components of the system.
The license is poorly worded, though I have an (email only) release
from the author for unlimited FreeBSD use. I will try to get something
more concrete, though the author's remote location makes this difficult.
Submitted by: Oleg Orel <orel@oea.ihep.su>
ypbind.c: if a client program asks ypbind for the name of the server
for a particular domain, and there isn't a binding for that domain
available yet, ypbind needs to supply a status value along with its
failure message. Set yprespbody.ypbind_error before returning from
a ypbindproc_domain request.
yplib.c: properly handle the error status messages ypbind now has the
ability to send us. Add a ypbinderr_string() function to decode the
error values.
ypwhich.c: handle ypbind errors correctly: yperr_string() can't handle
ypbind_status messages -- use ypbinderr_string instead.
- it succeeded on non-directories (see POSIX 5.1.2.4).
- it hung on (non-open) named pipes.
- it leaked memory if the second malloc() failed.
- it didn't preserve errno across errors in close().
of the plus or minus lists at all, reject him. This lets you create
a +@netgroup list of users that you want to admit and reject everybody
else. If you end your +@netgroup list with the wildcard line
(+:::::::::) then you'll have a +@netgroup list that remaps the
specified people but leaves people not in any netgroup unaffected.
link stage fell over for any program that attempted to use rexec().
Ruserpass() remains undocumented; i could not find any documentation
for it on other systems.
Also added a BUGS section to the man page, stating that this function
constitutes a potential security hole (as well as the underlying
"exec" service).
Submitted by: rgrimes
Originally submitted by: agc@uts.amdahl.com (Alistair G. Crooks)
Obtained from: netbsd-bugs@NetBSD.ORG
o add missing man pages
o make all man pages clearly refer to the libcompat thingie
o add the information to the vtimes(3) and vlimit(3) man pages
that nobody has reimplemented the functions by now
o add the missing getpw.c
o add code and man pages for cftime(3) and
ascftime(3) -- i found them somewhere in old
unfinished work
where one or more of the non-default domains are not yet bound.
If we make a YP request for a domain other than the default domain,
and there is no binding for the new domain yet, _yp_dobind() sees
that the /var/yp/binding/DOMAIN.VERS file for the unbound domain is
not locked (by ypbind) and from this it concludes that the NIS system
is dead, so it gives up.
This behavior has been changed: before giving up in this case, we now
make a second check to see if the binding file for the *default* domain
is also not locked. Only if the default domain binding file is also
unlocked to we now assume that ypbind has bought the farm and bail out.
(Note: this assumes that the user hasn't changed the default domain
while ypbind is running.)
With this change, _do_ypbind() is allowed to proceed into the next
section of code wherein it prods ypbind into establishing a binding
for the new domain. This first call times out after ten seconds,
after which it should retry and succeed. From then on, the binding
for the second domain should be handled normally.
Second part of update to fdlibm 5.2: speed up argument reduction for trig
functions in the case pi/4 < |x| < 3pi/4.
Remove unused static constants ("one").
isctype.c:
o The tolower() and toupper() functions duplicated too much code
and were out of date (surprise). This didn't matter because
it was difficult to call them.
o Change formatting to be more like that in <ctype.h> (with
extra parentheses as in the macros). Perhaps this file should
be machine generated or everything should be handled like
__tolower() so that no code is repeated.
nomacros.c:
o Instead of looking at _USE_CTYPE_INLINE_ to see what <ctype.h>
has done, set _EXTERNALIZE_CTYPE_INLINES_ to tell <ctype.h>
what to do, so that we don't have anything left to do. Note
that code is now generated even if inlines are used by default.
This allows users to switch to non-inline versions.
select() returns EINVAL if you try to feed it a value of FD_SETSIZE greater
that 256. You can apparently adjust this by specifying a larger value of
FD_SETSIZE when configuring your kernel. However, if you set the maximum
number of open file descriptors per process to some value greater than
the FD_SETSIZE value that select() expects, many selects() within the RPC
library code will be botched because _rpc_dtablesize() will return
invalid numbers. This is to say that it will return the upper descriptor
table size limit which can be much higher than 256. Unless select() is
prepared to expect this 'unusually' high value, it will fail. (A good
example of this can be seen with NIS enabled: if you type 'unlimit' at
the shell prompt and then run any command that does NIS calls, you'll
be bombarded with errors from clnttcp_create().)
A temporary fix for this is to clamp the value returned by _rpc_dtablesize()
at FD_SETSIZE (as defined in <sys/types.h> (256)). I suppose the Right
Thing would be to provide some mechanism for select() to dynamically
adjust itself to handle FD_SETSIZE values larger than 256, but it's a
bit late in the game for that. Hopefully 256 file descriptors will be enough
to keep RPC happy for now.
add #includes for YP headers when compiling with -DYP to avoid some implicit
declarations.
getgrent.c & getnetgrent.c: add some #includes to avoid implicit declarations
of YP functions.
Obtained from: Casper H. Dik (by vay of Usenet)
Small patch to help improve NIS rebinding times (among other things):
>From: casper@fwi.uva.nl (Casper H.S. Dik)
>Newsgroups: comp.sys.sun.misc,comp.sys.sun.admin
>Subject: FIX for slow rebinding of NIS.
>Summary: a small change in libc makes life with NIS a lot easier.
>Message-ID: <1992Jan17.173905.11727@fwi.uva.nl>
>Date: 17 Jan 92 17:39:05 GMT
>Sender: news@fwi.uva.nl
>Organization: FWI, University of Amsterdam
>Lines: 138
>Nntp-Posting-Host: halo.fwi.uva.nl
Have you been plagued by long waits when your NIS server is rebooted?
READ ON!
Sun has a patch, but the README says:
********************* WARNING ******************************
This is a new version of ypbind that never uses the NIS
binding file to cache the servers binding. This will have
the effect of fixing the current symptom. However, it might
degrade the overall performance of the system when the
server is available. This is most likely to happen on an
overloaded server, which will cause the network to produce
a broadcast storm.
*************************************************************
Therefor, I have produced another fix.
o What goes wrong.
When the NIS server is rebooted, ypserv will obtain different ports
to listen for RPC requests. All clients will continue to use the old
binding they obtained earlier. The NIS server will send ICMP dst unreachable
messages for the RPC requests that arrive at the old port. These ICMPs
are dropped on the floor and the client code will continue sending the
requests until the timer has expired. The small fix at the end of this
message will pick up these ICMP messages and deliver them to the RPC layer.
o Before and after.
I've tested this on some machines and this is the result:
(kill and restart ypserv on the server)
original% time ypmatch user passwd
user:....
0.040u 0.090s 2:35.64 0.0% 0+126k 0+0io 0pf+0w (155 seconds elapsed time)
fixedhost% time ypmatch user passwd
user:....
0.050u 0.050s 0:10.20 0.9% 0+136k 0+0io 0pf+0w (10 seconds elapsed time)
Rebinding is almost instantaneous.
o Other benefits.
RPC calls that use UDP as transport will no longer time out but
will abort much sooner. (E.g., the remote host is unreachable or
111/udp is filtered by an intermediate router)
Grrr. If the dbhash routines weren't grossly overengineered I wouldn't
even need to do this! :-(
Also now export the hash_stats routine. Manpage coming RSN - I promise.
Forms now have their own local bindings table so that anything
declared within a form is local to that form. This means you can
have fields of the same name in different forms.
Added inlined attribute setting for strings e.g. "This is \bold bold"
Added entry and exit functions for fields.
1) Eliminate spaces and double ':'.
2) Remove duplicated capabilities from tc= expansion.
It is needed to not overflow historycal 1024 limit.
Add range check and return -1 if entry is too big instead
of corrupting user memory.
Make sure all arguments to the yp_*() functions are valid before sending
them off to the server. This is somewhat distressing: once again my
FreeBSD box brought down my entire network because of NIS bogosities.
I *think* the poor argument checking in this module is the cause, but
I still haven't been able to reproduce the exact series of events that
lead to the ypserv crashes. For now I've resorted to sticking my FreeBSD
box in a seprate domain. Hopefully a weekend of heavy testing will
uncover the problem.
Change strtok() to strsep(), cause memory corruption for all
programs which use strtok() too in the same time.
Fix potential NULL reference, depends of /etc/hosts.conf format
Fix the bug when service name fetched always from beginning of the line,
not from parsed token.
programs which use strtok() too in the same time.
Fix potential NULL reference, depends of /etc/hosts.conf format
Fix the bug when service name fetched always from beginning of the line,
not from parsed token.
remapping mechanism in the following manner: if given an entry +@foo
and there is no netgroup named 'foo,' try searching for a regular
user group called 'foo' and build the cache using the members of
group 'foo' instead. If both a netgroup 'foo' and a user group 'foo'
exist, the 'foo' netgroup takes precedence, since we're primarily
interested in netgroup matching anyway.
This allows access control schemes based on ordinary user groups
(which are also available via NIS) rather than netgroups, since
netgroups on some systems are limited in really brain-damaged ways.
ypserv to do a yp_match() with an a null or empty key causes much havok.
(Note that this could be construed as a denial of service attack if used
maliciously.)
my network because setnetgrent() was trying to do a lookup on group "".
It seems that an attempt to do a yp_match() (and possible yp_next())
on a null or empty key causes Sun's ypserv in SunOS 4.1.3 to exit
suddenly (and without warning). Our ypserv behaves badly in this
situation too, thoush it doesn't appear to crash. In any event, getpwent,
getnetgrent and yp_match() and yp_next() are now extra careful not to
accidentally pass on null or empty arguments.
Also made a small change to getpwent.c to allow +::::::::: wildcarding,
which I had disabled previously.
- Have the +@netgroup/-@netgroup caches handle the +user/-user cases too.
- Clean up getpwent() to take advantage of the improved +user/-user handling.
Submitted by: Sebastian Strollo <seb@erix.ericsson.se>
- In /usr/src/lib/libc/yp/yplib.c, function yp_first when clnt_call
fails with (r != RPC_SUCCESS) ysd->dom_vers should be set to 0! This
ensures that /var/yp/bindings/dom.vers will be read again on retry.
What happens now is that when our server is down and someone tries to
use yp they will continue to try until kingdom come. So:
if(r != RPC_SUCCESS) {
clnt_perror(ysd->dom_client, "yp_first: clnt_call");
ysd->dom_vers = -1;
^^^^ change to 0
goto again;
}
that everyone else does: you can now use +host/-host, +user,-user and
+@netgroup/-@netgroup in /etc/hosts.equiv, /.rhosts, /etc/hosts.lpd and
~/.rhosts. Previously, __ivaliduser would only do host/user matches,
which was lame. This affects all the r-commands, lpd, and any other
program/service that uses ruserok().
An example of the usefullness of this feature would be a hosts.equiv
file that looks like this:
+@equiv-hosts
Since the netgroup database can now be accessed via NIS, this lets you
set up client machines once and then never have to worry about them
again: all hosts.equiv changes can now be done through NIS. Once I
finish with getpwent.c, we'll be able to do similar wacky things
with login authentication too. (Our password field substitution
will finally be on par with everyone else's, and I'll finally be
able to fully integrate my FreeBSD machine into my network without
having to worry about the grad students sneaking into it when I'm
not looking. :)
Danger Will Robinson! I tested this thing every which way I could, but
Murphy's Law applies! If anybody spots a potential security problem with
the way my matching algorithm works, tell me immediately! I don't want
crackers snickering and calling me names behind my back. :)
work because parse_netgrp() doesn't recurse properly. Fixed by
changing
if (parse_netgrp(spos))
return(1);
to
if (parse_netgrp(spos))
continue;
inside parse_netgrp(). (Lucky for me I happen to have a fairly complex
'live' netgroup database to test this stuff with.)
as tn3270 can replace _putchar(0 with their own routine and still keep
using the __cputchar() routine used by all of the other curses routines.
Reviewed by: "Andrey A. Chernov, Black Mage" <ache@astral.msk.su>
in all other places here.
This is a hack, the interface should be changed to use off_t's
everywhere around, but this will require to update all the programs
that happen to use libkvm.
- Added support for reading netgroups from NIS/YP in addition to the
local /etc/netgroups file. (Note that SunOS and many other systems only
support reading netgroups via NIS, which is a bit odd.)
- Fix Evil Null Pointer Dereferences From Hell (tm) that caused
parse_netgrp() to SEGV when expanding netgroups that include
references to other netgroups. Funny how nobody else noticed this.
This is the first step in implimenting +@netgroup substitution in
getpwent.c and any other places that could use it and don't already
support it (which is probably everywhere).
by heading off possible null pointer dereferences in grscan(). Also
change getgrnam() slightly to properly handle the change: if grscan()
returns an rval of 1 and leaves a '+' in the gr_name field and YP is
enabled, poll the YP group.byname map before giving up. This should
insure that we make every effort to find a match in the local and
YP group databases before bailing out.
when I'm not sure whether or not that directory exists."
Today I discovered that rebuilding /usr/include completely from scratch
doesn't work, because the libss Makefile tries to install headers into
/usr/include/ss, which 'make includes' does not create. The result is that
the libss Makefile plants the header files in /usr/include as individual
files called 'ss,' with the second one overwriting the first, and the
third one overwriting the second. So instead of a directory called
/usr/include/ss, you end up with just one file called /usr/include/ss with
only the last header file in it. Check out /usr/include/ss on freefall
and you'll see what I mean.
I've modified the beforeinstall target in the libss Makefile to check
for the presence of the ${DESTDIR}/usr/include/lbss directory and to
create it if it isn't already there. Hopefully I did it right.
commit by bde.
Fix bugs in floating point formatting. The 4.4lite version is similar
to revision 1.3 in old-cvs and is missing all of jtc's fixes in revision
1.4 in old-cvs. Revision 1.2 in ncvs fixed one of the old bugs but
introduced at least one new one (for %.0e).
old-cvs log:
revision 1.4
date: 1993/11/04 19:38:22; author: jtc; state: Exp; lines: +33 -20
My work from NetBSD to make printf() & friends ANSI C compliant.
Fixes several bugs in floating point formatting:
1. Trailing zeros were being stripped with %e format.
2. %g/%G formats incorrect.
3. Lots of other nits.
the copy built from here was overwritten by the other copy and the other
copy was put in library-building command lines twice. ld now objects to
duplicated modules.
from the code in strftime.c . This affects both the library code
and all the commands using it (e.g. date +%s).
Note that %s is not required by ANSI, but we've already got it in 1.1.5.1.
Suggested by: luigi@labinfo.iet.unipi.it (Luigi Rizzo)
than at compile time.
Should have same functionality as old libforms but with new mechanism.
Lots of new features that use the new mechanism are still to be added.
Since functions will come and go from libcompat as they are deprecated
it makes no sense to build a shared library out of it as it will change.
Based on freedback from Terry and Jonas on the mailing lists.
in an (unlikely) border case (maxgroups==1 and the user is on
an /etc/group line for the same group and that group only ...).
Now this case is dealt with as before ...
Add a missing apostrophe that suggests inverting the frequency to get
tick size. It read better before because `CLK_TCK' suggests a tick
size although it is actually a frequency.
as an NIS client. The pw_breakout_yp routines that are used to populate the
_pw_passwd structire only do anything if the bits in the pw_fields member
_pw_passwd are cleared. Unfortunately, we can get into a state where
pw_fields has garbage in it right before the YP lookup functions are
called, which causes the breakout functions to screw up in a big way.
Here's how to duplicate the problem:
- Configure FreeBSD as an NIS client
- Log in as a user who's password database records reside only in
the NIS passwd maps.
- Type ps -aux
Result: your processes appear to be owned by 'root' or 'deamon.'
/bin/ls can exhibit the same problem.
The reason this happens:
- When ps(1) needs to match a username to a UID, it calls getpwuid().
- root is in the local password file, so getpwuid() calls __hashpw()
and __hashpw() populates the _pw_passwd struct, including the pw_fields
member. This happens before NIS lookups take place because, by coincidence,
ps(1) tends to display processes owned by root before it happens upon
a proccess owned by you.
- When your UID comes up, __hashpw() fails to find your entry in the
local password database, so it bails out, BUT THE BITS IN THE pw_fields
STRUCTURE OF _pw_passwd ARE NEVER CLEARED AND STILL CONTAIN INFORMATION
FROM THE PREVIOUS CALL TO __hash_pw()!!
- If we have NIS enabled, the NIS lookup functions are called.
- The pw_breakout_yp routines see that the pw_fields bits are set and
decline to place the data retrieved from the NIS passwd maps into the
_pw_passwd structure.
- getpwuid() returns the results of the last __hashpw() lookup instead
of the valid NIS data.
- Hijinxs ensue when user_from_uid() caches this bogus information and
starts handing out the wrong usernames.
AAAARRRRRRRRRGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHH!!!
*Please* don't tell me I'm the only person to have noticed this.
Fixed by having __hashpw() check the state of pw_fields just before
bailing out on a failed lookup and clearing away any leftover garbage.
What a fun way to spend an afternoon.
one line long.
Fixed a bug in the input field with cursor positioning at the end of
the field.
Make the print_status function available to apps so they can print
status messages.
Updated the example for the new fib parser.
- FreeBSD's NIS server can supply a master.passwd map, which has
more fields in it than a standard passwd map, so we need a
_master_pw_breakout() fuction.
- When doing passwd map lookups, look for master.passwd.* by attempting
a _yp_first() on master.passwd.byname. If it exists, we're being served
by a FreeBSD NIS server and we should use this map.
- If we aren't the superuser, retrieve only the standard passwd maps.
If we're being served by a FreeBSD system, then the passwd map has
no passwords in it, and it won't serve us the master.passwd map unless
we're superuser anyway.
There's a small speed hit for the superuser inherent in the check for
the master.passwd map, but this lets us dynamically decide what to do
rather than rely on a non-standard config file somewhere. Since all
of this is bypassed for normal users, they shouldn't notice the
difference.
You can now specify separate attributes for selected/not selected
cases individually for each field and also an attr for the form as
a whole so you can now have colored backgrounds for the form and
different coloured fields etc.
Update the example.
Change the copyright to a BSD style one.
1) Link against object directory version of libcom_err.so.
2) Don't try to install ss_err.h if we haven't made it yet. It's not
on the critical path for `make world' at this point.
1) Changed LIB_SCCS and SYSLIB_SCCS to LIB_RCS and SYSLIB_RCS.
2) Changed sccsid[] variables to rcsid[]
3) Moved all RCSID strings into .text
4) Converted all SCCSID's to RCS $Id$'s
5) Added missing $Id$'s after copyright.
YP by disallowing `+' entries as logins in all cases. (This handles the
case of a `+' entry in the password file but YP not running, which should
never happen but is easy enough to check for so we'll apply some
prophylaxis.)
1) Don't spit out an error message if Kerberos is installed but not yet
set up.
2) Don't attempt to verify the ticket you got back, as workstations
are not intended to have srvtab files of their own.
Both behaviors can be re-enabled with KLOGIN_PARANOID.
a number of (ex-)Athena programs. Breaking my own rules for importing
somewhat, as this code does not appear to be actively maintained by anyone
(not that it really needs it).
input forms. It has the following simple fields:
Text fields: Just titles, labels etc.
Input fields: An editable text field that may or may not have an
initial default value.
Labelled input field: This is an input field that has an initial
informative entry in it but it vanishes when you start editing the
field.
Toggle fields: These are fields with a pre-defined list of options
which you cycle through using the space bar.
Action fields: These are button type fields that call functions when
they are selected.
A simple demo is included in examples.
Embalm. Rewrite to do things much the same as gcc-2: use fistpq for speed
and elegance, and mishandle overflow consistently. __fixunsdfsi() is no
longer called by gcc.
getcwd() has two off-by-one bugs in FreeBSD-2.0:
1. getcwd(buf, size) fails when the size is just large enough.
2. getcwd(buf + 1, 1) incorrectly succeeds when the current directory
is "/". buf[0] and buf[2] are clobbered.
(I modified Bruce's original patch to return the proper error code
[ERANGE] in the case of #2, but otherwise... -DG)
This program demonstrates the bug:
---
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
int main(void)
{
char buf[5];
int errors;
errors = 0;
if (chdir("/tmp") != 0) {
perror("chdir");
abort();
}
if (getcwd(buf, 5) == NULL) {
perror("oops, getcwd failed for buffer size = size required");
++errors;
}
if (chdir("/") != 0) {
perror("chdir");
abort();
}
buf[0] = 0;
buf[2] = 1;
if (getcwd(buf + 1, 1) != NULL) {
fprintf(stderr,
"oops, getcwd succeeded for buffer size = one too small\n");
++errors;
}
if (buf[0] != 0) {
fprintf(stderr,
"oops, getcwd scribbled on memory before start of buffer\n");
++errors;
}
if (buf[2] != 1) {
fprintf(stderr,
"oops, getcwd scribbled on memory after end of buffer\n");
++errors;
}
exit(errors == 0 ? 0 : 1);
}
pointer returned by realloc(). All callers free the pointer if the
execve fails. Nuke the caching. This essentially restores buildargv()
to the 1.1.5 version. Also fix a memory leak if realloc() fails. Also
nuke similar but non-broken caching in execvp(). malloc() should be
efficient enough.
command available yet.
Changed an entry in getprcent.3 from rpcinfo(8C) to rpcinfo(8).
Changed an entry in getrpcport.3 from 3R to 3.
Changed two entries in rpc.3 from 3N to 3.
incredibly obnoxious, but also makes inverse mappings work when the local
resolver is in a cache-only configuration. (Maybe this is actually
a bug in BIND?)
pointer if len is 0. I should have looked at the revision history - I would
have found that Bruce already fixed the bug with len=0 over a month ago.
Whoever said that the bug was in 2.0 was wrong.
Change the reference for the libtermcap libtermlib link from SHLIBDIR
to LIBDIR. SHLIBDIR is undefined in the standard case.
termcap.c:
Initialize a local variable to zero. Otherwise an erroneous free call
can happen and clobber the calling program.
Seen with vi and gdb. If you have TERMCAP set with a terminal entry and
set TERM with something like huhu, vi and gdb core dumps.
for Wine support. The current snapshot of wine works fine with this.
This should go into the beta as the code which it calls in the kernel is
already there, and works fine.
$(DESTDIR)/$(LIBDIR) (I need SHLIBDIR. The / was a bug and the
$(...) style was inconsistent.)
Install ordinary libraries in ${DESTDIR}${LIBDIR} instead of in
$(DESTDIR)/$(LIBDIR).
Change remaining $(...) to ${...}.
later be applied to a number of programs (inetd for instance) to clean
out the bogus code doing the same thing, modulus all the bugs.
If you need to read a '#'-is-a-comment-file, please use these routines.
I realize that the shlib# should be bumped (for the non-US world:
increased by something), but will defer this until something significant
happens.
input fields. It reads a template file passed to init_forms(char *)
and creates a curses based form editor. See the examples directory
for a basic demo.
This effectively changes the non-DES password algoritm.
If you have the "securedist" installed you will have no problems with this.
(Though you might want to consider using this password-encryption instead
of the DES-based if your system is likely to be hacked)
If you are running a -current system without the "securedist" installed:
YOU WILL NEED TO CHANGE ALL PASSWORDS !! There is no backwards mode.
Suggested procedure is:
Update your sources
cd /usr/src/lib/libcrypt
make clean
make all
make install
passwd root
<set roots new password>
change password for any other users on the system.
This algorithm is expected to be much better than the traditional DES-
based algorithm. It uses the MD5 algorithm at what it is best at, as
opposed to the DES algorithm at something it isn't good at at all. The
algorithm is designed such that it should very hard to shortcut the
calculations needed to build a dictionary, and to make partial knowledge
(Hmm, his password starts with a 'P'...) useless. Of course if somebody
breaks the MD5 algorithm this looses too.
The salt is 48 bits (8 char @ base64).
The encrypted password is 128 bits.
And I am positively delighted to say that it takes 34 msec to crypt() a
password on a Pentium/60Mhz, so building a dictionary is not really an
option for hackers at the moment.
Given the right circumstances, a call to kvm_open can result in a core
dump.
The diff belows fixes this (note that this change is already in the
NetBSD code). Could somebody apply this?
Gary J.
Submitted by: gj
From: Chris Torek <torek@bsdi.com>
Here is a semi-official patch (apply to /usr/src/lib/libc/stdio/fseek.c,
rebuild libc, install). The current code fails when the seek:
- is optimized, and
- is to just past the end of the block currently in the buffer, and
- is followed by another seek with no intervening read operation, and
- the destination of subsequent seek is within the block left in the
buffer (seeking to the beginning of a block does not force a read,
so the buffer still contains the previous block)
so it is indeed rather obscure.
I may have a different `final' fix, as this one `loses' the buffer
contents on a seek that goes just past the end of the current block.
[Footnote: seeks are optimized only on read-only opens of regular
files that are buffered by the file's optimal I/O size. This is
what you get with fopen(path, "r") and no call to setvbuf().]
Obtained from: [ BSDI mailing list ]
I know that many of these entries are bogus and need to be revisited,
but let's get the tree working again for now and then do a pass through
looking at all the __FreeBSD__ entries, shall we?
While trying to figure out why rlogind wasn't working right for root,
I noticed that man wouldn't come back with a man page for iruserok, but
it would for ruserok. Checking the lib/net directory's Makefile.inc
file shows that the link to the rcmd man page just isn't getting
created.
>How-To-Repeat:
Do a 'man iruserok' and notihing will come back, where a 'man ruserok'
will.
Submitted by: Brian Moore <ziff@houdini.eecs.umich.edu>
Obtained from: NetBSD-bugs mailing list
on terminals with no pad char (cons25) and quote from tputs.c says so too:
! * Too bad there are no user program accessible programmed delays.
! * Transmitting pad characters slows many
! * terminals down and also loads the system.
and don't return error, if non-terminals. This fix allows curses
to work into full duplex pipes under control of main program,
like good old curses does.
getnet* configuration. (It's highly unlikely that you'd want to do
something different, and network lookups aren't common enough to justify
their own configuration file.)
DANGER WILL ROBINSON!
_PATH_UNIX is currently defined as the literal string "don't use this".
I am of two minds about this myself, but wanted to get something into the
tree as quickly as possible.
!!!!!!!!
NB
!!!!!!!!
You MUST pwd_mkdb /etc/master.passwd before attempting to use the new
libc, or things may go wrong. (I doubt anything actually /will/ go
wrong, but the actual behavior is undefined. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.)
The database format is, however, backwards-compatible, so old executables
will still work.
(void) setlocale(LC_ALL, "");
It will be easiest way now to make national chars available
for all ctype-oriented programs at once by simple:
setenv LANG Your_National_Charset
Default case (without "LANG" environment
variable) will be fully ANSI compatible (got "C" locale).
If "LANG" variable present, extention becomes active.
Effect of this extention is great: in one time all ctype
oriented programs can accept/print national characters
without any touching source/binary code, it is big win, IMHO.
This method is fully compatible with ISO8859-* and russian koi8-r
too (in general -- with all 8-bit character sets). I think
it is very useful.
I got this idea from Xenix locale implementation.
This extention is even never compiled in, unless you set
setenv STARTUP_LOCALE
before rebuilding crt0.c or corresponding variable in /etc/make.conf
>From: jtk@atria.com (John T. Kohl)
in rcmd:
It calls select() with a hardcoded "number of file descriptors" argument
of 32, rather than computing it based on the sockets about which it
cares.
- Now we work out the nfds arg, and do some error checking
Submitted by: Geoff.
and tiny*tiny at compile time. The evaluations are supposed to be done
at run time to set the IEEE exception flags. Many other source files
in libm and msun are missing this fix. Fixing them is not urgent since
the default IEEE exception masks don't allow use of the overflow
exception flag.
Don't add to POBJS or SOBJS. bsd.lib.mk does it. Some objects were
duplicated.
Don't add to CLEANFILES. bsd.lib.mk does it. Some objects were
quadruplicated.
Define variables that are only used once close to where they are
used.
The ifdefs for avoiding building of profiled/shared objects when
NOPROFILE/NOPIC are set were not actually committed. The ifdefs
belong in bsd.lib.mk anyway.
o __FULLINE added for AL/DL/CS optimization with __noqch.
refresh.c
o Attributes does not turned off before clearing screen, cause
highlighted screen.
o Proper usage of 'affcnt' tputs parameter, affects terminals with
padding.
o make AL/DL/CS optimize not only for __FULLWIN but for __FULLLINE.
ATTENTION: original code works _only_for_ FULLWIN, i.e. if you
use two FULLLINE windows like in 'talk', you have full slow repaint with
original code, I enhance this thing. All other fixes marked
with phrase 'wrong for non-full windows' or WFNFW is continue of this fix.
I rewrite scroll code too for proper working (see below and tty.c
changes).
o DEBUG code always use 'i' index from 0 to curscr->maxy instead of
'i - win->begy', fixed
o check added into DEBUG to be shure that index inside current window.
o ->hash assigment code is WFNFW (forget win->begy).
o when CE usage required, and last spaces number counted, code don't check
attributes, so last standouted space will be incorrectly cleared.
o cep (start pointer) forget to add win->begy/win->begx, code WFNFW.
o clsp (last space) wrong in two places at once: forget to add win->begy
(WFNFW) and incorrectly use 'win->begx * __LDATASIZE' in pointer
arithmetics.
o clsp check incorrect: was 'clsp < win->maxx * __LDATASIZE', need to
be 'clsp < win->maxx
o Attributes does not turned off before clearing end of line, cause
highlighted end of line.
o When find how many lines from the top/bottom of the screen are unchanged,
code always forget '- win->begy', WFNFW.
o NO_JERKINESS code forgets to add win->begy, WFNFW.
o Curw & Curs changed in comment description
o In search for the largest block of text not changed forget to add
'- win->begy' (several places), WFNFW.
o Forget to add '- win->begy' for non-dirty lines, WFNFW.
o touchline forget to add '- win->begy', WFNFW.
o rewrite scrolln():
* remove win parameter, we deal with whole screen (curscr) now;
* use NL or '\n' instead of sf, it is faster in any case;
(imagine: cat written on curses now use '\n' for scroll
like standard cat, no ugly escapes)
* use dl (if present) instead of DL, if abs(n) == 1, the same
about al/sr, it is faster;
* change win->maxy to 'curscr->maxy - 1', we deal with whole screen
here, WFNFW.
* SF can be correctly issued only if cursor at bottom of scroll
region (whole screen region included too), fix this;
* sr/SR can be correctly issued only if cursor at top of scroll
region (whole screen region included too), fix this;
* use pre-calculaded (in setterm.c) __usecs variable to determine
usage of CS or AL/DL;
* completely rewrite scroll region stuff using __set_scroll_region
from tty.c (see below);
tty.c
o Added __set_scroll_region function which set CS region and stays
back in old position. Use SC/RC (save/restore cursor) if possible,
else use HO and __mvcur.
o __startwin: added __set_scroll_region(whole screen) at program
startup, if __usecs;
o endwin: added __set_scroll_region(whole screen) at program
exit, if __usecs;
o Fix all tc{set/get}attrs to works properly, when stdin redirected,
use /dev/tty in this case (needed for some applications).
setterm.c
o Add new variable __usecs, if (!AL/al || !Dl/dl) && CS && (SC && RC || HO)
(save/restore cursor used in __set_scroll_region in tty.c).
o Set __noqch, if !__usecs && (!AL/al || !DL/dl).
o Proper ospeed initialization for tputs, i.e. if speed == B9600,
ospeed = 13
curses.c
o Add __usecs variable that indicates usage of CS (if AL/DL absent).
curses.h
o Allow translation with applications which includes <sgtty.h>,
undef BXXX manually to avoid redefinition and include termios
to define proper ones.
o Define old-style names curx/begx/maxx/etc. for old applications.
Define _tty like __baset too.
o Typedef SGTTY type for old applications (SGTTY == struct termios).
o wstandout/wstandend should be int and not char*, some old
applications relay on this fact. See standout.c too.
o __FULLINE added indicated line width == terminal width, needed
for refresh using AL/DL/CS with __noqch, see refresh.c changes.
o Add extern __usecs variable that indicates usage of CS (if AL/DL absent).
o Add __set_scroll_region() prototype, see tty.c and refresh.c changes
for details.
o Change winch() character mask from 0177 to 0377, we don't need to
strip high bit on national characters.
o Allow translate on systems with _BSD_VA_LIST_ undefined, such as
FreeBSD 1.1.5.1
o __tty_fileno added to allows work with stdin redirected, see tty.c
o Privately declare tputs (..., void) and externally tputs(..., int),
many applications require this. Maybe not nice thing, but needed.
o Remove _putchar definition and replace it to proper _putchar
prototype, some old apps declares: 'extern int _putchar()'
and don't even include curses.h in such modules. See putchar.c
cr_put.c
o __mvcur: if destline == destcol && outline == outcol do nothing,
i.e. don't issue any escapes.
o Proper usage of 'affcnt' tputs parameter, affects terminals with
padding.
cur_hash.c
o Change char->unsigned char for proper sum 8-bit national characters.
getch.c
o check for inp == EOF added, don't add EOF to window.
getstr.c
o check for EOF added, don't add EOF to str.
insertln.c
o add cast to (int) in comparation of y and win->cury, this produce
big number (cast to (unsigned)) if y < 0
tstp.c
o Fix all tc{set/get}attrs to works properly, when stdin redirected,
use /dev/tty in this case (needed for some applications).
o add tstp() function for compatibility, some applications wants it.
standout.c
o Some old applications relay in fact that wstandout/wstandend
returns int instead of char*, change return type to OK/ERR.
putchar.c
o Add _putchar function (which calls __cputchar),
some old apps declares: 'extern int _putchar()'
and don't even include curses.h in such modules.
automagically. -lfoo has to be right to work, but ${LIBFO0} is too
easy to forget or misspell; nothing checks it and it should be
different for shared libraries.
because libmd builds a test program before installation and if
you've used CLOBBER there's no crt.0 to link with. This ensures
that in a make world the csu objects will get installed before
reaching the libmd directory.
Reviewed by:
Submitted by:
<machine/profile.h>. The old version was writing an incomplete
header without the profrate field that is necessary to handle the
current faster profiling clock. The counters that are where the
the profrate should be are usually 0 and gprof converts a profrate
of 0 to hz so the old version gave times too large by a factor of
profhz/hz = 10.24.
The fyl2xp1 instruction has such a limited range:
-(1 - (sqrt(2) / 2)) <= x <= sqrt(2) - 1
it's not worth trying to use it.
Also, I'm not sure fyl2xp1's extra precision will
matter once the result is converted from extended
real (80 bits) back to double real (64 bits).
Reviewed by: jkh
Submitted by: jtc
-- Begin comments from J.T. Conklin:
The most significant improvement is the addition of "float" versions
of the math functions that take float arguments, return floats, and do
all operations in floating point. This doesn't help (performance)
much on the i386, but they are still nice to have.
The float versions were orginally done by Cygnus' Ian Taylor when
fdlibm was integrated into the libm we support for embedded systems.
I gave Ian a copy of my libm as a starting point since I had already
fixed a lot of bugs & problems in Sun's original code. After he was
done, I cleaned it up a bit and integrated the changes back into my
libm.
-- End comments
Reviewed by: jkh
Submitted by: jtc
distributed in keith bostic's nvi (got his permission first). Most changes
are cosmetic, but a few errors (mostly in tty..c) were cleared up.
Reviewed by: Sean Eric Fagan
long long. Done by plugging both eax and edx with -1. This will clobber
edx unnecessarily when the return value is only 32bit...though probably
always an okay thing to do, it could stand a better fix.
This was the cause of gawk being broken (boy was THAT ever a subtle
bug!!!).
Securedist can be sorted out later - getting these bits exportable
is top priority.
The libtelnet with encryption has been moved to src/secure/lib.
It will either become part of libsecure, or or be made available
under another name, once the securedist strategy has been completely
worked out.
Submitted by: Geoff Rehmet
are running under. Here's how to bootstrap (order is important):
1) Re-compile gcc (just the driver is all you need).
2) Re-compile libc.
3) Re-compile your kernel. Reboot.
4) cd /usr/src/include; make install
You can now detect the compilation environment with the following code:
#if !defined(__FreeBSD__)
#define __FreeBSD_version 199401
#elif __FreeBSD__ == 1
#define __FreeBSD_version 199405
#else
#include <osreldate.h>
#endif
You can determine the run-time environment by calling the new C library
function getosreldate(), or by examining the MIB variable kern.osreldate.
For the time being, the release date is defined as 199409, which we have
already established as our target.
1.1.5 support for YP, fixing a bug in 1.1.5 that prevented YP from ever
working reliably. (I'm amazed that there were no bug reports.)
IWBRNI someone could write a host.conf(5) manual page. Please look at
the code before doing so; this version is somewhat more flexible in the
format of its input.
1. Copyright files looked for in the wrong place
2. cmp was looking in wrong place for test data.
3. Driver for test not linked static, thus dynamic resolution of library
not working.
4. Man page installation not consistent with source.
Reviewed by:
Submitted by: jkh
Imported libmd. This library contains MD2, MD4 and MD5.
These three boggers pop up all over the place all of the time, so I
decided we needed a library with them. In general they are used for
security checks, so if you use them you want to link them static.
2 Added optional excessive login logging.
3) Added login acces control on a per host/tty base.
4) See skey(1) for skey descriptions and src/usr.bin/login/README
for the logging and access control features.
-Guido
This fixes the problems Warner's having with ctors not being called
again with the latest round of ld changes and updates the file-names to what
Paul is using now.
The name change will not affect anything as we are not (yet) using it.
program. The idea was that these are 'alignment' crap, but the image
is 16byte-aligned without these. Location 0 still doesn't have a 0,
but who cares, binaries wil be built with page zero unmapped in the
near future.