altfmt was abused to sometimes screw up the disassembly of the bytes
following unconditional jump instructions. Gas doesn't pad to a longword
boundary like the comment said - that is the programmer's responsibility.
wdp_fixedcyl) gives it directly. wdp_removedcyl is "reserved" except
in ancient ATA-1 drafts and shouldn't be added. This fixes PR 1288.
Changed some fields and comments in struct wdparams to match a less-
ancient ATA draft.
Fixed bit number for `rdy' in status string.
gcc only inlines memcpy()'s whose count is constant and didn't inline
these. I want memcpy() in the kernel go away so that it's obvious that
it doesn't need to be optimized. Now it is only used for one struct
copy in si.c.
gcc only inlines memcpy()'s whose count is constant and didn't inline
these. I want memcpy() in the kernel go away so that it's obvious that
it doesn't need to be optimized. Now it is only used for one struct
copy in si.c.
queue in vm_fault.
Move the PG_BUSY in vm_fault to the correct place.
Remove redundant/unnecessary code in pmap.c.
Properly block on rundown of page table pages, if they are busy.
I think that the VM system is in pretty good shape now, and the following
individuals (among others, in no particular order) have helped with this
recent bunch of bugs, thanks! If I left anyone out, I apologize!
Stephen McKay, Stephen Hocking, Eric J. Chet, Dan O'Brien, James Raynard,
Marc Fournier.
name string. This function should be rewritten to deal with more than
10 units of a given type.
Pointed out by: jmf@free-gate.com (Jean-Marc Frailong)
(I fixed it slightly differently)
name (ie; strip off the domain). Given a hostname 'fooey.bar.com', the
previous code returned a system name of 'fooey.ba', instead of the more
correct 'fooey'. SCO uses 'uname' for many things, including some of
it's socket code so this patch is necessary for running certain legacy
SCO apps. :)
A variant of this code has been running on my box for 2 months now.
need this.
Consider the following code:
case 'O':
output_filename = malloc(strlen(arg)+4);
strcpy(output_filename, arg);
strcat(output_filename, ".tmp");
real_output_filename = arg;
return;
The idea here is to malloc() a buffer big enough to hold the name of
a supplied file name, plus ".tmp". So we malloc() 'size of filename'
bytes plus 4, right? Wrong! ".tmp" is _FIVE_ bytes long! There's a
traling '\0' which strcat() gleefully tacks on _outside_ the bounds
of the buffer. Result: program corrupts own memory. Program SEGVs at
seemingly random times. Bill not like random SEGVs. Bill smash.
Know how I found this? I've been trying to bootstrap -current on my
2.1.0-RELEASE machine at work and I couldn't seem to get libc.a built
because the linker would intermittently blow chunks while executing
things like 'ld -O foo.o -X -r foo.o'. Since this is an initial
bootstrap version of ld, it was linked against the 2.1.0 libc, who's
malloc() behaves differently than that in -current.
Presumeably ld -O doesn't blow up in -current, otherwise someone would
have spotted this already. I don't know if this is a bug or a feature.
Anyway. I'm changing the strlen(arg)+4 to strlen(arg)+5. Bah.
Create smaller BOOTMFS kernel with more sane sed command rather than fgrep/sed
Make it possible to generate multiple kernels with the KERNELS variable.
Add mtree generated distribution signatures to dists.
which ypxfr links with. (Sorry: left over development bogon.)
Just a reminder: you must rebuild librpcsvc before you build
this program.
Pointed out by: Stephen Hocking
to fix the mega-commits spamming.
pst 96/05/29 20:09:25
Modified: secure/usr.bin/telnet Makefile main.c
Log:
Remove obsolete SOCKSv4 support
Submitted by: pst
Obtained from: A mirrored CVS repository that will disappear next SUP