wildcard specifications. Earlier the only wildcard syntax
was "-j 0" for "any jail". There were at least
two shortcomings in it: First, jail ID 0 was abused; it
meant "no jail" in other utils, e.g., ps(1). Second, it
was impossible to match processed not in jail, which could
be useful to rc.d developers. Therefore a new syntax is
introduced: "-j any" means any jail while "-j none" means
out of jail. The old syntax is preserved for compatibility,
but now it's deprecated because it's limited and confusing.
Update the respective regression tests. While I'm here,
make the tests more complex but sensitive: Start several
processes, some in jail and some out of jail, so we can
detect that only the right processes are killed by pkill
or matched by pgrep.
Reviewed by: gad, pjd
MFC after: 1 week
- Fix overflow bugs in sysctl(8), systat(1), and vmstat(8)
when printing values of "struct vmmeter" in kilobytes as
they don't necessarily fit into 32 bits. (Fix sysctl(8)
reporting of a total virtual memory; it's in pages too.)
Using either one of the two would result in an empty protos[]
array, and no sockets were actually listed:
% sockstat -4
USER COMMAND PID FD PROTO LOCAL ADDRESS FOREIGN ADDRESS
% sockstat -6
USER COMMAND PID FD PROTO LOCAL ADDRESS FOREIGN ADDRESS
%
Fix this bug by tweaking appropriately the logic of handling opt_4,
opt_6, opt_u and protos_defined.
Submitted by: des
Pointy hat: keramida
behavior of sockstat(1) will still be to show "udp", "tcp" and
"divert" protocols, but we can now provide a (comma-separated)
list of protocols, as in:
% sockstat -P tcp
to list only TCP sockets, or we can filter more than one protocol
by separating the protocol names with a comma:
% sockstat -P tcp,udp
Protocol names are parsed with getprotobyname(3), so any protocol
whose name is listed in `/etc/protocols' should work fine.
Submitted by: Josh Carroll <josh.carroll@psualum.com>
Approved by: des
priority class and use this to:
- print "-" instead of a garbage value for ithreads. Print "-" instead
of the unused nice value for kthreads which are (mis)classified as
PRI_TIMESHARE. For such threads, the nice value can be set to nonzero
by root, but it is never used (at least by the 4bsd scheduler). For
ithreads, we didn't even print the unused value.
- print "i<priority>" and "r<priority>" instead of a biased "<priority>"
for idletime and realtime threads, Here <priority> is the priority
parameter to idprio/rtprio(1). Just add the prefix and remove the
bias for now. <priority> has been stored indirectly in the kernel
since 2001/02/12, and even the kernel cannot recover the original
value in all cases. Here we need to handle more cases than pri_to_rtp(),
but actually handle fewer cases, and end up printing garbage after
a thread changes its current priority while in the kernel.
- for idletime and realtime threads, if they are kthreads then add a prefix
of "k" to the previous string.
- for idletime and realtime threads, if they in the FIFO scheduling class
then add a suffix of "F" to the previous string (if it fits; the other
parts of the string are sure to fit unless <priority> is garbage).
- Reduce the number of global variables
- Make global objects static
- Use bool consistently
- Sort getopt arguments and their processing
- Add function comments
- Change notlast != 0 into !last
Up to now jot would fail to generate the last character in the range
or skew the integer distribution in a way that would generate the numbers
in the range's limits with half the probability of the rest.
This modification fixes the program, rather than documenting the
strange behavior, as suggested in docs/54879.
Also, correctly specify the range of random(3).
PR: docs/54879
MFC after: 2 weeks
sequence of random numbers.
This functionality was lost in revision 1.9 when the random number
generator was switched to arc4random.
PR: docs/54879
MFC after: 2 weeks
system that don't have audit framefork compiled into kernel or ia32 binary
on amd64 system will result in SIGSYS. There is one place in su.c itself
where it tries to check for errno != ENOSYS, but it has been a nop since su
does not catch SIGSYS anyway. There are few other places in libbsm,
where attempt to invoke audit syscal would result in SIGSYS if no audit
support is present in the kernel, so that the only reliable method for
now is to disable SIGSYS completely in the case when BSM is compiled in.
In the long run, both direct invocation of audit-related syscalls and
libbsm should be made more intellegent to handle the case when BSM is not
compiled into the kernel gracefully.
MFC after: 3 days
(provided re@ approval)
o When stat(2) fails (i.e. the file has been moved) there's no new
file with the same name yet, so keep showing the file that's open.
This yields the same behaviour as -f, for which we don't stat(2).
o When a new file with the same name has been created (i.e stat(2)
succeeds but the inode or device numbers differ from the opened
file), show any new lines in the opened file (i.e. the old or
rotated file) before reopening the new file.
These changes fix the observed behaviour that tail(1) doesn't show
the very last lines of the rotated (log) files.
PR: bin/101979
Tested by: Jos Backus <jos@catnook.com>
MFC after: 2 months
- Mention that some of them are POSIX extensions. [2]
PR: docs/85062 [1]
Submitted by: Toby Peterson [1]
Obtained from: wctype(3) [2]
MFC after: 3 days
somewhere around 1348.
The revision log doesn't seem to go back quite that far, but I assume
that the update to this file was forgotten in the celebrations.
While, here, note which countries the other UK patron Saints hold
patronage of.
Sources include http://www.novareinna.com/festive/georgeday.html and
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/
not in number of pages.
PR: docs/71690
Submitted by: Jan Srzednicki
(A patch is only partially merged, the rest was already fixed by bde@
in rev. 1.51.)
when root doesn't have the permission to enter target user's home directory.
If set, PAM environment variable HOME will be used in chdir(2) instead of
pwd->pw_dir, this allows pam_chroot module to continue to function.
discussed on src-committers. This is intentionally not included in the
usage() function as it would confuse the output too much.
Approved by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
audit properties, including the audit user id. This can be quite
helpful in debugging audit problems.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
MFC after: 3 days
successful and failed su attempts will be recorded using the AUE_su
event type (login or lo class) if auditing is present in the system.
Currently, the records will have a header, subject, text (with the
actual diagnostics), a return and trailer token.
See audit_submit(3) for more information.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
extensions. This seems to be unnecessary and prevents less(1) from being
able to detect file changes, so remove the part.
Submitted by: Eric Huss <e-huss netmeridian com>
PR: bin/102624
Discussed with: des
MFC After: 3 days
Add "-C <column>" and "-d <delims>" options to chop up input lines.
Make '#' a comment character, rest of line is ignored.
Submitted by: Dmitry Morozovsky <marck@rinet.ru>
can use this small and nifty utility. Create compatibility
symlinks from /usr/bin for the time being to avoid breaking
custom scripts relying on the hardcoded path to the utility.
If pkill(1) takes root, its source should be repocopied some
day to src/bin.
Idea by: des
Discussed with: brooks (in cvs-src and cvs-all)
Also make both lowercase and uppercase suffix letters work
as byte-count suffixes, i.e. the following two commands are
equivalent now:
% split -b 4m foo
% split -b 4M foo
Submitted by: Roman Divacky [1]
Lots of help by: cperciva
Reviewed by: cperciva
MFC after: 1 week
Sort getopt option handling of -p too, while here.
The changes are adapted from a patch by Ruslan Ermilov, posted as
followup to docs/33852.
PR: docs/33852
Submitted by: Gary W. Swearingen <swear@blarg.net>
MFC after: 1 week
characters correctly. These characters are displayed "combined"
with a space character.
PR: misc/100215
Submitted by: "J.R. Oldroyd" <<fbsd AT opal.com>>
Reviewed by: "J.R. Oldroyd" <<fbsd AT opal.com>> (revised patch)
MFC after: 3 days
including to printf(). Using uintmax_t is also robust to further
extensions in both the C language and the bitwidth of kernel counters.
Tested on: i386 amd64 ia64
Move INET6 out of the RELEASE_CRUNCH conditional block
because it saves as little as 2% of the binary size and
IPv6 is rather popular today. (Some other binaries, e.g.,
telnetd, include INET6 for RELEASE_CRUNCH already.)
of incorrect and machine-dependent integer math. Now we can encrypt a file
on an i386 and decrypt it on an amd64, and vice versa.
Submitted by: Andrew Heybey < ath at niksun dot com >
machine.c. The traditional condition was (pctcpu > 0 || SRUN), but the
negation of the condition logic (from select to skip) made this come
out as (pctcpu > 0 && SRUN), leading to a very erratic display, except
for purely CPU bound processes.
This has been discussed in the mail lists some time ago and I have used
top with this patch on my systems for more than a year without problems
(just forgot to commit it earlier, since my systems were all fixed ...).
style "every Monday":
mon * Do Foo.
Previously, at the end of the month, this could cause a printout of
the following nature when invoked with -A 7:
36 May* Do Foo
MFC after: 2 weeks
used once on a non-empty pattern space and then again on an empty
pattern space, the second usage restores the pattern space length to
the length that it had when the first "P" was used.
PR: bin/96052
Submitted by: Andrey Zholos <aaz@althenia.net>
MFC after: 7 days
specified size to be read in the more familiar units of kilobytes,
megabytes, gigabytes, terabytes and petabytes.
PR: bin/50988
Submitted by: Matthew Seaman <m.seaman@infracaninophile.co.uk>
MFC after: 7 days
32229 telnet CALL mmap(0,0x8000,0x3,0x1002,0xffffffff,0,0,0)
32229 telnet CALL open(0x2807bc28,0,0x1b6)
32229 telnet CALL socket(0x2,0x2,0)
to
32229 telnet CALL mmap(0,0x8000,PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE,MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_ANON,0xffffffff,0,0,0)
32229 telnet CALL open(0x2807bc28,O_RDONLY,<unused>0x1b6)
32229 telnet CALL socket(PF_INET,SOCK_DGRAM,0)
David wanted to implement the suggestions which came up at the review from
arch@ too, but real life rejected this proposal. So I commit what we already
got and let another volunteer pick the remaining work from the ideas list.
Submitted by: "David Kirchner" <dpk@dpk.net>
Suggested by: FreeBSD ideas list page
Reviewed by: arch
RPC_MAXDATASIZE was introduced. This is believed to have been debugging
code committed accidentally, although I've been unable to reach the
committer to confirm this. The effect was to limit the size of RPCs on
TCP and UDP to 9k, well below the default protocol limits in the libc
rpc code. This change simply removes these introduced limits, falling
back on the libc definitions.
PR: 88856
Reported by: Keith Bostic <bostic at sleepycat dot com>
Testing by: Susan LoVerso <sue at loverso dot southborough dot ma dot us>
Reveiwed by: cel, rees
Review timeout: alfred, mbr
MFC after: 2 weeks
rename, __getcwd, shutdown, getrlimit, setrlimit, _umtx_lock, _umtx_unlock,
pathconf, truncate, ftruncate, kill
- Decode more arguments of open, mprot, *stat, and fcntl.
- Convert all constant-macro and bitfield decoding to lookup tables; much
cleaner than previous code.
- Print the timestamp of process exit and signal reception when -d or -D are in
use
- Try six times with 1/2 second delay to debug the child
PR: bin/52190 (updated)
Submitted by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
Approved by: alfred
not on the top-level -and sequence, e.g. inside of ! or -or.
Create a separate linked list of all active -exec {} + primaries and
do the last execution for all at termination.
PR: bin/79263
Submitted by: Jilles Tjoelker <jilles@stack.nl>
MFC after: 7 days
and displays entries from the administrative database specified by
database, using the lookup order specified in nsswitch.conf(5).
PR: bin/79903, bin/88460, bin/96536
Submitted by: Julien Gabel, Dan Nelson, Daniel J. O'Connor
Obtained from: NetBSD
Discussed with: ume, soc-bushman
MFC after: 1 month
so that it can be more easily unbroken and extended.
Try to use `static', `const' (as appropriate), prototypes declared together,
and parameter names in prototypes for all private functions, not just the
new one.
vmstat.c:
Move totfr to be under daefr and prcfr since it logically belongs there.
Move all the count fields (wire, act, inact, cache and free) to near
the bottom of the sub-display (after all the rate fields) to reduce
competition with adjoining sub-displays.
systat.1:
Move things as above.
Attempt to improve missing and poor wording in the description of the
fields. The long sentence was hard to parse and didn't say anything
about the different units.
Increment .Dd.
part that handled the 17th and 18th rows of the vmstat-proper subdisplay
was deleted in rev.1.10 when these rows stopped being used and was not
restored when the 17th row was used again. For such terminals, we now
lose the `buf' field instead of making a mess with it. Terminals with
fewer than 24 rows have never been supported.
The problem is not avoided by using curses since we use the last line
for data entry and don't use a separate subwindow for this line.
Some other things in the vmstat display could be handled better using
subwindows.
output too.
Fine tune all coordinates and most field widths in the vmstat (sub)display
for this and previous changes now that we have to change almost all of them
just to move the ex-extended fields:
- change VMSTATROW back to 7. It was 6 due to a hack in the extended vm
stats changes.
- reduce the maximum field width that we try for from 9 to 8. 4 or 5 is
enough for most fields but we try to use the same width for all fields.
8 is enough to display everything without changing units memory sizes
exceed 100GB.
Fix some unrelated coordinates and field widths in comments.
vm stats to the normal vm stats. Sort them into the normal stats
according to the man page only in the source code so that diffs are
almost readable. Reduce style bugs in printing the value of %ozfod.
new vnstat display to the right of the namei display.
Move the non-vmstat fields {des,num,fre}vn from the vmstat display to a
new vnstat display. Move the dtbuf field there too. The buf and dtbuf
fields are non-vmstat and non-vnstat, so there is no good place to
display them. I need to move at least 1 of them out of the vm stats
for further cleanups of the vm stats, and there is only space for 1
of them in the vn stats. (The best place for the current buf field
is actually /dev/null, since it has been completely broken for about
10 years and broken for longer. It gives an uninteresting virtual
memory count where an interesting real memory count is wanted.)
to handle changes to the set of disks selected, but it is unnecessary
for that since the whole screen is redrawn when this set is changed.
It was also buggy:
- MAXDRIVES*6 = 42 was hard-coded as only 30 spaces in a string literal,
the last 2 disk names were not cleared as intended
- when the extended vmstats are active, clearing of even 30 columns
overruns the ozfod value field by 3 columns. This was harmless because
the field is much wider than necessary.
value printed is actually the optimized (i.e., the non-slow, not-on-the-fly
zero fills percentage) except in overflow cases. Describe it as %ozfod
in the display. Move the field descriptor 1 to the left so that there
is space for 5 characters after the % sign (this leaves no space between
the number and the descriptor but the % character serves well as a
separator).
Fixed integer overflow at z.ozfod = UINT_MAX/100 in the calculation of
%ozfod. This value can be reached just a few hours or minutes after
booting, so %ozfod was usually garbage in boot mode. Now %ozfod is
correct in boot mode for a few days or hours.
Print a non-dummy %ozfod when the division for it isn't division by 0
instead of when the result will be less than 100%. A result of 100%
may be correct, though a result of more than 100% indicates overflow
of one or both counters.
not very usefully, in all other displays). This was the original point
of the PR.
Move the load average up by 2 so that it starts in row 0 for all windows
(2 lines above it were wasted for all other windows except vmstat).
Move everything below it up by 2 or 3 (3 for icmp and icmp6 which had
an extra blank line due from not compensating for the foot-shooting in
note (3); only ip and ip6 compensated). Reduce the magic numbers related
to this.
Notes by the submitter:
%%%
1. All the subwin() calls are identical using #define MAINWIN_ROW 3
(systat.h).
2. The load average is at the top of the window.
3. Each display starts on the fourth line. I made changes to those
displays that shifted the start line (i.e., icmp). This entailed a
lot of changes within the comments at the top of those displays.
4. For ip6, I shifted the "Input next-header histogram" column down one
row to separate it from "IPv6 Output". I raised "bad scope packets"
and "address selection failed" up one row to stay with "IPv6 Input"
(valid?). They were down one row to probably line up at the bottom,
but I think they should stick with their fellow items in a column.
5. I condensed ifstat a bit. It had a lot of empty rows.
%%%
Submitted by: Se=E1n Farley <sean-freebsd at farley dot org>
PR: bin/81874
only affect amd64 and i386. alpha uses "intr N" instead of "irqN" and
mostly has no device names. ia64 uses only device names.
- Edit interrupt names once after they are read from the kernel and not
every time they are displayed.
- Discard bogus trailing spaces so that the next step doesn't move things
to oblivion.
- If an interrupt name starts with "irqN:" (as it usually does in on
amd64 and i386), then move "irqN" to the end and strip ":", since we
have no space for the ":" and don't want to start descriptions with
"N" after stripping "irq" in the next step (since "N" would look like
a count). This step may need reworking for interrupt names containing
several device names -- then moving the irq number to the end would
lose it instead of losing some device names.
- Remove "irq" from an interrupt name if and only if the original name is
too long to display.
accidentally.
Read buffer overruns:
The size of the target array (TSOTTA == 10) is a wrong limit to use for
scanning the source string.
Write buffer overruns:
TSOTTA is also a wrong limit to use for copying to the target buffer,
since we want to add a NUL terminator afterwards. TSOTTA was also 1
too small for holding both the desired number of visible characters
and the NUL.
Worked accidentally:
There is error in the algorithm that tends to result in the space saved
by stripping "irq" not actually being used, but some cases worked
accidentally provided "irqN" is near the end of the source string and
"N" is only 1 digit.
Starting with 5.mumble-CURRENT, "irqN" is at the beginning of the
string on all (?) arches that have it and the accidents don't happen.
E.g. on i386's, the keyboard irq is now named
"irq1: atkbd0<bogus blank padding>" by the kernel, and this name was
converted to "1: atkb" -- not only the device number but part of the
device name has been lost --, while before 5.mumble the kernel name
was "atkbd0 irq1" and systat accidentally preserved the irq number to
give "atkbd0 1". The ":" in the string wastes precious space, and
stripping "irq" results in descriptions starting with numbers which
makes them look too much like counts. This commit just fixes the last
problem.
clobbered at runtime:
dirtybuf -> dtbuf
desiredvnodes -> desvn
numvnodes -> numvn
freevnodes -> frevn
The vmstats column has only 5 characters available for descriptors, but up
to 13 were used. The extras get clobbered at runtime by interrupt values
and/or descriptors on systems with more than 12 interrupt sources.
%slo-z -> %sloz
This one is in the "extended" vmstats area and doesn't get clobbered now.
Removed stale documentation of desvn.
Changed a descriptor:
tfree -> totfr
so that it is consistent with the abbreviations for other free counts
(daefr and prcfr) and thus almost decodeable.
Fixed missing documentation of tfree/totfr. This and everything else
in the extended vmstats area is misdocumented as being in a certain
place in the vmstats column.
This speeds up my testing a bit. Because truncate(1) doesn't allocate
blocks on file system before they are used, it is very useful to
emulate huge file systems:
# truncate -s 16T fs.img
# mdconfig -a -f fs.img
# newfs /dev/mdX
(-t swap can be used as well)
Note to self: if a comment says a list must be lexically sorted, sort
the list lexically.
Submitted by: Pawel Worach
Approved by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
dereference it.
This will happen if we ^D at the Login: prompt without having provided a
valid login before.
Set pwd to NULL on bad login attempts to prevent audit_logout() from being
called for a user which didn't actually log on.
Reported by: Jerome Magnin jethro at docisland dot org
using sscanf and truncating the start/end entries by writing them with a
32 bit int descriptor (%x). The upper bytes of the 64 bit vm_offset_t
variables (for little endian machines) were uninitialized. For big endian
machines, things would have been worse because it was storing the 32 bit
value in the upper half of the 64 bit variable. I've changed it to use
%lx and long types. That should work on all our platforms.
forthcoming. This commit also has a number of style(9) fixes and
minor corrections so the code works better with the build system being
used for non-FreeBSD builds.
Many thanks to: Jaakko Heinonen, who proposed a mechanism for extended
attribute support and implemented both the machine-independent portion
and the Linux-specific portion.
- <netipx> headers [1]
- IPX library (libipx)
- IPX support in ifconfig(8)
- IPXrouted(8)
- new MK_NCP option
New MK_NCP build option controls:
- <netncp> and <fs/nwfs> headers
- NCP library (libncp)
- ncplist(1) and ncplogin(1)
- mount_nwfs(8)
- ncp and nwfs kernel modules
User knobs: WITHOUT_IPX, WITHOUT_IPX_SUPPORT, WITHOUT_NCP.
[1] <netsmb/netbios.h> unconditionally uses <netipx> headers
so they are still installed. This needs to be dealt with.
w/ non-zero data, and it turns out we don't... This is really optimized
zero filled on demand, or pages that were already zero'd for us...
MFC after: 3 days
if the target is a fifo. After opening a trace file, check that it is a
regular file, and if not, return an error.
MFC after: 3 days
Reported by: kris
PR: 94278
(I'm not using GPL, but I still think there are good
ideas in the GNU projects. ;-) Among other things,
this should make it easier for clients of bsdtar to
recognize it automatically:
bsdtar --version | grep bsdtar
in usr.bin/login because the login.access feature has
moved to PAM completely.
Their counterparts in lib/libpam/modules/pam_login_access
have been found to be in sync with, and even in better shape
than, login.access.5 and login_access.c here.
Therefore cvs rm login.access.5 and login_access.c from
usr.bin/login so that nobody will waste their time on fixing
or developing the files here.
MFC after: 3 days
after tty entry by one space in order to provide extra spaces for
the tty entry. As a result, full pts names are now visible (up
to 999 pts's anyway):
Before:
Login Name TTY Idle Login Time Office Phone
robert Robert Watson *v0 3:55 Fri 02:54
robert Robert Watson p0 19 Sat 11:01
robert Robert Watson pts Sat 14:55
After:
Login Name TTY Idle Login Time Office Phone
robert Robert Watson *v0 5:08 Fri 02:54
robert Robert Watson p0 8 Sat 11:01
robert Robert Watson pts/5 Sat 14:55
MFC after: 1 week
chdir(), be sure to undo the effects of the chdir before continuing.
Without this, after hitting a directory with mode 0111 (for example),
tar will get lost, and won't add any yet unvisted files to your
archive. (Or possibly add the wrong files, I suppose...)
Reviewed By: kientzle@
Apparently with the new pts code stalled entries are printed, when they are
not with the BSD ptys.
Submitted by: Michal Mertl <mime at traveller dot cz>
3 columns were wasted at the left, except these columns were used to
make the header line up. Now there is no space on the same line for
the "Proc:" part of the header. Try putting this on the line above
although it clutters that line (there is already similar clutter for
the "Interrupts" header). Leave 1 column between these fields. With
the above and a previous change there is enough of space for this.
Use 5 columns instead of 3 for the number of users since 3 is not quite
enough and there was space to spare. This also fixes an off-by-2 error
in a previous fix forthe column count in the comment on STATROW.
Move all the pager fields 1 to the right so that the "count" and "pages"
descriptors more clearly apply to the pager fields and not the memory
fields. There was space to space.
Waste some of the spare space at the right of the pager fields to expand
all the pager field widths to their old values (but now with a column
between the fields). There are fields more in need of expansion but most
of them are not in places near spare space.
made it unnecessary. (Rev.1.6 had to reduce the field width to 4, and
changed 100.0 and preposterous larger values down to 99.9 since 100.0
wouldn't have fitted. Rev.1.35 handles precentages > 99.9 well enough by
changing the format to %.0f when the string given by the initial format
is too wide.)
Even with this change, during short testing I've never seen a percentage
of 100 being displayed by systat -v, although top(1) displays percentages
of 100 user or 100 idle for similar loads.
Always use snprintf()'s return value, since discarding it is a style
bug at best and using it here gives slightly simpler code and better
error checking. Use snprintf() in putlongdouble() the same as in
putfloat(). (1.25 changed most sprintf()'s to snprintf()'s to fix
non-bugs without changing the logic to use the result of snprintf();
1.27 restored one of the sprintf()s by cloning a stale version of
putfloat().)
Don't print a too-long field in the unlikely case that the fallback
to M units in putint() leaves the field still too long. (The fallback
to printing stars was lost in rev.1.58 when the fallback to M units
was added.)
cannot run into other fields or field descriptors. If the value is
too large to fit in the field width, then the output format is adjusted
so that the value (usually) fits, but with fields running together
externally this adjustment usually didn't help. Mostly it doesn't
matter to lose 1 digit of precision, but switching the output format
is bad if it happens often or gives bogus units. The loss of width
is most serious for fields near "Csw" (which are also the ones which
must often ran together) since these have a high variance and large
values relative to the possible field widths so the switch occurs more
often now, and for the memory size fields where the switch gives the
bogus units kKB or MKB.
Now only the fields for r, p, d, s and w can run into each other.
These fields have width 3, and 3 cannot be reduced to 2 without losing
all precision when the value is between 100 and 999.
Trim "pdwake" to "pdwak" at think time now that it doesn't get clobbered
at runtime. The manpage doesn't need to be changed for this because
it documents the clobbered descriptor, unlike for 4 other too-long
descriptors which only get clobbered if there are lots of interrupt
sources.
Trim "% busy" to "%busy" since most other descriptors for percentages
are spelled without the space and this change makes changing the widths
of the %busy fields unnecessary.
around PUTRATE() because PUTRATE() only looked like a function -- it was
multiple statements. Use "do {...} while(0)" as usual in PUTRATE() so
that it is a single statement that can be used like a function.
large. In most cases it is still 1 too large, so fields tend to run
together, but in the following cases it was more than 1 too large, and
the starting column was too small too, so the field started inside the
previous field or descriptor and clobbered that:
- "wire": the number for this overwrote 2 characters of the number for
"Flt". Reduce the field width by 3 (2 to avoid the overwrite and 1
so that the fields don't run together). This was already done for
the preceding number for "cow".
- "inact": the number for this overwrote 1 character of the descriptor
"Idle". Reducing the field width by 2 is enough.
- "cache:" the number for this overwrote 3 characters of the scale
"...| |". The field width should be reduced by 4 to keep things
from running together, but that is a lot and not so necessary here
since the final "|" in the scale serves as a delimiter. Only reduce
it by 3.
- "free": the number for this overwrote 2 characters of the bar graph.
The character position under the final "|" in the scale is apparently
not used, so reducing the field width by 3 is enough.
When "zfod" is in the main vmstat display:
- use the normal field width of 9 (not 5) for it since there is no shortage
of space. Fix style bugs (excessive {}) in the statement that
conditionally writes it.
Write all reduced field widths for vmstat fields as "9 - <reduction>" as
a hint that we don't want to reduce them.
number in more cases by stealing 2 characters from the count field to
give more space in the descriptor field, but it did the column adjustments
for this strangely using an off-by-2 error in the base column and
compensating off-by-2 errors in 6 offsets from the base column (4 new
errors and 2 from not changing the offsets that actually changed).
Print the "Interrupts" header directly at its offset from the base column
instead of spacing it half using the offset and half by printing a space
character.
current tab, however the code it replaced wanted to round to the
next TAB. Consequently things like this:
( echo 1 ; echo 2 ) | column
cause column to loop indefinitely. This patch is slightly different
from the one Gary submitted, but is closer to the original code.
Submitted by: Gary Cody <gary@lyranthe.org>
MFC after: 1 week
events. The specifics of submitting the records is contained within
login_audit.c.
Document the auditing behavior in the man page.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project, Apple Computer, Inc.
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
Correct insecure temporary file usage in ee. [06:02]
Correct a race condition when setting file permissions, sanitize file
names by default, and fix a buffer overflow when handling files
larger than 4GB in cpio. [06:03]
Fix an error in the handling of IP fragments in ipfw which can cause
a kernel panic. [06:04]
Security: FreeBSD-SA-06:01.texindex
Security: FreeBSD-SA-06:02.ee
Security: FreeBSD-SA-06:03.cpio
Security: FreeBSD-SA-06:04.ipfw
$ su
% kill -STOP $$
where su is executing (t)csh. csh's job handling is a little more
special than that of (a)sh, bash and even zsh and blows up a little
more spectacularly. This modification restores the original mucking
about with the tty pgrp, but is careful to only do it when su (or
su's child) is the foreground process.
While I'm here, fix a STDERR_FILENO spelling as suggested by bde.
su isn't the foreground process. Hopefully this won't break PAM,
but I couldn't find any useful information about ache's theory
that it will.
Specifically, this change fixes the following:
# sh
# echo $$
# su - root -c id &
# echo $$
The PID output changes as su seems to be kill -STOP'ing itself
and catching the parent shell in the process. This is especially
bad if you add a ``su - user -c command &'' to an rc script!
Sponsored by: Sophos/Activestate
Not objected to by: des
type which is a String type that has no -s limitations applied to it.
Change most Strings in the code to Names and add a few extra syscalls,
namely munmap, read, rename and symlink. This was enough to facilitate
following file descriptor allocations in the code more easily and
getting a hint at what's being read/written from/to files. More
syscalls should really be added.
While here, fix an off-by-one bug in the buffer truncation code and
add a fflush so that truss's output reflects the syscall that the
program is stuck in.
Sponsored by: Sophos/Activestate
MFC after: 2 weeks
but don't expect a proper ASCII string to exist right here right now, don't
use strcmp(3) which checks for a NUL. As we're still building the argument
up, the next character might be garbage. It would probably be just as safe to
temporarily write a NUL there, but if we've reached the end of argument memory
that might not be the best idea, I think. It's unclear.
Doing it this way seems to meet the most with the original intent.
PR: 85696
Prodded by: stefanf
with upper and lower case letters from the English alphabet. Change
the number of possible file names mktemp will return from 26**6
to (10+26+26)**6 instead. This keeps things consistent with mkstemp(3)
with FAST_IPSEC rather than the KAME IPSEC stack.
Note that the output of "netstat -s -p ipsec" differs depending on which
stack is compiled into the kernel since they each keep different stats.
This delta also adds the "esp", "ah", and "ipcomp" protocol stats, which
are also available when the kernel is compiled with the FAST_IPSEC stack
(e.g. "netstat -s -p esp").
Submitted by: Matt Titus <titus at nttmcl dot com>
MFC after: 3 days
holiday is now celebrated on December 1st. From the PR:
December 1 was adopted as National Day in 1990, being the day of
celebration of the Great Assembly of Alba Iulia which voted for the
union of Transylvania with Romania and which symbolise the union of all
Romanians within a single state and the achievement of the unity of
Romanian national state. [1]
[1] LAW Number 10 from July 31st, 1990
Regarding the proclamation of the National Day of Romania
http://www.1decembrie.ro/en/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1&Itemid=4
PR: docs/90673
Submitted by: Ion-Mihai "IOnut" Tetcu
Originally pointed out by: Cornel Ilie <cornel dot c punkt ilie at gmail punkt com>
means:
o Remove Elf64_Quarter,
o Redefine Elf64_Half to be 16-bit,
o Redefine Elf64_Word to be 32-bit,
o Add Elf64_Xword and Elf64_Sxword for 64-bit entities,
o Use Elf_Size in MI code to abstract the difference between
Elf32_Word and Elf64_Word.
o Add Elf_Ssize as the signed counterpart of Elf_Size.
MFC after: 2 weeks
case. It seems entries are in reverse order when read from the kernel
memory but in the right order when read from a file (i.e. ALQ). Handle
both cases.
MFC after: 1 day
option is undocumented because it does nothing. It does nothing
because bsdtar never needs it. It is accepted because gnutar does
sometimes need it and many scripts use it.
Reported by: Pawel Jakub Dawidek
time_t and times will look incorrect on machines with 64bit time_t.
PR: 88788
Submitted by: Keith White <Keith.White -at- site.uottawa.ca>
MFC after: 1 week
service name instead of channel number with -c command option. Supported
service names are: DUN (Dial-Up Networking), FAX (Fax) and SP (Serial Port).
MFC after: 1 week
This includes fixes and cleanups listed below:
- If a process dissappears while we are signalling it, don't count it as a
match/error.
- Better handling of errors and messages.
- Downgrade failure to kill(2) (other than ESRCH) from fatal error to a
warning; otherwise processing aborts and possibly matching killees would
remain unsignalled. This makes pkill match the Solaris behavior.
- Exit with 2 on usage errors as documented.
Obtained from: NetBSD
Glanced at by: maintainer (gad) [a bit different version of this patch]
% pgrep <something> [to verify which processes match]
% pkill <something>
To speed such operation up, add -I option which works like rm(1)'s -i
option (unfortunately -i is already used in pkill(1)), ie. pkill will
ask for confirmation before killing each matching process.
After adding -j, -F, -i, -S, -o and -L options and other improvements,
I think I can add myself to the copyright header.
Glanced at by: maintainer (gad)
kernel memory and not using sysctl. Previously, libmemstat was used
only for the live kernel via sysctl paths.
This results in netstat output becoming both more consistent between
core dumps and the live kernel, and also more information in the core
dump case than previously (i.e., mbuf cache information).
Statistics relating to sfbufs still rely on a kvm descriptor as they
are not currently exposed via libmemstat. netstat -m operating on a
core is still unable to print certain sfbuf stats available on the live
kernel.
MFC after: 1 week
when list the archive contents, then try to extract selected files
(file selection always works against unedited pathnames). With this change,
-t always shows the pathnames as they appear in the archive.
Thanks to: Robert Watson
this by accessing the cdev_priv element of the cdev structure. Looking
forward we need a better way to handle this, as this structure shouldn't
be frobbed by userspace.
Submitted by: Doug Steinwand
PR: bin/88203
MFC after: 1 week
Discussed with: phk
field holding the threadid. This is more useful for libthr than
libpthread, but still quite useful in libpthread as it can be used to
process interlaced records from multiple threads over the course of a
system call.
Detect old ktr_buffer values using the heuristic "if it's negative,
then it must not be a valid threadid". This may leave something to be
desired.
MFC after: 1 month
Reviewed by: davidxu
This causes attempts to update a non-existent file to report
an actual error instead of triggering an assertion failure.
PR: bin/87911
Thanks to: roemer.ulrich
MFC after: 3 days
Note: This does not entirely fix bin/87911. I need to decide on
the "correct" response when someone tries to update a non-existent
archive file.
command is handled as a shell function. This avoids the following
peculiar behaviour when /usr/bin is on a case-insensitive filesystem:
# READ foo
(... long pause, depending upon the amount of swap space available ...)
sh: Resource temporarily unavailable.
Reported by: I can't remember; someone on IRC.
MFC after: 1 week
looked for in the system make file directory or in the specified
-m paths instead of always looking in the other -I and .PATH
specified paths. (Commit log shamelessly stolen from NetBSD.)
Reviewed by: yar
appear to be never called:
(1) If a function is never called according to its call count but it
must have been called because its child time is nonzero, then print
it in the flat profile. Previously, if its call count was zero
then we only printed it in the flat profile if its self time was
nonzero.
(2) If a function has a zero call count but has a nonzero self or child
time, then print its total self time in the self time per call
column as a percentage of the total (self + child) time. It is
not possible to print the times per call in this case because the
call count is zero. Previously, this was handled by leaving both
per-call columns blank. The self time is printed in another column
but there was no way to recover the total time.
(1) partially fixes the case of the "never called" function main() and
prepares for (2) to apply to main() and other functions. Profiling
of main() was lost in the conversion from a.out to ELF, so main()'s
call count has always been zero for many years; then in the common
case where main() is a tiny function, it gets no profiling ticks, so
main() was completely lost in the flat profile.
(2) improves mainly cases like kernel threads. Most kernel threads
appear to be never called because they are always started before
userland can run to turn on profiling. As for main(), the fact that
they are called is not very interesting and their callers are
uninteresting, but their relative self time is interesting since they
are long-running.
Almost always printing percentages in the per-call columns would be
more useful than almost always printing 0.0ms. 0.1ms is now a long
time, so only very large functions take that long per call. The accuracy
per call can approach 1-10 nsec provided programs are run for about
100000 times as long as is necessary to get this accuracy with high
resolution kernel profiling.
you want to see, e.g., sendmail arguments mail(1) will use.
-H is not an independent flag, it's a modifier. Also explicitly
say that -H will cause mail(1) to exit as soon as it prints the headers.
MFC after: 5 days
Add a flags argument to wait_for_lock so that O_NONBLOCK can be
passed to open if a user doesn't want the open to sleep until the
lock becomes available.
Submitted by: Amir Shalem (partially modified)
for mutual exclusion:
A brief description of the problem:
1) Proc A picks up non-blocking lock on file X
2) Proc B attempts to pickup lock, fails then waits
3) Proc C attempts to pickup lock, fails then waits
4) Proc A releases lock
5) Proc B acquires lock, release it to pickup a non-blocking version
6) Proc C acquires lock, release it to pickup a non-blocking version
7) Both process B and C race each other to pickup lock again
This occurs mainly because the processes do not keep the lock after they have
been waiting on it. They drop it, attempt to re-acquire it. (They use the wait
to notify when the lock has become available then race to pick it up). This
results in additional CPU utilization during the race, and can also result
in processes picking locks up out of order.
This change attempts to correct this problem by eliminating the test/acquire
race and having the operating system handle it.
Reported by: kris
Tested by: kris
MFC after: 1 week
Split commands into two groups: one with optional count and one with
required argument. Changed synopsis line accordingly.
Added some hopefully-helpful comments based on experiments, knowing
that not all hardware works the same.
PR: docs/84101
Approved by: keramida
MFC after: 3 days
replacement and has additional features which make it superior.
Discussed on: -arch
Reviewed by: thompsa
X-MFC-after: never (RELENG_6 as transition period)
-- Made the synopses more precise.
-- Added argument to flag in option description.
-- Moved -b default and limits to option description (to un-hide).
-- Noted several behaviors that were not mentioned.
-- A few more trivial changes.
PR: docs/46787
Approved by: keramida
MFC after: 3 days
a -B option which causes bpf peers to be printed. This option can be
used in conjunction with -I if information about specific interfaces
is desired. This is similar to what NetBSD added to their version of
netstat.
$ netstat -B
Pid Netif Flags Recv Drop Match Sblen Hblen Command
1137 lo0 p--s-- 0 0 0 0 0 tcpdump
205 sis0 -ifs-l 37331 0 1 0 0 dhclient
$
$ netstat -I lo0 -B
Pid Netif Flags Recv Drop Match Sblen Hblen Command
1174 lo0 p--s-- 0 0 0 0 0 tcpdump
$
-Add bpf.c which stores all the code for retrieving and parsing bpf
related statistics.
-Modify main.c to add support for the -B option and hook it into the
program logic.
-Add bpf.c to the build.
-Document this new functionality in the man page and bump the revision
date.
-Add prototype for bpf_stats function.
if none was specified on the command line. This is not permitted by
POSIX, and no longer needed now that we have the -a option.
PR: 85099
Submitted by: Toby Peterson (Apple Computer)
integer to an unsigned long. This lifts variables like the maximum
number of pages available for shared memory from 2^31 to 2^32 on 32
bit architectures, and from 2^31 to 2^64 on 64 bit architectures.
It should be noted that this changes breaks ABI on 64 bit architectures
because the size of the shmmax, shmmin, shmmni, shmseg and shmall members
of the shminfo structure has changed.
Silence on: current@
constructing and applying binary patches; in particular, they perform
well (in the sense of constructing small patches) for executable code.
Both portsnap (coming to the base system Real Soon Now) and FreeBSD
Update (coming to the base system a bit later) use bspatch.
This is the same code as the bsdiff-4.2 which has been in the ports
tree (misc/bsdiff) for the past year, with the following exceptions:
1. The license is now the traditional 2-clause BSD;
2. Instead of forking and execing bzip2, the code now uses libbz2; and
3. Some minor changes have been made to fit this code into the base
system (adding $FreeBSD$ tags, putting bsdiff and bspatch into separate
directories, etc.)
This code is rather ugly and has lots of style bugs (mostly because I
wrote it before I had ever heard of style(9)). Some day I'll come
back and clean it up.
Discussed on: freebsd-arch
MFC before: 5.5-RELEASE
Tested by: Several million users (earlier version).
set up before it is called, so move the progname initialization before
the first possible call to bsdtar_warnc().
Thanks to: Stanislav Sedov
PR: bin/83366
MFC after: 7 days
cdev structure, returns the device name associated with it through
the __si_namebuf member. This un-breaks the processing of devices.
This is a RELENG_6 candidate.
Reviewed by: phk
- Remove some extra blank lines.
- Remove comments that don't contribute to understanding.
- Remove additional blank lines in output added to maximize compatibility
with older vmstat output, but that is actually somewhat gratuitous.
Submitted by: bde
MFC with: other vmstat libmemstat(3) changes
statistics from -z are now a bit different due to changes in the
way statistics are now measured. Reproduce with some amount of
accuracy the slightly obscure layouts adopted by the two kernel
sysctls. In the future, we might want to normalize them.
GC dosysctl(), which is now no longer used.
MFC after: 1 week
avg/median/stddev bars onto separate lines for readability if the
ranges overlapped. In 2005, ministat was extended to support more than
2 datasets, but the -s code was not updated. It will coredump if run
with -s and >2 sets.
PR: 82909
Submitted by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
commands for this target are appended to the .END target instead
of beeing executed now. They are executed when the graph is finished.
There was a bug with executing the .END target which came in when
doing conversion to LST_FOREACH() which caused make to dump core.
PR: bin/83698
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
MFC after: 3 days
with a number of positive benefits:
- Start using UMA(9) statistics for mbufs and clusters, which avoids
using the mbuf allocator statistics which suffer from races under
load on SMP. This should eliminate "negative" mbuf counts in
netstat -mb.
- We are now able to track cached (free) mbufs and clusters and count
it towards memory allocated by the network stack.
- We are now also able to track memory allocated to mbuf tags since
libmemstat(3) can also query malloc(9). We don't print this except
as part of the total (for now - #if 0).
- We are now able to track mbuf/cluster/packet allocation failures,
although they are not currently printed (#if 0).
- Don't print out sfbuf statistics when running on a kernel core, as
currently that code is able only to query sysctl for statistics.
MFC after: 1 week
1) An unquoted space is always a separator, even when not "in_arg".
2) When a new destination buffer must be allocated during variable
substitution, only copy data from the active buffer to the new
one when we *are* "in_arg".
These were noticed when testing variable-substitution of variables
which have null values, and are not inside quoted strings...
MFC plans: after a few days, and re@ approval...
was a separator character immediately before it. This wasn't likely to
happen in #-lines, but we might as well get it right. Also fix it so
that "" and "" will create a zero-length argument.
Approved by: re (blanket `env')
start with a '/', they are more supported (by POSIX and SUSv3) than
filenames which have an '=' in them.
Noticed by: tjr
Approved by: re (blanket `env')
apart a string, and supports some text substitutions. This can be
used to provide all the flexibility (and more!) that was lost by recent
changes to how the kernel parses #!-lines in shell scripts.
The '-P' option provides a way to specify an alternate set of directories
to use when searching for the 'utility' program to run. This way you can
be sure what directories are used for that search, without changing the
value of PATH that the user has set. Note that on FreeBSD 6.0, this
option is worthless unless the '-S' option is also used.
Approved by: re (blanket `env')
without checking it for an equals-sign. If it starts with a slash, then
it cannot be a request to set the value of a valid environment variable.
Approved by: re (blanket `env')
it does not happen until all single-letter options are processed. This will
be important for the -S option, which will be coming soon.
Approved by: re (blanket `env')
malloc(9) statistics from kernel memory or a kernel coredump, to catch
up with recent changes to adopt per-CPU malloc(9) statistics. The new
routines walk the per-CPU statistics pools and coalesce them for
presentation to the user.
the string. Until now this caused no harm, because the buffer code used
to tack two NULs onto buffers. With the new, soon to come, parsing code
this isn't the case anymore in all cases, so fix this.
rename the function to be consistent with the naming scheme in the rest
of make. No functional changes.
Obtained from: DragonFlyBSD (idea and most of shell.h)
before executing the shell. Until now this was done when the default
shell was the ksh. This failed if the default shell was sh or csh and
the user switched to ksh.
set the current shell to DEFSHELL. Put all these specifications into
a list. Add user specified new shells to this list. If the user
just selects one of the already know shells just pick the right one
off the list. This let's one do something like:
# Full specification of the user's shell. This also selects the shell.
.SHELL: name=myshell path=/somewhere/foo echo=loud ...
FOO != bar # use myshell here
.SHELL: name=sh
BAR != baz # use /bin/sh here
.SHELL: name=myshell # no need for full spec here.
# continue to use the user's special shell.
the list of shell builtins. Both of these are needed for the compat
mode where make directly executes commands if the command line contains
neither a shell meta character nor a shell builtin. The list of builtins
is not changed, but csh has '@' added as a meta-character.
Initialize the default shell by parsing a string as one would specify
to the .SHELL target. So we get rid of the CShell clone of struct Shell which
just contained const char * where struct Shell had char *.
Add a debugging function for dumping a parsed shell description to
stdout.
introduce a struct that holds all the information about an argument
vector and pass that around.
Author: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
Obtained from: DragonFlyBSD
command that toggles between the two and update the ORDER_PCTCPU()
macro to sort correctly by the visible "cpu" value.
This saves 6 more columns in 80-column terminals, making things a lot
better for the COMMAND column.
Tested on: i386, sparc64 (panther), amd64 (sledge)
Approved by: davidxu (in principle)
similar to the zmore script that comes with gzip (and in fact, in most
Linux distros, zless is a symlink to that very same zmore script) but has
the advantage that you get the correct file name on the less status line,
and can use :n and :p to navigate back and forth between multiple files.
MFC after: 1 week
there are users on the system (even if not running a single process)
with a login > 8 chars.
I'm not all that happy limiting the username width like this, but it
restores sanity to top(1) output.
Discussed with: keramida
after that many values have been printed. The line length is not
considered anymore.
o Add option -x. The -x option will cause the byte values to be
printed in hexadecimal instead of decimal.
o Bump WARNS to 6.
o Update the manpage accordingly.
Make sure we don't end up with shellPath beeing non-zero, but shellName
beeing zero in the error case - back out cleanly from the error.
When executing a command for macro assignment in Cmd_Exec() stuff the
path of the shell into argv[0], not the name. This makes no difference
from the functionality point of view, but allows the regression tests to
determine whether make executes the correct shell.
match text; it also doesn't warn() for files which can't be opened. Remove
global variables. Use bool. fopen(3) the files instead of freopen(3)ing stdin.
used so there is no need to stuff the value of .MAKE into it,
which btw isn't set for quite a while already.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu> (7.239)
into job.c. Move retrieving of environment nearer to the place where it
is actually used and invert the preprocessor conditionals to use
positive logic.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu> (7.236)
been two maxJobs variables: one static in job.c and one global used in
main.c and parse.c. Makeing one global out of these was the wrong way
to fix the problem. Instead rename the global one to jobLimit and keep
maxJobs static in job.c.
Suggested by: rwatson
PR: bin/72510
takes place in the child process in a function ProcExec(). Make sure,
that the child does not call malloc() or other potential dangerous
functions (there are still calls to Punt() in the error case that
should go away). Allocate the argv string via malloc to overcome
the non-constness bug of the execvp prototype. Change the handling of
shell meta-characters and move the builtin list near the list of shell
builtins. Both of these lists should actuall be configurable by the .SHELL
target since they depend on the shell used.
Patch: 7.21[2-9], 7.22[0-46]
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
kldstat -m finds geom_uzip module even if it is compiled in statically.
- create output file with x bit set.
- build mkuzip on all architectures (verified with "make universe").
- fix typo in info message.
where they actually belong to. Move the definitions of the strings
for special macros like "$*" from make.h to parse.h - they're used
only in the parser.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu> (7.211)
context (and only in one place to substitute the .for variable). Therefor
there is no need to pass the context as a parameter.
Patch: 7.197
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
take everything after -- as either a macro assignment or a target.
Note that make still reorders arguments before --: anything starting
with a dash is considered an option, anything which contains an equal
sign is considered a macro assignment and everything else a target.
This still is not POSIX with regard to the options, but it will probably
not change because it has been make's behaviour for ages.
Add a new function Var_Match() that correctly skips a macro call by just
doing the same as Var_Subst() but without producing output. This will help
making the parser more robust.
Patches: 7.190,7.191
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
only one variable and Var_Subst() which substitutes all. Split out the
test whether a variable should not be expanded into match_var().
Make access to the input string consistently using str[]. Remove two
unused functions: Var_GetTail() and Var_GetHead().
Patches: 7.184-7.189
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
make macro into the environment of programs executed by make. This
has approximately the same function as gmake's export directive.
The form of a pseudo target was deliberately choosen to minimize work
for POSIX compatibility (Makefiles are not allowed to use any targets
starting with a dot and consisting only of uppercase letters except those
specified in the standard when they want POSIX compatible behaviour, so
such a Makefile can never contain .EXPORTVAR.)
Change the handling of macros coming from the environment: instead
of asking the environment for each variable we could not find otherwise
put all the environment variables in a special variable environment just
at start up.
This has been tested on the ports cluster by kris.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
given is looked up in a table and no longer stored literally in the
header.
Submitted by: Divacky Roman <xdivac02@stud.fit.vutbr.cz
PR: 80499
MFC After: 1 month
that there are more than one hash table in them. There is no
history to preserve here, so go without a repo-copy.
Asked for by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
to the id_print() function.
Use getgrouplist(3) for the case when an user was specified,
and getgroups(2) when no user was given.
That reverts to the expected behaviour and makes it easy to
implement an option later to force using getgrouplist(3).
NGROUPS groups. getgrouplist(3) may put a duplicate group
id into the passed array (it sets [0] and [1] to the value
of the gid argument), but id_print() sorts them out.
Showing the ids of both an user given by an argument to `id',
and the current user, is now handled in a single function.
Displaying the current user's ids was inaccurate because
getgroups(2) had been used. getgroups(2) returns the current
kernel state of a user's groups, which may not always be
correct if /etc/group was recently changed.
- Fix a few style bugs.
PR: bin/78085
Negative values would produce undefined behaviour including
a possible segmentation fault.
- Explicitly initialize the global row and column variables
to zero.
PR: bin/80348
a Makefile target to re-created this file. Note, that there is no
explicite dependency to automatically re-create the file, because this
is needed only when the directive table changes and it requires the
(yet to come) devel/mph port.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu> (first version)
(combine with existing seconds-based), treat '-' as punctuation rather
than a negative number indicator (eliminates several special cases),
use a single list of special words instead of several separate lists,
use table-driven abbreviation logic (eliminate duplicate word entries
and special-case abbreviation and plural handling). The result is
shorter, simpler (judging from comments, earlier maintainers didn't
understand the special handling for "negative years"), handles more
cases (e.g., "tu" is now a recognized abbreviation for "tuesday",
"3rd" is now equivalent to "third") and it has 2 fewer shift/reduce
conflicts.
particular, acl support is no longer enabled on FreeBSD 4, acl support
should be correctly enabled on Linux, dirent.d_namlen should be
correctly detected on platforms that support it.
Thanks to: Greg Lewis, Juergen Lock, and Jaakko Heinonen
extraction and creation. While I'm here, fix a bug reported by Garrett
Wollman: when stripping the leading '/' from the path "/", don't produce
an entry with an empty name; produce "." instead.
of lines in SMP machines (which are wider), until we have a better way
of handling window sizes & columns in top.
Caught by: ache, Andre Guibert de Bruet <andy@siliconlandmark.com>
Point hat: keramida
threads a process has. The THR column is disabled and disappears
when 'H' is hit, because then every thread gets its own output line.
- Allow sorting processes by "threads".
Approved by: davidxu
Inspired by: Jiawei Ye <leafy7382@gmail.com>
of flags originally passed to VarFind(). This eliminates the code by
removing a bunch of tests.
Patch: 7.173
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
the limit is only the number of meaningful graph symbols available.
Statistical comparison is performed between the first dataset and
any further datasets.
No objection by: phk
getopt() may be called several times - make sure to set optreset
to reset it. Cleanup handling of non-option arguments.
Remove some misleading comments.
Patch: 7.171
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
on every line that starts with a dot use a minimal perfect hash
function and a single strcmp() on the first word after the dot
to find out whether it is really a directive call and, if yes, which
one. Then directly dispatch to a handler function for that directive
(or fall through to the dependency handling code). This makes the
directive parse a little bit more strict about the syntax: the directive
word must be followed by a character that is not alphanumerical and not
an underline (making .undefFOO illegal); .endif and .else can only be
followed by comments.
have no CURFILE anymore so we cannot print a file name or line number.
When ParseSkipLine() returns NULL (it does this when it has detected an
EOF in an .if block) try to pop the input stack and process the next line
Parse_File(). Remove a comment and a piece of code comming from
ancient times when the if-directive read like #if and not .if.
Correctly analyze the first character of a line.
structure - it is just the strlen() of noPrint. Inline JobCondPassSig()
in the only function JobPassSig() using it. Fix the argument types
of JobPrintCommand(). Better parsing for the .SHELL target keywords.
let them say I lived in the time of Pope John Paul II,
one of the greatest man...
Je¶li kiedy¶ kto¶ opowie moj± historiê,
niech powie, ¿e ¿y³em w czasach Papie¿a Jana Paw³a II,
jednego z najwspanialszych ludzi, najwspanialszego Polaka...
-- Pawe³ Jakub Dawidek, atheist
part). Archive handling was broken at least since the move from BSD ar/ranlib
to GNU binutils because of the different archive format. This rewrite fixes
this by making make to carry around the defines for all formats (it supports)
so it can support all of them independent of the actually used one. The
supported formats are: traditional BSD (this seems to come from V7 at least,
short names only and __.SYMDEF), BSD4.4 (long names with #1/ and __.SYMDEF)
and SysV (extra name table and //). The only format not supported are broken
traditional archives where the member names are truncated to 15 characters.
Errors in the archive are not ignored anymore, but cause make to stop with
an error message. The command line option -A causes these errors to become
non-fatal. This is almost compatible with previous usage except for the
error message printed in any case.
Use a type-safe intrusive list for the archive cache.
Reviewed by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu> (without new error handling)
module. The only module accessing it (the current line number) was the
condition module, so pass the current line number as a function argument.
Centralize the pushing of new input sources into one function
ParsePushInput() and rename the function handling the popping from ParseEOF()
to ParsePopInput(). Make the entire thing a little bit clearer, by holding
the current input source in the top element of the stack instead of
using extra variables for this. Use a type-safe intrusive list for the
input stack.
characters so it is not safe to move around code from
before it to after it. This should fix problems with building the
documentation.
Patch: 7.170
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
A Path is now a TAILQ of PathElements each of which just points to
a reference counted directory. Rename all functions dealing with Paths
from the Dir_ prefix to a Path_ prefix.
the closing brace so it is unwise to keep a pointer to it. Make
the variable static to fix this.
Patch: 7.152
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
Remove unreachable code for VAR_NOSUBST - it was never set.
Replace redundant code with calls to VarGetPattern().
Patch: 7.143-7.145
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
Change the parsing of the C modifier flags so that specifying both
'1' and 'g' gives an error.
Patch: 7.141,7.142
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
is always a '$'. This is not always correct, for example for
conditionals: .if defined(foobar).
Clean up some comments.
Move common code out of if-statements.
Patch: 7.140
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
by the caller. Don't pass 'endc' - it can be computed from 'startc'.
Remove unneccessary temporary variables. Remove constant if-expressions
and remove code before call Fatal() - there is no point to cleanup before
aborting.
Patch: 7.134,7.135
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
occurence which actually holds always the same constant value.
Shorten the name pattern to patt.
Patch: 7.133
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
by putting them into struct VarParser or computing them (consumed).
Change the loop termination condition in VarParseLong from endc to \0.
Patch: 7.128-7.132
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
When L is omitted, double precision is used, so printf(1) gives
reproducable results. When L is specified, long double precision is
used, which may improve precision, depending on the machine.
after allocating a new buffer. This bug caused `tail -r < /dev/null'
to core dump when the `J' malloc option is set, and also affected
any other input that was an exact multiple of 128k.
processes.
This option can be also found in Solaris and Linux.
- Use timercmp(9) macro for timeval comparsion.
- Include time.h directly, don't depend on stat.h doing it for us.
Reviewed by: gad (first point)
MFC after: 3 days
- Rename IS_KERNPROC() macro to PSKIP() and extend its functionality.
Now it'll skip calling process and system processes when -S is not given.
As a side effect it fixes '-n' option. Before it was always matching
calling process (because of missing 'if (kp->ki_pid == mypid)' check)
and after that, calling process was ignored.
- When '-l' option is given and there are no arguments, use p_comm as an
arguments list (this is helpful for kernel threads matching).
Reviewed by: gad
MFC after: 3 days
Reduce the number of arguments passed between these functions by
creating a special-purpose struct.
Patch: 7.120,7.121
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
would access memory before the beginning of the string to match (the
suffix match starts at the end of both the string and the suffix and
proceedes to the begin until either the start of the suffix is hit
or the character does not match). This could lead to a memcpy copying
into random memory. Fix this by checking the length of the string to
match too and replacing the Lst_Find calls with LST_FOREACH loops
(last part by me).
Submitted by: Matt Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com> (in principle)
Rename result variable so common code becomes more visible.
Rename freePtr to freeResult to make clear what pointer must be freed.
Patch: 7.116, 7.116a
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
the loop. Add a comment why the 'consumed' variable is updated.
Rename lengthPtr to consumed.
Patch: 7.115
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
It turns out that some ports use the obscure feature of spreading
a dependency block across multiple include files. While this seems
bad style, allow it for now and call said function only at end of
all input to process the really last line of everything.
ParseRestModifier() and ParseRestEnd(): move advancement of ptr to remove
a confusing calculation.
VarParseLong(): cleanup calculation of consumed.
Patch: 7.114
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
actual variable lookup. Consistently rename lengthPtr to consumed.
Update a number of comments to match the code.
Patch: 7.111-113
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
Also, reduce the WARNS level to 5 since different build environments
end up using different Yacc skeletons. The BSD one does not
predeclare yyparse, the FSF one does, so it's not really possible to
consistently enforce both -Wmissing-prototypes and -Wredundant-decls.
switches to support selecting files by time of modification.
Special thanks to: Steven M. Bellovin, Rich $alz, and Jim Berets,
authors of the public-domain getdate.y date-parsing code.
patch differs from the previous one in that it calls the function
only when a real file hits EOF. The bodies of .for loops are also
handled as files, but for these we don't want to end a dependency block
on the 'EOF' as in:
foo:
do-this
.for ...
do-something
.endfor
do-more
per-connection and globally. This eliminates potential DoS attacks
where SACK scoreboard elements tie up too much memory.
Submitted by: Raja Mukerji (raja at moselle dot com).
Reviewed by: Mohan Srinivasan (mohans at yahoo-inc dot com).
variables and expands archive specifications, one that expands
wild cards and a driver that loops over the children list and
expands each child if necessary replacing it with it's expansions.
headers properly (right justified for numbers, left justified for
everything else).
This fixes the alignment of the fields on i386, sparc64 and amd64
today but does not dynamically assign column widths or bear in mind
that some of the values may be 64-bit in the future.
Reviewed by: alfred
Allow the user to run unifdef without defining any symbols. This is
useful in conjunction with the -k flag.
Fix a bug in the -s handling code that would have caused out-of-bounds
array accesses.
Add a -n option to insert #line directives in the output.
Ignore comment markers inside string and character literals
(bug reported by Amos Shapira <amos.shapira@netregistry.com.au>).
More accurate copyright notices.
that is now used for both the 'M'/'N' branch and the 'S' branch of
the switch statement into a common scope.
Patch: 7.102-105
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
is terminated with a slash. Although we are not System V, ar has
been configured to put that slash in. This format allows filenames
with trailing spaces.
the first user/group. Caused huge fun in error messages from large script.
Old: pgrep -u root,NoSuchUser,daemon -> pgrep: unknown user `root'
Now: pgrep -u root,NoSuchUser,daemon -> pgrep: unknown user `NoSuchUser'
Obtained from: NetBSD (rev. 1.8)
MFC After: 1 week (if re@ would have approved this)
paranthesis or brace) into the loop and don't leak the buffer in this
case. Remove the check for Var_Parse returning NULL - it can't.
Patch: 7.92
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
Return always malloc()-ed strings from VarParseShort() to get
rid of warnings when returning string constants from a non-const char *
function.
Patch: 7.90
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
to VarExpand down into the branches of the if as well as cleanup code.
Eliminate code that is now obviously dead.
Patch: 7.83
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
an else clause. Move the assignment to the lengthPtr down to
just before the return statements.
Patch: 7.81
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
it type and endian clean.
Also following changes were done:
. Remove of outdated support for generating of include files for
NLS catalogs being generated.
. Integrate my old code optimizations
. ANSI'fy prototypes
. Remove duplicate defines, and cleanup includes
. Remove first (unused) argument from error() function
. Const'ify (gencat now WARNS=8 clean)
. Convert corrupt() and nomem() functions to macros
. Add *temporary* note what '-new' command line argument is
deprecated now (instead of exiting with error message)
WARNING: format of generated .cat files is changed!
XXX: re-add support for *updating* of .cat files, NetBSD has this
functionality disabled
Obtained from: NetBSD (mostly)
appears in LC_COLLATE files (due to alignment). An alternative
would be to bump STR_LEN to 16.
(This is in preparation to make LC_COLLATE files architecture
independent.)
do something sensible (namely: treat then '\0' as the EOL character, when
deciding what "a line" is for -N). Note that -I implies -N.
MFC after: 3 days
introducing the disk formats for _RuneLocale and friends.
The disk formats do not have (useless) pointers and have 32-bit
quantities instead of rune_t and long. (htonl(3) only works
with 32-bit quantities, so there's no loss).
Bootstrap mklocale(1) when necessary. (Bootstrapping from 4.x
would be trivial (verified), but we no longer provide pre-5.3
source upgrades and this is the first commit to actually break
it.)
functions: one for the single letter variables, one for the others
and one that does the recursive expansion.
Patches: 7.68-7.79
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
after a return. Move assignments to {freePtr, dynamic, start} closer to the
return statements to clarify which variables are actually used for
communication between the losely coupled blocks of the code. Clear up
an if-expression to make common structures of the conditions clearer.
Use strchr instead of switch statements to check for a character beeing
a member of a set.
Patches: 7-62.2, 7-62.3, 7-64, 7-65.1, 7-65.2
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
hosts to share an IP address, providing high availability and load
balancing.
Original work on CARP done by Michael Shalayeff, with many
additions by Marco Pfatschbacher and Ryan McBride.
FreeBSD port done solely by Max Laier.
Patch by: mlaier
Obtained from: OpenBSD (mickey, mcbride)
to the Lst_ForEach function this macro reduces the number of function
calls per invocation by N + 1 (where N is the number of list elements)
and increases code locality thereby increasing readability and
(maybe) performance.
when looking into an already hashed archive, the code tried to use
the name shortened to the maximum length allowed for the archive.
Unfortunately it passed a buffer of junk to the hashing routine when
the name actually wasn't too long. Theoretically this could lead to
a false positive.
which is stat.st_blksize (i.e., PAGE_SIZE).
This change causes the .db files that were cross-compiled on
another platform to be identical to the natively built ones.
Tested on: alpha->amd64 build
it is actually needed. This makes clear in which subblocks the variables
are not needed and which can easier be split out.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
to prepare for function splitting and slightly reorganise the code
in anticipation of Var_Subst returning a Buffer.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu> (with slight changes)
to be split out into a function soon). Also there is no need to write
back the colon that we have NUL-ed - the string is going to be freed
anyway.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
use a more consistent style with regard to *str and str[0];
simplify code by introducing a temporary variable;
shift a break around and add braces where appropriate.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
Move some assignments nearer to where they actually used. Convert a loop
from a for() to a while() to make it clearer and add braces to the long
body of it. Split assignment from variable declaration.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
parantheses. This helps editors to find its way through the horrible
mess of Var_Parse. Rewrite a for() loop into a while() to make it clearer.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
- .PATH: is spelled ``.PATH: ''
- Don't forget to use DPADD so ``make checkdpadd'' is
not broken.
- LDADD should not come with + as it's empty in the
first place
Suggested by: ru
- Bring IPsec support from the ports collection [1].
- Bring -o ("once only") option from the ports
collection [2].
- Adopt the Makefile framework into
usr.bin/nc/Makefile.
- Add a knob to control whether to build nc(1),
NO_NETCAT.
- Bump __FreeBSD_version so ports collection can
detect this change.
Original patchset are contributed to the ports collection by:
[1] nectar, [2] joerg.
Note: WARNS?=6 patchset spined off in this commit, in order not
to take too many files off the vendor branch.
- convert Buf_AddByte from a macro to a function
- move #define's into the header file
- remove unused field in struct Buffer
- remove size fields - they can be easily computed
- inline Buf_OvAddByte
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
during we show the first file's tail. Instead of:
tarsier% tail -f 1 2
==> 1 <==
foo
bar
==> 2 <==
bar
foo
==> 2 <==
bar2
foo2
Now with this change, we have:
tarsier% tail -f 1 2
==> 1 <==
foo
bar
==> 2 <==
bar
foo
bar2
foo2
While I'm there, move a comment to where it should belong to. Also,
const'ify the "last" static because we will never need to change the
contents it points to.
MFC After: 1 week
was non-NULL. This let's us eliminated an otherwise unused variable.
shellneeded can never return -1 so there is no need to check for it and
hence no need for a variable to hold the returned value.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu> (partly)
today's modern "no sir, not today" compilers.
Basically, when building the table:
use NULL instead of 0,
use braces around array initializers,
case the function pointers to xdrproc_t,
don't cast function pointers that do not need casting.
MFC After: 1 week
itself. This will ease constification (think of what 'const Ptr foo'
means if Ptr is a pointer to a struct).
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
double documentation comments. Remove the 3rd clause (from 4) of the
BSD license because these files have only the UCB copyright.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
that get included just where they are needed. All headers include the
headers that they need to compile (just with an empty .c file). Sort
includes alphabetically where apropriate and fix some duplicate commenting
for struct Job, struct GNode and struct Shell by removing one version and
inlining the comments into the structure declaration (the comments have been
somewhat outdated).
This patch does not contain functional changes (checked with md5).
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
and tabs. This is still not correct for command line variable values
ending in a backslash because this would require a larger effort.
Document this limitation in the BUGS section of the man page. The
quoting is mostly compatible with that of gmake and smake.
Tested by: Max Okumoto and Joerg Sonnenberger from DragonFly BSD
Reviewed by: ru (man page, partly)
suggestions which result in the last revision[*]:
- style(9) and sysexits(3) suggests that we use EX_*
as exit values, instead of some other values like
those returned from a system call as errno.
Additionally, follow Ruslan's suggestion about style(9) and
other style improvements:
- Since open(2) says that it returns -1 on errors,
explicitly determine whether it is returning -1
rather than whether the return value is less than
zero.
- Only set rval when there is no previous error.
This distinguishes the first error that occours.
- Use exit() in favor of return in main(), this is
suggested in old style(9), while the evolve has
fade the suggestion.
- Add some NOTREACHED comments.
- Add blank line after first { because no local variables
in usage()
Thanks to Ruslan for his tireless explaining of the code standards
and knowledge of the history of style(9).
[*] Pointy hat to: me
Submitted by: ru (with some minor changes)
Discussed with: ru, ssouhlal
Without this change, when running netstat with a kernel without
INET6 built in, you will get a complain at the end of "netstat -s"
output.
X-MFC: NO_INET6 was called "NOINET6" on RELENG_5
the user indicating that su is not running setuid, which may help
suggest to the user that it should be setuid, or should not be
running from a file system mounted nosuid.
Suggsted by: Ivan Voras <ivoras at fer dot hr>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Nowadays, f_data points to the vnode only if the underlying filesystem
doesn't use it for other purposes (devfs uses it to store the cdev,
for example).
Found by: csjp
Reviewed by: csjp
Approved by: phk, wes, grehan (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
'fts_number' to remember number of blocks.
This makes du(1) 64bit-clean.
This work is part of the BigDisk project:
http://www.FreeBSD.org/projects/bigdisk/
Discussed on: arch@
MFC after: 5 days
netstat(1):
- Make previously unnecessarily global variables local.
- Use LIST_FOREACH() in preference to manual iteration.
- Restore a sanity check through slightly incestuous use of queue macro
knowledge.
Submitted by: rik
home-brew linked lists. Read in the ipxpcb_list structure first in
order to find the first pcb pointer. Then follow the chain as
before, only the termination condition is a NULL next pointer
rather than a next pointer equal to the original offset.
catman /usr/share/man/man8
cd /usr/share/man; catman man8
- Don't print false warnings about invalid cat pages which are
machine-specific cat page subdirectories (visible with -v).
- Fixed one memory leak.
source code. Include configure logic to pick up the
system one when it exists and use the fallback version
when it doesn't exist. Set the default for FreeBSD
to use the system version.
With this, bsdtar should now be quite portable.
In particular:
-W excl=text
fails because "excl" is a prefix of both "exclude" and "exclude-from". But,
-W exclude=text
is okay because it matches "exclude" exactly.
Thanks to: Jose F Nieves
MFC after: 7 days
now that their size is only two pointers. This eliminates a lot of calls
to Lst_Init and from there to malloc together with many calls to
Lst_Destroy (in places where the list is obviously empty). This also
reduces the chance to leave a list uninitilized so we can remove more
NULL pointer checks and probably eliminates a couple of memory leaks.
christened. We don't know whether he was born on the same or the
previous day.
From: Die Musik in Gecshichte und Gegenwart (Bärenreiter, Kassel,
1989), 1:1509
birth:
1. Remove anachronistic "Germany". Depending on your viewpoint, he
was born in the Rheinland or Prussia.
2. Remove reference to his date of birth. It's not known, though
it's possible it was 16t or 17 December.
3. Get the date of his christening right.
only in a couple of places and all of them except for one were easily
converted to use Lst_First/Lst_Succ. The one place is compatibility
mode in job.c where the it was used to advance to the next command on
each invocation of JobStart. For this case add a pointer to the node to
hold the currently executed command.
requires to make a copy of the filename in ReadMakefile and to duplicate
two small functions in suff.c. This hopefully will go away when everything
is constified.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu> (partly)