- Handle whitespace with long flags that take arguments:
echo 'foo bar' > test
zgrep --regexp='foo bar' test
- Do not hang reading from stdin with patterns in a file:
echo foobar > test
echo foo > pattern
zgrep -f pattern test
zgrep --file=pattern test
- Handle any flags after -e:
echo foobar > test
zgrep -e foo --ignore-case < test
These two are still outstanding problems:
- Does not handle flags that take an argument if there is no
whitespace:
zgrep -enfs /etc/rpc
- When more than one -e pattern used matching should occur for all
patterns (similar to multiple patterns supplied with -f file).
Instead only the last pattern is used for matching:
zgrep -e rex -e nfs /etc/rpc
(This problem is masked in the unpatched version by the "any
flags after -e" problem.)
Add tests for the above problems.
Update the mange and add references to gzip(1) and zstd(1) and also
document the remaining known problems.
PR: 247126
Approved by: markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25613
The version that ended upstream was ultimately slightly different than the
version committed here; notably, statvfs() is used but it's redefined
appropriately to statfs() on FreeBSD since we don't provide the fstypename
for the former interface.
The revokex test does not work when the scratch directory is created on NFS.
Given the nature of NFS, it likely can never work without looking like a
security hole since O_SEARCH would rely on the server knowing that the
directory did have +x at the time of open and that it's OK for it to have
been revoked based on POSIX specification for O_SEARCH.
This does mean that O_SEARCH is only partially functional on NFS in general,
but I suspect the execute bit getting revoked in the process is likely not
common.
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23573
The RCSID data was wrong, so this is effectively a record-only merge
with correction of said data. No further changes should be needed in this
area, as we've now upstreamed our local changes to this specific test.
In FreeBSD's O_SEARCH implementation, O_SEARCH in conjunction with O_RDWR or
O_WRONLY is explicitly rejected. In this case, O_RDWR was not necessary
anyways as the file will get created with or without it.
This was submitted upstream as misc/54940 and committed in rev 1.8 of the
file.
Coverity correctly reports this as a resource leak. It's an admittedly minor
one, but plug it anyways.
This has been submitted upstream as misc/54939.
CID: 978288
O_SEARCH is defined by POSIX [0] to open a directory for searching, skipping
permissions checks on the directory itself after the initial open(). This is
close to the semantics we've historically applied for O_EXEC on a directory,
which is UB according to POSIX. Conveniently, O_SEARCH on a file is also
explicitly undefined behavior according to POSIX, so O_EXEC would be a fine
choice. The spec goes on to state that O_SEARCH and O_EXEC need not be
distinct values, but they're not defined to be the same value.
This was pointed out as an incompatibility with other systems that had made
its way into libarchive, which had assumed that O_EXEC was an alias for
O_SEARCH.
This defines compatibility O_SEARCH/FSEARCH (equivalent to O_EXEC and FEXEC
respectively) and expands our UB for O_EXEC on a directory. O_EXEC on a
directory is checked in vn_open_vnode already, so for completeness we add a
NOEXECCHECK when O_SEARCH has been specified on the top-level fd and do not
re-check that when descending in namei.
[0] https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23247
The current code clearly intended for these to be octal based on the values
used, but the octal prefix was forgotten. Add it now for correctness, but
note that we don't currently execute these tests.
This has been submitted upstream as misc/54902, so I've omitted the standard
FreeBSD markers that we tend to put into netbsd-tests for upstream-candidate
identification.
Reviewed by: ngie
MFC after: 3 days
unifdef(1): Improve worst-case bound on symbol resolution
Use RB_TREE to make some algorithms O(lg N) and O(N lg N) instead of O(N)
and O(N^2).
While here, remove arbitrarily limit on number of macros understood.
Reverts r354877 and r354878, which disabled the (correct) test.
PR: 242095
Reported by: lwhsu
It turns out that a test of backtrace symbol resolution and formatting
requires symbols. Another option mightt be building with -rdynamic instead,
but this works for now.
Re-enabled skipped CI test, as it should now pass.
PR: 241562
Submitted by: lwhsu
Reported by: lwhsu
X-MFC-With: r354126, r354135, r354144
The bogus requirement was causing CI infrastructure (which does not mount
procfs) to skip the test. Procfs has not been needed by libexecinfo on
FreeBSD (nor NetBSD) for years. Both now use a sysctl to obtain the path to
the current process image.
X-MFC-With: r354126
When an empty pattern is encountered in the pattern list, I had previously
broken bsdgrep to count that as a "match all" and ignore any other patterns
in the list. This commit rectifies that mistake, among others:
- The -v flag semantics were not quite right; lines matched should have been
counted differently based on whether the -v flag was set or not. procline
now definitively returns whether it's matched or not, and interpreting
that result has been kicked up a level.
- Empty patterns with the -x flag was broken similarly to empty patterns
with the -w flag. The former is a whole-line match and should be more
strict, only matching blank lines. No -x and no -w will will match the
empty string at the beginning of each line.
- The exit code with -L was broken, w.r.t. modern grep. Modern grap will
exit(0) if any file that didn't match was output, so our interpretation
was simply backwards. The new interpretation makes sense to me.
Tests updated and added to try and catch some of this.
This misbehavior was found by autoconf while fixing ports found in PR 229925
expecting either a more sane or a more GNU-like sed.
MFC after: 1 week
This only lists the changed type and not other attributes so that it
matches the behavior of -C as done in r66747 for fmtree. The NetBSD
-ff implementation was copied from fmtree.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21623
gets is unsafe and shouldn't be used (for many years now). Leave it in
the existing symbol version so anything that previously linked aginst it
still runs, but do not allow new software to link against it.
(The compatability/legacy implementation must not be static so that
the symbol and in particular the compat sym gets@FBSD_1.0 make it
into libc.)
PR: 222796 (exp-run)
Reported by: Paul Vixie
Reviewed by: allanjude, cy, eadler, gnn, jhb, kib, ngie (some earlier)
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12298
pthread_cond_timedwait() should wait _at least_ until the timeout,
but it might appear to wait longer due to system activity and
scheduling. The test ignored fractional seconds when comparing the
actual and expected timeouts, so it allowed anywhere between zero
and one extra second of wait time. Zero is a bit unreasonable.
Compare fractional seconds so we always allow up to one extra second.
Reviewed by: ngie
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
When O_CREAT is specified, the third, variadic argument is
required as the permission. If on is not passed, then depending
on the ABI, either the contents of the third argument register
or some arbitrary stuff on the stack will be used as the permission.
This has been merged to NetBSD.
Reviewed by: asomers, ngie
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20972
Historically we have not distinguished between kernel wirings and user
wirings for accounting purposes. User wirings (via mlock(2)) were
subject to a global limit on the number of wired pages, so if large
swaths of physical memory were wired by the kernel, as happens with
the ZFS ARC among other things, the limit could be exceeded, causing
user wirings to fail.
The change adds a new counter, v_user_wire_count, which counts the
number of virtual pages wired by user processes via mlock(2) and
mlockall(2). Only user-wired pages are subject to the system-wide
limit which helps provide some safety against deadlocks. In
particular, while sources of kernel wirings typically support some
backpressure mechanism, there is no way to reclaim user-wired pages
shorting of killing the wiring process. The limit is exported as
vm.max_user_wired, renamed from vm.max_wired, and changed from u_int
to u_long.
The choice to count virtual user-wired pages rather than physical
pages was done for simplicity. There are mechanisms that can cause
user-wired mappings to be destroyed while maintaining a wiring of
the backing physical page; these make it difficult to accurately
track user wirings at the physical page layer.
The change also closes some holes which allowed user wirings to succeed
even when they would cause the system limit to be exceeded. For
instance, mmap() may now fail with ENOMEM in a process that has called
mlockall(MCL_FUTURE) if the new mapping would cause the user wiring
limit to be exceeded.
Note that bhyve -S is subject to the user wiring limit, which defaults
to 1/3 of physical RAM. Users that wish to exceed the limit must tune
vm.max_user_wired.
Reviewed by: kib, ngie (mlock() test changes)
Tested by: pho (earlier version)
MFC after: 45 days
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19908
This is not required of a compliant implementation, but it's easy to
check for and helps improve compatibility with other common
implementations. Moreover, it's consistent with our
pthread_mutex_destroy().
PR: 234805
Reviewed by: jhb, kib, ngie
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19496
trig_test.reduction test cases to fail, if the fixes from r343916 have
not yet been applied to the base compiler.
Reported by: lwhsu
PR: 234040
Upstream PR: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40206
MFC after: 1 week
Based on the description in Linux man page.
Reviewed by: markj, ngie (previous version)
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18837
This was shown to be a problem by side effect of now-enabled test case,
which was going through C, en_US.UTF-8, ja_JP.SJIS, and ja_JP.eucJP,
and failing eventually as data in mbrtowc's mbstate, that was
perfectly correct for en_US.UTF-8 was treated as incorrect for
ja_JP.SJIS, failing the entire test case.
This makes the persistent mbstates to be per ctype-component,
and not per-locale so we could easily reset the mbstates when
only LC_CTYPE is changed.
Reviewed by: bapt, pfg
Approved by: kib (mentor, implicit)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17796
This code was originally written for NetBSD. r306031 tried to adapt it to
FreeBSD, but didn't correctly handle the case that tmpfs was available, but
not already loaded. Fix the logic to load the module if necessary. The
tmpfs tests shouldn't be skipped anymore.
Also, fix a comment that was dislocated by r306031.
Reported by: Jenkins
MFC after: 2 weeks
sbt is the time in the future that the tsleep_sbt() is expected to be completed
at. sbtt is the current time. Depending on the precision with sysctl
kern.timecounter.alloweddeviation the start time may be incremented by
tc_tick_sbt. The same increment is needed for the current time of sbtt before
calculating the difference. The impact of missing this increment is that rmtp
may increase by one tc_tick_sbt on every early [EINTR] return. If the same
struct is passed in for rqtp as rmtp this can result in rqtp effectively
incrementing by tc_tick_sbt and sleeping longer than originally intended.
This problem was introduced in r247797.
Reviewed by: kib, markj, vangyzen (all on an older version of the test)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14362
Don't declare some types that FreeBSD incorrectly declares.
Fix an incorrect call to open() (missing mode).
ANSIfy prototypes.
Enable SysV message queue, semaphore, and shared memory tests.
With exception of the workaround for union semun, these fixes have been
committed to NetBSD.
Reviewed by: asomers
Approved by: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13471
sparc64 and riscv do not support 10 arguments, but MIPS now does.
While here, combine clauses for architectures that support the same
number of arguments to reduce duplication.
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
The test was marked as an expected failure in r320414 after r319971's import
of a newer jemalloc removed an essential feature (opt.redzone) for
reproducing the behavior it was testing. Since then, no way has been found
or demonstrated to reliably test the behavior, so remove the test.
PR: 220309
The man page is years out of date regarding errors. Our implementation _does_
allow unaligned addresses, and it _does_not_ check for negative lengths,
because the length is unsigned. It checks for overflow instead.
Update the tests accordingly.
Reviewed by: bcr
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13826
Previously added tests only check that fgrep is somewhat sane and works. Add
some more tests that check that the implementation is basically functional
and not producing incorrect results with various flags.
Reviewed by: cem, emaste, ngie
Approved by: emaste (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12056
Currently, regex(3) exhibits the following wrong behavior as demonstrated
with sed:
- echo "a{1,2,3}b" | sed -r "s/{/_/" (1)
- echo "a{1,2,3}b" | sed "s/\}/_/" (2)
- echo "a{1,2,3}b" | sed -r "s/{}/_/" (3)
Cases (1) and (3) should throw errors but they actually succeed, and (2)
throws an error when it should match the literal '}'. The correct behavior
was decided by comparing to the behavior with the equivalent BRE (1)(3) or
ERE (2) and consulting POSIX, along with some reasonable evaluation.
Tests were also adjusted/added accordingly.
PR: 166861
Reviewed by: emaste, ngie, pfg
Approved by: emaste (mentor)
MFC after: never
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10315
o Replace __riscv64 with (__riscv && __riscv_xlen == 64)
This is required to support new GCC 7.1 compiler.
This is compatible with current GCC 6.1 compiler.
RISC-V is extensible ISA and the idea here is to have built-in define
per each extension, so together with __riscv we will have some subset
of these as well (depending on -march string passed to compiler):
__riscv_compressed
__riscv_atomic
__riscv_mul
__riscv_div
__riscv_muldiv
__riscv_fdiv
__riscv_fsqrt
__riscv_float_abi_soft
__riscv_float_abi_single
__riscv_float_abi_double
__riscv_cmodel_medlow
__riscv_cmodel_medany
__riscv_cmodel_pic
__riscv_xlen
Reviewed by: ngie
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11901
Given an empty pattern (i.e. grep "" A B), bsdgrep(1) would previously exit()
with the appropriate exit code upon encountering an empty file. Likely intended
as an optimization, but this behavior is technically incorrect since an empty
pattern should match every line.
PR: 220924
Reviewed by: emaste, cem (earlier version), ngie
Approved by: emaste (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11698
BREs recently became prematurely sensitive to the branching operator, which
outright broke expressions that used it instead of failing silently. Test
that \| is matching a literal | for the time being.
Reviewed by: cem, emaste, ngie
Approved by: emaste (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11577
ATF cleanup routines run in separate processes from the tests themselves, so
they can't share global variables.
Also, setdomainname_test needs to be is_exclusive because the test cases
access a global resource.
PR: 219967
Reviewed by: ngie
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11188
the limit to 32MB instead.
Require user=root and memory=64MB+ first so one can be reasonably sure that
the test will function appropriately.
MFC after: 1 month
MFC with: r320726
PR: 220502
This change implements NOTE_ABSTIME flag for EVFILT_TIMER, which
specifies that the data field contains absolute time to fire the
event.
To make this useful, data member of the struct kevent must be extended
to 64bit. Using the opportunity, I also added ext members. This
changes struct kevent almost to Apple struct kevent64, except I did
not changed type of ident and udata, the later would cause serious API
incompatibilities.
The type of ident was kept uintptr_t since EVFILT_AIO returns a
pointer in this field, and e.g. CHERI is sensitive to the type
(discussed with brooks, jhb).
Unlike Apple kevent64, symbol versioning allows us to claim ABI
compatibility and still name the new syscall kevent(2). Compat shims
are provided for both host native and compat32.
Requested by: bapt
Reviewed by: bapt, brooks, ngie (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11025
Basic sanity tests as well as coverage for the bug fixed in r318565.
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91@ksu.edu>
Reviewed by: bapt, ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10827
Metadata printing with -b, -H, or -n flags suffered from a few flaws:
1) -b/offset printing was broken when used in conjunction with -o
2) With -o, bsdgrep did not print metadata for every match/line, just
the first match of a line
3) There were no tests for this
Address these issues by outputting this data per-match if the -o flag is
specified, and prior to outputting any matches if -o but not --color,
since --color alone will not generate a new line of output for every
iteration over the matches.
To correct -b output, fudge the line offset as we're printing matches.
While here, make sure we're using grep_printline in -A context. Context
printing should *never* look at the parsing context, just the line.
The tests included do not pass with gnugrep in base due to it exhibiting
similar quirky behavior that bsdgrep previously exhibited.
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91@ksu.edu>
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10580
We should not set an arbitrary cap on the number of matches on a line,
and in any case MAX_LINE_MATCHES of 32 is much too low. Instead, if we
match more than MAX_LINE_MATCHES, keep processing and matching from the
last match until all are found.
For the regression test, we produce 4096 matches (larger than we expect
we'll ever set MAX_LINE_MATCHES) and make sure we actually get 4096
lines of output with the -o flag.
We'll also make sure that every distinct line is getting its own line
number to detect line metadata not being printed as appropriate along
the way.
PR: 218811
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91@ksu.edu>
Reported by: jbeich
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10577
The previous logic was flawed in the sense that it assumed that /dev/md3
was always available. This was a caveat I noted in r306038, that I hadn't
gotten around to solving before now.
Cache the device for the mountpoint after executing mdmfs, then use the
cached value in basic_cleanup(..) when unmounting/disconnecting the md(4)
device.
Apply sed expressions to use reuse logic in the NetBSD code that could
also be applied to FreeBSD, just with different tools.
Differential Revision: D10766
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
The kern.coredump sysctl can be set to 0 to disable coredumps. Skip the
'status_coredump' and 'wait6_coredumped' tests if this sysctl is set to 0
rather than reporting a failure.
Submitted by: brooks
Reviewed by: ngie
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10665
The existing 'binary' test in netbsd-tests/ does a basic check of the
default treatment for binary behavior, but not much more than that.
Given some opportunity for breakage recently that did not trigger any
failures, add some tests to cover the three different binary file
behaviors (a, -I, -U) and their --binary-files= equivalent values.
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91@ksu.edu>
Reviewed by: cem, ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10620
This is being done to avoid dereferencing a NULL pointer via strlcat,
obscuring the underlying issue with the getcwd(3) call.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Previously, when given a negative -A/-B/-C argument bsdgrep would
overflow the respective context flag(s) and exhibited surprising
behavior.
Fix this by removing unsignedness of Aflag/Bflag and erroring out if
we're given a value < 0. Also adjust the type used to track 'tail'
context in procfile() so that it accurately reflects the Aflag value
rather than overflowing and losing trailing context.
This also fixes an inconsistency previously existing between -n and
-C "n" behavior. They are now both limited to LLONG_MAX, to be
consistent.
Add some test cases to make sure grep errors out properly for both
negative context values as well as non-numeric context values rather
than giving bogus matches.
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91@ksu.edu>
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10675
- Apply the logic to the FreeBSD block
- Fix a typo with the getconf(1) call that I would have caught, were
it not for the fact that I got the blocks wrong.
- Consolidate the hardcoded buffer sizes to the NetBSD block.
This would have been discovered had I run the test on a system where
PATH_MAX != 1024 (I don't have that at my disposal right at this moment).
MFC after: 3 weeks
MFC with: r318210
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
In the event the value of PATH_MAX was changed, the assumption that
MAXPATHLEN is 1024 (and hence the buffer length required to trigger
SSP to fail for read(2)) would be invalidated. Query getconf(1) for
the actual value of MAXPATHLEN via _XOPEN_PATH_MAX instead, and
increment the value by 1 to ensure that the SSP support tests the
stack smashing support properly.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Refactoring done in r317703 broke -c, -l, and -L flags implying
suppression of match printing. Fortunately this is just a matter of not
doing any printing of the resulting matches and context printing was not
broken in this refactoring.
Add some regression tests since this area may still see further
refactoring, include different context flags as well even though they
were not broken in this case.
PR: 219077
Submitted by: Kyle kevans91@ksu.edu
Reported by: markj
Reviewed by: cem, ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10607
-w flag matching with an empty pattern was generally 'broken', allowing
matches to occur on any line whether or not it actually matches -w
criteria.
This fix required a good amount of refactoring to address. procline()
is altered to *only* process the line and return whether it was a match
or not, necessary to be able to short-circuit the whole function in case
of this matchall flag. -m flag handling is moved out as well because it
suffers from the same fate as context handling if we bypass any actual
pattern matching.
The matching context (matches, mostly) didn't previously exist outside
of procline(), so we go ahead and create context object for file
processing bits to pass around. grep_printline() was created due to
this, for the scenarios where the matches don't actually matter and we
just want to print a line or two, a la flushing the context queue and
no -o or --color specified.
Damage from this broken behavior would have been mitigated by the fact
that it is unlikely users would invoke grep -w with an empty pattern.
This was identified while checking PR 105221 for problems it this may
cause in BSD grep, but PR 105221 is *not* a report of this behavior.
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91 at ksu.edu>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10433
Work in progress (D10315) is going to make egrep_empty_invalid an
actually invalid regex, to be consistent with the equivalent BRE "{"
behavior, when using regex(3).
Any non-0 exit value is acceptable, depending on how the installed grep
interprets the expression. GNU grep interprets it as non-matching, and
in the future BSD grep will interpret it is an error.
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91 at ksu.edu>
Reviewed by: cem, ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10572`
-w and -v flag matching was mostly functional but had some minor
problems:
1. -w flag processing only allowed one iteration through pattern
matching on a line. This was problematic if one pattern could match
more than once, or if there were multiple patterns and the earliest/
longest match was not the most ideal, and
2. Previous work "fixed" things to not further process a line if the
first iteration through patterns produced no matches. This is clearly
wrong if we're dealing with the more restrictive -w matching.
#2 breakage could have also occurred before recent broad rewrites, but
it would be more arbitrary based on input patterns as to whether or not
it actually affected things.
Fix both of these by forcing a retry of the patterns after advancing
just past the start of the first match if we're doing more restrictive
-w matching and we didn't get any hits to start with. Also move -v flag
processing outside of the loop so that we have a greater change to match
in the more restrictive cases. This wasn't strictly wrong, but it could
be a little more error prone.
While here, introduce some regressions tests for this behavior and fix
some excessive wrapping nearby that hindered readability. GNU grep
passes these new tests.
PR: 218467, 218811
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91 at ksu.edu>
Reviewed by: cem, ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10329
The test suite currently lacks basic sanity checks to ensure that egrep,
fgrep, and grep are actually matching the right expression types, i.e. passing
the right flags to regcomp(3). Amend the test suite to make sure that not only
are the individual versions doing the right thing, but also that we don't have some
kind of frankenregex situation happening where egrep is accepting a BRE or
grep an ERE.
I've chosen to not expand the 'basic' test but to add the 'grep_sanity' checks
to their own test case since this is testing for more than just 'grep matches things',
but actual expression types.
Differential Revision: D10444
Reviewed by: emaste, ngie
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91@ksu.edu>
Tested with: bsdgrep, gnu grep (base, ports)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
They're no longer needed after recent fixes made to bsdgrep(1).
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91@ksu.edu> (via a previous diff in D10433)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by
skipping over them entirely.
Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future.
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91 at ksu.edu>
Reviewed by: cem emaste ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10333
Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by
PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104.
It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base
system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being
up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs.
PR: 175314 202022 195763 180990 197555 197531 181263 209116
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91@ksu.edu>
Reviewed by: cem, ngie, emaste
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10112
Restore the stock (upstream) code under an #else block, so it's easier
for me to visualize and understand the code that needs to be upstreamed.
MFC after: 2 months
X-MFC with: r316178, r316179, r316180
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
msgsnd(2)'s msgsz argument does not describe the full structure, only the
message component.
Reported by: Coverity
CIDs: 1368703, 1368711
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
msgsnd's msgsz argument is the size of the message following the 'long'
message type. Don't include the message type in the size of the message
when invoking msgsnd(2).
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1368712
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
This is no longer required as of r315616, as the test is no longer
built/installed.
This is being done to diff reduce with NetBSD.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Add a clock_nanosleep() syscall, as specified by POSIX.
Make nanosleep() a wrapper around it.
Attach the clock_nanosleep test from NetBSD. Adjust it for the
FreeBSD behavior of updating rmtp only when interrupted by a signal.
I believe this to be POSIX-compliant, since POSIX mentions the rmtp
parameter only in the paragraph about EINTR. This is also what
Linux does. (NetBSD updates rmtp unconditionally.)
Copy the whole nanosleep.2 man page from NetBSD because it is complete
and closely resembles the POSIX description. Edit, polish, and reword it
a bit, being sure to keep any relevant text from the FreeBSD page.
Reviewed by: kib, ngie, jilles
MFC after: 3 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10020
The reasoning for this is the same as r276046: to ease MFCing the tests
to ^/stable/10 .
This was accidentally missed in r313439
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC with: r313439
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
This function allows the caller to specify the reference clock
and choose between absolute and relative mode. In relative mode,
the remaining time can be returned.
The API is similar to clock_nanosleep(3). Thanks to Ed Schouten
for that suggestion.
While I'm here, reduce the sleep time in the semaphore "child"
test to greatly reduce its runtime. Also add a reasonable timeout.
Reviewed by: ed (userland)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9656
There are some potential issues with the test (as brd@ has pointed out
elsewhere) with precision, etc not being set before the test, but as
always, more research is required.