instead of htonl() !
This results in the int a,b,c,d changing to b,a,c,d,
but as it's subsequently coerced to a u_short, the
ultimate answer is correct.
If this isn't fixed properly soon (by the author) I'll
have a look at it again.
Noted by: eivind & ari@suutari.iki.fi
Obtained from: Whistle Communications tree
Add an option to the way UFS works dependent on the SUID bit of directories
This changes makes things a whole lot simpler on systems running as
fileservers for PCs and MACS. to enable the new code you must
1/ enable option SUIDDIR on the kernel.
2/ mount the filesystem with option suiddir.
hopefully this makes it difficult enough for people to
do this accidentally.
see the new chmod(2) man page for detailed info.
o start function names in column 1
o sort order of flags in getopt and switch
o don't try to reference progname
o unspam some changes introduced by a 2.2.1-R build box instead of a
-current build box
doc changes:
o document when these commands first appeared
o put email address in angle brakets
o minor mdoc clean up
permissions centrally and a setuid root mount utility just breaks
its security. There was no new breakage in practice because
mfdosfs_mount() still checks the ruid.
fix a few problems with missing headers, warn called with an exit
value, and undeclared getopt vars
these programs now compile -Wall clean (and yes, I know I should use
more than just -Wall) :)
like PAP and CHAP secrets with sppp(4). This is the first utility
using the new SIOC[SG]IFGENERIC ioctls (and the reason for inventing
them in the first place).
plain 0 should be used. This happens to work because we #define
NULL to 0, but is stylistically wrong and can cause problems
for people trying to port bits of code to other environments.
PR: 2752
Submitted by: Arne Henrik Juul <arnej@imf.unit.no>
higher up in memory (0x0800000 upwards) rather than near zero (0x1000
for our qmagic a.out format). The method that mount_mfs uses to allocate
the memory within data size rlimits for the ram disk is entirely too much
of a kludge for my liking. I mean, if it's run as root, surely it makes
sense to just raise the resource limits to infinity or something, and if
it's a non-root user mount (do these work? with mfs?) it could just fail
if it's outside limits.
an export line) is unresolvable, make a note of it via syslog and skip
that individual host instead of skipping the entire line.
PR: 1981, 815
Perused by: joerg