everyone (to prevent fake-postings) and modern Inn installs
rnews as news.uucp and mode 4550 this is the only save way to allow
uuxqt to process rnews batches.
a system header defines a macro __printf0like() using the new printf0
format attribute. uucp's internal ulog() function isn't actually
printf-like but uucp normally declares it as such.
can get their rights as well. ;-) The default remains, of course, Taylor
config.
Demanded by: some people on -hackers
I think this is safe enough to go into RELENG_2_2 as well, if there's
demand.
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.
When we get an EN8 response while we're already sending the file using
the i protocol, this can happen:
In send.c, flocal_send_await_reply() is called. This function calls
flocal_send_fail() to process the aborted transfer. After this, we run
into the branch that calls ffileseekend() to force the end of the
actual transfer.
Now flocal_send_fail() frees qtrans, but qtrans is still used later!
I propose to fix this by moving the usfree_send(qtrans) out of
flocal_send_fail(), as in the patch I append to this mail.
...
I have found a race condition in the uucp 1.05 code. The typical result
is that the connections mysteriously fails with "conversation failed",
even while all files were transmitted. This is the problem:
At least for the i protocol, the code to send a packet can receive and
process packets after sending.
In several places in the code, we send a command and then prepare to
receive an answer.
Now the answer might already arrive during the call that sends the
command while we aren't ready to process it.
The general solution is IMHO first to do all preparations and only as a
last step to send out the command.
Reviewed by: John Dyson
Submitted by: Johannes Stille
Several files in uucp/libunix included <sys/dir.h> and defined dirent
as direct, but <sys/dir.h> defines direct as dirent. This macro
recursion is not allowed by cpp in traditional mode. The 2.0 mkdep
uses cpp in traditional mode (another bug) so cpp prints a error
message and exits with a nonzero status. The error status leaks out
of the pipe (another bug) so mkdep "succeeds". It may even succeed.
saying that 4.4 uses f_size in statfs, yet we're using b_size. Anyway,
I've configured things to match our current environment.
Reviewed by:
Submitted by: