This uses the same logic as with the -s option, first validating the
entered value, then storing the result in a struct timeval.
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC-With: r352818
In r334906, the -s option was changed to allow fractional times, but
this only functioned correctly for batch mode. In interactive mode, any
delay below 1.0 would get floored to zero. This would put top(1) into a
tight loop, which could be difficult to interrupt.
Fix this by storing the -s option value (after validation) into a struct
timeval, and using that struct consistently for delaying with select(2).
Next up is to allow interactive entry of a fractional delay value.
MFC after: 3 days
The description talks about 'number', while the final argument was
'count'. Since 'count' is already used for the count of displays,
change the final argument name to 'number'.
MFC after: 3 days
Add an atomic shm rename operation, similar in spirit to a file
rename. Atomically unlink an shm from a source path and link it to a
destination path. If an existing shm is linked at the destination
path, unlink it as part of the same atomic operation. The caller needs
the same permissions as shm_unlink to the shm being renamed, and the
same permissions for the shm at the destination which is being
unlinked, if it exists. If those fail, EACCES is returned, as with the
other shm_* syscalls.
truss support is included; audit support will come later.
This commit includes only the implementation; the sysent-generated
bits will come in a follow-on commit.
Submitted by: Matthew Bryan <matthew.bryan@isilon.com>
Reviewed by: jilles (earlier revision)
Reviewed by: brueffer (manpages, earlier revision)
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21423
Introduce a new add_off_t static function that exits with an error
message if there's an overflow, otherwise returns their sum. Use this
when adding values obtained from the input patch.
Reviewed by: delphij, allanjude (earlier)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7897
When an empty pattern is encountered in the pattern list, I had previously
broken bsdgrep to count that as a "match all" and ignore any other patterns
in the list. This commit rectifies that mistake, among others:
- The -v flag semantics were not quite right; lines matched should have been
counted differently based on whether the -v flag was set or not. procline
now definitively returns whether it's matched or not, and interpreting
that result has been kicked up a level.
- Empty patterns with the -x flag was broken similarly to empty patterns
with the -w flag. The former is a whole-line match and should be more
strict, only matching blank lines. No -x and no -w will will match the
empty string at the beginning of each line.
- The exit code with -L was broken, w.r.t. modern grep. Modern grap will
exit(0) if any file that didn't match was output, so our interpretation
was simply backwards. The new interpretation makes sense to me.
Tests updated and added to try and catch some of this.
This misbehavior was found by autoconf while fixing ports found in PR 229925
expecting either a more sane or a more GNU-like sed.
MFC after: 1 week
The way jot(1) defaults missing arguments doesn't match the behaviour
described in the manpage, which states that with fewer than 3 arguments
missing values are supplied from left to right.
In fact, with one or two arguments, the last (s which is step size or seed)
defaults to 1 (or -1 if begin and end specify a descending range), and then
omitted arguments are set to default starting with the leftmost until three
arguments are available.
This is why `jot 2 1000` prints 1000 and 1001 instead of 1000 and 100.
PR: 135475
Submitted by: Jonathan McKeown <j.mckeown@ru.ac.za>
Approved by: doc (bcr)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21736
Event: EuroBSDcon 2019
to a clnt_create() call even when it is actually a program
version mismatch.
Normally the server is supposed to return RPC_PROGVERSMISMATCH
when it supports the specified program but not support
the specified version. Some filers return RPC_PROGNOTREGISTERED
to RQUOTA v2 calls and FreeBSD does not retry with the old
v1 calls. This change fixes this failure scenario.
Submitted by: Jian-Bo Liao
PR: 236179
- make abday, day, abmon, mon, am_pm output quoting match linux
- workaround localeconv() issue for mon_grouping and grouping (PR172215)
- for other values not available in default locale, output -1 instead of
127 (CHAR_MAX) as returned by localeconv()
With these changes, output of `locale` and `locale -k` for all keywords
specified by POSIX exactly matches the linux one.
PR: 237752
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21599
All of these are defined as mandatory by POSIX.
While here, mark all non-standard ones as FreeBSD-only as
other systems (at least, GNU/Linux and illumos) do not handle
them, so we should not encourage their use.
PR: 237752
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21490
In FreeBSD 11 along with the rework on the collation, mklocale(1) and colldef(1)
has been replaced by localedef(1) (a note has been added to the manpage to state
it).
mklocale(1) and colldef(1) has been kept around to be able to build older
versions of FreeBSD. None of the version requiring those tools are supported
anymore so it is time to remove them from base
o Do not run any iconv() processing in -a. The locale of root user is not
what is desired by most of the users who receive their calendar mail.
Just assume that users store their calendars in a format that is readable
to them. This fixes regression from r344340.
o fork() and setusercontext(LOGIN_SETALL) for every user. This makes LANG
set inside a calendar file mostly excessive, as we will pick up user's
login class LANG.
o This also executes complex function cal() that parses user owned files
with appropriate user privileges.
Previously it was run with privileges dropped only temporary for execution
of cal(), and fully dropped only before invoking sendmail (see r22473).
Reviewed by: bapt (older version of patch)
patch by espie@
replace sloppy parsing of numeric values with strtonum (incr, decr, divert)
still use integers, so use the natural bounds for these.
POSIX says m4 should error when these use non numeric values, and now they
do.
okay millert@
Obtained from: OpenBSD
by espie@
ifelse is special, fix argv parsing to avoid segfault
problem noticed by Matthew Green (netbsd), slightly different fix
so that argc counting makes more sense.
we might want to warn on wrong number of parameters later, but this is
somewhat inconsistent depending on the builtin right now.
okay millert@
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Add -E flag (make warnings fatal), following the behavior of GNU m4 1.4.9+
Help and direction millert@ espie@ anton@ deraadt@
ok espie@
Obtained from: OpenBSD
To remain compatible with GNU patch, we should ensure that once we're
removing empty files after a reversed /dev/null patch we don't remove files
that have been modified. GNU patch leaves these intact and just reverses the
hunk that created the file, effectively implying --remove-empty-files for
reversed /dev/null patches.
All of them are needed to be able to boot to single user and be able
to repair a existing FreeBSD installation so put them directly into
FreeBSD-runtime.
Reviewed by: bapt, gjb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21503
Summary:
- basic: test application of patches created by diff -u at the
beginning/middle/end of file, which have differing amounts of context
before and after chunks being added
- limited_ctx: stems from PR 74127 in which a rogue line was getting added
when the patch should have been rejected. Similar behavior was
reproducible with larger contexts near the beginning/end of a file. See
r326084 for details
- file_creation: patch sourced from /dev/null should create the file
- file_nodupe: said patch sourced from /dev/null shouldn't dupe the contents
when re-applied (personal vendetta, WIP, see comment)
- file_removal: this follows from nodupe; the reverse of a patch sourced
from /dev/null is most naturally deleting the file, as is expected based
on GNU patch behavior (WIP)
Some of the procstat tests start a program "while1" and examine the process
using procstat, but did not wait properly for it to start (kill -0 will
succeed immediately after the child process has been created).
Instead, have "while1" write something when it starts, and use a fifo to
wait for that.
PR: 233587, 233588
Reviewed by: ngie
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21519
These will be expanded later as I come up with good test cases; for now,
these seem to be enough to trigger bugs in base gnugrep and expose missing
features in bsdgrep.
The libxo xml feature of adding an annotation with the "original"
address from the utmpx file if it is different than the final "from"
field was broken by r351379. This was pointed out by the gcc error
that save_p might be used uninitialized. Save the original address
as needed in each entry, don't just use the last one from the previous
loop.
Reviewed by: marcel@
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21390
Ouput format of last(1) is broken for non UTF-8 locales
since it got libxo(3) support. It uses strftime(3) that produces
non UTF-8 strings passed to xo_emit(3) with wrong %s format -
it should be %hs in this case, so xo_emit(3) produces empty output.
This change is basically no-op when locale is of UTF-8 type,
f.e. en_GB.UTF-8 or ru_RU.UTF-8 or sr_RS.UTF-8@latin.
It fixes output for other locales.
MFC after: 2 weeks
After r351379 save_p may be used uninitialized. Set it to NULL before
first assignment so that a later NULL check will work correctly.
Reported by: CI system for gcc platforms
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC with: 351379 (karels)
It's nice to be able to display a full IPv6 host address if
needed, but it's also nice to display more than 3 characters of a command
line. Compute the needed size for the FROM column in an earlier pass,
and determine the maximum, then print what fits for the command.
Reviewed by: marcel@ (markm@ previous revision)
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21211
On arm64, riscv, and s390x disable building of aout components.
This allows gprof to build on these architectures which never supported
the legacy a.out binary format.
Obtained from: s390x branch
MFC after: 3 months
The Zstd format bumps the CLOOP major number to 4 to avoid incompatibility
with older systems. Support in geom_uzip(4) is conditional on the ZSTDIO
kernel option, which is enabled in amd64 GENERIC, but not all in-tree
configurations.
mkuzip(8) was modified slightly to always initialize the nblocks + 1'th
offset in the CLOOP file format. Previously, it was only initialized in the
case where the final compressed block happened to be unaligned w.r.t.
DEV_BSIZE. The "Fake" last+1 block change in r298619 means that the final
compressed block's 'blen' was never correct unless the compressed uzip image
happened to be BSIZE-aligned. This happened in about 1 out of every 512
cases. The zlib and lzma decompressors are probably tolerant of extra trash
following the frame they were told to decode, but Zstd complains that the
input size is incorrect.
Correspondingly, geom_uzip(4) was modified slightly to avoid trashing the
nblocks + 1'th offset when it is known to be initialized to a good value.
This corrects the calculated final real cluster compressed length to match
that printed by mkuzip(8).
mkuzip(8) was refactored somewhat to reduce code duplication and increase
ease of adding other compression formats.
* Input block size validation was pulled out of individual compression
init routines into main().
* Init routines now validate a user-provided compression level or select
an algorithm-specific default, if none was provided.
* A new interface for calculating the maximal compressed size of an
incompressible input block was added for each driver. The generic code
uses it to validate against MAXPHYS as well as to allocate compression
result buffers in the generic code.
* Algorithm selection is now driven by a table lookup, to increase ease of
adding other formats in the future.
mkuzip(8) gained the ability to explicitly specify a compression level with
'-C'. The prior defaults -- 9 for zlib and 6 for lzma -- are maintained.
The new zstd default is 9, to match zlib.
Rather than select lzma or zlib with '-L' or its absense, respectively, a
new argument '-A <algorithm>' is provided to select 'zlib', 'lzma', or
'zstd'. '-L' is considered deprecated, but will probably never be removed.
All of the new features were documented in mkuzip.8; the page was also
cleaned up slightly.
Relnotes: yes