signal never affects su directly, some shells changes its pgrp at running
or suspended time, so a broadcast SIGTSTP from child will mess up su's job
control.
Discussed with: bde
the child process, before executing the command. This is very useful
when you do stuff like ``find ... | xargs interactive_application''.
Without -o, the application would inherit the pipe as its stdin, and
you thus lose any control over it.
This flag has been carefully chosen to not conflit with other options
of other xargs utilities like GNU xargs.
Reviewed by: jmallett
careless users vulnerable to terminal control sequence attacks,
since they expect uudecode to just drop (or overwrite) a file in
the current directory. POSIX also says that the full pathname from
the input should be used when writing a file, which we only do if
the -s (shoot me in the foot) option is specified; therefore this
revision means that you now need to use -s for standard /dev/stdout
handling.
Kernel:
Change statistics to use the *uptime() timescale (ie: relative to
boottime) rather than the UTC aligned timescale. This makes the
device statistics code oblivious to clock steps.
Change timestamps to bintime format, they are cheaper.
Remove the "busy_count", and replace it with two counter fields:
"start_count" and "end_count", which are updated in the down and
up paths respectively. This removes the locking constraint on
devstat.
Add a timestamp argument to devstat_start_transaction(), this will
normally be a timestamp set by the *_bio() function in bp->bio_t0.
Use this field to calculate duration of I/O operations.
Add two timestamp arguments to devstat_end_transaction(), one is
the current time, a NULL pointer means "take timestamp yourself",
the other is the timestamp of when this transaction started (see
above).
Change calculation of busy_time to operate on "the salami principle":
Only when we are idle, which we can determine by the start+end
counts being identical, do we update the "busy_from" field in the
down path. In the up path we accumulate the timeslice in busy_time
and update busy_from.
Change the byte_* and num_* fields into two arrays: bytes[] and
operations[].
Userland:
Change the misleading "busy_time" name to be called "snap_time" and
make the time long double since that is what most users need anyway,
fill it using clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC) to put it on the same
timescale as the kernel fields.
Change devstat_compute_etime() to operate on struct bintime.
Remove the version 2 legacy interface: the change to bintime makes
compatibility far too expensive.
Fix a bug in systat's "vm" page where boot relative busy times would
be bogus.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to 500107
Review & Collaboration by: ken
This option is present on most uuidgen(1) implementations even
though normal file redirection can be used to achieve the same.
Submitted by: Hiten Pandya <hiten@unixdaemons.com>
int, long int or u_int32_t. This changes the interface of
all the CRC calculation and output functions from cksum.
- Print variables of type off_t as intmax_t using a cast and %jd.
- Use the standardized uint32_t type instead of u_int32_t.
To have uint32_t defined, include <stdint.h> where necessary.
Style(9):
- Move #include directives where they belong (esp. crc32.c).
- Add empty lines between #include directives of system headers,
standard library headers and local headers.
- Test a pointer value against NULL.
- Put a space after the return keyword.
PR: bin/48424
KTR_DROP set in its header, then we output an extra line to stdout to
indicate that events were dropped between the previous record and this
record. It is a bit trickier because we need to always notify the user
if events are dropped even if KTR_DROP is set on a record of a type that
we aren't interested in since kdump(8) doesn't know if the dropped events
were of the types that the user has requested. To avoid outputting
multiple events dropped notices in between actual event logs, a state
variable is set whenever a drop is logged and cleared whenever an actual
record is output.
Requested by: phk
are specified the old behaviour is old. The submitted applied a much cleaner
diff to ruptime.c, however it did not cover cases like listing failures. It
would probably be a good idea to move the printing from the ruptime function,
and have that function just be used to build the list, as that would unbreak
sorting, but this diff is intended to be clear, relative to the original
code. As the sort order is the order specified on the command line, for now,
such is documented in the manual page accordingly.
Submitted by: Edward J. M. Blocklesby <ejb@lythe.org.uk>
MFC after: 3 weeks
end-of-file checks out of the inner base64 loop, and remove the
trailing whitespace stripper. The latter was added in rev 1.23 but
the actual fix for the problem was in 1.24 -- b64_pton doesn't mind
extra whitespace. (However there's a bogus comment in OpenSSH's
uuencode.c that also mentions problems with trailing whitespace and
b64_pton, but their real problem is the comment field in the key
file.)
comparing regular files. Add a SIGSEGV handler to make its
behavior less surprising when a read error occurs. The handler
does not attempt to distinguish errors from file truncation, but
anyone actively modifying a file while trying to compare it
shouldn't even expect something sane to happen.
PR: 45391
Reviewed by: mike (mentor)