The char that the random letters and numbers are being pulled from is
ended with a '\0'. Using sizeof() includes this '\0' in the 'pool' of
possible characters. This patch decrements by one the size so we don't
accidently end the new password prematurly.
and terminate it. This patch ensures passwords will be the correct length of 8,
which is what is implied in the source (but not reflected in the man page).
PR: bin/7817
Reviewed by: Alfred Perlstein <bright@hotjobs.com>
Submitted by: Hiroshi Nishikawa <nis@pluto.dti.ne.jp>
in getopt(). The code was there, the means to use it wasn't.
Also update the usage() statment to reflect reality.
PR: bin/9248
Submitted by: Jos Backus <jbackus@plex.nl>
Forgotten By: dillon
to a hostname. This will help those who keep a cluster of machines all with
the same hostname but different domain names.
PR: bin/9091
Submitted By: Heikki Suonsivu <hsu@clinet.fi>
No Response From: -current mailing list
arithmetic instead of the special macros in PR 8163 or the magic
2's in PR 381. (Rev.1.3 unfortunately fixed only half of the
problems reported in PR 381.)
PR: 381, 8163
Fixed missing DPADD.
Fixed placement of the include of bsd.prog.mk. It annulled
`make checkdpadd', which should have been run to find the broken DPADD.
It just replace u_long with u_int32_t and shouldn't affect on i386.
Without this patch,
- unaligned accesses occur
- permission denied randomly
Submitted by: Hidetoshi Shimokawa <simokawa@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
ISDN4BSD is the work of our brand-new comitter: Hellmuth Michaelis,
who has done a tremendous amount of work to bring us this far.
There are still some outstanding issues and files to bring into
the tree, and for now it will be needed to pick up all the extra
docs from the isdn4bsd release.
It is probably also a very good idea to subscribe to the isdn@freebsd.org
mailing list before you try this out.
These files correspond to release "beta Version 0.70.00 / December
1998" from Hellmuth.
to see if there's anything to do, schedule the next alarm
based on the next required timeout.
This decreases the load when there are lots of relatively
idle ppp processes.
While I'm in there, handle the possibility that a timeout
makes the timer element go out of scope by grabbing the
enext pointer before executing the timer function.
Prevent cron from going crazy if the time steps. For example, if you
have a system with hundreds of users and lots of different crontabs
and your time steps back an hour, the old cron would then attempt to
run an hours worth of cron jobs in a few seconds.
Have pwd_mkdb lock the source file while rebuilding the database. When
called by programs such as vipw, the source file is a temporary file and
this does not conflict with the lock on /etc/master.passwd already held
by vipw. When run manually, however, master.passwd is typically specified
as the argument and the locking prevents other programs from messing with
master.passwd during the database rebuild.
Also pwd_mkdb uses a blocking exclusive lock as it may be called from
a script. The -N option was added to cause pwd_mkdb to get the lock
non-blocking and exit with an error if the attempt fails, again useful
for scripts.