Convert 1000000 usec to 1 sec 0 usec.
Use provided safe malloc (rtmalloc()) instead of malloc(): exit on allocation
failure.
Correct use of .Nm
Add usage() and use errx().
contain code that compare a char pointer with a char. As this
doesn't make much sense, it looks very much as if a '*' has been
dropped by mistake. I have made no analysis of the possible
consequences of the problem.
PR: 7319
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Anders Thulin <Anders.X.Thulin@telia.se>
routed discards the first character of the network address.
Example: "subnet=10.0.0.0/24,1"
The network address is interpreted as 0.0.0.0/24,1.
PR: 4825
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Mike E. Matsnev <mike@azog.cs.msu.su>
The answer is not really, but almost.
it sent data that was ok, though it was a hack,
but it was bug-compatible with the kernel on receiving them. This also
had been fixed with a hack.. I hacked it better I think.
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
ftp.sgi.com:sgi/src/routed.tar.Z has a fix that has been cooking for a week
or so and that fixes a problem in the new hash tables for zillions of
interface aliases. The bug was that interfaces that come and go, such
as for SLIP and PPP, would get permanently lost.
Submitted by: Vernon J. Schryver <vjs@mica.denver.sgi.com>
some MD5 fixes, better tracing, configurable redirect processing,
and a fix to split-horizon/poisoned-reverse treatment.
Submitted by: Vernon J. Schryver <vjs@mica.denver.sgi.com>
do it themselves. (Some of these programs actually depended on this
beyond compiling the definition of struct ifinfo!) Also fix up some
other #include messes while we're at it.