been repo-copied from src/lib/libc/uuid to src/include. Update the
makefiles.
While in src/include/Makefile, reformat and resort INCS. Reverting
the functional change only involves removing uuid.h.
Pompted by: ru
I've no idea if this is the right behavior for the library, but this
at least fixes the build, and matches what seems to be alfred's intent
in the commit message for 1.19.
sysconf.c:
Use 'break' rather than 'goto yesno' in sysconf.c so that we report a '0'
return value from the kernel sysctl.
vfs_aio.c:
Make aio reset its configuration parameters to -1 after unloading
instead of 0.
posix4_mib.c:
Initialize the aio configuration parameters to -1
to indicate that it is not loaded.
Add a facility (p31b_iscfg()) to determine if a posix4 facility has been
initialized to avoid having to re-order the SYSINITs.
Use p31b_iscfg() to determine if aio has had a chance to run yet which
is likely if it is compiled into the kernel and avoid spamming its
values.
Introduce a macro P31B_VALID() instead of doing the same comparison over
and over.
posix4.h:
Prototype p31b_iscfg().
Both are atomic, but the cmpxchg has memory ordering hints. We
give this acquire semantics.
NOTE: The unlock in libc_r is implemented by a "normal" assign
statement. This is not correct on ia64 due to the memory ordering
characteristics of the architecture. We need release semantics
for an unlock.
libc. I want to keep these in some version for the thread
library/ies, but don't know whether to have them repo-copied
to libc_r or renamed and kept in libc.
Change the name of an alpha macro that was changed with the
system call commit.
subsystems capabilities:
_SC_AIO_LISTIO_MAX returns the default of _POSIX_AIO_LISTIO_MAX
_SC_AIO_MAX returns the default _POSIX_AIO_MAX
_SC_AIO_PRIO_DELTA_MAX returns the default of 0
Without these adjustments the values returned are -1 even when the
aio side of the kernel returns '0' for them which is incorrect.
Noticed by: Craig Rodrigues <rodrigc@attbi.com>
time_t. Deal with the possibility that time_t != int32_t. This boils
down to this sort of thing:
- time(&ut.ut_time);
+ ut.ut_time = time(NULL);
and similar for ctime(3) etc. I've kept it minimal for the stuff
that may need to be portable (or 3rd party code), but used Matt's time32
stuff for cases where that isn't as much of a concern.
Approved by: re (jhb)
descriptors that have the close-on-exec flag set, as that will have no
effect anyway and might screw something else up if the file descriptor
happens to be shared with another process.
PR: standards/43335
MFC after: 1 week
architecture, mainly to avoid getting a SIGFPE signal sent
when calling strtod(3) with certain input.
The SIGFPE has been sent because the code was not aware that
a Gradual Underflow is handled in software via traps on the
Alpha architecture, but is not implemented in our Alpha kernel
layer.
With `Sudden_Underflow' defined, strtod(3) should not depend
on Gradual Underflow and adjust its calculations accordingly,
which means that other, more subtle errors than the sending of
SIGFPE could be solved by this.
Discussed with: bde
PR: alpha/12623
PR: alpha/17032
PR: alpha/43567
MFC after: 7 days
caused by dynamic PAM modules that call openlog(3) and closelog(3),
e.g. ports/security/pam_pwdfile.
What happened here is that the module first registered its "ident"
with openlog(3), then PAM library unloaded module with dlclose(3),
and the next call to syslog(3) resulted in SIGSEGV.
MFC after: 3 days
o Remove the unwanted smartness in _longjmp() where it compares
the current ar.bspstore with the saved ar.bspstore and restores
ar.rnat based on it. This either avoids saving ar.rnat in the
jmp_buf or is the consequence of not saving ar.rnat. All this
complexity breaks libc_r where we use longjmp() to switch to
different threads and the current ar.bspstore has no relation
to the saved ar.bspstore. Thus: we save ar.rnat in setjmp()
and simply restore ar.bspstore and ar.rnat in longjmp().
This code needs a cleanup.
by filling in the jump table.
Convert uses of pthread routines within libc_r to use the internal
versions (_pthread_foo instead of pthread_foo).
Remove a couple of globals from application namespace.
entries in the table being stubs. While I'm here, add macros to
auto-generate the stubs. A conforming threads library can override
the stub routines by filling in the jump table.
Add some entries to namespace.h and sync un-namespace.h to it.
Also add a comment to remind folks to update un-namespace.h
when changing namespace.h.
PAM module state (created in pam_sm_authenticate and referenced later
in pam_sm_setcred and pam_sm_acct_mgmt). However, the krb5_ccache
structure shares some data members with the krb5_context structure
that was used in its creation. Since a new krb5_context is created
and destroyed at each PAM entry point, this inevitably caused the
krb5_ccache structure to reference free'd memory.
Now instead of storing a pointer to the krb5_ccache structure,
we store the name of the cache (e.g. `MEMORY:0x123CACHE') in
pam_sm_authenticate, and resolve the name in the other entry points.
This bug was uncovered by phkmalloc's free'd memory scrubbing.
Approved by: re (jhb)
e.g.
Unknown error: -1765328378
we get
Client not found in Kerberos database
Another way to accomplish this would have been to leave
`error_message' alone, but to explicitly load the Kerberos com_err
error tables. However, I don't really like the idea of a PAM module
dorking with global tables.
Approved by: re (jhb)
difference between the two from a low-level point of view is that
the partition type is different. This change adds EFI related cases
to existing switch statements with existing FAT related cases.
information, since we rely on the pwd entry to know what MAC labels
to set as part of the login process.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
Don't force 16-byte alignment at run-time. Do it at compile-time.
This saves us the pointer fiddling by the setjmp functions and
reduces complexity. While here, increase the jmp_buf by 16 bytes
to an even 512 bytes. Coincidentally, due to the way alignment
was handled prior to this change, the jmp_buf has not changed in
size, but only in how the space is used. Prior to this change
the 16 bytes were reserved for enforcing alignment; now they are
reserved by us for future extensions.
Therefore, this ABI breaker is relatively save: the failure is
always an alignment trap.
namely uuidgen(1), uuidgen(2) and uuid(3), the following division
has been choosen:
uuidgen(1) A description of the command line utility,
and other user oriented UUID information.
uuidgen(2) A mostly technical description of UUIDs.
uuid(3) A description of the functions and other
programmer oriented UUID information.
According to the division: add more technical contents.
Contributed by: Hiten Pandya <hiten@uk.FreeBSD.org>
Edited and enhanced: marcel
always to the first 16 sectors of the disk. The firmware reads the boot
code from a partition, defaulting to 'a' if none is specified, which only
corresponds to the first 16 sectors of the disk if 'a' is first. Solaris
often makes the swap partition first, instead of the root partition, and
users expect to be able to do the same with freebsd as well. This also
allows one to temporarily boot from another partition if the boot block
on the root partition gets scrambled somehow.
o Remove all code guarded by !defined(__ia64__). This file is
specifically written for ia64,
o Handle the case when read_block() or write_block() fails. We
don't want sysinstall(8) to signal a thumbs-up on error,
o Set the starting (cyl,hd,sect) triple to 0xFFFFFF when either
bios_hd or bios_sect is zero or the LBA us not representable
with the triple. In that case automaticly initialize the
ending triple with 0xFFFFFF as well,
o Reindent Write_Int32() as it was different than the rest of
the file,
o Remove some unused variables that appeared to be used but
were effectively useless.
o Plug a memory leak: The second timne we read the MBR, we write
out a modified block, but didn't free the memory after writing.
o Replace d1->sector_size with 512 when we read/write the MBR.
We ignore the sector size in cases we shouldn't but adhered to
it in cases it would be wrong if the sector_size wasn't 512.
This file should eventually be rewritten to write out a GPT. For
now, a MBR will do...
to be static for 5.0. I may remove this for 5.1 or 5.2. No more
binaries or libarires will be generated with __sF starting as of
yesterday. Originally the plan had been to eliminate this for 5.0,
but we didn't get the __std{in,out,err}p changes merged into -stable
until yesterday (rather than in September 2001 like it should have
been). Given that didn't happen on time, we can't do the other part
of the scheme now.
# Please do not change this without talking to me first.