extattr namespace routines to the libc/posix1e directory. While
the extattr calls are not strictly POSIX.1e, POSIX.1e wasn't
strictly ever approved, so I think that's OK.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
- Renumber labels since the previous revision removed one.
- Remove useless and wrong comment.
- Repeating the function name is just redundant.
- The previous revision made the comment about %edx useless.
- The comment about %eax was wrong (but did explain why %eax used to be
fixed up).
Submitted by: bde
`warn'. Now a whole 2 members of the err() family don't cause pollution.
This fixes world breakage in awk for NOSHARED worlds. contrib/awk/msg.c
has had its own version of err() for a long time, but this somehow
didn't cause problems until the update to awk-3.1.0.
access an array beyond it's length. This only happens in the last iteration of
a loop, and the value fetched is not used then, so the bug is a relatively
innocent one. Fix this by not fetching any value on the last iteration of said
loop.
Submitted by: MKI <mki@mozone.net>
MFC after: 1 week
hosts:!!!!!!!!@@@@@$%^&*()()*$(files{}{}|||++!)(dns
exactly the same as:
hosts: files dns
Recover from parse errors by looking for the end of a line; this
allows entries without errors to still be parsed even if there is
an erroneous entry earlier in the file.
I'm assuming that the comment was regarding socket address structures, so
correct the comment about pre-zero'ing socket structures to recommend
pre-zero'ing socket address structures.
- Fix some minor grammar nits.
- This isn't directly submitted by the PR below but is related to it and was
inspired by it.
PR: 31704
the netbsd_strtod.c file we have does not. More still should be done
here, but this works happily on my Alpha. I have not (yet?) changed
the Makefile.inc to use this.
If zero bytes are allocated, return pointer to the middle of page-zero
(which is protected) so that the program will crash if it dereferences
this illgotten pointer.
Inspired & Urged by: Theo de Raadt <deraadt@cvs.openbsd.org>
serve two purposes: (1) so we can maintain backwards compatibility with
protocols (rwhod, dump, etc...) that either assume time_t is 32 bits or
assume sizeof(time_t) == sizeof(int), or make other similar assumptions.
(2) To tag such routines (by the presence of these calls) for future
cleanup/extension work.
The 32->64 routine, time32_to_time() (when time_t is 64 bits, that is),
is defined specifically to implement temporal locality to properly set the
msb bits of a 64 bit time_t quantity, using the 50 year rule. The locality
code has not been implemented yet (and doesn't need to be for a while),
but that is the intent. This will allow us to maintain backwards protocol
compatibility past 2038.
These routines are intended to be platform and time_t agnostic.
MFC after: 1 week
since that is what we use now and this insulates us from any time_t
tweaks here. We can define a record format that uses 64 bit times if/when
we need to.
using rcmd directly. This has been in my tree for a long time, but we
may need to sync with OpenBSD before MFC.
Obtained from: openbsd
PR: 15830
MFC after: 2 months
manual page), fix capitalization, and remove chflags reference from
SEE ALSO since the only time it's referenced is with an .Xr, anyway.
Submitted by: bde