and for proper behaviour of some sed functions given a nil pattern space,
as fixed in PR 34813.
The test for G was based on the test in the PR. The nil pattern space test
is slightly different as we need to get *some* output, as the core dump will
also produce no output (old behaviour) and turn up falsely that the utility
is working fine.
and UPDATING and has been posted to both freebsd-current and
freebsd-stable, users are still not adding the required smmsp user and
group before doing an installworld. Therefore, don't let users do an
installworld unless they have followed directions.
Add a new installcheck Makefile target which installworld runs before
actually starting the installation. This target can be used by other parts
of userland as well. The first addition to the target is to check for the
smmsp user and group if NO_SENDMAIL isn't defined.
Others may add checks to this target as they see fit.
MFC after: 1 week
the creation of /var/spool/clientmqueue and therefore the need for the
smmsp user and group if NO_SENDMAIL is defined. This required breaking out
the creation of the directory into a new BSD.sendmail.dist mtree file.
MFC after: 1 week
- New length modifiers: hh, j, ll, t, z.
Still to do:
- %C, %S, %lc, %ls (wide character support)
- %a/%A (exact hex representation of floating-point numbers)
Removed old compatability equivalents:
- %D for %ld, %O for %lo, %X for %lx, %E and %F for %le & %lf (these
were buggy anyway, since they should have represented %Le & %Lf).
- %[unknown uppercase char] for %ld, %[unknown lowercase char] for %d
user stack in response to a failed window fill, allowing the process to be
killed if its wrong. This caused user programs which misalign their stack
pointer to get stuck in an infinite loop at the kernel-userland boundary,
which is mostly harmless.
The same thing causes a fatal RED state exception on OpenBSD and probably
NetBSD.
Inspired by: art@openbsd.org
VOP_OPEN() and doing lots of manual checking. This would further
centralize use of the name functions, and once the MAC code is integrated,
meaning few extraneous MAC checks scattered all over the place. I don't
have time to fix this now, but want to make sure it doesn't get
forgotten. Anyone interested in fixing this should feel free.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
named by its argument and use ttyslot(3) instead to determine what slot to
use. The problem is that sshd(8) calls pam_open_session(3) before forking
the child (as it should), at which point it does not have a controlling
terminal. Also, ttyslot(3) is very crude as it assumes fd 0, 1 or 2 refers
to the controlling terminal, which is usually (but not always) the case.
Instead of using ttyslot(3) to determine the slot number, look up the
specified tty in /etc/ttys ourselves (this is what ttyslot(3) does anyway).
(perforce change 9969)
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs