property. This should have been done a while back (certainly before
mergeing projects/release-pkg to head), but I fixed the merge conflicts
and forgot to correct the real problem afterward.
Noticed by: peter
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
share/mk/sys.mk instead.
This is part of a medium term project to permit deterministic builds of
FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Erik Cederstrand <erik@cederstrand.dk>
Reviewed by: imp, toolchain@
Approved by: cperciva
MFC after: 2 weeks
When ntp switched between PLL and FLL mode it produced a log message
"kernel time sync status change %04x". This issue is reported in ntp
bug 452[1] which claims that this behaviour is normal and the log
message isn't necessary. I'm not sure exactly when it was removed, but
it's gone in the latest ntp release (4.2.6p5).
[1] http://bugs.ntp.org/show_bug.cgi?id=452
Approved by: roberto
for resolving by a child process that, upon success, will add the entry
to the config of the running running parent process.
Unfortunately there are a couple of bugs with this, fixed in various
later versions of upstream in potentially different ways due to other
code changes:
1) Upon server [-46] <FQDN> the [-46] are used as FQDN for later resolving
which does not work. Make sure we always pass the name (or IP there).
2) The intermediate file to carry the information to the child process
does not know about -4/-6 restrictions, so that a dual-stacked host
could resolve to an IPv6 address but that might be unreachable (see
r223626) leading to no working synchronization ignoring a IPv4 record.
Thus alter the intermediate format to also pass the address family
(AF_UNSPEC (default), AF_INET or AF_INET6) to the child process
depending on -4 or -6.
3) Make the child process to parse the new intermediate file format and
save the address family for getaddrinfo() hints flags.
4) Change child to always reload resolv.conf calling res_init() before
trying to resolve names. This will pick up resolv.conf changes or
new resolv.confs should they have not existed or been empty or
unusable on ntp startup. This fix is more conditional in upstream
versions but given FreeBSD has res_init there is no need for the
configure logic as well.
Approved by: roberto
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
MFC after: 9 days
in host byte order, so we need to compare them as such.
Properly compare IPv6 addresses as well.
This allows the, by default, 8 badaddrs slots per address
family to work correctly and only print sendto() errors once.
The change is no longer applicable to any latest upstream versions.
Approved by: roberto
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
MFC after: 1 week
system and is decided upon by configure and could be an u_int or a
u_char. For FreeBSD it is a u_char.
For IPv6 however RFC 3493, 5.2 defines the argument to
IPV6_MULTICAST_LOOP to be an unsigned integer so make sure we always
use that using a second variable for the IPV6 case.
This is to get rid of these error messages every 5 minutes on some
systems:
ntpd[1530]: setsockopt IPV6_MULTICAST_LOOP failure: Invalid argument
on socket 22, addr fe80::... for multicast address ff02::101
While here also fix the copy&paste error in the log message for
IPV6_MULTICAST_LOOP.
Reviewed by: roberto
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 10 days
Filed as: Bug 1936 on ntp.org
/boot/kernel/hptrr.ko
/etc/mail/*.cf
/lib/libcrypto.so.5
/usr/bin/ntpq
/usr/sbin/amd
/usr/sbin/iasl
/usr/sbin/ntpd
/usr/sbin/ntpdate
/usr/sbin/ntpdc
There does not appear to be any purpose to having these timestamps, and
they have the irritating consequence that the aforementioned files will
be different every time they are rebuilt.
After this commit, the only remaining build timestamps are in the kernel,
the boot loaders, /usr/include/osreldate.h (the year in the copyright
notice), and lib*.a (the timestamps on all of the included .o files).
Reviewed by: scottl (hptrr), gshapiro (sendmail), simon (openssl),
roberto (ntp), jkim (acpica)
Approved by: re (kib)
Reinsert our local changes to ntp_control.c:
1.4: Do not log every potential exploit attempt since a denial-of-service
may result
1.5: int -> unsigned char fixes