control-file for each print job. This is partially because the previous
checks still let through some characters which would cause trouble for
other applications which try to process the resulting userid -- such as
accounting programs.
But the main reason is to handle the case where some remote host sends a
print job where the given userid is an uppercase-version of the real userid.
For that case, lpd will now check for uppercase letters in the userid. If
there are any, it will check to see if the given userid (with the uppercase
letters) is a valid one. If it is *not* valid, then lpd will change the
userid to all-lowercase right when the job is received.
MFC after: 2 weeks
source to use __FBSDID() for setting rcsids. Also fix the format
of 'sccsid' lines to consistently match style(9) guidelines.
Reviewed by: discussed with bde and obrien
MFC after: 15 days
control-files will always start with 'cfA*'. It turns out that some
implementations of lpd (such as solaris) may send a control file which
starts with 'cfB*', or really 'cf<anyLetter>*'. Although such filenames
are very odd, we did used to accept them. This changes ctl_renametf to
work correctly with them, and fixes up 'lpc clean' to match.
PR: bin/32183
MFC after: 10 days
'l' ("plain text which includes control characters") is somewhat more
appropriate for 'o' ("postscript files"), and in fact some printers treat
'l' as a request to print a postscript file.
MFC after: 1 week
This was described in the original RFC wrt lpr, but most lpr's do not
actually implement it. There is some indication that MacOS 10.1 will
be using this when sending postscript files to print servers (that is
what "o"-type was supposed to signify -- postscript files).
MFC after: 1 week
receives them from other hosts. This is meant to protect from both
nefarious users (which maybe broke into some remote host that we accept
print jobs from), and broken implementations of lpr on other platforms.
This is done by changing recvjob.c to call the new ctl_renametf()
routine in the new common_source/ctlinfo.[ch] files. This will not
affect jobs coming via lpr on the local machine.
Reviewed by: freebsd-print@bostonradio.org & freebsd-audit
MFC after: 16 days