
+float
+ynf(int n, float x) /* wrapper ynf */
This is because the __STDC__ stuff was indented.
Reviewed by: md5
The uuidgen command, by means of the uuidgen syscall, generates one
or more Universally Unique Identifiers compatible with OSF/DCE 1.1
version 1 UUIDs.
From the Perforce logs (change 11995):
Round of cleanups:
o Give uuidgen() the correct prototype in syscalls.master
o Define struct uuid according to DCE 1.1 in sys/uuid.h
o Use struct uuid instead of uuid_t. The latter is defined
in sys/uuid.h but should not be used in kernel land.
o Add snprintf_uuid(), printf_uuid() and sbuf_printf_uuid()
to kern_uuid.c for use in the kernel (currently geom_gpt.c).
o Rename the non-standard struct uuid in kern/kern_uuid.c
to struct uuid_private and give it a slightly better definition
for better byte-order handling. See below.
o In sys/gpt.h, fix the broken uuid definitions to match the now
compliant struct uuid definition. See below.
o In usr.bin/uuidgen/uuidgen.c catch up with struct uuid change.
A note about byte-order:
The standard failed to provide a non-conflicting and
unambiguous definition for the binary representation. My initial
implementation always wrote the timestamp as a 64-bit little-endian
(2s-complement) integral. The clock sequence was always written
as a 16-bit big-endian (2s-complement) integral. After a good
nights sleep and couple of Pan Galactic Gargle Blasters (not
necessarily in that order :-) I reread the spec and came to the
conclusion that the time fields are always written in the native
by order, provided the the low, mid and hi chopping still occurs.
The spec mentions that you "might need to swap bytes if you talk
to a machine that has a different byte-order". The clock sequence
is always written in big-endian order (as is the IEEE 802 address)
because its division is resulting in bytes, making the ordering
unambiguous.
- Remove redundant "? :" construct.
style(9):
- Place a space after return statements.
- Compare pointers to NULL.
- Do not use ! to compare a character to nul.
and pthread_resume_all_np(). These suspend and resume all threads except
the current thread, respectively. The existing functions pthread_single_np()
and pthread_multi_np(), which formerly had no effect, now exhibit the same
behaviour and pthread_suspend_all_np() and pthread_resume_all_np(). These
functions have been added mostly for the native java port.
Don't allow the uthread kernel pipe to use the same descriptors as
stdio. Mostily submitted by Oswald Buddenhagen <ossi@kde.org>.
Correct some minor style nits.
obscene, or - as they say in New York - sophisticated, add pam_echo(8) and
pam_exec(8) to our ever-lengthening roster of PAM modules.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs.
- fix a potential overrun made worse by rev 1.5 of camlib.h
- change strncpy() and strcpy() calls to strlcpy()
- use sizeof(string[]) instead of STRING_LEN to avoid future problems
- get rid of an unused variable
Thanks to BDE for pointing out some of the problems.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Get rid of the INTERNALSTATICLIB knob and just use plain INTERNALLIB.
INTERNALLIB now means to build static library only and don't install
anything. Added a NOINSTALLLIB knob for libpam/modules. To not
build any library at all, just do not set LIB.
via INCS. Implemented INCSLINKS (equivalent to SYMLINKS) to
handle symlinking include files. Allow for multiple groups of
include files to be installed, with the powerful INCSGROUPS knob.
Documentation to follow.
Added standard `includes' and `incsinstall' targets, use them
in Makefile.inc1. Headers from the following makefiles were
not installed before (during `includes' in Makefile.inc1):
kerberos5/lib/libtelnet/Makefile
lib/libbz2/Makefile
lib/libdevinfo/Makefile
lib/libform/Makefile
lib/libisc/Makefile
lib/libmenu/Makefile
lib/libmilter/Makefile
lib/libpanel/Makefile
Replaced all `beforeinstall' targets for installing includes
with the INCS stuff.
Renamed INCDIR to INCSDIR, for consistency with FILES and SCRIPTS,
and for compatibility with NetBSD. Similarly for INCOWN, INCGRP,
and INCMODE.
Consistently use INCLUDEDIR instead of /usr/include.
gnu/lib/libstdc++/Makefile and gnu/lib/libsupc++/Makefile changes
were only lightly tested due to the missing contrib/libstdc++-v3.
I fully tested the pre-WIP_GCC31 version of this patch with the
contrib/libstdc++.295 stuff.
These changes have been tested on i386 with the -DNO_WERROR "make
world" and "make release".
a floating point instruction into a 6-bit register number for
double and quad arguments.
Make use of the new INSFPdq_RN macro where apporpriate; this
is required for correctly handling the "high" fp registers
(>= %f32).
Fix a number of bugs related to the handling of the high registers
which were caused by using __fpu_[gs]etreg() where __fpu_[gs]etreg64()
should be used (the former can only access the low, single-precision,
registers).
Submitted by: tmm
startup code rather than a static C++ object since c++ seems to be broken.
This doesn't seem to work for staticically linked program just yet, I'll
give that some more work when I get a chance.
except to generate spurious warnings about a system header <sys/param.h>
having some inline functions (the bswap family). This backs out the main
part of rev.1.5 (which was the only part left). The problem fixed by
rev.1.5 of the Makefile went away in rev.1.5 of ../common/crtbegin.c
when the references to do_ctors() and do_dtors() in the latter were moved
from inline asm to C code.
This leaves the problem that implementation details cause warnings.
Discussed with: jdp
on long double, which are not implemented in hardware on any UltraSPARC
chip that I know of. This just calls into the existing floating point
emulator, which is still needed to emulate other floating point operations
in certain conditions. Without this gcc has to generate the quad floating
point instructions directly, which sometimes causes internal compiler
errors.
Reviewed by: tmm
using these to load long doubles, but they aren't implemented in hardware
on (at least) UltraSPARC I and II machines.
Emulate popc in the user trap handler as well.
Re-arrange slightly to make support functions more accessible.
Reviewed by: tmm
- New length modifiers: hh, j, ll, t, z.
Still to do:
- %C, %S, %lc, %ls (wide character support)
- %a/%A (exact hex representation of floating-point numbers)
Removed old compatability equivalents:
- %D for %ld, %O for %lo, %X for %lx, %E and %F for %le & %lf (these
were buggy anyway, since they should have represented %Le & %Lf).
- %[unknown uppercase char] for %ld, %[unknown lowercase char] for %d
named by its argument and use ttyslot(3) instead to determine what slot to
use. The problem is that sshd(8) calls pam_open_session(3) before forking
the child (as it should), at which point it does not have a controlling
terminal. Also, ttyslot(3) is very crude as it assumes fd 0, 1 or 2 refers
to the controlling terminal, which is usually (but not always) the case.
Instead of using ttyslot(3) to determine the slot number, look up the
specified tty in /etc/ttys ourselves (this is what ttyslot(3) does anyway).
(perforce change 9969)
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
of this code. I very much doubt that "the FreeBSD way" really means "make
it as unreadable and unmaintable as possible", and I would like Makefile
style (which is not currently documented anywhere except in the minds of
bde and ru) to be discussed and agreed upon in the appropriate forum
before any further commits of this kind happen.
of makefiles: bsd.own.mk was included before ../Makefile.inc,
effectively hiding the (wrong) LIBCOMPATDIR assignment here.
share/mk/sys.mk,v 1.60 (and assorted share/mk fixes) fixed
this order, revealed this bug, and broke "make release" and
"make installworld" with either of -DCOMPAT1X or -DCOMPAT2?.
Reported by: jhay
them to point at static strings that contain the default paths. This
makes 'vipw -d' work again (I broke it in rev 1.21; apologies for taking
so long to fix it.)
Spotted by: Olivier Houchard <doginou@cognet.ci0.org>
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
Satoshi NIIMI-san kindly explained that EUC does not limit the byte length to
any arbitrary number.
We now set the limit to the maximum octet length of the codeset and it is
locale-specific.
Submitted by: Yong-Jhen Hong <winard@ms11.url.com.tw>
- add __unused where appropriate
- PAM_RETURN -> return since OpenPAM already logs the return value.
- make PAM_LOG use openpam_log()
- make PAM_VERBOSE_ERROR use openpam_get_option() and check flags
for PAM_SILENT
- remove dummy functions since OpenPAM handles missing service
functions
- fix various warnings
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
I've looked for this example for a long time, to demonstrate
some people why it's a really BAD idea to use ${.OBJDIR}
instead of ".". I hope these people are reading this. :-)
Approved by: des
-lroken is an installable library, there's no need to give an
explicit path to it. In any case, -L paths should be specified
in LDFLAGS if needed.
Approved by: des
Change case of POLLNVAL as an error.
Remove POLLHUP and POLLERR from one case, their place is most likely
amongst read events.
PR: 33723
Submitted by: Alexander Litvin <archer@whichever.org>
Reviewed by: deischen [Provided a small change to the PR patch as well]
MFC after: 4 weeks
and add some compatibility defines. Add fields for ins and locals to
struct reg also for the same reason; these aren't filled in yet because
getting at those registers sucks and I'd rather not save them in the
trapframe just for this. Reorder struct reg to be ABI compatible as
well. Add needed include of machine/emul.h.
This gets pmdb (poor man's debugger) from OpenBSD mostly compiling but it
doesn't work yet :(
login_getcapstr(3). Also fix a longer-standing bug (login_close(3)
frees the string returned by login_getcapstr(3)) by reorganizing the
code a little, and use login_getpwclass(3) instead of login_getclass(3)
if we already have a struct pwd.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
processes match the given criteria. Since revision 1.60 of malloc.c,
malloc() and friends return an invalid pointer when given a size of 0.
kvm_getprocs() uses sysctl() with a NULL oldp argument to get an
initial size, but does not check whether it's 0 before passing it to
realloc() (via _kvm_realloc()). Before the aforementioned malloc()
change, this resulted in a minimal allocation made and a valid poitner
returned, but now results in an invalid, but non-NULL, pointer being
returned. When this is passed to sysctl(), the latter returns EFAULT
(as it should).
Andrew Korty's pam_ssh. The most notable difference is that this uses
commas rather than colons to separate items in the "keyfiles" option.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
Also, make an internal _getprogname() that is used only inside
libc. For libc, getprogname(3) is a weak symbol in case a
function of the same name is defined in userland.
# This appears to not break X11, but I'm having problems compiling the
# glide part of the server with or without this patch, so I can't tell
# for sure.
chpass(8). The relations between libc, libpam, chpass, passwd, and
vipw are a mess and probably should be cleaned up.
Submitted by: Peter Pentchev <roam@ringlet.net>
modules split across several physical medias. Following is how it works:
The splitfs code, when asked to open "foo" looks for a file "foo.split"
which is a text file containing a list of filenames and media names, e.g.
foo.aa "Kernel floppy 1"
foo.ab "Kernel floppy 2"
foo.ac "Kernel and modules floppy"
For each file segment, the process is:
- try to open the file
- prompt "Insert the disk labelled <whatever> and press any key..."
- try to open the file
- return error if file could not be located
RE team is free to use this feature in the upcoming 5.0-DP1.
Reviewed by: msmith, dcs
over someone else's fixes; this is at least offensive. If you
have problems doing a proper merge, we are here, your fellow
committers. :-(
Reapply markup fixes from revision 1.2 and fix some more. Also
fix the $OpenBSD$ tag.
support for fcmp and fcmpe instructions with a condition code
specification other than %fcc0.
This (primarily the first part) seems to fix a lot of problems that
people were seeing, e.g. perl and gawk failures.
Reported and analyzed by: wollman
gcc emits the deprecated sparc v8 instructions that use this register
when optimizing for UltraSparc machines because they are apparetly
faster then their v9 counterpars there.
o In i386's <machine/endian.h>, macros have some advantages over
inlines, so change some inlines to macros.
o In i386's <machine/endian.h>, ungarbage collect word_swap_int()
(previously __uint16_swap_uint32), it has some uses on i386's with
PDP endianness.
Submitted by: bde
o Move a comment up in <machine/endian.h> that was accidentially moved
down a few revisions ago.
o Reenable userland's use of optimized inline-asm versions of
byteorder(3) functions.
o Fix ordering of prototypes vs. redefinition of byteorder(3)
functions, so that the non-GCC (libc asm) case has proper
prototypes.
o Add proper prototypes for byteorder(3) functions in <sys/param.h>.
o Prevent redundant duplicate prototypes by making use of the
_BYTEORDER_PROTOTYPED define.
o Move the bswap16(), bswap32(), bswap64() C functions into MD space
for platforms in which asm versions don't exist. This significantly
reduces the complexity of some things at the cost of duplicate code.
Reviewed by: bde
to the console in a final attempt to log something. Make this final
attempt non-blocking so that a blocking console doesn't end up
blocking process which attempt to syslog something.
In particular, this means you should be able to su and fix the
problem if the console becomes blocking.
MFC after: 3 weeks
implementation did not match our manpage description (i.e., it could
return NULL). I mistakenly thought we were still using getpass.c
because, for some reason, CVS never removed it from the tree.
Pointy hat received from: alfred
Kick in the groin to: CVS
applications linked with Linux-PAM will still work.
Remove pam_get_pass(); OpenPAM has pam_get_authtok().
Remove pam_prompt(); OpenPAM has pam_{,v}{error,info,prompt}().
Remove pam_set_item(3) man page as OpenPAM has its own.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
be serialized. A mutex is used to protect the critical regions.
sbrk() and brk() are not thread safe. Replace use of sbrk() with
a call to malloc to avoid race when one thread calls atexit
while another thread calls malloc.
Reviewed by: deischen
device drivers for bus system with other endinesses than the CPU (using
interfaces compatible to NetBSD):
- bwap16() and bswap32(). These have optimized implementations on some
architectures; for those that don't, there exist generic implementations.
- macros to convert from a certain byte order to host byte order and vice
versa, using a naming scheme like le16toh(), htole16().
These are implemented using the bswap functions.
- stream bus space access functions, which do not perform a byte order
conversion (while the normal access functions would if the bus endianess
differs from the CPU endianess).
htons(), htonl(), ntohs() and ntohl() are implemented using the new
functions above for kernel usage. None of the above interfaces is currently
exported to user land.
Make use of the new functions in a few places where local implementations
of the same functionality existed.
Reviewed by: mike, bde
Tested on alpha by: mike
spares (the size of the field was changed from u_short to u_int to
reflect what it really ends up being). Accordingly, change users of
xucred to set and check this field as appropriate. In the kernel,
this is being done inside the new cru2x() routine which takes a
`struct ucred' and fills out a `struct xucred' according to the
former. This also has the pleasant sideaffect of removing some
duplicate code.
Reviewed by: rwatson
deprecated in favor of the POSIX-defined lowercase variants.
o Change all occurrences of NTOHL() and associated marcros in the
source tree to use the lowercase function variants.
o Add missing license bits to sparc64's <machine/endian.h>.
Approved by: jake
o Clean up <machine/endian.h> files.
o Remove unused __uint16_swap_uint32() from i386's <machine/endian.h>.
o Remove prototypes for non-existent bswapXX() functions.
o Include <machine/endian.h> in <arpa/inet.h> to define the
POSIX-required ntohl() family of functions.
o Do similar things to expose the ntohl() family in libstand, <netinet/in.h>,
and <sys/param.h>.
o Prepend underscores to the ntohl() family to help deal with
complexities associated with having MD (asm and inline) versions, and
having to prevent exposure of these functions in other headers that
happen to make use of endian-specific defines.
o Create weak aliases to the canonical function name to help deal with
third-party software forgetting to include an appropriate header.
o Remove some now unneeded pollution from <sys/types.h>.
o Add missing <arpa/inet.h> includes in userland.
Tested on: alpha, i386
Reviewed by: bde, jake, tmm
- missing whitespace
- strange version of warn() built out of warnx() + strerror(). Just use
warn().
- conversion of just one of the two perror()'s to warn*()
Actually use _warn() instead of _warn(), to keep up with namespace-
unpollution for warn().
I'll know as soon as I re-import it and compile it.. :-)
There is no longer a 'pri' strict in the proc struct.
the fields are scattered between the ksegrp and thread in question.
of an alternate signal stack for handling signals. Let the kernel
send signals on the stack of the current thread and teach the threads
signal handler how to deliver signals to the current thread if it
needs to. Also, always store a threads context as a jmp_buf. Eventually
this will change to be a ucontext_t or mcontext_t.
Other small nits. Use struct pthread * instead of pthread_t in internal
library routines. The threads code wants struct pthread *, and pthread_t
doesn't necessarily have to be the same.
Reviewed by: jasone
dependencies in the correct place, record the fact that -lssh
depends on -lcrypto and -lz.
Removed false dependencies on -lz (except ssh(1) and sshd(8)).
Removed false dependencies on -lcrypto and -lutil for scp(1).
Reviewed by: markm
Make a slight change so that libkvm reaches the main thread via the
linked list, rather than assuming it is in the proc structure. Both
conditions are true in -current but only the first will be true in
the KSE M3 world.
change prototypes to be the same as in the original sun tirpc code.
Remove ()P macro in a file where the mayority had ()P already removed.
Add them if the mayority use ()P macros.
Submitted by: mbr
Requested by: bde
server handle (for reuse or whatever). We just return now a handle
connected to the local rpcbind.
Do not try to call checkcache, if host = NULL;
Submitted by: mbr
In NetBSD, Solaris, xprt->xp_p2 pointed directly to the credentials,
in FreeBSD xprt->xp_verf.oa_base was a pointer to a struct cmessage,
which is defined as follow:
struct cmessage {
struct cmsghdr cmsg;
struct cmsgcred cmcred;
};
The credentials were submitted the right way and xprt->xp_p2 pointed to them.
But cb_verf.oa_flavor was still empty. There was an assignment missing
in svc_recv() in svc_vc.c:
msg->rm_call.cb_verf.oa_flavor = AUTH_UNIX;
Also
+ if (addr.ss_family == AF_LOCAL) {
+ xprt->xp_raddr = *(struct sockaddr_in *)xprt->xp_rtaddr.buf;
+ xprt->xp_addrlen = sizeof (struct sockaddr_in);
+ }
was missing. But the first seems not to be needed:
I guess in rpc.yppasswdd there was a typo:
- transp>xp_verf.oa_flavor != AUTH_UNIX) {
+ rqstp->rq_cred.oa_flavor != AUTH_UNIX) {
This little fix does fix the breakage in rpc.yppasswdd :-)
+ if (msg.msg_controllen == 0 ||
+ (msg.msg_flags & MSG_CTRUNC) != 0)
+ return (-1);
We cannot set the cb_verf.oa_length in svc_recv() of svc_vc.c,
the credentials get overwritten then, and that's bad.
Submitted by: mbr
were removed and replaced them with clnt_tp_create, now the af_local
support is fixed.
I also removed the hack how rpcinfo contacted rpcbind, now we can
relay on clnt_tp_create create the client-handle for us. Only
rpcbind itself needs a hardcoded socket-path.
Submitted by: mbr
Also add $FreeBSD
is an internal Linux-PAM header which shouldn't be used outside Linux-PAM
itself, and has absolutely zero effect on pam_ftp.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
MFC after: 1 week
in conditional code that happens not to be compiled, and because gcc
doesn't complain garbage after #endif by default.
Fixed some style bugs in previous commit, 1.8 and 1.1.
commit.
Fixed related style bugs:
basename.c: misplaced '#if 0'
dirname.c: misplaced '#if 0'
getgrent.c: missing '#if 0', and tab lossage in vendor id (the previous
commit fixed the complete corruption of the vendor id but
lost a tab)
getpwent.c: missing '#if 0'
it a little and try to make it more resilient to various possible failure
conditions. Change the man page accordingly, and take advantage of this
opportunity to simplify its language.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
doesn't really make any difference, except it matches wtmp(5) better.
Don't do anything in pam_sm_close_session(); init(8) will take care of
utmp and wtmp when the tty is released. Clearing them here would make it
possible to create a ghost session by logging in, running 'login -f $USER'
and exiting the subshell.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs (but the bugs are all mine)
and sbrk's prototype from char *sbrk(int) to void *sbrk(intptr_t).
This makes us more consistant with NetBSD and standards which include
these functions. Bruce pointed out that ptrdiff_t would probably
have been better than intptr_t, but this doesn't match other
implimentations.
Also remove local declarations of sbrk and unnecessary casting.
PR: 32296
Tested by: Harti Brandt <brandt@fokus.gmd.de>
MFC after: 1 month
either PAM_RHOST or PAM_TTY against /etc/login.access.o
This uncovers a problem with PAM_RHOST, in that if we always set it, there
is no way to distinguish between a user logging in locally and a user
logging in using 'ssh localhost'. This will be fixed by first making sure
that all PAM modules can handle PAM_RHOST being unset (which is currently
not the case), and then modifying su(1) and login(1) to not set it for
local logins.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
- Spam /usr/lib some more by making libssh a standard library.
- Tweak ${LIBPAM} and ${MINUSLPAM}.
- Garbage collect unused libssh_pic.a.
- Add fake -lz dependency to secure/ makefiles needed for
dynamic linkage with -lssh.
Reviewed by: des, markm
Approved by: markm
argument to kvm_open() and kvm_openfiles() as unused.
BSD didn't read swap since kvm.c CSRG revision 5.21 (u-area is pageable
under new VM. no need to read from swap.)
The old !NEWVM code was removed in CSRG revision 5.23 (~ten years ago).
- Ignore the {try,use}_first_pass options by clearing PAM_AUTHTOK before
challenging the user. These options are meaningless for pam_opie(8)
since the user can't possibly know the right response before she sees
the challenge.
- Introduce the no_fake_prompts option. If this option is set, pam_opie(8)
will fail - rather than present a bogus challenge - if the target user
does not have an OPIE key. With this option, users who haven't set up
OPIE won't have to wonder what that "weird otp-md5 s**t" means :)
Reviewed by: ache, markm
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
time_to_xxx() and xxx_to_time() functions. e.g. _time_to_xxx()
instead of time_to_xxx(), to make it more obvious that these are
stopgap functions & placemarkers and not meant to create a defacto
standard. They will eventually be replaced when a real standard
comes out of committee.
is correct but less than useful. There is some uncertainty about whether
isblank() is in C99, but it is certainly not in C90. It just conforms
to C89 because it is a conforming extension.
functions are defined in SUSv2 and the latest POSIX spec.
Thanks to Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely8.cicely.de> for helping debug my
alpha assembly.
Approved by: -arch
1. ctype.h defines digittoint(), isnumber() and ishexnmber(), yet
they are not documented in any of the manpages.
2. The ctype manpage references a non-existent manpage for
digittoint().
3. The isascii() manpage claims it is standards compliant, when
it isn't.
4. isblank() claims it is _not_ standards compliant, when it
is.
Fix by including the appropriate .Nm entries, and with a new digittoint.3
page.
PR: docs/26451
Submitted by: Adrian Filipi-Martin <adrian@ubergeeks.com>
alpha these bugs didn't cause any problems because it was little endian,
but on sparc64, we ended up with garbage for the IP address when we tried
to contact the server. (Usually 3.253.0.0)
Not objected to by: wpaul
argument. Leave a compatibility shim for Delete_Chunk().
Implement DELCHUNK_RECOVER flag so sysinstall can ask libdisk
to recover space when deleting a chunk.
data without confirming the connection by issuing a recvmsg(2) [...]".
There's no such code in the kernel.
PR: 26861
Submitted by: Richard A Steenbergen <ras@e-gerbil.net>,
Tom Rhodes <darklogik@pittgoth.com>
the first revision of strcpy(3)'s section is included, but should be
removed as the Security Architecture document is committed and
completed.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
at first and try to set an accept_filter(9) on it only after that.
Also document errno value that will be set if installing the
filter on a non-listening socket.
This will be trimmed as the FreeBSD Security Architecture document
is fleshed out and committed.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
Add support for handling floating point disabled traps mostly in userland
for the simple single threaded case. Not yet enabled by default.
Implement __sparc_utrap_install as specified by the sparc abi.
- Don't connect datagram socket if RES_INSECURE1.
- Needed to implement IPv6 anycast UDP DNS queries as documented in
<draft-ietf-ipngwg-dns-discovery-03.txt>.
Obtained from: KAME
According to C99:
"The functions atof, atoi, atol, and atoll need not
affect the value of the integer expression errno on an
error. If the value of the result cannot be represented,
the behavior is undefined."
o Document the following capabilities: CAP_NET_ADMIN, CAP_SYS_RAWIO,
CAP_SYS_ADMIN, and CAP_SYS_TTY_CONFIG.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
return address when modifying a jmp_buf to create a new thread context.
Also set t12 with the return address.
This should fix libc_r on alpha.
With much detective work by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
calls.
This change allows libc_r to create thread contexts with a different
stack and return address.
With much detective work by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
LC_MESSAGES related data was installed to <locale>/LC_MESSAGES file.
Now it go to <locale>/LC_MESSAGES/SYS_LC_MESSAGES file. LC_MESSAGES
directory is supposed to be storage of message catalogs of userland tools.
This should allow us to avoid many potential problems with future
libintl related functionality introduction.
Thanks for useful suggestions about correct way how to replace plain
files with directories at installworld stage to: Ruslan Ermilov <ru>
allows us to supply our own value for this, overriding the
default /usr/local/etc/nsmb.conf, which is not appropriate for
base system configuration files.
the target thread of the join operation. This allows the cancelled
thread to detach the target thread in its cancellation handler.
This bug was found by Butenhof's cancel_subcontract test.
Reviewed by: jasone
It tries to comply with the SCD 2.4.1 (and thus Sparc 64-bit psABI).
This is an amalgamation of the FreeBSD Alpha crt1.c and the BSD/OS Sparc
crt0.c (which the copyright reflects).
In original version grouping was hardcoded. It assumed that thousands
separator should be inserted to separate each 3 numbers. I.e. grouping
string "\003" was assumed for all cases. In correct case (per POSIX)
vfprintf should respect locale defined non-monetary (LC_NUMERIC
category) grouping sequence.
Also simplify thousands_sep handling.
o) Since we unwrap the sendfile syscall, check the return value of
writev(2) to see if it didn't complete all the data.
Previously if only a partial writev() succeeded, it would proceed
to sendfile(2) even though the headers weren't completely sent.
o) Properly adjust the "bytes to send" to take into account sendfile(2)'s
behaviour of counting the headers against the bytes to be transfered
from the file.
o) Correct the problem where EAGAIN was being returned from _sys_sendfile(2)
however the wrapper didn't update the 'sent bytes' parameter to take into
account for it. This is because sendfile can return EAGAIN even though
it has actually transfered data.
Special thanks to Justin Erenkrantz <jerenkrantz@apache.org> for bringing
this to my attention and giving an excellent way to reproduce the problem.
PR: kern/32684
MFC After: 1 week
driver in libstand. This specifically does not expand or truncate files
since the filesystem may be dirty or inconsistent.
PR: kern/32389
Submitted by: Jonathan Mini <mini@haikugeek.com>
Sponsored by: ClickArray, Inc.
of the recent WARNS commits. The idea is:
1) FreeBSD id tags should follow vendor tags.
2) Vendor tags should not be compiled (though copyrights probably should).
3) There should be no blank line between including cdefs and __FBSDIF.
sysinstall will automatically expand the previous partition to take up
the freed up space. So you can 'D'elete /home and /usr will get the
combined space, or you can 'D'elete /tmp and /var will get the combined space.
This gives the user, developer, or lay person a huge amount of flexibility
in constructing partitions from an 'A'uto base. It takes only 3 or 4
keystrokes to achieve virtually any combination of having or not having
a /tmp and/or /home after doing an 'A'uto create.
Change 'A'uto creation of /var/tmp to 'A'uto creation /tmp, which should
be less controversial.
MFC after: 6 days
more careful about reporting truncation with ERANGE in strerror_r.
Set errno to EINVAL for "unknown" errnum in strerror as required
by P1003.1-200x Draft June 14, 2001.
More carefully document the handling of strerrbuf when errors
(ERANGE, EINVAL) are encountered in strerror_r.
Reviewed by: bde (ongoing discussion)
dump core if invoked with an input file that looks like a password file
but isn't (e.g. /etc/group).
PR: 32378
Submitted by: Maxim Konovalov <maxim@macomnet.ru>
MFC after: 1 week
This API is supported in SVR4.0MP, Solaris, Linux, AIX and Tru64 Unix.
PR: bin/27489
Submitted by: Arun Sharma <arun@sharma-home.net>
Reviewed by: bde (prior version)
o Hide nonstandard functions and types in <netinet/in.h> when
_POSIX_SOURCE is defined.
o Add some missing types (required by POSIX.1-200x) to <netinet/in.h>.
o Restore vendor ID from Rev 1.1 in <netinet/in.h> and make use of new
__FBSDID() macro.
o Fix some miscellaneous issues in <arpa/inet.h>.
o Correct final argument for the inet_ntop() function (POSIX.1-200x).
o Get rid of the namespace pollution from <sys/types.h> in
<arpa/inet.h>.
Reviewed by: fenner
Partially submitted by: bde
removing it from our source tree in order to have one version
of strtod() for all arches. netbsd_strtod.c still left in source
tree until alpha folks make sure that our native strtod() works
as well as NetBSD's one.
Reviewed by: peter, bde (some time ago)
- New length modifiers: hh, j, t, z.
- New flag: '. Note that %'f is not yet implemented.
- Use "inf"/"nan" for efg formats, "INF"/"NAN" for EFG formats.
- Implemented %q in terms of %ll; if "quad_t" is not "long long"
%q will break.
Still to do:
- %C, %S, %lc, %ls (wide character support)
- %'f (thousands in integer portion of %f)
- %a/%A (exact hex representation of floating-point numbers)
Garrett Wollman wrote the first version of the vfprintf.c update;
Mike Barcroft wrote the first version of the printf.3 changes.
STANDARDS section of the page. Add one remark there about inet_pton(3)
only understanding decimal values (in contrast to inet_aton(3) and
friends who are happy with 0ac.020.25 for 172.16.0.25).
Caught by: ru
MFC after: 2 days
The definition of character class digit requires that only ten characters
-the ones defining digits- can be specified; alternate digits (for
example, Hindi or Kanji) cannot be specified here. However, the encoding
may vary if an implementation supports more than one encoding.
The definition of character class xdigit requires that the characters
included in character class digit are included here also and allows for
different symbols for the hexadecimal digits 10 through 15.
the return code and errno instead. Those warnings did not do any good
for daemonized users of initgroups(3), and confused cvs clients that
communicated with non-root cvs pserver.
The committed fix differs from the one suggested in the PR, and was
submitted by ru.
PR: 15421
Approved by: markm
Discussed on: -stable, -current at various times
for passive mode data connections (PASV/EPSV -> 227/229). Well,
the actual punching happens a bit later, when the aliasing link
becomes fully specified.
Prodded by: Danny Carroll <dannycarroll@hotmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
offsets don't work. It should really be documented that the returned
pointer can be in the middle of a fully-valid page when the offset
is not page-aligned, but I couldn't come up with suitable wording.
PR: kern/22754
extattr namespace routines to the libc/posix1e directory. While
the extattr calls are not strictly POSIX.1e, POSIX.1e wasn't
strictly ever approved, so I think that's OK.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
is not defined in the capability type list. Provide a definition for
'bool', if a slightly less than elegant one. Note that this definition
does not include the complete scope of available behavior defined
in cgetcap(3), and could probably be improved.
- Renumber labels since the previous revision removed one.
- Remove useless and wrong comment.
- Repeating the function name is just redundant.
- The previous revision made the comment about %edx useless.
- The comment about %eax was wrong (but did explain why %eax used to be
fixed up).
Submitted by: bde
if and only if a target directory is devfs. Previous patch
doesn't correct, it's unconditionally avoid to create a device
file if kernel knows devfs.
PR: 31109
replaced with the new version in sendmail's distribution, vacation and
the necessary libraries (libsmdb and libsmutil) were changed so they
were always compiled. This broke people who didn't checkout
src/contrib/sendmail/. I don't know if it's best to think of NO_SENDMAIL
as no sendmail sources available or no sendmail binary. It is now the former.
Also, remove the sendmail chapter from System Managers Manual (SMM) if
NO_SENDMAIL is defined (for similar reasons -- source not available).
PR: 31863, 31865
Submitted by: matusita, Joe Kelsey <joe@zircon.seattle.wa.us>
MFC after: 3 days
`warn'. Now a whole 2 members of the err() family don't cause pollution.
This fixes world breakage in awk for NOSHARED worlds. contrib/awk/msg.c
has had its own version of err() for a long time, but this somehow
didn't cause problems until the update to awk-3.1.0.
access an array beyond it's length. This only happens in the last iteration of
a loop, and the value fetched is not used then, so the bug is a relatively
innocent one. Fix this by not fetching any value on the last iteration of said
loop.
Submitted by: MKI <mki@mozone.net>
MFC after: 1 week
what broke ps on ia64. It probably also broke on alpha, but the fallback
method of using lseek/read on /proc/*/mem to read ps_strings seems to
work there. It doesn't on ia64 yet.
hosts:!!!!!!!!@@@@@$%^&*()()*$(files{}{}|||++!)(dns
exactly the same as:
hosts: files dns
Recover from parse errors by looking for the end of a line; this
allows entries without errors to still be parsed even if there is
an erroneous entry earlier in the file.
new flags: F_ROOTDIR and F_RR (Rock Ridge present).
- Cache the SUSP LEN_SKP parameter in struct file as well.
- If we open() '/', then force a read of the directory's contents so we
can examine the directory record of '.' to see if Rock Ridge is present.
- If Rock Ridge extensions are present, lookup Rock Ridge names in
readdir().
I'm assuming that the comment was regarding socket address structures, so
correct the comment about pre-zero'ing socket structures to recommend
pre-zero'ing socket address structures.
- Fix some minor grammar nits.
- This isn't directly submitted by the PR below but is related to it and was
inspired by it.
PR: 31704
page and add an historical note explaining this. This patch is
based on Stephen's.
We still need someone to implement tgamma.
PR: 28972, 31764
Submitted by: Stephen Montgomery-Smith <stephen@math.missouri.edu>
the netbsd_strtod.c file we have does not. More still should be done
here, but this works happily on my Alpha. I have not (yet?) changed
the Makefile.inc to use this.
and/or libgnumalloc on anything but i386. The other platforms
post-date this mistake.
Do not build libc_r for ia64. There are some fundamental issues that
need to be resolved (ie: it cannot use setjmp/longjmp for thread
switching, which isn't likely to be fixed soon. libc_r has to be
reimplemented using something like makecontext()/swapcontext() etc
in order to work in ia64.)
If zero bytes are allocated, return pointer to the middle of page-zero
(which is protected) so that the program will crash if it dereferences
this illgotten pointer.
Inspired & Urged by: Theo de Raadt <deraadt@cvs.openbsd.org>
serve two purposes: (1) so we can maintain backwards compatibility with
protocols (rwhod, dump, etc...) that either assume time_t is 32 bits or
assume sizeof(time_t) == sizeof(int), or make other similar assumptions.
(2) To tag such routines (by the presence of these calls) for future
cleanup/extension work.
The 32->64 routine, time32_to_time() (when time_t is 64 bits, that is),
is defined specifically to implement temporal locality to properly set the
msb bits of a 64 bit time_t quantity, using the 50 year rule. The locality
code has not been implemented yet (and doesn't need to be for a while),
but that is the intent. This will allow us to maintain backwards protocol
compatibility past 2038.
These routines are intended to be platform and time_t agnostic.
MFC after: 1 week
since that is what we use now and this insulates us from any time_t
tweaks here. We can define a record format that uses 64 bit times if/when
we need to.
kernel #defines to figure out where the stack is located. This stops
libc_r from exploding when the kernel is compiled with a different
KVM size. IMHO this is all kinda bogus, it would be better to just
check %esp and work from that.
- uthread_signal.c; libc_r does not wrap signal() since 1998/04/29.
- uthread_attr_setprio.c; it was never connected to the build, and
pthread_attr_setprio() does not exist in POSIX.
- uthread_sigblock.c and uthread_sigsetmask.c; these were no-ops
bloating libc_r's space.
pthread_private.h:
- Removed prototypes of non-syscalls: send().
- Removed prototypes of unused syscalls: sigpending(), sigsuspend(),
and select().
- Fixed prototype of fork().
- MFS: Fixed prototypes of <sys/socket.h> syscalls.
Reviewed by: deischen
Approved by: deischen, jasone
makes FreeBSD inconsistent with previous releases and "other unices" as well
as with some internal password-asking services (e.g. ftp) within the same
release.
using rcmd directly. This has been in my tree for a long time, but we
may need to sync with OpenBSD before MFC.
Obtained from: openbsd
PR: 15830
MFC after: 2 months
manual page), fix capitalization, and remove chflags reference from
SEE ALSO since the only time it's referenced is with an .Xr, anyway.
Submitted by: bde
In libc_r, if _FDLOCKS_ENABLED is not defined, there is no guarantee
in many of the sycall wrappers that _thread_fd_table[fd] is
initialized. This causes problems for programs that pass in file
descriptors and execve() another program; when the exec'ed program
tries to do an fcntl() or other syscall on the passed-in fd, it fails.
Add calls to initialize the FD table entry for _thread_fd_lock and
_thread_fd_lock_debug.
Submitted by: Peter S. Housel <housel@acm.org>
describing these operators in English. This completes the fix in rev.1.3
(rev.1.2 got this wrong by describing wrong operators in English).
Fixed bitrot and improved English in the DESCRIPTION section.
Updated by peter following KSE and Giant pushdown.
I've running with this patch for two week with no ill side effects.
PR: kern/12014: Fix SysV Semaphore handling
Submitted by: Peter Jeremy <peter.jeremy@alcatel.com.au>
number of characters that are searched. This is especially useful
with file operations and non-NUL terminated strings.
Silence from: -audit, -hackers
MFC after: 5 days
1) Allow the sending of more than one control message at a time
over a unix domain socket. This should cover the PR 29499.
2) This requires that unp_{ex,in}ternalize and unp_scan understand
mbufs with more than one control message at a time.
3) Internalize and externalize used to work on the mbuf in-place.
This made life quite complicated and the code for sizeof(int) <
sizeof(file *) could end up doing the wrong thing. The patch always
create a new mbuf/cluster now. This resulted in the change of the
prototype for the domain externalise function.
4) You can now send SCM_TIMESTAMP messages.
5) Always use CMSG_DATA(cm) to determine the start where the data
in unp_{ex,in}ternalize. It was using ((struct cmsghdr *)cm + 1)
in some places, which gives the wrong alignment on the alpha.
(NetBSD made this fix some time ago).
This results in an ABI change for discriptor passing and creds
passing on the alpha. (Probably on the IA64 and Spare ports too).
6) Fix userland programs to use CMSG_* macros too.
7) Be more careful about freeing mbufs containing (file *)s.
This is made possible by the prototype change of externalise.
PR: 29499
MFC after: 6 weeks
is interrupted by saving the pid.
The old code would assign the return value to pid which would trash
it, to fix the problem save a copy of the pid to be used as the
paramter to wait4().
Submitted by: Toshihiko ARAI <toshi@jp.FreeBSD.org>
The corresponding bugs in <wchar.h> have no effect because the function
prototypes there don't have args so the __restrict "keyword" is
misinterpreted as an arg.
commits to these files.
As I sing to CVS:
Have I told you lately that I hate your guts? Have I told you
all SCM's are above you? You fill my heart with pain, take away
all my merging joy, grow my troubles that's what you do."
NAT in extended passive mode if the server's public IP address was
different from the main NAT address. This caused a wrong aliasing
link to be created that did not route the incoming packets back to
the original IP address of the server.
natd -v -n pub0 -redirect_address localFTP publicFTP
Note that even if localFTP == publicFTP, one still needs to supply
the -redirect_address directive. It is needed as a helper because
extended passive mode's 229 reply does not contain the IP address.
MFC after: 1 week
we have just installed a replacement for. This should solve the problem
of having a stale /usr/lib/libc.so.4 after we put a fresh
/usr/lib/compat/libc.so.4 in its place.
of NFS home directory and root directory processing fails to include
additional groups. This doesn't impact the final credential, but does
mean that users may be denied login even when additional groups might
allow it.
These might not be present in /usr/include, or they may be
incompatible with the version we are building (for library
upgrades/downgrades).
This stopped the RELENG_4 buildworld on a -CURRENT box.
Well, this only fixes the issue if MFC'ed. :-)
Note ALL MODULES MUST BE RECOMPILED
make the kernel aware that there are smaller units of scheduling than the
process. (but only allow one thread per process at this time).
This is functionally equivalent to teh previousl -current except
that there is a thread associated with each process.
Sorry john! (your next MFC will be a doosie!)
Reviewed by: peter@freebsd.org, dillon@freebsd.org
X-MFC after: ha ha ha ha
Note our implementation is not thread nor async-cancel safe.
Explicitely note atof() does not check nor report errors.
Note that strtod() should be used instead.
Also add C99 conformity status plus clarification that C99 leaves the
flushing of unwritten data, closure of open streams, and removal of
temporary files to the implementation.
of repeating unsuccessful lseek call on each write (original stdio bug).
2) Save errno accross _sseek call in _swrite to not touch it in case write
success (original stdio bug).
3) Add _sseek error checking back, but only for __SOPT mode now.
This is a first cut, but enough to help people interested in using it
further than before.
More text coming to illustrate use and provide more details.
Based on standards' text.
with non-seekable streams. Now here is what here was originally, but it is
ugly, producing unneded seek syscall on each non-seekable stream write. I'll
think about proper solution later.
manpage by taking its text from NetBSD and editing it further.
This also improves the page's mdoc(7) markup style.
Reviewed by: ru
Obtained from: NetBSD
my last version of this work due to HDD crash, but this version cleanly
passed all POSIX and SuSv2 tests. I am working on testing scripts which
should test this implementation against all locales and surely more fixes
will come soon.
Reviewed by: ache, silence at -audit & -developers
o Removed whitespace at EOL
o Removed hard sentence breaks
o Added cap_size() to the NAME section
o Normalized .Nd descriptions
o Fixed the abuses of .Nm and .Va
o Fixed some DESCRIPTION texts
o Fixed the RETURN VALUES and ERRORS texts to look more traditional
Reviewed by: tmm
'locale not used' statement from comments and BUGS section of manpage.
strtol(): fix non-portable 'cutoff' calculation using the same method as
in strtoll().
Cleanup 'cutoff' calculation, remove unneded casts. Misc. cleanup to
make all functions looks the same.
Implement EINVAL reaction per POSIX, document it in manpage, corresponding
POSIX example quotes here:
------------------------------------------------
If the subject sequence is empty or does not have the expected form, no
conversion is performed; the value of str is stored in the object pointed
to by endptr, provided that endptr is not a null pointer.
If no conversion could be performed, 0 shall be returned and errno may be
set to [EINVAL].
[EINVAL] The value of base is not supported.
Since 0, {LONG_MIN} or {LLONG_MIN}, and {LONG_MAX} or {LLONG_MAX} are
returned on error and are also valid returns on success, an application
wishing to check for error situations should set errno to 0, then call
strtol( ) or strtoll ( ), then check errno.
-----------------------------------------------------
are not used'. This is incorrect, as addr must be passed (caddr_t)1
to do anything useful. The source for gdb and a short test program
will confirm that this man page was in error.
PR: docs/27758
Submitted by: Jiangyi Liu <jyliu@163.net>
sys/capability.h--this compiled fine on i386 where (int) and (ssize_t)
are the same, but broke on Alpha where they differ.
Submitted by: Mike Barcroft <mike@FreeBSD.org>
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
plain regular files, i.e. files with __SOPT flag set. Fix it, so ftell(stdout)
always returns the same as lseek(1, 0, 1) now.
NOTE: this bug was in original stdio code
__swrite() and __sseek() to higher level. According to funopen(3) they all
are just wrappers to something like standard read(2), write(2) and
lseek(2), i.e. must not touch stdio internals because they are replaceable
with any other functions knows nothing about stdio internals. See example
of funopen(3) usage in sendmail sources f.e.
NOTE: this is original stdio bug, not result of my range checkin added.
internal functions there may fail and set (i.e. overwrite) errno in normal
(not error) situation). In original variant errno testing after call
(as POSIX suggest) is wrong when errno overwrite happens.
0, return that we can't specify it, i.e. error with ESPIPE.
(hint from: "Peter S. Housel" <housel@acm.org>)
Back out sinit() addition, not needed after various code simplifications.
support functions:
cap_subset_np() - Is cap1 a subset of cap2
cap_equal_np() - Is cap1 equal to cap2
o Introduce implementations of POSIX.1e capability support functions:
cap_copy_ext() - Externalize capability
cap_copy_int() - Internalize capability
cap_size() - Determine size required for cap_copy_ext()
Submitted by: tmm
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
When file offset tends to be negative due to internal and ungetc buffers
additions counted, try to discard some ungetc data first, then return EBADF.
Later one can happens if lseek(fileno(fd),...) called f.e. POSIX says that
ungetc beyond beginning of the file results are undefined, so we can just
discard some of ungetc data in that case.
Don't rely on gcc cast when checking for overflow, use OFF_MAX.
Cosmetique.
o Unify <machine/endian.h>'s across all architectures.
o Make bswapXX() functions use a different spelling of u_int16_t and
friends to reduce namespace pollution. The bswapXX() functions
don't actually exist, but we'll probably import these at some
point. Atleast one driver (if_de) depends on bswapXX() for big
endian cases.
o Deprecate byteorder(3) prototypes from <sys/types.h>, these are
now prototyped indirectly in <arpa/inet.h>.
o Deprecate in_addr_t and in_port_t typedefs in <sys/types.h>, these
are now typedef'd in <arpa/inet.h>.
o Change byteorder(3) prototypes to use standards compliant uint32_t
(spelled __uint32_t to reduce namespace pollution).
o Document new preferred headers and standards compliance.
Discussed with: bde
PR: 29946
Reviewed by: bmilekic
kernels. The error message was "elf_loadexec: cannot seek".
Libstand maintains a read-ahead buffer for each open file, so that
it can read in chunks of 512 bytes for greater efficiency. When
the loader tries to lseek forward in a file by a small amount, it
sometimes happens that the target file offset is already in the
read-ahead buffer. But the lseek code simply discarded the contents
of that buffer and performed a seek directly on the underlying
file. This resulted in an attempt to seek backwards in the file,
since some of the data has already been read into the read-ahead
buffer. Gzipped data streams cannot seek backwards, so an error
was returned.
This commit adds code which checks to see if the desired file offset
is already in the read-ahead buffer. If it is, the code simply
adjusts the buffer pointer and length, thereby avoiding a reverse
seek on the gzipped data stream.
I incorporated a suggestion from Matt Dillon which saved a little
bit of code in this fix.
Reviewed by: dillon, gallatin, jhb
documented by POSIX.1e, and understand the opaque capability structures.
Introduce support in the userland POSIX.1e library for a
_CAPABILITY_NEEDMACROS define to remove these macros from the normal
namespace, but allow the libc functions to use them.
Submitted by: tmm
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
return values a little more. Specifically, mention that a return
of 0 from NgRecvData() and NgRecvMsg() means the socket has been
closed.
Suggested by: jkh
referal from mmap to minherit for MAP_INHERIT. Fully document the
minherit.2 manual page (because frankly, my dear, however you think it
currently works is almost certainly wrong!). I may soon re-implement
MAP_COPY because I believe we can support it properly now, but I will have
to call it something else and that is for a later time.
Certain ISO fs's (like the one for 4.4-RC1 disc1 on alpha)
trigger this, and we end up opening a null file name. This causes us to get
a false match for "kernel.ko" when it does not exist.
without the silly librsaINTL.so and/or librsaUSA.so dependencies.
4.2-RELEASE appears to be after the demolition of the librsa* stuff, so
I'm not sure where ps got these binaries from. Anyway, this makes old
binaries work again since we dont ship librsaINTL.so and/or librsaUSA.so
in the compat dists. I believe RELENG_4 is affected still too.
o unifdef AUTHENTICATE. We have never compiled this code, and its
doubtful it will even work in this case.
o Style changes (some ansification, some comment updating)
o Diff reduction and code style merging with crypto telnet.
gets rid of the duplicated code in compute_stats().
Add a new DSM_SKIP statistic type for devstat_compute_statistics() that
causes the subsequent variable argument to be skipped.
Thanks to Sergey Osokin for coding up my idea/code fragment.
Submitted by: "Sergey A. Osokin" <osa@freebsd.org.ru>
socket option for the Unix domain. It's weaker than the
socket option (this only returns the uid and gid, while the
socket opt. can return the entire group list), and is
implemented mostly for compatibility with OpenBSD.
Resulting fseek() offset must fit in long, required by POSIX (pointed by bde),
so add LONG_MAX and final tests for it.
rewind.c:
1) add missing __sinit() as in fseek() it pretends to be.
2) use clearerr_unlocked() since we already lock stream before _fseeko()
3) don't zero errno at the end, it explicitely required by POSIX as the
only one method to test rewind() error condition.
4) don't clearerr() if error happens in _fseeko()
"[EINVAL] ... The resulting file-position indicator would be set to a
negative value."
Moreover, in real life negative seek in stdio cause EOF indicator cleared
and not set again forever even if EOF returned.
2) Catch few possible off_t overflows.
Reviewed by: arch discussion
It was foiled because of dynamic copy relocations that caused compile-time
space to be reserved in .bss and at run time a blob of data was copied to
that space and everything used the .bss version.. The problem is that
the space is reserved at compile time, not runtime... So we *still* could
not change the size of FILE. Sigh. :-(
Replace it with something that does actually work and really does let us
make 'FILE' extendable. It also happens to be the same as Linux does in
glibc, but has the slight cost of a pointer. Note that this is the
same cost that 'fp = fopen(), fprintf(fp, ...); fclose(fp);' has.
Fortunately, actual references to stdin/out/err are not all that common
since we have implicit stdin/out/err-using versions of functions
(printf() vs. fprintf()).
is stored in _res_ext.sort_list, and sortlist for IPv4 is stored in
_res.sort_list for backward compatibility. However, both sort_list's
are maintaind by just one index _res.nsort. So, when IPv6 address is
specified to sortlist, empty entry was created in _res.sort_list. It
broke sortlist facility of gethostbyname().
Discussed on users@jp.ipv6.org.
/usr/src/lib/libpam/modules/pam_ssh/pam_ssh.c has couple of bugs which cause:
1) xdm dumps core
2) ssh1 private key is not passed to ssh-agent
3) ssh2 RSA key seems not handled properly (just a guess from source)
4) ssh_get_authentication_connectionen() fails to get connection because of
SSH_AUTH_SOCK not defined.
PR: 29609
Submitted by: Takanori Saneto <sanewo@ba2.so-net.ne.jp>
Backout previous revision. We should not expand plain text xrefs if
they appear in the literal text, e.g. in the error or warning message
of the library function. (Submitted by: bde)
Moved "out of memory" from warning to errors section.
o Replace strncpy examples with less confusing ones from
OpenBSD. These examples give more detail and also suggest
using strlcpy(3).
Reviewed by: des, ru, sheldonh
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 3 days
Avoid using parenthesis enclosure macros (.Pq and .Po/.Pc) with plain text.
Not only this slows down the mdoc(7) processing significantly, but it also
has an undesired (in this case) effect of disabling hyphenation within the
entire enclosed block.
into sadb_x_sa2_sequence from sadb_x_sa2_reserved3 in the sadb_x_sa2
structure. Also the output of setkey is changed. sequence number
of the sadb is replaced to the end of the output.
Obtained from: KAME
1.) prefix all functions in the library with devstat_ (compatability
functions are available for all functions that were chaned in an
incompatible way, but are deprecated).
2.) Add a pointer to a kvm_t as the first argument to functions that
used to get their information via sysctl; they behave the same
as before when NULL is passed as this argument, otherwise, the
information is obtained via libkvm using the supplied handle.
3.) Add a new function, devstat_compute_statistics(), that is intended
to replace the old compute_stats() function. It offers more
statistics data, and has a more flexible interface.
libdevstat does now require libkvm; a library depedency is added, so
that libkvm only needs to be explicitely specified for statically linked
programs.
The library major version number is bumped.
Submitted by: Sergey A. Osokin <osa@freebsd.org.ru>, ken (3)
Reviewed by: ken
to strdup() the address string before returning it via *targaddr
because the caller will free the string.
Change the comment at the top of getclnthandle() to clarify that
the caller is responsible for freeing *targaddr.
Noticed by: sobomax
crypto bits installed and/or NOCRYPTO/NO_OPENSSL is defined. This unfortunately
meants that usr.bin/chkey, usr.bin/newkey and usr.sbin/keyserv have also to
be disconnected.
IMO it is merely a workaround, the proper solution is to move libmp to
src/crypto where it belongs and use libgmp for the cryptoless builds instead.
Missed by: dd
with NetBSD and OpenBSD. glob(3) will now return GLOB_NOSPACE with
errno set to 0 instead of GLOB_LIMIT when we match more than `gl_matchc'
patterns. GLOB_MAXPATH has been left as an alias of GLOB_LIMIT to
maintain backwards compatibility.
Reviewed by: sheldonh, assar
Obtained from: NetBSD/OpenBSD
proxy specification, which seems to be valid according to the man page.
Change the logic to consider "hostname:port" a hostname and port instead
of a file URL.
Approved by: des
I revised the text after dd's kind review. So, if you find
any error, it is probably introduced by my last minutes'
update and is entirely my fault, not dd's.
Reviewed by: dd
already found in the sigaction(2) manual.
As discussed with the committer of that delta, cross-reference the list
in sigaction(2) instead of duplicating the list of functions that are
safe for use within signal handlers.
Clarify that if strlcat() does not find a NUL within siz byte it
will not NUL terminate either.
Document boundary condition when size < strlen(dst).
"of", not "on" (from Henric Jungheim)
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC After: 1 week
immediately when a signal is caught. Instead, defer
program termination until the next call to VGLCheckSwitch().
Otherwise, the video card may not be restored correctly
if the signal is seen while inside libvgl functions.
MFC after: 1 week
Previously, some useful xrefs were missing.
Now each of the pages refers to all remaining section 2 pages,
to the kld(4) page, and to a related utility's (section 8) page.
be malloc()ed, but they are now allocated using mmap(), just as the
default-size stacks are. A separate cache of stacks is kept for
non-default-size stacks.
Collaboration with: deischen
o The new options-processing API
o The new DEBUG-logging API
Add man(1) pages for ALL modules. MDOC-Police welcome
to check this.
Audit, clean up while I'm here.
underlying CAM device. This needs to be checked not only in
the open routine, but the device->fd has to be initialized
as well.
PR: 28688
Submitted (partially) by: T. William Wells <bill@twwells.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
change the name of the page (.Nm) from "kldstat" to "modstat".
Second, don't claim that modstat(2) always returns 0. Actually,
it behaves as most syscalls do - returns 0 on success, or -1
on failure.
MFC after: 5 days
atomically:
1) Search _thread_list for the thread to join.
2) Search _dead_list for the thread to join.
3) Set the running thread as the joiner.
While we're at it, fix a race in the case where multiple threads try to
join on the same thread. POSIX says that the behavior of multiple joiners
is undefined, but the fix is cheap as a result of the other fix.
whether or not connect(2) is used for UDP client sockets. The default
is not to connect(), so existing clients will see no change in
behaviour.
The use of connect(2) for UDP clients has a number of advantages:
only replies from the intended address are received, and ICMP errors
pertaining to the connection are reported back to the application.
and its associated constants. Implement _SC_IOV_MAX in the usual way.
Be a bit sloppy about the namespace question; this should get cleared up
in time for 5.0.
MFC after: 1 month
to fix the "-nostdinc WARNS=X" breakage caused by broken prototypes
for cabs() and cabsl() in <math.h>.
Reimplemented cabs() and cabsl() using new complex numbers types and
moved prototypes from <math.h> to <complex.h>.
this is not strictly compliant with XSI curses, it enables us to pass
const strings to many more functions that are actually const safe than
before. This should be harmless.
Requested by: lots of folks
of calling sigprocmask(). This matches the behaviour of thr_sigsetmask()
on Solaris; _pthread_sigmask_stub was added purely for compatibility
with Solaris (for TI-RPC), so it might as well do the same thing.
This fixes the problem where client RPC calls ignored all signals
for the complete duration of the RPC. This behaviour is currently
necessary in the threaded case due to locking issues, but was never
intended to occur in non-threaded programs.
Reviewed by: deischen
This work was based on kame-20010528-freebsd43-snap.tgz and some
critical problem after the snap was out were fixed.
There are many many changes since last KAME merge.
TODO:
- The definitions of SADB_* in sys/net/pfkeyv2.h are still different
from RFC2407/IANA assignment because of binary compatibility
issue. It should be fixed under 5-CURRENT.
- ip6po_m member of struct ip6_pktopts is no longer used. But, it
is still there because of binary compatibility issue. It should
be removed under 5-CURRENT.
Reviewed by: itojun
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 3 weeks
IPv6 transport-ready resolvers/DNS servers. Need careful configuration
when enable it. (default config is not affected).
See manpage for details.
XXX visible symbol __res_opt() is added, however, it is not supposed to be
called from outside, libc minor is not bumped.
Obtained from: KAME/NetBSD
Move common stuff into Makefile.inc, and tidy up all the Makefiles
as a result.
Build new modules.
Put a commented-out dependancy on libpam for the (shared) modules.
I can't bring this in just yet, as the dependancy (modules->libpam)
is reversed for the static case (libpam->modules).
pam_securetty silently succeeds if the user is on a secure tty
as defined by /etc/ttys.
pam_ftp does "anonymous ftp" style authentication with options for
specifying the anonymous user(s).
data pointer. This bug has been here since the ti-rpc import; it
apparently broke the clnt_control CLGET_SVC_ADDR options.
PR: misc/27813
Submitted by: Jean-Luc Richier <Jean-Luc.Richier@imag.fr>
there and compare the inode and device numbers to the values we remember,
to guard against the directory having been moved around in the meantime.
Reported by: Nick Cleaton <nick@cleaton.net>
For FTP control connection, keep the CRLF end-of-line termination
status in there.
Fixed the bug when the first FTP command in a session was ignored.
PR: 24048
MFC after: 1 week
real uid, saved uid, real gid, and saved gid to ucred, as well as the
pcred->pc_uidinfo, which was associated with the real uid, only rename
it to cr_ruidinfo so as not to conflict with cr_uidinfo, which
corresponds to the effective uid.
o Remove p_cred from struct proc; add p_ucred to struct proc, replacing
original macro that pointed.
p->p_ucred to p->p_cred->pc_ucred.
o Universally update code so that it makes use of ucred instead of pcred,
p->p_ucred instead of p->p_pcred, cr_ruidinfo instead of p_uidinfo,
cr_{r,sv}{u,g}id instead of p_*, etc.
o Remove pcred0 and its initialization from init_main.c; initialize
cr_ruidinfo there.
o Restruction many credential modification chunks to always crdup while
we figure out locking and optimizations; generally speaking, this
means moving to a structure like this:
newcred = crdup(oldcred);
...
p->p_ucred = newcred;
crfree(oldcred);
It's not race-free, but better than nothing. There are also races
in sys_process.c, all inter-process authorization, fork, exec, and
exit.
o Remove sigio->sio_ruid since sigio->sio_ucred now contains the ruid;
remove comments indicating that the old arrangement was a problem.
o Restructure exec1() a little to use newcred/oldcred arrangement, and
use improved uid management primitives.
o Clean up exit1() so as to do less work in credential cleanup due to
pcred removal.
o Clean up fork1() so as to do less work in credential cleanup and
allocation.
o Clean up ktrcanset() to take into account changes, and move to using
suser_xxx() instead of performing a direct uid==0 comparision.
o Improve commenting in various kern_prot.c credential modification
calls to better document current behavior. In a couple of places,
current behavior is a little questionable and we need to check
POSIX.1 to make sure it's "right". More commenting work still
remains to be done.
o Update credential management calls, such as crfree(), to take into
account new ruidinfo reference.
o Modify or add the following uid and gid helper routines:
change_euid()
change_egid()
change_ruid()
change_rgid()
change_svuid()
change_svgid()
In each case, the call now acts on a credential not a process, and as
such no longer requires more complicated process locking/etc. They
now assume the caller will do any necessary allocation of an
exclusive credential reference. Each is commented to document its
reference requirements.
o CANSIGIO() is simplified to require only credentials, not processes
and pcreds.
o Remove lots of (p_pcred==NULL) checks.
o Add an XXX to authorization code in nfs_lock.c, since it's
questionable, and needs to be considered carefully.
o Simplify posix4 authorization code to require only credentials, not
processes and pcreds. Note that this authorization, as well as
CANSIGIO(), needs to be updated to use the p_cansignal() and
p_cansched() centralized authorization routines, as they currently
do not take into account some desirable restrictions that are handled
by the centralized routines, as well as being inconsistent with other
similar authorization instances.
o Update libkvm to take these changes into account.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Reviewed by: green, bde, jhb, freebsd-arch, freebsd-audit
reason not to add it to others later). This causes the pam_unix
module to check the user's _own_ password, not the password of the
account that the user is authenticating into. This will allow eg:
WHEELSU type behaviour from su(1).
Tor created a while ago, removes the raw I/O piece (that has cache coherency
problems), and adds a buffer cache / VM freeing piece.
Essentially this patch causes O_DIRECT I/O to not be left in the cache, but
does not prevent it from going through the cache, hence the 80%. For
the last 20% we need a method by which the I/O can be issued directly to
buffer supplied by the user process and bypass the buffer cache entirely,
but still maintain cache coherency.
I also have the code working under -stable but the changes made to sys/file.h
may not be MFCable, so an MFC is not on the table yet.
Submitted by: tegge, dillon
keep track of a joiner. POSIX only supports a single joiner, so this
simplification is acceptable.
At the same time, make sure to mark a joined thread as detached so that
its resources can be freed.
Reviewed by: deischen
PR: 24345
accidentally clobber the server address if a stray packet arrived
at the client port. This would result in any further retransmits
going to the wrong address.
For now, fix this by not saving the source address of the reply; this
matches the pre-tirpc behaviour.
there is no need to wake all waiters to assure that the highest priority
thread is run. As the semaphore code is written, there was no correctness
problem, but the change improves sem_post() performance.
Pointed out by: deischen
history info as:
: .Sh STANDARDS If the command, library function or file adheres to a
: specific implementation such as IEEE Std 1003.2
: (``POSIX.2'') or ANSI X3.159-1989 (``ANSI C'') this
: should be noted here. If the command does not adhere
: to any standard, its history should be noted in the
: HISTORY section.
pam_krb5 is a Kerberos 5 (Heimdal) authentication module.
pam_nologin checks for /etc/nologin and does the "usual stuff"
if it is found, otherwise it silently succeeds.
pam_rootok silently succeeds if the user is root, otherwise
it fails.
pam_wheel silently succeeds if the user is a member of group
"wheel" (or another nominated group), and fails
otherwise.
There is an issue with kerberosIV and kerberos5 - if both are
being built, then static linking fails with duplicate symbols.
This will take a bit of work to sort out in the kerberii.
+ make Open_Disk sense the sector size by trying 512, 1024 and 2048
in this order. This makes the kernel note that
dscheck(cd1): bio_bcount 512 is not on a sector boundary (ssize 2048)
dscheck(cd1): bio_bcount 1024 is not on a sector boundary (ssize 2048)
if 2048 is the sector size. If this worries anyone: the message is from
/usr/src/sys/kern/subr_diskslice.c and shutups are to be placed there.
+ Have read_block and write_block use an additional parameter, the
sector size.
+ replace all barfout calls with return NULL, 0, __LINE__, etc.
Note that this does NOT emit diagnostics. More often than not,
you don't want library functions to scribble on stderr -- it may
not even be available. The right thing is to propagate the error
condition to upper management. The app should take care of errors.
+ use d1->sector_size instead of 512 in various places. I've left many
places untouched, especially those writing MBRs. I simply added
another arg hardcoded as 512. This is because I would not know what
I'm doing... I felt this approach would be reasonably backward
compatible and not introduce any new bugs in critical software.
Famous last words. Messing with MBRs might soon put me in the same
screwup meister category as, uh, never mind. :-)
+ bump the max no of disks from 20 to 32 (due to PR 24503).
PR: 8434 / 8436 / 24503
Submitted by: Jens Schweikhardt <schweikh@schweikhardt.net>
terminates the string in all cases, based on code from netstat(1).
The path in a sockaddr_un is terminated either by a '\0', or by
the end of the sockaddr as defined by sun_len.
Previously, the code could write the "safety" '\0' beyond the end
of the sockaddr (sockaddr_un's need only be large enough to store
sun_len bytes), and writing into the the supplied sockaddr is bad
anyway.
process on fork(2).
It is the supposed behavior stated in the manpage of sigaction(2), and
Solaris, NetBSD and FreeBSD 3-STABLE correctly do so.
The previous fix against libc_r/uthread/uthread_fork.c fixed the
problem only for the programs linked with libc_r, so back it out and
fix fork(2) itself to help those not linked with libc_r as well.
PR: kern/26705
Submitted by: KUROSAWA Takahiro <fwkg7679@mb.infoweb.ne.jp>
Tested by: knu, GOTOU Yuuzou <gotoyuzo@notwork.org>,
and some other people
Not objected by: hackers
MFC in: 3 days
placed in any scheduling queue(s). The process of dispatching
signals to a thread can change its state which will attempt to add
or remove the thread from any scheduling queue to which it belongs.
This can break some assertions if the thread isn't in the queue(s)
implied by its state.
When adding dispatching a pending signal to a thread, be sure to
remove the signal from the threads set of pending signals.
PR: 27035
Tested by: brian
MFC in: 1 week
longer includes machine/elf.h.
* consumers of elf.h now use the minimalist elf header possible.
This change is motivated by Binutils 2.11.0 and too much clashing over
our base elf headers and the Binutils elf headers.
address" string to a netbuf/sockaddr "transport address". In the
case of an AF_LOCAL address, it was missing the code to actually
point the netbuf at the newly allocated sockaddr_un, so the caller
ended up with a netbuf containing junk.
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
required by POSIX.1e. This maintains the current 'struct acl'
in the kernel while providing the generic external acl_t
interface required to complete the ACL editing library.
o Add the acl_get_entry() function.
o Convert the existing ACL utilities, getfacl and setfacl, to
fully make use of the ACL editing library.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
The devinfo library provides access to the kernel's internal device
hierarchy and to the I/O resource manager. The library uses a
sysctl(9) interface to obtain a snapshot of the kernel's state which
is then made available to the application.
arguments where the format string is obtained from user data, or
otherwise difficult to verify statically.
Example usage:
printf(fmtcheck(user_format, standard_format), arg1, arg2);
checks the format string user_format for consistency (same number/order/
type of format operators) with standard_format. If they differ,
standard_format is used instead to avoid potential crashes or security
violations.
Obtained from: NetBSD
Reviewed by: -arch
instead of #pragma weak to create weak definitions. This macro is
improperly named, though, since a weak definition is not the same
thing as a weak reference.
Suggested by: bde
than the default buffer size in the old RPC code (8800 bytes), and
it could not be overriden by the application. This caused problems
with CFS (/usr/port/security/cfs).
Change this default back to UDPMSGSIZE (8800 bytes), but more
importantly, allow applications to use larger message sizes for
all protocols if desired. Choose an arbitrary maximum message size
of 256k instead of using the default as the maximum (which is
silly).
Reported by: ache
Reviewed by: alfred, Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
functions.
- Place the acl_dup() description in alphabetical order.
- Move the POSIX.1e descriptions under the ENVIRONMENT section to the
STANDARDS section.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Makefile, add Makefile.inc needed for libc build; add
#include "namespace.h"/#include "un-namespace.h" pairs around the
includes of sys/acl.h and sys/capability.h, and an additional underscore
in front of the functions that will be overridden in libc_r.
Approved by: rwatson
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
`nc_error' variables. Move the nc_lock mutex from mt_misc.c to a
static variable within this function, since it is only used here.
Add a new getnetconfigent() error code `NC_NOTFOUND' to report the
case where the specified netid was not found. Set nc_error in all
error cases in getnetconfigent() so that the error messages returned
by nc_(s)perror are always meaningful.
Add a terminating \n to the output of nc_perror() to match both
our manpage and other implementations of this function.
Reviewed by: deischen, alfred, Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
a "#pragma weak" directive linking the external symbol. This matches
the other pthread_* definitions, and ensures that users of this
function from within libc get the real version, not the stub.
Suggested by: deischen
Reviewed by: deischen, alfred
RPC clients hanging. The real problem turned out to be missing
cleanup code; this was fixed in clnt_vc.c r1.5 and clnt_dg.c r1.4.
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
so that the underscored versions of the pthread functions get
declared. This removes around 300 lines of 'implicit declaration
of XXX' warnings from the output of a libc build with -Wall.
Reviewed by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>, alfred
Also, looking to the future, don't assume all the world is an i386 and all
its disk layout brain damage will be repeated by other platforms. So all
the diking out if we are an Alpha, becomes adding in if we are an i386.
I've left out a couple of unused args between internal functions.
Use MAXPATHLEN, not MAXPATHLEN + 1 in a couple of places.
Pass a pointer to the end of the target filename space.
exactly the right size. Do it differently - pass a length rather than an
end-of-string+1 pointer as this is more convenient anyway. Get rid of
the bogus +1's.
to make asynchronous RPCs. This is needed to help fix ypbind, which can no
longer override the clnt_dg_call() method (formerly the clntudp_call()
method) due to all the internal descriptor locking code in TI-RPC. Turning
on this flag allows us to send an RPC request, then return immediately,
and handle a reply later, rather than being forced to do the request
and reply in a single function call.
Also fix a byte ordering bug: when clnt_dg_call() increments the XID
prior to transmitting a request, it uses the raw value, which is wrong.
The XID is stored in network byte order, i.e. big-endian. The CLSET_XID
and CLGET_XID commands in clnt_dg_control() use ntohl()/htonl() to get
the byte ordering right, but because clnt_dg_call() does not do this,
using CLSET_XID/CLGET_XID doesn't actually work, unless you're on a
big endian host, which we aren't (yet). Fix clnt_dg_call() to byte swap
properly when doing the increment.
Some of the major changes include:
- The SCSI error handling portion of cam_periph_error() has
been broken out into a number of subfunctions to better
modularize the code that handles the hierarchy of SCSI errors.
As a result, the code is now much easier to read.
- String handling and error printing has been significantly
revamped. We now use sbufs to do string formatting instead
of using printfs (for the kernel) and snprintf/strncat (for
userland) as before.
There is a new catchall error printing routine,
cam_error_print() and its string-based counterpart,
cam_error_string() that allow the kernel and userland
applications to pass in a CCB and have errors printed out
properly, whether or not they're SCSI errors. Among other
things, this helped eliminate a fair amount of duplicate code
in camcontrol.
We now print out more information than before, including
the CAM status and SCSI status and the error recovery action
taken to remedy the problem.
- sbufs are now available in userland, via libsbuf. This
change was necessary since most of the error printing code
is shared between libcam and the kernel.
- A new transfer settings interface is included in this checkin.
This code is #ifdef'ed out, and is primarily intended to aid
discussion with HBA driver authors on the final form the
interface should take. There is example code in the ahc(4)
driver that implements the HBA driver side of the new
interface. The new transfer settings code won't be enabled
until we're ready to switch all HBA drivers over to the new
interface.
src/Makefile.inc1,
lib/Makefile: Add libsbuf. It must be built before libcam,
since libcam uses sbuf routines.
libcam/Makefile: libcam now depends on libsbuf.
libsbuf/Makefile: Add a makefile for libsbuf. This pulls in the
sbuf sources from sys/kern.
bsd.libnames.mk: Add LIBSBUF.
camcontrol/Makefile: Add -lsbuf. Since camcontrol is statically
linked, we can't depend on the dynamic linker
to pull in libsbuf.
camcontrol.c: Use cam_error_print() instead of checking for
CAM_SCSI_STATUS_ERROR on every failed CCB.
sbuf.9: Change the prototypes for sbuf_cat() and
sbuf_cpy() so that the source string is now a
const char *. This is more in line wth the
standard system string functions, and helps
eliminate warnings when dealing with a const
source buffer.
Fix a typo.
cam.c: Add description strings for the various CAM
error status values, as well as routines to
look up those strings.
Add new cam_error_string() and
cam_error_print() routines for userland and
the kernel.
cam.h: Add a new CAM flag, CAM_RETRY_SELTO.
Add enumerated types for the various options
available with cam_error_print() and
cam_error_string().
cam_ccb.h: Add new transfer negotiation structures/types.
Change inq_len in the ccb_getdev structure to
be "reserved". This field has never been
filled in, and will be removed when we next
bump the CAM version.
cam_debug.h: Fix typo.
cam_periph.c: Modularize cam_periph_error(). The SCSI error
handling part of cam_periph_error() is now
in camperiphscsistatuserror() and
camperiphscsisenseerror().
In cam_periph_lock(), increase the reference
count on the periph while we wait for our lock
attempt to succeed so that the periph won't go
away while we're sleeping.
cam_xpt.c: Add new transfer negotiation code. (ifdefed
out)
Add a new function, xpt_path_string(). This
is a string/sbuf analog to xpt_print_path().
scsi_all.c: Revamp string handing and error printing code.
We now use sbufs for much of the string
formatting code. More of that code is shared
between userland the kernel.
scsi_all.h: Get rid of SS_TURSTART, it wasn't terribly
useful in the first place.
Add a new error action, SS_REQSENSE. (Send a
request sense and then retry the command.)
This is useful when the controller hasn't
performed autosense for some reason.
Change the default actions around a bit.
scsi_cd.c,
scsi_da.c,
scsi_pt.c,
scsi_ses.c: SF_RETRY_SELTO -> CAM_RETRY_SELTO. Selection
timeouts shouldn't be covered by a sense flag.
scsi_pass.[ch]: SF_RETRY_SELTO -> CAM_RETRY_SELTO.
Get rid of the last vestiges of a read/write
interface.
libkern/bsearch.c,
sys/libkern.h,
conf/files: Add bsearch.c, which is needed for some of the
new table lookup routines.
aic7xxx_freebsd.c: Define AHC_NEW_TRAN_SETTINGS if
CAM_NEW_TRAN_CODE is defined.
sbuf.h,
subr_sbuf.c: Add the appropriate #ifdefs so sbufs can
compile and run in userland.
Change sbuf_printf() to use vsnprintf()
instead of kvprintf(), which is only available
in the kernel.
Change the source string for sbuf_cpy() and
sbuf_cat() to be a const char *.
Add __BEGIN_DECLS and __END_DECLS around
function prototypes since they're now exported
to userland.
kdump/mkioctls: Include stdio.h before cam.h since cam.h now
includes a function with a FILE * argument.
Submitted by: gibbs (mostly)
Reviewed by: jdp, marcel (libsbuf makefile changes)
Reviewed by: des (sbuf changes)
Reviewed by: ken
o Revise description in light of commits over last month including:
- ACL editing library is now implemented
- ACLs are now implemented
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
because libc/rpc/key_call.c references uname(), and ps/print.c also
defines uname(), and ps is linked statically. This leads to a symbol
clash. The userland uname(3) kinda sucked anyway as the hostname
etc was too short. And since the libc rpc interface now uses
the utsname.nodename which gets truncated, I was tempted into doing
something about it. Create a new userland uname function, called
__xuname() which takes an extra argument that allows you to change
the size of the fields. uname() becomes a static inline function
in sys/utsname.h that passes the extra argument in. struct utsname
has its field members expanded by default now in userland.
We still provide a 'uname' externally linkable function for things
that either think that they ``know'' the utsname format and assume
32 character strings and bypass the include file, or objects that
are linked against old libcs. ie: just about every plausible
case that I can think of is covered. Should we ever change the
default lengths again, a libc major bump should not be required
as the size is now passed to the function.
XXX the uname(2) in the kernel is for FreeBSD 1.1 binary compatability!
All the uname(3) functions that are exported to userland are actually
implemented in libc with sysctl. uname(1) uses sysctl directly and
does not call uname(3).
PR: bin/4688
acl_add_perm, acl_clear_perms, acl_copy_entry, acl_create_entry,
acl_delete_perm, acl_get_permset, acl_get_qualifier, acl_get_tag_type,
acl_set_permset, acl_set_qualifier, acl_set_tag_type
This brings us within 4 functions of a full ACL editing library.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Make struct cmessage visible from socket.h (about 4 places were
defining it for themselves which wasn't good)
Make __rpc_get_local_uid() useable and give it prototype that's
visible.
Fix some issues with printing out usernames from rpcbind and keyserv.
changed. These were taken from the 4.2-RELEASE dist on ftp.freebsd.org.
This will be MFC'd shortly as it is required in RELENG_4 to maintain
compatability with binaries linked against these libraries.
should have been repo-copied from it in the first place.
Apply all of our fixes up to and including revision 1.14 to
the original rpc.3 manpage, including conversion to mdoc(7).
number of paths which glob(3) will return. Remove the hardcoded limit
from the last commit, which restores the previous unbounded behavior.
Document the new flag in the manual page.
associated changes that had to happen to make this possible as well as
bugs fixed along the way.
Bring in required TLI library routines to support this.
Since we don't support TLI we've essentially copied what NetBSD
has done, adding a thin layer to emulate direct the TLI calls
into BSD socket calls.
This is mostly from Sun's tirpc release that was made in 1994,
however some fixes were backported from the 1999 release (supposedly
only made available after this porting effort was underway).
The submitter has agreed to continue on and bring us up to the
1999 release.
Several key features are introduced with this update:
Client calls are thread safe. (1999 code has server side thread
safe)
Updated, a more modern interface.
Many userland updates were done to bring the code up to par with
the recent RPC API.
There is an update to the pthreads library, a function
pthread_main_np() was added to emulate a function of Sun's threads
library.
While we're at it, bring in NetBSD's lockd, it's been far too
long of a wait.
New rpcbind(8) replaces portmap(8) (supporting communication over
an authenticated Unix-domain socket, and by default only allowing
set and unset requests over that channel). It's much more secure
than the old portmapper.
Umount(8), mountd(8), mount_nfs(8), nfsd(8) have also been upgraded
to support TI-RPC and to support IPV6.
Umount(8) is also fixed to unmount pathnames longer than 80 chars,
which are currently truncated by the Kernel statfs structure.
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
Manpage review: ru
Secure RPC implemented by: wpaul
- lowercase Nd argument
- mark function arguments with Fa
- mark defined values with Dv
- simply copying POSIX text for RETURN VALUES and ERRORS sections is not
always a good idea. POSIX uses the word "shall" indicating the behavior
the correct implementation should follow.
reserved word, causing breakage when a C++ program included libutil.h
This change will be propagated elsewhere shortly.
Submitted by: jkh
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
o acl_calc_mask(): calculates the ACL mask entry associated with
the given ACL.
o acl_delete_entry(): remove a specified ACL entry from the given
ACL.
Approved by: rwatson
`err()'). libdisk does! and additionally libdisk gets confused on Alpha
disks with foreign disklabels, throws up its hands and exits. This is
the cause of the "going no where without my init" install bug on the Alpha.
So now on the Alpha, rather than call err(), we print the error string and
continue processing.
Submitted by: jkh
since they not allows POSIXly legal locale data. Currently, if relaxed form
POSIXly legal locale data will be used right now, some programs will be broken,
but it means that either locale data or programs must be fixed, not the library.
Introduce non-standard md_order (month/day order) locale field to be used later
via nl_langinfo(). Currently %EF and %Ef emulated using this field, but they
planned for remove in future in favour of nl_langinfo() test field.
Implement %F per POSIX
char *
FooFileChunk(const char *filename, char *buf, off_t offset, off_t length)
Which only hashes part of a file.
Implement FooFile() in terms of this function.
Submitted by: roam
is currently set to 10000. This is intended to prevent glob from running
amok when a highly recursive path is provided (such as "../*/../*/../*/...")
Reviewed by: Diane Bruce <db@db.net>, jhb
utility functions which convert between string namespace names and
numeric constants used by the interface. Right now, two namespaces
are supported, EXTATTR_NAMESPACE_SYSTEM ("system") and
EXTATTR_NAMESPACE_USER ("user"). These functions are used by
various userland EA utilities, rather than hard coding the routines
all over the place.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
o Rename internal library functions so that they are prefixed with
_posix1e or _POSIX1E, removing them from the application namespace (and
potential conflict with other ACL functions elsewhere in the system).
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
gratuitous difference between us and our sister project.
This was given to me _ages_ ago. May apologies to Paul for the length
of time its taken me to commit.
Obtained from: Niels Provos <provos@physnet.uni-hamburg.de>/OpenBSD
Submitted by: Paul Herman <pherman@frenchfries.net>
Reviewed by: David Cross <dec@freebsd.org>, jkh <jkh@freebsd.org>
Approved by: jkh <jkh@freebsd.org>
Obtained from: Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>, David Cross <dec@freebsd.org>
We have been running this patch on a production NIS server for 2.5 weeks now.
Normally we would have ypserv die at least once a week, and often many times
a day.
This patch treats and error from select as zeroing out the FD_SET to indicate
that no fds are ready for reading. This is safe because the rpc code
always re-inits the FDSET before calling select.