is based on an old implementation from the University of Michigan with lots of
changes and fixes by me and the addition of a Solaris-compatible API.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems
Reviewed by: alfred
__xdrrec_getrec has returned TRUE, then we have a complete request in
the buffer - calling xdrrec_skiprecord is not necessary. In particular,
if there is another record already buffered on the stream,
xdrrec_skiprecord will discard both this request and the next
one, causing the call to xdr_callmsg to fail and the stream to be
closed.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems
When NGROUP_MAX is larger than NGRP the call used to fail. Now the call
succeedes, but only the first NGRP groups are actually used for authentication.
net: endhostdnsent is named _endhostdnsent and is
private to netdb family of functions.
posix1e: acl_size.c has been never compiled in,
so there's no "acl_size".
rpc: "getnetid" is a static function.
stdtime: "gtime" is #ifdef'ed out in the source.
some symbols are specific only to some architectures,
e.g., ___tls_get_addr is only defined on i386.
__htonl, __htons, __ntohl and __ntohs are no longer
functions, they are now (internal) defines in
<machine/endian.h>.
Submitted by: ru
behind _FREEFALL_CONFIG). This is done mainly to make NIS even more
resistant to packet loss.
This is not enabled by default for "normal" FreeBSD since it might cause
the server providing the RPC service to be hit heavily with RPC traffic
in case of problems. freefall.FreeBSD.org and hub.FreeBSD.org have been
running with a patch similar to this for a couple of weeks.
MFC after: 1 week
Discussed with: peter
While we don't use the NC_BROADCAST value of nc_flag anywhere in the
RPC code, it is parseable by getnetconfigent(3) from /etc/netconfig.
o Clean up some "see below"'s that were cut and pasted from netconfig.h.
If turned on no NIS support and related programs will be built.
Lost parts rediscovered by: Danny Braniss <danny at cs.huji.ac.il>
PR: bin/68303
No objections: des, gshapiro, nectar
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
that this provokes. "Wherever possible" means "In the kernel OR NOT
C++" (implying C).
There are places where (void *) pointers are not valid, such as for
function pointers, but in the special case of (void *)0, agreement
settles on it being OK.
Most of the fixes were NULL where an integer zero was needed; many
of the fixes were NULL where ascii <nul> ('\0') was needed, and a
few were just "other".
Tested on: i386 sparc64