at least one consumer outside of libc and pwd_mkdb.
Adjust the versioning in libc and pwd_mkdb accordingly.
named was the application affected, and that fact was first
Reported by: Zherdev Anatoly <tolyar@mx.ru>
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
environment. This includes support for multiple KSEs and KSEGs.
The ability to create more than 1 KSE via pthread_setconcurrency()
is in the works as well as support for PTHREAD_SCOPE_SYSTEM threads.
Those should come shortly.
There are still some known issues which davidxu and I are working
on, but it'll make it easier for us by committing what we have.
This library now passes all of the ACE tests that libc_r passes
with the exception of one. It also seems to work OK with KDE
including konqueror, kwrite, etc. I haven't been able to get
mozilla to run due to lack of java plugin, so I'd be interested
to see how it works with that.
Reviewed by: davidxu
family of functions using the new nsdispatch(3) core. Remove
arbitrary size limits when using the thread-safe versions.
= Re-implement the traditional getpwent(3)/getgrent(3) functions on
top of the thread-safe versions.
= Update the on-disk format of the hashed version of the passwd(5)
databases to allow for versioned entries. The legacy version is
`3'. (Don't ask.)
= Add support for version `4' entries in the passwd(5) database.
Entries in this format are identical to version 3 entries except
that all integers are stored as 32-bit integers in network byte
order (big endian).
= pwd_mkdb is updated to generate both version 3 and version 4
entries.
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
may be built into libc (`static NSS modules') or dynamically loaded
via dlopen (`dynamic NSS modules'). Modules are loaded/initialized
at configuration time (i.e. when nsdispatch is called and nsswitch.conf
is read or re-read).
= Make the nsdispatch(3) core thread-safe.
= New status code for nsdispatch(3) `NS_RETURN', currently used to
signal ERANGE-type issues.
= syslog(3) problems, don't warn/err/abort.
= Try harder to avoid namespace pollution.
= Implement some shims to assist in porting NSS modules written for
the GNU C Library nsswitch interface.
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
they resemble one another, but POSIX.1e interfaces were not sufficiently
expressive to do what we needed.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
%f and sufficiently short %g specifiers where the precision was
explicitly zero, no '#' flag was specified, and the floating point
argument was > 0 and <= 0.5. While at it, add some comments to better
explain the relevant bits of code.
Noticed by: Christoph Kukulies <kuku@physik.rwth-aachen.de>
or the tty, just block selected signals in the parent like system(3) does.
Many thanks to bde for his assistance in finding the correct solution.
PR: bin/50679
by allprison_mtx), a unique prison/jail identifier field, two path
fields (pr_path for reporting and pr_root vnode instance) to store
the chroot() point of each jail.
o Add jail_attach(2) to allow a process to bind to an existing jail.
o Add change_root() to perform the chroot operation on a specified
vnode.
o Generalize change_dir() to accept a vnode, and move namei() calls
to callers of change_dir().
o Add a new sysctl (security.jail.list) which is a group of
struct xprison instances that represent a snapshot of active jails.
Reviewed by: rwatson, tjr
- Bump shared library version on libusbhid.
- Retire libusbhid.h; it is called usbhid.h now.
- hid_start_parse() takes a third argument.
- hid_locate() takes a fifth argument.
- hid_report_size() order of arguments changes.
- Other changes, including formatting and whitespace.
Bump __FreeBSD_version.
This change will break all third party applications that rely on previous
FreeBSD specific behavior.
proper way to fix this. The way this works is to prepend "exec " to
the editor command to eliminate the "shell in the middle" which prevents
us from properly reawakening the editor after a SIGTSTP.
PR: bin/50679
- Reduce diffs with NetBSD.
- Formatting and explicit values for enum declaration.
- Order of prototypes.
- zero report_size in hid_clear_local()
- errx() needs no newline
- Don't initialie variable in declaration in hid_parse_usage_in_page().
- Use fmtcheck() in hid_usage_in_page().
be printed.
- Fix %f conversions where the number of significant digits is < expt.
This would be a one-line change were it not for thousands separators.
Noticed by tjr.
- Remove some unnecessary code in the parsing of precision specifiers.
- We used to round long double arguments to double. Now we print
them properly.
- Bugs involving '%F', corner cases of '#' and 'g' format
specifiers, and the '.*' precision specifier have been
fixed.
- Added support for the "'" specifier to print thousands' grouping
characters in a locale-dependent manner.
- Implement the __vfprintf() side of hexadecimal floating point
support. All that is still needed is a routine to convert the
mantissa to hex digits one nibble at a time in the style of ultoa().
Reviewed by: silence on standards@
- __vfprintf()'s 'buf' has never been used for floating point, so
don't define it in terms of (incorrect) constants describing
floating point numbers. The actual size needed depends on
sizeof(uintmax_t) and locale details, so I slightly overestimated.
- We don't need a 308-character buffer to store the string "308".
With long doubles and %a we need more than three characters, though.
FreeBSD. This method attempts to centralize all the necessary hacks
or work arounds in one of two places in the tree (src/Makefile.inc1
and src/tools/build). We build a small compatibility library
(libbuild.a) as well as selectively installing necessary include
files. We then include this directory when building host binaries.
This removes all the past release compatibilty hacks from various
places in the tree. We still build on tip of stable and current. I
will work with those that want to support more, although I anticipate
it will just work.
Many thanks to ru@, obrien@ and jhb@ for providing valuable input at
various stage of implementation, as well as for working together to
positively effect a change for the better.
strange things might happen when garbage values in the struct
get passed in to localtime_r() and family.
Noticed by: marcus
Approved by: markm (mentor)(implicit)
Move the remaining bits of <sys/diskslice.h> to <i386/include/bootinfo.h>
Move i386/pc98 specific bits from <sys/reboot.h> to
<i386/include/bootinfo.h> as well.
Adjust includes in sys/boot accordingly.
as curthread in the new context, so that it will be set automatically when
the thread is switched to. This fixes a race where we'd run for a little
while with curthread unset in _thread_start.
Reviewed by: jeff
_get_curthread(). This is similar to the kernel's curthread. Doing
this saves stack overhead and is more convenient to the programmer.
- Pass the pointer to the newly created thread to _thread_init().
- Remove _get_curthread_slow().
This was changed because originally we were blocking on the umtx and
allowing the kernel to do the queueing. It was decided that the
lib should queue and start the threads in the order it decides and the
umtx code would just be used like spinlocks.
critical and should not be killed when pageout is looking for more
memory pages in all the wrong places.
Reviewed by: arch@
Sponsored by: St. Bernard Software
from strptime(3). Previously, they would get filled only
for the %s specifier and as a side effect of using the
the %Z specifier with a GMT time zone.
PR: misc/48993
Approved by: markm (mentor)
Silence on: -standards
new one, and do not fall back to the RO fd. There was a bug here
in that the RO fd was never closed, if the RDRW open succeeded, but
this code is bogus anyway, and it breaks newfs of floppies, at least
for me, due to "Device busy." Anything that wants to fall back is
doing something significantly odd that it should have some more complex
code on its end.
more complicated things than just setting the lock to 0.
- Implement stubs for this function in libc and the two threading libraries
that are currently in the tree.
by NIS work, like nsswitch.conf(5) promises to be able to.
(These modifications will be fed back to NetBSD, of course)
- In endusershell(), do not set `sl' to NULL if we know it already has
that value.
a couple of reqests: DSM_BUSY_PCT and DSM_QUEUE_LENGTH.
I have no further plans for mutilating this API at this point in
time, and will update the man-page to reflect current reality as
the next thing.
Reviewed by: ken
Kernel:
Change statistics to use the *uptime() timescale (ie: relative to
boottime) rather than the UTC aligned timescale. This makes the
device statistics code oblivious to clock steps.
Change timestamps to bintime format, they are cheaper.
Remove the "busy_count", and replace it with two counter fields:
"start_count" and "end_count", which are updated in the down and
up paths respectively. This removes the locking constraint on
devstat.
Add a timestamp argument to devstat_start_transaction(), this will
normally be a timestamp set by the *_bio() function in bp->bio_t0.
Use this field to calculate duration of I/O operations.
Add two timestamp arguments to devstat_end_transaction(), one is
the current time, a NULL pointer means "take timestamp yourself",
the other is the timestamp of when this transaction started (see
above).
Change calculation of busy_time to operate on "the salami principle":
Only when we are idle, which we can determine by the start+end
counts being identical, do we update the "busy_from" field in the
down path. In the up path we accumulate the timeslice in busy_time
and update busy_from.
Change the byte_* and num_* fields into two arrays: bytes[] and
operations[].
Userland:
Change the misleading "busy_time" name to be called "snap_time" and
make the time long double since that is what most users need anyway,
fill it using clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC) to put it on the same
timescale as the kernel fields.
Change devstat_compute_etime() to operate on struct bintime.
Remove the version 2 legacy interface: the change to bintime makes
compatibility far too expensive.
Fix a bug in systat's "vm" page where boot relative busy times would
be bogus.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to 500107
Review & Collaboration by: ken
dtoa() is buggy. The bug would cause incorrect output to be
generated when format strings such as '%5.0f' were used with
nonzero numbers whose magnitude is less than 1.
Reported by: df(1) by way of periodic(8)
Reviewed by: mike
amount of bytes (supposed to be) written by vsnprintf exceeds the
size of the buffer.
PR: bin/48844
Submitted by: Peter A Jonsson <pj@ludd.luth.se>
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 1 month
package, a more recent, generalized set of routines. Among the
changes:
- Declare strtof() and strtold() in stdlib.h.
- Add glue to libc to support these routines for all kinds
of ``long double''.
- Update printf() to reflect the fact that dtoa works slightly
differently now.
As soon as I see that nothing has blown up, I will kill
src/lib/libc/stdlib/strtod.c. Soon printf() will be able
to use the new routines to output long doubles without loss
of precision, but numerous bugs in the existing code must
be addressed first.
Reviewed by: bde (briefly), mike (mentor), obrien
not save (restore) the global pointer (GP) in the jmpbuf in setjmp
(longjmp) because it's not needed in general. GP is considered a
scratch register at callsites and hence is always restored after a
call (when it's possible that the call resolves to a symbol in a
different loadmodule; otherwise GP does not have to be saved and
restored at all), including calls to setjmp/longjmp. There's just
one problem with this now that we use setjmp/longjmp for context
switching: A new context must have GP defined properly for the
thread's entry point. This means that we need to put GP in the
jmpbuf and consequently that we have to restore is in longjmp.
This automaticly requires us to save it as well.
When setjmp/longjmp isn't used for context switching, this can be
reverted again.
integral type to the size of a pointer type when it's known that the
cast is valid. On ia64 such casts are generally bad news and has led
us (=peter :-) to make such casts fatal. By casting to intptr_t
before casting to a pointer type, this now compiles cleanly in LP64
architectures. Note that the final cast has been changed to void*
(instead of siginfo_t*) to make it explicit that we're not trying to
pass a siginfo_t pointer but rather trying to pass an int when the
prototype says it should be a pointer.
the J_SIG0 field. While here, rename J_SIG0 to J_SIGSET and
remove J_SIG1. The main reason for this change is that the
128-bit sigset_t is now aligned on a 16-byte boundary, which
allows us to use 16-byte atomic loads and stores on CPUs that
support it. The removal of J_SIG1 is done to avoid confusion:
it is never accessed and should not be. Renaming J_SIG0 to
J_SIGSET is the icing on the cake that's better done now than
later.
password quality, not login.conf(5).
- Move warnexpire and warnpasswd from the ``Accounting Limits''
section to ``Authentication'', and nix everything else in the
former section. The accounting knobs are not available in
the base system, and the subset of them available in ports
should be documented in the ports' manpages.
PR: 47960
Reviewed by: mike (mentor), doc
file in the NFS file system when the underlying device is not a
network device. A Sparc64 specific hack for this exact problem was
already present (nfs.c:1.9, tftp.c:1.10), but the problem is not
specific to Sparc64. The hack has been promoted to a non-i386 test
because on non-i386 architectures it's either impossible to have
non-network devices coexist in the same loader with the NFS FS, or
network and non-network device coexist and NFS filesystems can only
be used on top of network devices. I believe i386 pxeboot is where
this does not hold.
The root cause of this problem is in open.c where each file system
is tried until no more file systems exist or a file system returns
success. There's no notion of a list of valid file systems given
the underlying device and the non-existence of a file can cause
the invalid combination to be tried.
in math.h; the consensus here was that __BSD_VISIBLE was correct instead.
- gamma_r, lgamma_r, gammaf_r, and lgammaf_r had no documentation in the
lgamma(3) manpage.
Reviewed by: standards@
Submitted by: Ben Mesander
The background info in this man page needs rewriting
in some parts since the last major changes
to the code, however it still accuratly reflects how to use the
API.
* use correct error detection of realloc failure
* strtol negative return check
* use strtol to validate string instead of rolling our own
validation code
* terminate the command sequence correctly
for the sorts of errors we run into[1]. This also gives us room to put in a
vaguely appropriate casts to silence warnings since our compiler doesn't like
when we compare ssize_t to size_t[2]. Add a cast in sblock.c[3] to silence
a warning because of signed vs. size_t hell (again). Clean up nearby
excessive parenthemutilation[4].
Reviewed by: bde [2] [3]
Suggested by: bde, many [1]
Submitted by: bde [4]
An aside about [4], bde notes that we do not check for a negative value for
the fs bsize. I'm nto going to do that in every situation we use it, one must
expect a reasonable program to pass down reasonable values. Some foot shooting
protection I will tolerate, some I will not. Also he suggests some possible
conditional improvements there, which I may take to heart.
PS: For me at least, this is now WARNS=5 clean...
seed->first value correlation. It breaks rand_r()... Other possible methods
like shuffling inside aray will breaks rand_r() too, because it assumes
only one word state, i.e. nothing extra can be added after seed assignment
in srand().
BTW, for old formulae seed->first value correlation is not so monotonically
increased as with other Linear Congruential Generators of this type only
becase arithmetic overflow happens. But overflow affects distribution
and lower bits very badly, as many articles says, such type of overflow
not improves PRNG.
So, monotonically increased seed->first value correlation problem remains...
Only warnings that could be fixed without changing the generated object
code and without restructuring the source code have been handled.
Reviewed by: /sbin/md5
Introdice RTLD_SELF special handle and properly process it within
dlsym() and dlinfo() functions.
The intention is to improve our compatibility with Solaris and
to make a Java port easier.
Partially submitted by: phantom
isnormal(). The current isinf() and isnan() are perserved for
binary compatibility with 5.0, but new programs will use the macros.
o Implement C99 comparison macros isgreater(), isgreaterequal(),
isless(), islessequal(), islessgreater(), isunordered().
Submitted by: David Schultz <dschultz@uclink.Berkeley.EDU>
to maintain, and had security issues which would have required a major
rewrite to address anyway.
This implementation currently starts a separate agent for each session
instead of connecting each new session to the agent started by the first
one. While this would be a Good Thing (and the old pam_ssh(8) tried to
do it), it's hard to get right. I'll revisit this issue when I've had a
chance to test some modifications to ssh-agent(1).
o Add a MD header private to libc called _fpmath.h; this header
contains bitfield layouts of MD floating-point types.
o Add a MI header private to libc called fpmath.h; this header
contains bitfield layouts of MI floating-point types.
o Add private libc variables to lib/libc/$arch/gen/infinity.c for
storing NaN values.
o Add __double_t and __float_t to <machine/_types.h>, and provide
double_t and float_t typedefs in <math.h>.
o Add some C99 manifest constants (FP_ILOGB0, FP_ILOGBNAN, HUGE_VALF,
HUGE_VALL, INFINITY, NAN, and return values for fpclassify()) to
<math.h> and others (FLT_EVAL_METHOD, DECIMAL_DIG) to <float.h> via
<machine/float.h>.
o Add C99 macro fpclassify() which calls __fpclassify{d,f,l}() based
on the size of its argument. __fpclassifyl() is never called on
alpha because (sizeof(long double) == sizeof(double)), which is good
since __fpclassifyl() can't deal with such a small `long double'.
This was developed by David Schultz and myself with input from bde and
fenner.
PR: 23103
Submitted by: David Schultz <dschultz@uclink.Berkeley.EDU>
(significant portions)
Reviewed by: bde, fenner (earlier versions)
pam_wheel(8) module was written to work in spite of a broken libpam, and
has grown organically since its inception, which is reflected in both its
functionality and implementation. Rather than clean up pam_wheel(8) and
break backward compatibility, I've chosen to reimplement it under a new,
more generic name.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
to remove part of seed -> 1st value correlation. Correlation still remains
because of algorithm limits. Note that old algorithm have even stronger
correlation, especially in the lower bits area, but not eye-visible, as
current one.