Document that popen() can now create bidirectional pipes and handles.
Note that this needs to be updated since we have a native bidirectional
pipe and don't use socketpair() here.
style and b) the wrong logic. Should be strstr(s, "##") != NULL. (Note
that the passwd.adjunct stuff has not been merged into 2.2 so this bug
is not in that branch.)
The character `#' introduces a comment. Leading spaces and tabs are
ignored: '^[ \t]*#.*\n$'
Count an empty line - only spaces, tabs or newline - also as a comment.
(to be compatibel with password database comments). '^[ \t]*\n$'
- 0 was returned instead of EOF when an input failure occured while
skipping white-space after 0 assignments. This fixes PR2606. The
diagnosis in PR2606 is wrong.
- EOF was returned instead of 0 when an input failure occurred after
zero assignments and nonzero suppressed assignments.
- EOF was spelled -1.
This should be in 2.2.
for now so that we don't lose library compatibility. Applications should
define _NEW_VFSCONF and use getvfsbyname() instead of new_getvfsbyname()
if they want the new vfsconf interface. Parts of the old interface
(enough to load vfs modules, I hope) are still available.
doesn't need to be included in files that have nothing to do with
syscalls.
Added missing `.text' to START_ENTRY so that ENTRY() works when
invoked in the data section.
- Use MAP_FAILED instead of the constant -1 to indicate
failure (required by POSIX).
- Removed flag arguments of '0' (required by POSIX).
- Fixed code which expected an error return of 0.
- Fixed code which thought any address with the high bit set
was an error.
- Check for failure where no checks were present.
Discussed with: bde
a manner consistent with other implementations. Its done in a way that
adds only a tiny amount of overhead when positional arguments are not used.
I also have a test program to go with this, but don't know where it belongs
in the tree.
Submitted-By: Bill Fenner <fenner@FreeBSD.ORG>
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
of the user's timezone failed), don't bail if the specified timezone
doesn't have an offset; in this case it isn't going to. (Perhaps it would
be better to change the caller to always supply one, but this is quick
and clean and fixes the bug in the easiest possible way.)
Should be in 2.2. Fixes (properly) PR#1740.
interfaces, until it's redone to use sysctl().
- bump the SIOCGIFCONF buffer size from 1K to 8K
- if we didn't find a suitable address, return a failure. Previously
if it didn't find anything it left the return address uninitialised.
Perhaps it would be better to return AF_INET/111/127.0.0.1 rather than
failing?
more manageable and convenient referencing by login.conf (login
class database) and (e.g.) login.access.
This is the first of a group of commits which implements the login
class capabilities database.
(There may be a behavior difference between the 2.1 and 2.2/3.0 kernels
in this area, it seemed to work for me but I have a horribly hacked
select() that might have a bug in the handling of this)
Submitted by: wpaul
Restore the clamp on the return value from rpc_dtablesize().. Some programs
(eg: ypserv) use this as an indication of how large svc_fdset is in their
hand-rolled svc_run() loops. The svc_fdset table is maintained by the
rpc library explicitly for compatability with such programs. (It uses
a different variable-sized bitmap itself internally)
- prototypes now in include files
Obtained from: a diff of FreeBSD vs. OpenBSD/NetBSD rpc code.
Note: potential bug here, It looks like there could be a null pointer
dereference depending on what has already been called to initialise some
shared data.
- kill non-FD_SETSIZE code
Obtained from: a diff of FreeBSD vs. OpenBSD/NetBSD rpc code.
Note, there was a nasty bug with our old code here. It would trash the
stack if a fd > 31 was passed in. It was using a "long" as though it
was an "fd_set", ie: it was assuming that a long was 256 bits wide. :-(
This has been lurking here for a while, since the FD_SETSIZE #ifdef's
were first implemented.
- fix timeout code
- better sequence number generation (for long running daemons)
- dont close an unopen socket
- use standard functions
- 64 bit type safe for wire protocols
- unlimited file descriptors
Obtained from: a diff of FreeBSD vs. OpenBSD/NetBSD rpc code.
- ensure we're not spoofed/confused while trying to talk to the portmapper
- handle new get_myaddress failure cases
- prototype now in include file
Obtained from: a diff of FreeBSD vs. OpenBSD/NetBSD rpc code.
- fix timeout code
- better "random" initial transaction id for long running daemons
- unlimited number of file descriptors to select().
- 64 bit type safe wire protocol
Obtained from: a diff of FreeBSD vs. OpenBSD/NetBSD rpc code.
- typo (spelling police :-)
- dont die on select() that returns time remaining (on my systems)
- improve initial "random" sequence number, to make it harder to guess
in long running daemons.
- fix timeout code.
- unlimited number of fd's in select.
Obtained from: a diff of FreeBSD vs. OpenBSD/NetBSD rpc code.
- Protect against select() that returns time remaining (on my systems).
- don't exit. It's bad form for libc to exit() or abort() instead of
returning an error.
- only use loopback addresses after checking the real interfaces.
Obtained from: a diff of FreeBSD vs. OpenBSD/NetBSD rpc code.
- canonical function declaration
- use constants from includes, not magic numbers
- use standard functions
Obtained from: a diff of FreeBSD vs. OpenBSD/NetBSD rpc code.
- 64 bit long type safe (wire protocols specified in explicit sized types)
- Support systems that don't do unaligned accesses
- Support for explicit int16 and int32 sizes in xdr
Obtained from: a diff of FreeBSD vs. OpenBSD/NetBSD rpc code.
RELENG_2_2!
This is part#2 of the previous commit to src/lib/libc/net to contain the
potential damage.
This provides stubs so that binaries linked in 2.2 will run on 3.0
- getpwent:
o adjunctbuf should be NUL terminated after copying
o _pw_breakout_yp() needs to know the length of the buffer returned
from YP so it can properly NUL terminate its local buffer.
- getgrent:
o YP buffers should be YPMAXRECORD + 2 bytes long and NUL terminated.
(Previously they were hardcoded to 1024 bytes.)
- getnetgrent:
o YP data should be copied with snprintf(), not sprintf()
These are 2.2 candidates. I will wait a few days to make sure these don't
break anything and then, if there are no objections, move them to the 2.2
branch.
- getservent:
o put _yp_check() proto under #ifdef YP where it belongs
o local YP buffers should be YPMAXRECORD + 2 bytes long and should
be NUL terminated after copying
- gethostbynis:
o local YP buffer should be YPMAXRECORD + 2 bytes long
- getnetbynis:
o local YP buffer should be YPMAXRECORD + 2 bytes long and should
be NUL terminated after copying
- ether_addr:
o local YP buffers should be YPMAXRECORD + 2 bytes long and should
be NUL terminated after copying (in this case it's BUFSIZ + 2 bytes,
but it happens that BUFSIZ == YPMAXRECORD.
- gethostbydns:
o nuke stray 'return(NULL)' in __dns_getanswer() (harmless but looks silly)
These are 2.2 candidates. I will wait a few days to make sure these don't
break anything and then, if there are no objections, move them to the 2.2
branch.
line length limit anymore - now 500 members or 5000 members are
possible. For security group lines longer than 256K will be count as
an error. 256K should be enough for 65536 users.
Support comments (lines that begin with a #) if compiled with
option -DGROUP_IGNORE_COMMENTS.
Fortunately it seems that all system utilities which use getgrent()
functions are dynamically linked executables. So you need only
rebuild libc.so.3.0 if you want this change. Note: if you have
an old X server which depend on libc.so.2.* you should rebuild
libc.so.2.* too.
Not a 2.2 candidate.
lookup results. Without this, doing multiple host/addr lookups in a
single process yeilds strange results (the buffer is static, and
garbage may be left behind from previous lookups).
I just noticed this in 2.2-BETA. Unless somebody threatens to chop my
hands off with an axe, I'm going to move this to the 2.2-RELENG branch
shortly.
of BIND, we need to tweak some things to that gethostanswer() knows
whether or not we're dealing with an IPv4 or IPv6 address. (This'll
teach me to use a 2.1.0 system for NIS development -- but it's so nice
and stable I just can't being myself to upgrade it. :)
_yp_dobind() checks to see if a fork() happens (by checking PIDs) and
invalidates all bindings if it finds itself in a newly created child
process. (This avoids sharing RPC client handles and socket descriptors
with the parent, which would be bad.) Unfortunately, it summarily
calls clnt_destroy() on the handles, which may result in the destruction
of a descriptor that isn't really a socket.
This is fixed by replacing the explicit call to clnt_destroy() with a
call to _yp_unbind(), which deals with potentially hosed socket descriptors
an a safe manner.
This is basically a one-liner. Once I confirm that it fixes Christoph's
problem, I'd like permission to put it in the 2.2-RELENG branch.
Vulnerable: all programs that use setlocale(LC_COLLATE),
setlocale(LC_CTYPE), or setlocale(LC_ALL). The only setuid/setgid
binary i've found for this is w(1).
Should go into 2.2.
in lots of unrelated junk from <net/if.h> and <net/if_ether.h>. These
functions still aren't prototyped anywhere (but should be in
<net/ethernet.h>---got that, Bill?).
and he said:
The 3rd agrument is new; looks like it was part of the upgrade to
a new BIND with some IPv6 support. The third argument here should be
AF_INET. In order for it to be anything else, I'd have to add new
NIS functions to support IPv6 lookups. I don't even know what those
look like yet.
So there ya go, add AF_INET as the 3rd argument to the call.
Submitted-by: wpaul
copy of insure++, too bad the runtime only works for BSD/OS. :-(
Maybe they'll be so impressed by my initial 15 entry bug report for it
that they'll take the FreeBSD version more seriously. :-) :-)
NIS map which is present on SunOS NIS servers with the SunOS C2 security
hack^Woption installed. I'm convinced that the C2 security option restricts
access to the passwd.adjunct.byname map in the same way that I restrict
access to the master.passwd.{byname,buid} maps (checking for reserved ports),
which means that we should be able to handle passwd.adjunct.byname map
correctly.
If _havemaster() doesn't find a master.passwd.byname map, it will now
test for a passwd.adjunct.byname map before defaulting back to the
standard non-shadowed passwd.{byname,byuid} maps. If _pw_breakout_yp()
sees that the adjunct map was found and the password from the standard
maps starts with ##, it will try to grab the correct password field
from the adjunct map. As with the master.passwd maps, this only happens
if the caller is root, so the shadowing feature is preserved; non-root
users just get back ##username as the encrypted password.
Note that all we do is grab the second field from the passwd.adjunct.byname
entry, which is designated to be the real encrypted password. There are
other auditing fields in the entry but they aren't of much use to us.
Also switched back to using yp_order() to probe for the maps (instead
of yp_first()). The original problem with yp_order() was that it barfed
with NIS+ servers in YP compat mode since they don't support the
YPPROC_ORDER procedure. This condition is handled a bit more gracefully
in yplib now: we can detect the error and just punt on the probing.
Since locale reading code not resistent against stack overflowing or
similar intruder attacks, don't allow PATH_LOCALE env variable action
for s-bit programs (non-standard locale path setting)
strdup() it to prevent unsetenv() or setenv() effects. Check its length to
not allow user to overflow internal locale buffer. Move PATH_LOCALE
handling code into one place.
POSIX: make better stub for LC_MONETARY & LC_NUMERIC, now it check
locale directory existance instead of refusing all non-C non-POSIX
locales. POSIX treats empty locale env variable as unset variable
while our old code treats it as "C" locale, fix it. Implement previous locale
restoring, if locale setting fails. Old code assumes success if some
of LC_ALL subset is successed even other fails, POSIX treats it as
failure with previous locale restoring, fix it.
Remove unneccessary length checking in currentlocale()
Garbage in `eacces' caused the wrong errno to be set for non-EACCES errors.
Garbage in `etxtbsy' caused a semi-random retry strategy for ETXTBSY errors.
Found by: NIST-PCTS. gcc -Wall reported the problem, but -Wall is not
enabled for libc.
dealing w/the fixit floppy.
Also added the MNT_RELOAD, MNT_WANTRDWR, MNT_ASYNC, MNT_NOATIME,
MOUNT_UNION flags. Someone might want to check my description of MNT_RELOAD.
2.2-R candidate. Not a 2.1.6-R candidate -- some current flags aren't in
2.1.5-R's version.
for NULL RPC client handles. This should hopefully fix the problems
Satoshi reported on -current.
- Add socket descriptor sanity checks to _yp_unbind().
- Fix yp_order() so that it handles the RPC_PROCUNAVAIL error gracefully.
NIS+ in YP compat mode doesn't support the YPPROC_ORDER procedure.
This is a 2.2 candidate with bells on.
inside libc. Add collate_range_cmp as alias to __collate_range_cmp
for temp. backward compatibility.
collate_range_cmp will be replaced with direct code for each
external program for compatibility with the rest of world
1) Rename FNM_ICASE to FNM_CASEFOLD
2) Add FNM_LEADING_DIR
Add proper (unsigned char) casts to tolower().
Use 'char' function argument for proper sign extension
Add progname to warning/error message layout. (joerg)
Remove inline assembler, no speed impact, not need for the obfuscation (bde)
Remove on the fly calculation of parameters, no longer critical.
Make D & U flags valid even if we don't support them.
Don't call imalloc until we're done initializing.
Zap contents on free() if we have "Junk" set. [*]
Various nitpicking.
[*] As a sideeffect of this change, if you are worried about
sensitive data lingering in memory, you can use the 'Junk' option
now to make sure phkmalloc zaps memory when it is returned. add
char * malloc_options = "J";
to your source. Obviously there is a performance impact.
Somehow, I also managed to get quite some other changes in this file at
the same time. All I did was checkout the file and made a single change.
If someone has an explanation how these PURIFFY defines got in...
- removed references to nonexistent pathconf-related variables.
- document everything in CTL_MACHDEP(more than in sysctl.8) and
80% of the things in CTL_KERN (same as in sysctl.8).
Various neat features added. More documentation in the manpage.
If your machine has very little RAM, I guess that would be < 16M
these days :-(, you may want to try this:
ln -fs 'H<' /etc/malloc.conf
check the manpage.
as done after a quasi-recursive call to free() had modified what we
thought we knew about the last chunk of pages.
This bug manifested itself when I did a "make obj" from src/usr.sbin/lpr,
then make would coredump in the lpd directory.
for gcc >= 2.5 and no-ops for gcc >= 2.6. Converted to use __dead2
or __pure2 where it wasn't already done, except in math.h where use
of __pure was mostly wrong.
traditional BSD4.4 behavior (_POSIX_SAVED_IDS are OFF) was described
before.
Add some hooks to easily change this text when
POSIX_SAVED_IDS model will be changed.
routines from contrib/bind directly. There were too many problems,
including having to add -DUSE_OPTIONS_H to the entire libc source in
order for the contrib code to pick up it's options, and so on.
Instead, I've merged the changes, libc is now self contained again.
in a bunch of man pages.
Use the correct .Bx (BSD UNIX) or .At (AT&T UNIX) macros
instead of explicitly specifying the version in the text
in a bunch of man pages.
note that at_shutdown has a new parameter to indicate When
during a shutdown the callout should be made. also
add a RB_POWEROFF flag to reboot "howto" parameter..
tells the reboot code in our at_shutdown module to turn off the UPS
and kill the power. bound to be useful eventually on laptops
Here are the diffs for libc_r to get it one step closer to P1003.1c
These make most of the thread/mutex/condvar structures opaque to the
user. There are three functions which have been renamed with _np
suffixes because they are extensions to P1003.1c (I did them for JAVA,
which needs to suspend/resume threads and also start threads suspended).
I've created a new header (pthread_np.h) for the non-POSIX stuff.
The egrep tags stuff in /usr/src/lib/libc_r/Makefile that I uncommented
doesn't work. I think its best to delete it. I don't think libc_r needs
tags anyway, 'cause most of the source is in libc which does have tags.
also:
Here's the first batch of man pages for the thread functions.
The diff to /usr/src/lib/libc_r/Makefile removes some stuff that was
inherited from /usr/src/lib/libc/Makefile that should only be done with
libc.
also:
I should have sent this diff with the pthread(3) man page.
It allows people to type
make -DWANT_LIBC_R world
to get libc_r built with the rest of the world. I put this in the
pthread(3) man page. The default is still not to build libc_r.
also:
The diff attached adds a pthread(3) man page to /usr/src/share/man/man3.
The idea is that without libc_r installed, this man page will give people
enough info to know that they have to build libc_r.
refilled) a file that was either line- or un-buffered, all files were
flushed. According to the code comment, the flush (according to ANSI)
is supposed to happen on write + line buffered output files, not _all_
files.
Obtained from: OpenBSD / Theo de Raadt, possibly from proven@cygnus.com
set sin_len
close one ftp port bounce attack
have rresvport() use bindresvport() rather than duplicate the code,
rresvport() is a superset of bindresvport().
Obtained from: OpenBSD / Jason Downs / Theo de Raadt, minor tweaks by me.
this man page to prevent half of it from coming out with underlines.
This man page needs to be gone over to fully convert it to mdoc format.
This closes PR#1440.
Submitted by: Jens Schweikhardt <schweikhardt@rus.uni-stuttgart.de>