processes match the given criteria. Since revision 1.60 of malloc.c,
malloc() and friends return an invalid pointer when given a size of 0.
kvm_getprocs() uses sysctl() with a NULL oldp argument to get an
initial size, but does not check whether it's 0 before passing it to
realloc() (via _kvm_realloc()). Before the aforementioned malloc()
change, this resulted in a minimal allocation made and a valid poitner
returned, but now results in an invalid, but non-NULL, pointer being
returned. When this is passed to sysctl(), the latter returns EFAULT
(as it should).
objects were not being correctly set to zero. Instead, the function
descriptor pointer was set to the load address of the .so object. This
caused gcc generated binaries to segfault on exit when crtbegin.asm's
_fini code tested the __cxa_finalize() function pointer for zero.
This is a bit of a hack because of a problem nearby workaround for
find_symdef and its quirks (failures) for local symbols. This still
needs to be fixed.
compiled with gcc-3.1. Somebody thought it was a good idea to move
the implementation of new and delete from libgcc to libstdc++. This
change doesn't harm the current compiler in the tree.
specified, and then the first part of the pattern space is deleted, when
there are two or more input lines, as this results in subtraction of one from
an unsigned integral value of '0'. That bogus value is used in one case
for a loop (that will run far too many times in this case) and a function to
search for a value within a specified range of memory, however now the range
of memory is obscenely large and a segmentation fault will occur. This is
fixed by checking for and appropriately handling a nil pattern space as if
the specified search in memory failed, as indeed it obviously will with nil
pattern space.
Submitted by: Tim J. Robbins <tim@robbins.dropbear.id.au>
PR: bin/34813
Reviewed by: mike
MFC after: 1 day
sized integer' bites. The various malloc functions return pointers,
but without any prototype/declarations visible to callers, the compiler
expects them to return int.
prevent the interfaces from being initialized by /etc/rc.network6
wrongly. So, you can explicitly initialize the interfaces by
/etc/pccard_ether.
With previous rc.network6, if you specify pccardd_flags="-z",
net.inet6.ip6.accept_rtadv was wronly set to 0, then RA was not
accepted.