other, less advanced architecutres. This should minorly help porting
efforts of FreeBSD. I've done several make worlds since this came up
with this change, as well as debugging several interesting nits with
-V (which is the only thing this change will affect really).
have been added to time(1) to write output to an alternative destination.
Option "-f filename" will write to filename, and filename can be - to
write to stdout. Option "-a filename" will append the output to filename.
Time(1) man page has been updated to reflect the change.
PR: 7368
Submitted by: Steven G. Kargl <kargl@troutmask.apl.washington.edu>
name of entry points, functions, subroutines, and program to
stderr error. The enclosed patches do 3 things:
(1) Silenced the output to stderr.
(2) Added a -v option to f2c and f77. This will turn on a verbose
mode, and dumps quite a bit of stuff to stderr.
(3) Updated the f2c man page.
PR: 7369
Submitted by: Steven G. Kargl <kargl@troutmask.apl.washington.edu>
if LOGIN_CAP_AUTH was defined. This is kind of silly, because
LOGIN_CAP_AUTH doesn't work anyway, is not defined currently,
probably will never be defined, and IMHO should not be defined.
But I'm sure you'll sleep better tonight, knowing that these bugs
are gone.
o When reporting a int21 function we don't know about yet, report
AH as the major and AL as the minor, as opposed to reporting AL
as the major.
o Add support for 21:44:7: ioctl check output status. We
optimistically say that output is always ready.
o Add half support for 21:23: get file size. We always now return
failure. This function isn't supported, according to the interrupt
list, by the DOS box in windows, so I don't feel too bad.
o Remove init printf
o Don't set optind from return value for do_args. getopt has already
done this.
o Bump EMS memory from 1M to 10M (this really should be a command line
option).
o Open /dev/null when requested to open emmxxxx0 to allow many programs
checking to see if EMS is installed to find it.
o Route int67 to ems_entry to allow EMS to be used when DOS is emulated
as well as when DOS is booted. This may obviate the need for the
driver doing anything at all in a really booted situation and won't
hurt that case.
I can now run the DOS program I'm interested in running with enough
EMS memory that its "advanced" functions are enabled and working.
FreeBSD does not have _POSIX_SAVED_IDS enabled. Thanks to Warner Losh
and Ollivier Robert for pointing this out, and Bruce Evans for explaining
the role of _POSIX_SAVED_IDS.
- failed to use authorization parameters passed in the environment, if
/dev/tty could not be opened (i.e. if running from cron)
- mixed use of /dev/tty and stdin for prompt and reading of the result
bootstrapped by `make world'. The version just built in ".."
normally won't work if the target system is not binary compatible.
Don't build or install anything if _BUILD_TOOLS is defined. Then
we only want to build and install the mklocale binary, but the layout
of the mklocale tree forces recursing to mklocale/data for at least
the obj target even when _BUILD_TOOLS is defined.
bootstrapped by `make world'. The version just built in ".."
normally won't work if the target system is not binary compatible.
Don't build or install anything if _BUILD_TOOLS is defined. Then
we only want to build and install the colldef binary, but the layout
of the colldef tree forces recursing to colldef/data for at least
the obj target even when _BUILD_TOOLS is defined.
especially on a new install, where /var/msgs/bounds doesn't exist. I
moved my bounds file out of the way to create this before and after
on a quick 'n' dirty hack, which is probably the 23rd best way to do it,
but it works:
PR: 6963
Submitted by: Matthew Fuller <fullermd@mortis.futuresouth.com>
Fixed the type of the string table size variable to match its use
(assuming that int32_t is 4 bytes and other unportable things).
bfd uses `unsigned char string_chars[BYTES_IN_WORD]', where
BYTES_IN_WORD can be 4, 8, or perhaps even 2 or 3, but it is
assumed to be precisely 4 bytes here.
Fixed printf format errors (don't assume that n_value in struct
n_list has type u_long, since it should have size BYTES_IN_WORD
and longs may be longer than words).
o Make the dos emulation treat c: and C: the same way. Sourcer was doing
a chdir("c:\\") rather than a chdir("C:\\");
o use drlton() in all places where we used to use -'A' so that we're always
case independent.
o use drntol() in all places where we used to use + 'A' for similar reasons
used to check to see if windows 3.x if running. We always return 0,
which means that neither Windows 3.x nor Windows/386 2.x is running. It
also means, btw, that XMS version 1 isn't installed, which is true since
we don't implement that either.
This fix only removes the dependency on compile time constants. The code
has other (old) problems that need to be addressed.
PR: 1791
Reviewed-by: bde, tegge
o Add more checks for buffer overflows
o Use snprintf rather than strcat/cpy and have better checks for max
length exceeded.
Most of these changes are not exploitable buffer overruns, but it never
hurts to be safe.
Inspired by and obtained from: OpenBSD
says it pretends to make.
This bug was apparently harmless except for normal cases involving
.ORDER statements when it made debugging of -jN using -n very
confusing. E.g., for:
.ORDER: beforedepend .depend
depend: beforedepend .depend
where beforedepend depends on something so that it is not initially
up to date, `make [-n] -j2 depend' causes `make' to wait for itself
to make beforedepend. This works fine without -n. The job to make
beforedepend has normally been started, and beforedepend is marked
as made when the job completes. However, with -n, the pseudo-job
for making beforedepend has normally completed, and in any case
there was no chance of beforedepend being marked as made. `make'
actually exited almost immediately with status 0 instead of waiting
forever.
it if flags were explicitly specified on the command line. Do not warn
if we were merely trying to preserve flags or remove UF_NODUMP. NFS does
not support flags.
I'm not sure that this is ideal, but it should do for now. Installing
a plain file onto a NFS server must work, we used to silently ignore the
attempt. Doing a binary install looses the flags anyway since cpio
doens't preserve them with the cdrom/network images.
XXX make world should not use flags or chown/chgrp in the obj/tmp area.
This is based on a suggestion from Ken Merry <ken@plutotech.com>.
Here is a some example for avoiding a confusion.
It asssumes a logged host domain is "spec.co.jp". All
example is longer than UT_HOSTNAMELEN value.
1) turbo.tama.spec.co.jp: 192.19.0.2 -> trubo.tama
2) turbo.tama.foo.co.jp : 192.19.0.2 -> 192.19.0.2
3) specgw.spec.co.jp : 202.32.13.1 -> specgw
Submitted by: Atsushi Murai <amurai@spec.co.jp>
Clean up (or if antipodic: down) some of the msgbuf stuff.
Use an inline function rather than a macro for timecounter delta.
Maintain process "on-cpu" time as 64 bits of microseconds to avoid
needless second rollover overhead.
Avoid calling microuptime the second time in mi_switch() if we do
not pass through _idle in cpu_switch()
This should reduce our context-switch overhead a bit, in particular
on pre-P5 and SMP systems.
WARNING: Programs which muck about with struct proc in userland
will have to be fixed.
Reviewed, but found imperfect by: bde
Move a.out libraries to /usr/lib/aout to make space for ELF libs.
Make rtld usr /usr/lib/aout as default library path.
Make ldconfig reject /usr/lib as an a.out library path.
Fix various Makefiles for LIBDIR!=/usr/lib breakage.
This will after a make world & reboot give a system that no
longer uses /usr/lib/*, infact one could remove all the old
libraries there, they are not used anymore.
We are getting close to an ELF make world, but I'll let this
all settle for a week or two...
Move our old a.out utils to /usr/libexec/aout.
Enable binutils and put the utils in /usr/libexec/elf
Enable objformat, a little helper program that calls the right
utils based on /etc/objformat and $OBJFORMAT.
This will enable the ELF generating tools.
Remember that this is only step one, the system is still compiled
and run in a.out format ONLY.
Problem left to solve: The BSD manpages wins over the GNU equivalents
as the are installed last. We need to distinguish between the manpages
somehow...
group is 0 in /etc/passwd even if they aren't listed
as a member in /etc/group. This is more inline with
what the group manpage says.
PR: 6696
Submitted by: Max Euston <meuston@jmrodgers.com>
that prevent the programs from being linked static (duplicated
symbols).
Other programs depend on kernel internals. These will have to wait
for a custom alpha kernel. For now, let's just make the build safe.
Implement -s option
Keep going if a file is not found
Append ':' to printed filenames
Include backslash in terminal characters
Make exit status dependent on a match having been found
Revise manpage accordingly
is on a NFS partion without root read access. Also, flip euid again for
the duration of the chdir() to the homedir for the same reason.
PR: 5145
Submitted by: Joel.Faedi@esial.u-nancy.fr
Also tested by: A Joseph Koshy <koshy@india.hp.com>
arguments are given.
Note that usage() and the manpage disagree...
PR: bin/6294
Suggested by: Ruslan Ermilov and Bruce Evans
Submitted by: Ruslan Ermilov (partly)
to free the suffix. I think, it is a very strange idea. (Or, maybe, it is a
POSIX requirement?) And it is done incorrectly. Apparently, it even don't
update the list of known suffixes (but it is an other bug).
PR: 4254, 4692, 4783
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Dmitrij Tejblum <dima@tejblum.dnttm.rssi.ru>
as large as UT_LINESIZE (/usr/include/utmp.h). If the tty name is logged
with this size why isn't the w command reporting it?
(We should probably report the tty/cua prefix then as well ? /phk)
PR: 4187
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Jorge M. Goncalves <ee96199@tom.fe.up.pt>
name for AF_LINK routing entries. This makes debugging
network problems more difficult.
PR: 4182
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Craig Leres <leres@ee.lbl.gov>
(originally on a different OS without mkstemp()), albeit somewhat
bashed and hacked into something that doesn't look too much like
the original any more. It should be upwardly compatable with
OpenBSD's mktemp(1) but does a couple of extra things.
I've taken OpenBSD's mktemp.1 man page and adapted it to suit.
stat() the file being followed and do a close/reopen if the file has been
renamed and/or rotated. This is damn useful for leaving running on files
in /var/log when newsyslog(8) rotates them.
announced a K4 weakness with their rsh/rlogins. We were not put in any
danger by this, as we were not using KTH rlogin/rsh, but the patches
in themselves, had some good points. This lot means we can run our
rlogin without it being SUID root. Win win win. There are other KTH
cleanups as well.
generated sources in SRCS breaks because compile_et uses an evil
include of one .c file in another. Use a worse fix. Perhaps
DPSRCS is useful after all.
Don't put *.y in SRCS. Put the generated file in SRCS instead.
This fixes incomplete dependencies (mkdep can't work on *.y).
Don't override the default .l.c rule. Just use LFLAGS.
Fixed some style bugs.