was having its last element zero'd. It turns out not to be a security
hole or to have any real effect on the code because 'from' was previously
pointing to a buffer of the same size as 'fromb', and the last
element in fromb is already 0 anyway due to the use of sizeof(fromb)-1
in the strncpy() call. But I'm not pressing my luck so only the type-o
is being fixed.
with remote hosts feeding it, so that some hosts have their header
pages supressed and some don't. This is because lpd doesn't know
how to rewrite a print job before forwarding it to a remote lpd.
In particular this causes problems with p rinters that contain
their own lpd, eg. HP jet direct cards, because they can't suppress
headers. It's not possible to have headers supressed by putting
'sh' in any printcap in the lpd chain, it is up to the originating
lpr to have a '-h' option specified at run time.
Lpr has been modified to allow _it_ to honour the 'sh' flag in the
local print cap. This allows the administrator to switch off
headers for a particular printer (on a particular host) irrespective
of whether that printer is local to the machine or remote.
This doesn't break anything, because in the case of a remote printer
the 'sh' flag would have had no meaning, in the case of the local
printer it would have been on anyway.
Submitted by: Scott James Remnant <scott@pavilion.net>
Remove src/contrib/bind/bin/nslookup/commands.c as it is generated by lex
from commands.l.
Submitted by: lpc/cdcontrol patches originally by msmith.
Reviewed by: msmith (in theory)
track.
The Id line is normally at the bottom of the main comment block in the
man page, separated from the rest of the manpage by an empty comment,
like so;
.\" $Id$
.\"
If the immediately preceding comment is a @(#) format ID marker than the
the $Id$ will line up underneath it with no intervening blank lines.
Otherwise, an additional blank line is inserted.
Approved by: bde
However, it doesn't check if the remote printer name it
is sending it to is the same as the local printer name,
and so chokes 'cos "laser" is not a real printer.
PR: 7081
Submitted by: David Malone <dwmalone@maths.tcd.ie>
arguments to be numbers. Also use '0' base to allow hex, octal or
decimal numbers.
This was done by me based on ideas in pr 3556, submitted by Uwe
Laubenstein and commented upon by j@uriah.heep.sax.de (J Wunsch).
PR: 3556
libraries so that `ld -f' in can create correct dependencies for
yet-to-be-built libraries.
Get the default BINDIR correctly (by including ../Makefile.inc recursively.
Override the default it it is wrong.
Don't override defaults when the defaults are correct.
GCC suppresses the warning for ``standard'' header files, but since the
headers do not come from the ``standard'' place in a ``make world'', GCC
doesn't get it.
- Get rid of a lot of the static variables which were shared by
many routines and programs in the suite.
- Create an abstract interface to the printcap database, so that
other retrieval and iteration mechanisms could be developed
(e.g., YP, Hesiod, or automatic retrieval from a trusted server).
- Give each capability a human-readable name in addition to the historic
two-character one.
- Otherwise generally clean up a lot of dark corners. Many still remain.
- When submitting jobs, use the official login name record (from getlogin())
if there is one, rather than reverse-mapping the uid.
More to come...
Properlay clean the global RM variable if cgetstr() failed for it.
Otherwise, a connection attempt to a remote machine was made (and a
bogus result code printed) if a local printer followed a remote one in
printcap, and you did a `lpq -a', since checkremote() falsely assumed
the printer to be a remote one.
While i was at it, removed a gratuituous newline printed in front of
the remote machine's name, thus making the output more consistent (and
better machine-parseable) now.
connection timeout controllable by a new printcap(5) capability named
`ct' (connectiom timeout), defaulting to 120 seconds (which is the
default TCP connection timeout).
Would anybody see a problem with merging all this into RELENG_2_2?
with libc's version.
lpd: use getopt(3), err(3), add usage(), allow specification of a port #
on the command line as the documentation suggested for more than 10 years.
PR: docs/3290