the PAM modules.
Fix the comments describing the PAM dependencies to be consistent
with other related comments.
Restructure the library-building loop slightly, per suggestion from
bde.
modules for FreeBSD's standard authentication methods. Although
the Linux-PAM modules are present in the contrib tree, we don't
use any of them.
The main library "libpam" is composed of sources taken from three
places. First are the standard Linux-PAM libpam sources from the
contrib tree. Second are the Linux-PAM "libpam_misc" sources, also
from the contrib tree. In Linux these form a separate library.
But as Mike Smith pointed out to me, that seems pointless, so I
have combined them into the libpam library. Third are some additional
sources from the "src/lib/libpam" tree with some common functions
that make it easier to write modules. Those I wrote myself.
This work has been donated to FreeBSD by Juniper Networks, Inc.
This commit introduces the following features:
a) the fetchStat*() functions, which return meta-information for a
document, such as size, modification time, etc.
b) the use of the com_err(3) facilities to report errors.
It also fixes a bunch of style bugs and a few logic bugs and somewhat
improves the man page.
Changed files, in alphabetical order:
Makefile:
Don't generate macros in {ftp,http}err.c.
Generate category fields for the error message lists.
Compile the error table.
Install fetch_err.h along with fetch.h.
common.c:
Remove the _netdb_errstring() macro, and add FETCH_ERR_NETDB to the
error code in the _netdb_seterr() macro.
Add categories to the _netdb_errlist table.
Report errors through the Common Error library.
common.h:
Add the DEBUG macros.
Add prototype for fetchConnect().
Remove the prototype for _fetch_errstring(), which is local to common.c
Add a categroy field to struct fetcherr, and define constants for
error categories.
Define macros for _{url,netdb,ftp,http}_seterr().
errors.et: (new file)
List error categories.
fetch.3:
Document the fetchStat*() functions.
Move the "unimplemented functionality" comments from NOTES to BUGS.
Document that applications which use libfetch must also use
libcom_err, and list existing error codes.
Undocument fetchLastErr{Code,String}.
Remove the (empty) DIAGNOSTICS section.
Mention Eugene Skepner in the AUTHORS section.
fetch.c:
Move the DEBUG macros to common.c
Add fetchStat() and fetchStatURL().
Generate error messages for URL parser errors, and fix a minor bug
in the parser.
Use 'struct url' instead of 'url_t'.
Remove fetchLastErr{Code,String}.
fetch.h:
Use 'struct url' instead of 'url_t', and remove the typedef.
Define struct url_stat (used by fetchStat()).
Add prototypes for fetchStat*().
Remove the declarations for fetchLastErr{Code,String}.
Include fetch_err.h.
fetch_err.et: (new file)
Error table for libfetch.
file.c:
Add fetchStatFile().
Use 'struct url' instead of 'url_t'.
ftp.c:
Add fetchStatFTP().
Use 'struct url' instead of 'url_t'.
Don't use fetchLastErrCode.
ftp.errors:
Add categories to all error messages.
http.c:
Add fetchStatHTTP().
Use 'struct url' instead of 'url_t'.
Don't use fetchLastErr{Code,Text}.
http.errors:
Add categories to all error messages.
Prompted by: jkh and Eugene Skepner
Numerous sugestions from: Garett Wollman and Eugene Skepner
alphabetical order:
Makefile:
Add common.c to SRCS.
Make debugging easier by making 'CFLAGS += -DNDEBUG' conditional on DEBUG
Don't declare struct {ftp,http}err in {ftp,http}err.c; use struct fetcherr
instead.
README:
Remove the todo list, which is out of date anyway.
common.c: (new file)
Gather utility functions in this file.
Merge the error reporting functions intp _fetch_errstring(),
_fetch_seterr() and _fetch_syserr().
Set fetchLastErrCode and fetchLastErrText appropriately when fetchConnect
fails.
common.h: (new file)
Gather internal prototypes and structures in this files.
fetch.3:
Undocument fetchFreeURL().
Document a few more known bugs.
Document fetchLastErrCode and fetchLastErrText.
fetch.c:
Add descriptive comments to all functions that lacked them.
Move fetchConnect() to common.c.
Obviate the need for fetchFreeURL(), and remove it.
fetch.h:
Modify struct url_t so the document part is at the end.
ftp.c:
Remove code that is duplicated elsewhere.
http.c:
Remove code that is duplicated elsewhere.
Prompted by: jkh
in libstand, only for i386 until I locate an alpha setjmp/longjmp.
Minimal 64-bit gcc integer support for i386. This is kinda nasty, and
should be revisited once we decide whether the bootblocks need
quad arithmetic.
they cannot mount a filesystem that they cannot see in getvfsbyname().
Part 1 of this is a hack, make vfsisloadable() always return true - the
ultimate decider of whether it's loadable or not is kldload() or mount().
Part 2 of this is to have vfsload() call kldload(2) and return success if
it works. This means that we will use a viable kld module in preference
to an LKM!
Ultimately, the thing to do is remove the hacks to do a vfsload in all the
mount_* commands and let the kernel do it by itself in mount(2).
etc. associated with the device entry.
Consider EOF an 'error' for fgetstr if we haven't read anything yet.
You *MUST* recompile and reinstall libstand before rebuilding the bootstrap.
most of the open/close routines, and the buffer/cdb parsing routines
derived from the old scsi(3) library.
The cam_cdbparse(3) man page borrows from the old scsi(3) man page, so the
copyright and history section reflect that.
The many scsi_* functions and other functions that are pulled in from the
kernel aren't documented yet, but will be eventually.
execvp() in the child branch of a vfork(). Changed to use fork()
instead.
Some of these (mv, find, apply, xargs) might benefit greatly from
being rewritten to use vfork() properly.
PR: Loosely related to bin/8252
Approved by: jkh and bde
have the passthrough device configured in their kernel.
This will hopefully reduce the number of people complaining that they can't
get {camcontrol, xmcd, tosha, cdrecord, etc.} to work.
Reviewed by: gibbs
loaded systems by retrying the sysctl() with a larger buffer if it
fails with ENOMEM. For good measure, allocate 10% more memory than
sysctl() claims is necessary.
PR: 8275
Reviewed by: David Greenman <dg@freebsd.org>
This bug showed up when you had more than 3 devices displayed. (thus
requiring a second line of display)
Here's a quote From the PR:
When wrefresh() is called with a subwindow as argument, __set_subwin
might be called with reversed arguments if wrefresh() decides to calls
quickch(). This may cause use of negative array indexes, with a
resulting segfault.
Since quickch() manipulates the line structures belonging to curscr,
it looks like all subwindows of curscr should be updated.
PR: bin/8086
Submitted by: Tor Egge <Tor.Egge@fast.no>
- the directory was wrong if ${SHLIBDIR} != ${LIBDIR}. It's still wrong
if the installation of the obsolete library was done before /aout was
appended to LIBDIR.
- the version would have become wrong when the default in ../Makefile.inc
is changed from 2.0.
- the comment mostly described moving of libraries to /usr/lib/compat, but
we don't do that.
in the wrong places for a while.
Also, the the libtermlib.so -> libtermcap.so manually for elf, otherwise
the hard link follows the symlink and the result looks rather wierd. The
*.a files are still hard linked under elf as before.
have been linked against it. Try and clean up the leftovers. Also, put
the a.out libs in /usr/lib/compat/aout since that's where the default
a.out ldconfig compat path points to.
vfork() can't be used. We could use alloca() in execl() so that
it can be called between vfork() and execve(), but a "portable"
popen() shouldn't depend on this. Calling execle() instead of
execl() should be fairly safe, since execle() is supposed to be
callable from signal handlers and signal handlers can't call
malloc(). However, execle() is broken.
ever saw one), and move the description of NULL behaviour out to a
'NOTES' section, with an extra note that programs should not rely up
on it.
Kinda-approve-by: bde (by not replying to the mail with the diff)
make pthread_yield() more reliable,
threads always (I hope) preempted at least every 0.1 sec, as intended.
PR: bin/7744
Submitted by: "Richard Seaman, Jr." <dick@tar.com>