For libc_r renamed syscalls, correct symbol naming from
_thread_sys_foo() <-- _foo() to _thread_sys_foo() <-- _foo() <-- foo(). This
is necessary for system calls which libc_r doesn't define foo().
Some weak symbols such as poll() are defined twice. From what I understand,
depending on one weak symbol or the other to be used is a bad idea. All
such weak symbols defined in the libc_r-specific code should therefore be
made strong (non-weak?).
Simplify PSEUDO() to not define any weak symbols, since they aren't ever
needed.
alpha/SYS.h:
Correct reversed usage of WEAK_ALIAS(), which has reversed arguments from
__weak_reference(). Also, fix reversal of symbols, so that syscall foo()
is a weak alias for _foo().
Add WEAK_ALIAS() call to PRSYSCALL(), which unlike the i386 version of
PRSYSCALL(), is not defined in terms of PSYSCALL().
Make PSEUDO() equivalent to the i386 version.
Introduce ACL man pages en masse for library calls, and general introduction.
Also, fix acl_valid.c non-portable calls to include _np in their names,
making them standard-happy as well as consistent with acl.h
strftime(3), add another one. :) %z yields the local timezone's offset
in hours and minutes, as used in RFC822 headers. There's a precedence
for this in Lunux' libc, and Internet software (like Perl scripts)
start using it.
OKed by (wrt. the code freeze): jkh
just use _foo() <-- foo(). In the case of a libpthread that doesn't do
call conversion (such as linuxthreads and our upcoming libpthread), this
is adequate. In the case of libc_r, we still need three names, which are
now _thread_sys_foo() <-- _foo() <-- foo().
Convert all internal libc usage of: aio_suspend(), close(), fsync(), msync(),
nanosleep(), open(), fcntl(), read(), and write() to _foo() instead of foo().
Remove all internal libc usage of: creat(), pause(), sleep(), system(),
tcdrain(), wait(), and waitpid().
Make thread cancellation fully POSIX-compliant.
Suggested by: deischen
string to u_long and back using two functions, flags_to_string and
string_to_flags, which co-existed with 'ls'. As time has progressed
more and more other tools have used these private functions to
manipulate the file flags.
Recently I moved these functions from /usr/src/bin/ls to libutil,
but after some discussion with bde it's been decided that they
really ought to go in libc.
There are two already existing libc functions for manipulating file
modes: setmode and getmode. In keeping with these flags_to_string
has been renamed getflags and string_to_flags to setflags.
The manual page could probably be improved upon ;)
o Do not override `environ' if realloc() fails, leave it intact.
o Set `alloced' only when memory is actually allocated.
PR: bin/5604 (2nd part)
Reviewed by: bde
Updated date. 1987 was a while ago.
Removed trailing comma in NAME section.
Uncapitalised Bindresvport and Bindresvport_sa in DESCRIPTION section.
Don't use .Nm there either.
Added bindresvport_sa() to the RETURN VALUES and ERROR sections.
- clean up unneeded AFS ID type
- Add Coda, NTFS, NWFS ACL types
- Add acl_dup() prototype
- Remove acl_calc_mask, which belongs in the editing library
- Introduce posix1e.3, a man page introducing POSIX.1e library calls
(more man pages to follow)
-changed bindresvport2 to bindresvport_sa
-merged the man into bindresvport.3
All discussion between Jean-Luc Richier <Jean-Luc.Richier@imag.fr>,
Theo de Raadt <deraadt@cvs.openbsd.org>, itojun, is reflected to
this code. (Actually Theo de Raadt write the code simultaneously as the
discussion change.)
obtained from itojun.
-don't filter address families which are not supported by system at
FQDN resolving.
-don't do reverse lookup
I think I checked all lib and tools which use getaddrinfo() if
this change affect them.
Obtained from: KAME project
adds _np to a couple of function prototypes that provided more broad/useful
interfaces than POSIX.1e interfaces included.
Also, move from using a heuristic to identify POSIX.1e-semantic ACLs to
using different ACL types for non-POSIX.1e ACLs. This should clean up the
existing fuzzy logic that determined when acl_sort() should be applied
before kernel submission.
are not supported by this implementation, and the error return values
from sem_init(), sem_open(), sem_close(), and sem_unlink() reflect this.
Approved by: jkh
signal handler. Explicitly check for jumps to anywhere other than the
current stack, since such jumps are undefined according to POSIX.
While we're at it, convert thread cancellation to use continuations, since
it's cleaner than the original cancellation code.
Avoid delivering a signal to a thread twice. This was a pre-existing bug,
but was likely unexposed until these other changes were made.
Defer signals generated by pthread_kill() so that they can be delivered on
the appropriate stack. deischen claims that this is unnecessary, which is
likely true, but without this change, pthread_kill() can cause undefined
priority queue states and/or PANICs in [sig|_]longjmp(), so I'm leaving
this in for now. To compile this code out and exercise the bug, define
the _NO_UNDISPATCH cpp macro. Defining _PTHREADS_INVARIANTS as well will
cause earlier crashes.
PR: kern/14685
Collaboration with: deischen
prettier (?) names, adding some const's around here, et al.
This is commit 4 out of 3, updating the userland library to reflect kernel
interface changes.
Reviewed by: bde
check for on the server may arise legitimately on the client. The
correct way to check for a zero record length is to check for it
without the LAST_FRAG marker in it, since it's legal to send a LAST_FRAG
marker with 0 bytes of data.
PR: misc/16028
the case that a CPU hungry main thread is prevented from being preempted
due to a negative calculation of its time slice.
Reported by: Alexander Litvin <archer@lucky.net>
libcrypt and libutil was not built before libpam.
The order here is currently unimportant, but ../Makefile should
descend here to build everything (which currently doesn't work
right) or at least to get the order using `make -V SUBDIR'.
Fixed bitrot in comments about library dependencies. The list has been
maintained better in ../Makefile.inc1, except it has been uninverted
there so it is hard to use manually.
interface. This commit introduces the library, as well as a modest
subset of the ACL calls, with some modifications to support multiple
ACL semantics.
Reviewed by: eivind
points. For library functions, the pattern is __sleep() <--
_libc_sleep() <-- sleep(). The arrows represent weak aliases. For
system calls, the pattern is _read() <-- _libc_read() <-- read().
I smite thee, vile buildworld breakage!
The story is that these were added to beforeinstall improperly. In our
beforeinstall, a full mtree has not been populated. Since the tree is
not populated, we explode from missing directories on doc install. It
should not be done in beforeinstall (includes) anyway.
* Add the 'h' ftp flag (allocate local port in high range)
* Add the 'd' flag (use direct connection even if proxy is defined)
* Make sure flags != NULL before calling strchr().
* Minor changes to some comments.
the initial thread). Instead, just leave an unmapped gap between thread
stacks and make sure that the thread stacks won't grow into these gaps,
simply by limiting the size of the stacks with the 'len' argument to
mmap(). This (if I understand correctly) reduces VM overhead
considerably.
Reviewed by: deischen
is an application space macro and the applications are supposed to be free
to use it as they please (but cannot). This is consistant with the other
BSD's who made this change quite some time ago. More commits to come.
handler. Thread-to-thread signals (pthread_signal) are treated differently
than process signals; a pthread_signal can wakeup a blocked thread if
a signal handler is not installed for that signal.
Found by: ACE tests
pointer" instead. The potential confusion arises because the string/*.3
pages use the term "null-terminated string" (which is permissable). Moreover,
this also makes these two manpages more consistent with the other string/*.3
manpages.
(1)added error check of if_nameindex() return value at getaddrinfo().
(2)print out more detailed information when getaddrinfo() error value
is EAI_SYSTEM.(in this case system error num is kept in errno)
(1) is Discovered by: jinmei@kame.net in KAME environment.
(From the author:)
Primarily, I have added built-in functions for manipulating the
environment, so putenv() is no longer used. XDM and its variants
should now work without modification. Note that the new code uses
the macros in <sys/queue.h>.
Submitted by: Andrew J. Korty <ajk@iu.edu>
locking functions. If an application loads a shared object with
dlopen() and the shared object has an init function which requires
lazy binding, then _rtld_bind is called when the thread is already
inside the dynamic linker. This leads to a recursive acquisition
of the lock, which I was not expecting -- hence the assert failure.
This work-around makes the default locking functions handle recursive
locking. It is NOT the correct fix -- that should be implemented
at the generic locking level rather than in the default locking
functions. I will implement the correct fix in a future commit.
Since the dllockinit() interface will likely need to change, warn
about that in both the man page and the header file.
Fix some ctype problems - isascii() caused a warning if fed an unsigned
char - it's always > 0 and libstand is compiled with -Wall.
Missing prototype/include in printf.c
and is module aware. Yes, this means that kvm_nlist(3) will find symbols
in loaded modules. The emulation of the nlist struct is pretty crude but
seems to work well enough for all the users in the tree that I found.
functions to be used by the dynamic linker. This can be called by
threads packages at start-up time. I will add the call to libc_r
soon.
Also add a default locking method that is used up until dllockinit()
is called. The default method works by blocking SIGVTALRM, SIGPROF,
and SIGALRM in critical sections. It is based on the observation
that most user-space threads packages implement thread preemption
with one of these signals (usually SIGVTALRM).
The dynamic linker has never been reentrant, but it became less
reentrant in revision 1.34 of "src/libexec/rtld-elf/rtld.c".
Starting with that revision, multiple threads each doing lazy
binding could interfere with each other. The usual symptom was
that a symbol was falsely reported as undefined at start-up time.
It was rare but not unseen. This commit fixes it.
Doing the "right thing" here is difficult, so create two ENTRY points for
each function (for example, __setjmp and setjmp are equivalent). This
isn't pretty, but it works for both aout and ELF.
libc symbol naming needs an overhaul in order to properly support function
wrapping, specifically in the case of a real libpthread, and these
duplicate entry points should be fixed as part of that overhaul.
Pointed out by: bde
takes an int arg and is prototyped in <string.h>. It has the opposite
interface botches to psignal(3) which takes a bogus unsigned arg but is
prototyped in the right place.
This is not the last of the interface problems for strsignal(). We
obtained it from NetBSD, but NetBSD has moved its prototype to
<unistd.h>. strsignal() should return const char *, but it returns
char * for historical reasons. NetBSD declares it as returning
__aconst char, where __aconst is normally empty but can be set to
`const' to give better error checking. glibc-2.1.1 prototypes
strsignal() in <string.h>.
lobotomized environment, say booted from a floppy with no /etc full
of password and group files, give sensible fallbacks for roots uid
and operators gid.
This might fix sysinstall.
this makefile update which should have been together with the file
removal.
Removed vlimit.3 and vtimes.3. Removed vlimit.c and vtimes.c from
the "MISSING" list. These were old variants of get/setrlimit() and
getrusage(), respectively, and were never implemented in FreeBSD.
vlimit.3 referred to <sys/vlimit.h> which was removed recently.
vtimes.3 referred to <sys/vtimes.h> which never existed in FreeBSD.
the "MISSING" list. These were old variants of get/setrlimit() and
getrusage(), respectively, and were never implemented in FreeBSD.
vlimit.3 referred to <sys/vlimit.h> which was removed recently.
vtimes.3 referred to <sys/vtimes.h> which never existed in FreeBSD.