- fchmod(2),
- fchown(2),
- fchflags(2),
- fstat(2),
- ftruncate(2),
- fpathconf(2),
- lpathconf(2).
Make write(2) syscall to take descriptor instead of file name.
We implement descriptors by keeping track of open files and allowing to
reference them by the following syscalls. Because pjdfstest already supports
executing multiple syscalls from one command it works pretty well.
For example, the following command:
pjdfstest open foo "O_CREAT,O_RDWR" 0 : open bar "O_CREAT,O_RDONLY" 640 : fchmod 0 0666 : fchown 0 -1 20 : fchmod 1 0444
is equivalent of (error checking omitted):
int fd[2];
fd[0] = open("foo", O_CREAT | O_RDWR, 0);
fd[1] = open("bar", O_CREAT | O_RDONLY, 0640);
fchmod(fd[0], 0666);
fchown(fd[0], -1, 20);
fchmod(fd[1], 0444);
Preserving $? may cause problems particularly if set -e is in effect.
It may be useful to preserve the old value of $? in the dot script but this
must not be implemented in such a way that it would break this test.
setting. It can be built by setting the WITH_ICONV knob. While this
knob is unset, the library part, the binaries, the header file and
the metadata files will not be built or installed so it makes no impact
on the system if left turned off.
This work is based on the iconv implementation in NetBSD but a great
number of improvements and feature additions have been included:
- Some utilities have been added. There is a conversion table generator,
which can compare conversion tables to reference data generated by
GNU libiconv. This helps ensuring conversion compatibility.
- UTF-16 surrogate support and some endianness issues have been fixed.
- The rather chaotic Makefiles to build metadata have been refactored
and cleaned up, now it is easy to read and it is also easier to add
support for new encodings.
- A bunch of new encodings and encoding aliases have been added.
- Support for 1->2, 1->3 and 1->4 mappings, which is needed for
transliterating with flying accents as GNU does, like "u.
- Lots of warnings have been fixed, the major part of the code is
now WARNS=6 clean.
- New section 1 and section 5 manual pages have been added.
- Some GNU-specific calls have been implemented:
iconvlist(), iconvctl(), iconv_canonicalize(), iconv_open_into()
- Support for GNU's //IGNORE suffix has been added.
- The "-" argument for stdin is now recognized in iconv(1) as per POSIX.
- The Big5 conversion module has been fixed.
- The iconv.h header files is supposed to be compatible with the
GNU version, i.e. sources should build with base iconv.h and
GNU libiconv. It also includes a macro magic to deal with the
char ** and const char ** incompatibility.
- GNU compatibility: "" or "char" means the current local
encoding in use
- Various cleanups and style(9) fixes.
Approved by: delphij (mentor)
Obtained from: The NetBSD Project
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code 2009
A full featured groff is required during buildworld, so build it always
and don't rely on it being present on the host system.
vgrind(1) is tightly coupled to a roff processor and will not be
built/installed when groff is disabled. Also much of the roff'ed
documentation under share/doc will not be built/installed when
WITHOUT_GROFF is defined.
Reviewed by: ru (partial)
Sync up with flags understood by install(1) [1], and make install(1)'s
usage output not hide the clearly documented -M flag.
PR: misc/154739 [1]
Submitted by: arundel
images that are of a certain size. The geometery is bogus, but that
doesn't matter since the new packet mode onviates the need to get the
geometry right.
* In {(...) <redir1;} <redir2, do not drop redir1.
* Maintain the difference between (...) <redir and {(...)} <redir:
In (...) <redir, the redirection is performed in the child, while in
{(...)} <redir it should be performed in the parent (like {(...); :;}
<redir)
POSIX requires this and it is simpler than the previous code that remembered
command locations when appending directories to PATH.
In particular,
PATH=$PATH
is no longer a no-op but discards all cached command locations.
If execve() returns an [ENOEXEC] error, check if the file is binary before
trying to execute it using sh. A file is considered binary if at least one
of the first 256 bytes is '\0'.
In particular, trying to execute ELF binaries for the wrong architecture now
fails with an "Exec format error" message instead of syntax errors and
potentially strange results.
hexdump.
This is a part replacement of the old athprom code, which tries
to both fetch and print the contents of an eeprom dump.
A tool to generate hexdumps from a running system will follow shortly.
* add missing includes to quieten warnings
* fix an inline function decl to have a return type
* since .h files are created during the build (opt_ah.h, ah_osdep.h)
which modify the behaviour of the HAL include/source files,
include OBJDIR in the path so the #include's work.
The tools should now build when the directory is added to LOCAL_DIRS
during a make buildworld.
When a foreground job exits on a signal, a message is printed to stdout
about this. The buffer was not flushed after this which could result in the
message being written to the wrong file if the next command was a builtin
and had stdout redirected.
Example:
sh -c 'kill -9 $$'; : > foo; echo FOO:; cat foo
Reported by: gcooper
MFC after: 1 week
This is useful so that it is easier to exit on a signal than to reset the
trap to default and resend the signal. It matches ksh93. POSIX says that
'exit' without args from a trap action uses the exit status from the last
command before the trap, which is different from 'exit $?' and matches this
if the previous command is assumed to have exited on the signal.
If the signal is SIGSTOP, SIGTSTP, SIGTTIN or SIGTTOU, or if the default
action for the signal is to ignore it, a normal _exit(2) is done with exit
status 128+signal_number.