backslash as nothing, treat it like a space so that adjacent lines
aren't glued together.
PR: 8479
Submitted by: Adrian Filipi-Martin <adrian@ubergeeks.com>
give a bit more information about up to 10 errors encountered during
formatting (unless -q has been specified, of course).
While being here, removed a bitrotten comment in the Makefile, and
kill the old Emacs local variable stuff at the end of fdformat.c
that's no longer useful anway.
names suggest, they perform methods on Device's. In addition, they
check that the pointer passed to them is valid; if it isn't, they
pretend that the action failed. This fixes some crashes due to NULL
dereferences (e.g., PR 26509).
Approved by: jkh (some time ago)
avoid blasting the syslog with error messages from bad floppies. Both
tools have their own error reporting anyway (which could easily be
cluttered by the syslog output on your terminal).
one to see what files would be removed *if* an 'lpc clean' is done. 'tclean'
will remove no files, and is therefore not a privileged command. Also, both
'lpc clean' and 'lpc tclean' will now look for 'core' files in spool directories
(but not remove them). They also print out an extra line of info when a
datafile to be removed is a symlink (from 'lpr -s'), saying what file it is
a symlink to.
The 'lpc clean' commands also now print out a summary line saying how many
queues were checked, how many files were removed (or "would be" removed, for
tclean), and how much disk space is involved. For the benefit of those who
have many print queues, 'lpc clean all' will only print out the names of print
queues where some "interesting" files were found, instead of printing out a
header-line for every queue in your printcap file.
Reviewed by: freebsd-print@bostonradio.orgfreebsd-audit@FreeBSD.org
MFC after: 2 weeks
while -w allows connection from non-reserved ports. Also improves the
helpfulness of various connection-error messages.
The changes for IPv6 added back in the reserved-port check which was mistakenly
dropped from lpd in 1997 (copying a change from openbsd). It is best to have
that check in place, but the check breaks lpr's from some implementations of
lpr/lpd for Windows. The -w option is for those admins who need to accept
jobs from non-reserved ports, the -c option is for admins who would like a
print-server machine to log all failed connection-attempts to syslog.
Reviewed by: freebsd-audit@FreeBSD.orgfreebsd-print@bostonradio.org
MFC after: 2 weeks
contained a number of memory leaks. The changes include:
- Add a comment describing what addrmerge() does.
- Deal with 0.0.0.0./::. or AF_LOCAL callers correctly.
- Use rpcbind_get_conf() instead of getnetconfigent() so we don't
have to remember to free the returned netconfig struct.
- Make just one pass through the ifaddrs list; we can pick up a fallback
interface address in the same pass as the netmask comparison.
- Define and use SA2SIN* macros to avoid the need for loads of
protocol-specific local variables.
- Use mostly protocol-independent code for building the netbuf version
of the address to be returned.
- Use the common cleanup code for virtually all error and non-error
cases, fixing a number of memory leaks.
function has a return type of u_int32_t, into which it was somehow
supposed to encode:
* A valid 32-bit XID (which could be any value including 0).
* 0, meaning a duplicate request.
* -1, meaning a malloc failed (!);
We now ensure that all XIDs are non-zero, and pass the XID out via
a pointer argument.
In forward_find() and free_slot_by_xid(), remove an unnecessary
and confusing test for a negative result from an unsigned modulo
operation, but add an unnecessary cast to highlight why.
itself verbatim from INDEX. This fixes seg. faults with newer INDEX
files which have some gnome ports with outrageously long run deps.
Approved by: jkh
exist, and therefore mm_install is returning the "fail" value of
the test instead of the "success" value for install.
This change is a no-op on HEAD, but since the only harm on RELENG_4
ATM is a spurious warning it can follow the usual MFC practice.
Submitted by: A cast of thousands :-/
encryption compatibility with Windows 2000. Stateful encryption
uses less CPU but is bad on lossy transports.
The ``set mppe'' command has been expanded. If it's used with any
arguments, ppp will insist on encryption, closing LCP if the other
end refuses.
Unfortunately, Microsoft have abused the CCP reset request so that
receiving a reset request does not result in a reset ack when using
MPPE...
Sponsored by: Monzoon Networks AG and FreeBSD Services Limited
allow MRU/MTU negotiations to exceed 1492.
Add an optional ``max'' specifier to ``set m[rt]u'', ie.
set mtu max 1480
Bump the ppp version number.
Sponsored by: Monzoon Networks AG and FreeBSD Services Limited
sends error messages to stderr, normal output to stdout, instead of
logging everything via syslog.
Turn off the FORMAT_AUDIT in the Makefile, until I can figure out how
to disable the check for one single line in the source :(
Reviewed by: dd, silence on -audit
MFC after: 1 month
how to use this feature are in the man page. This is based on work
by Lyndon Nerenberg.
(The only difficult part about this patch is the fact that you
can't fchown a unix domain socket, which means the sockets must be
put in a secure directory).
Reviewed by: dillon
more sensible/understandable. 'from'->'from_host' 'host'->'local_host'
'fromb'->'frombuf' 'fromhost'->'origin_host' and a local-variable
named 'host'->'hostbuf'. This fixes some compile-time warnings about
local variables shadowing global variables.
Other than renaming variables, the only actual code changes are to call
strlcpy() instead of strncpy() when setting those (renamed) variables,
and that 'from_ip' is now a strdup()-created buffer instead of being a
static buffer compiled in as 1025 bytes.
Reviewed by: freebsd-print@bostonradio.org (an earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
warnings which come up for various routines that have a parameter which
is also called 'name'.
Reviewed by: freebsd-print@bostonradio.org
MFC after: 1 week
(e.g., on alphas, or even on i386's with a POSIX-200x-conformant
ntohl() (ntohl() returns uint32_t which is u_int on i386's)).
Fixed related bugs and bogons while I'm here:
- ntohl() was "fixed" for printing in 1 place by casting to
"(unsigned int )". This breaks the value on systems where u_int
is smaller than uint32_t, and has 2 style bugs.
- spell u_int consistently (never use "unsigned").
- break K&R support some more (don't cast malloc()'s arg to a wrong
type...).
with BDECFLAGS on, mainly by adding 'const' to parameters in a number
of routine declarations. While I'm at it, ANSI-fy all of the routine
declarations. The resulting object code is exactly the same after
this update as before it, with the exception of one unavoidable
change to lpd.o on freebsd/alpha.
Also added $FreeBSD$ line to lpc/extern.h lpc/lpc.h lptest/lptest.c
Reviewed by: /sbin/md5, and no feedback from freebsd-audit
before running make. If the package origin points to a non-existent or
stale port, report this package as orphaned, instead of producing more
general `unknown in index' message.
PR: 27707
Submitted by: myself, roamer
Approved by: bmah, markm
This is needed to pick up the right headers. Wrong headers from
src/contrib/ipfilter are used otherwise.
The right fix would be to fix contrib/ipfilter C sources to pick up
headers from <sys/netinet>.
Noticed by: peter
This work was based on kame-20010528-freebsd43-snap.tgz and some
critical problem after the snap was out were fixed.
There are many many changes since last KAME merge.
TODO:
- The definitions of SADB_* in sys/net/pfkeyv2.h are still different
from RFC2407/IANA assignment because of binary compatibility
issue. It should be fixed under 5-CURRENT.
- ip6po_m member of struct ip6_pktopts is no longer used. But, it
is still there because of binary compatibility issue. It should
be removed under 5-CURRENT.
Reviewed by: itojun
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 3 weeks
Once again, as explained in my messages to -audit, the ANSIfication comes
as part of the preparation to add a new -d command-line flag to send
output to stdout/stderr. That commit will come in a week, pending any
further comments/objections. For those who have missed the -audit mails,
it's at http://people.FreeBSD.org/~roam/bsd/rarpd/usr.sbin-rarpd-d.patch
Asbestos suit: on ;)
Reviewed by: dd, silence on -audit
MFC after: 1 month
to be consistent with the -s flag. Updated documentation
on what this modifier does.
- Added the ``only'' keyword to the -s and -S flags, that
could be used to created "proxy-only" published entries.
Previously, arp(8) created an entry of this type only
in the absence of the route to a destination.
PR: bin/12357
MFC after: 1 week
been patched so many times it was a bit of a mess. There are style,
code and man page cleanups. The following are the functional changes:
The RFC only permits the returning of 4 possible error
codes, make sure we only return these (PR 27636).
Use MAXLOGNAME to determine the longest usernames.
Add a -i flag, which returns the uid instead of the username
(this is from a PR 25787, which also contained alot of the
cleanups in this patch).
PR: 25787, 27636
Partially Submitted by: Arne.Dag.Fidjestol@idi.ntnu.no
Reviewed by: Arne.Dag.Fidjestol@idi.ntnu.no, green
MFC after: 3 weeks
With a small disk being 20GB these days, chances are pretty good that
an ailing sector will not be read while still being recoverable by
the drive.
Diskcheck daemon will read disks in the background at a low rate and
that way give the diskdrive a chance to detect and correct soft read
errors before they become hard errors.
Idea by: phk
Written by: ben
``chown -h owner symlink'' did not set the symlink's owner
if the file the symlink points to already had that owner:
# ls -l alink afile
-rw-r--r-- 1 nobody ru 0 May 31 14:14 afile
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root ru 5 May 31 14:14 alink -> afile
# ./chown -h -v nobody alink
# ls -l alink afile
-rw-r--r-- 1 nobody ru 0 May 31 14:14 afile
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root ru 5 May 31 14:14 alink -> afile
Similarly for chgrp(1) and chmod(1).
it already, their syntax is not compatible with ours. It will confuse
users. So, we have compatibility with their syntex.
Approved by: dwmalone
Obtained from: NetBSD
The PCCard daemon can hang indefinately while reading its
configuration file. If the last line of the file is a comment line
that does not end in a newline, the program goes into an infinite
loop searching for the non-existent newline.
This fix, provided by the PR, will allow files ending without a newline
to be read without hanging.
Submitted by: Crist J. Clark <cjclark@alum.mit.edu>
PR: bin/25791
"install && rm" change fits in with the new FreeBSD default of
copy instead of move for install. Changing the order of the deletion
of the spurious password files doesn't affect FreeBSD functionality,
but it's done in such a way as not to matter.
Obtained from: Christian Weisgerber <naddy@mips.inka.de>
attempting to remove nonexistant exports with MNT_DELEXPORT returns
an error; before this change it always succeeded. This caused
mountd(8) to log "can't delete exports for /whatever" warnings.
Change the error code from EINVAL to a more specific ENOENT, and
make mountd ignore this error when deleting the export list. I
could have just restored the previous behaviour of returning success,
but I think an error return is a useful diagnostic.
Reviewed by: phk
* Minor umask portability change (Christian Weisgerber <naddy@mips.inka.de>)
* Clarify default value of the "run it now" option (bmah)
* Make "run it now" $DESTDIR safe (bsd)
* Handle installation of hard links for /.profile and /.cshrc properly
when the auto-install option is selected
* Fix some more whitespace issues
This is required by symlink(7), ``Commands not traversing a file tree''
subsection, third paragraph:
: It is important to realize that this rule includes commands which may
: optionally traverse file trees, e.g. the command ``chown file'' is
: included in this rule, while the command ``chown -R file'' is not.
For chown(8) and chgrp(1), this is also is compliance with the latest
POSIX 1003.1-200x draft.
MFC after: 1 week
installed" instead of "old and new". Inspired by the somewhat
non-linear PR, which really didn't have a fix, per se.
PR: conf/27235 Roelof Osinga <roelof@eboa.com>
missing on the system. Instead of passing it by, mm was prompting...
bad mm, no cookie!
Brought to my attention by the PR, but the fix needed to be tweaked to
handle the auto-install option as well.
PR: misc/25731 Gilbert Gong <ggong@cal.alumni.berkeley.edu>
the -c option [when CONS_CLRHIST isn't defined]. This is okay since
the only time CONS_CLRHIST wouldn't be defined is when kbdcontrol is
being built in bootstrap-tools, and -c isn't needed then.
Submitted by: imp
The patch I used isn't quite the one Lars suggested, but the size
of the largest datagram you can recv isn't #defined anywhere, and
probably isn't even bounded for some protocols.
PR: 25050
Submitted by: Lars Eggert <larse@isi.edu>
forward or backward by a specified number of tracks (defaulting to 1).
Use strvisx() to display the media catalog in case it contains unprintable
characters. Sort includes. Based on two patches submitted by PR, plus
style fixes and other changes of my own.
Submitted by: Seth Kingsley <sethk@osd.bsdi.com>, Maxime Henrion <mux@qualys.com>
PR: bin/22672, bin/26962
MFC After: 1 week
Add a CAPI (hardware independent) driver i4bcapi(4) and hardware driver
iavc (4) to support active CAPI-based BRI and PRI cards (currently AVM
B1 and T1 cards) to isdn4bsd.
systems were repo-copied from sys/miscfs to sys/fs.
- Renamed the following file systems and their modules:
fdesc -> fdescfs, portal -> portalfs, union -> unionfs.
- Renamed corresponding kernel options:
FDESC -> FDESCFS, PORTAL -> PORTALFS, UNION -> UNIONFS.
- Install header files for the above file systems.
- Removed bogus -I${.CURDIR}/../../sys CFLAGS from userland
Makefiles.
page with *all* the permissible values.
This should really be spelt ipencap (as /etc/protocols does),
but a precedent has already been set by the ipproto array in
setkey.c.
It would be nice if /etc/protocols was parsed for the upperspec
field, but I don't do yacc/lex...
This change allows policies that only encrypt the encapsulated
packets passing between the endpoints of a gif tunnel. Setting
such a policy means that you can still talk directly (and
unencrypted) between the public IP numbers with (say) ssh.
MFC after: 1 week
The new syntax available in the config file is:
apm_battery [0-9]+(%|[Mm) (dis|)charging { ... }
The stuff in the braces is the same as the existing case. nn% checks for
a certain percentage of life remaining and nnM checks for a cerain
number of minutes remaining. Specifying "discharge" means that you're
interested in knowing when the battery reaches a certain level while AC
power is off, "charging" the opposite.
The man page needs to be updated.
The code can be fooled. If you SIGHUP the daemon and the battery level
matches a rule it will be performed once per SIGHUP. If the battery
level matches a rule and you repeatedly apply and take away AC power,
the rule will be run once per occurance. This, however, is a feature.
:-) The code also only runs when select() times out, so getting APM
events more often than the timeout interval will result in the rules not
being run. These are things that remain to be overcome.
Its main purpose is to adapt automatically to the floppy parameters
(in particular the track size for efficient reading), and to allow a
simple error recovery for CRC-errored sectors. Requires the newly
added fdc(4) options.
them.
Sysinstall used to check /var/run/ld.so.hints (aout related) and create
hints with the ldconfig command, but the ldconfig command alone will
generate elf hints only. The correct behavior is:
* If /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints does not exist, generate elf hints
* If /var/run/ld.so.hints does not exist, generate aout hints
(using ldconfig with the -aout option)
This will help ports that check for aout libraries using ldconfig in their
pkg-req scripts.
Approved by: jkh
MFC after: 1 weeks
warnx()+exit() with errx() and replace a big if..then..else construct
to determine the package download directory with a lookup table.
Reviewed by: jkh
MFC after: 2 weeks
/usr/share/syscons/keymaps. This should prevent word breakage when new keymaps
have been added.
Prompted by: Matthew D. Fuller <fullermd@over-yonder.net>
TLU event handler).
This used to be done as a side effect of SIOCAIFADDR'ing the interface,
but now that duplicate SIOCAIFADDRs are optimised out, we can't depend
on that behaviour.
and DP83821 gigabit ethernet MAC chips and the NatSemi DP83861 10/100/1000
copper PHY. There are a whole bunch of very low cost cards available with
this chipset selling for $150USD or less. This includes the SMC9462TX,
D-Link DGE-500T, Asante GigaNIX 1000TA and 1000TPC, and a couple cards
from Addtron.
This chip supports TCP/IP checksum offload, VLAN tagging/insertion.
2048-bit multicast filter, jumbograms and has 8K TX and 32K RX FIFOs.
I have not done serious performance testing with this driver. I know
it works, and I want it under CVS control so I can keep tabs on it.
Note that there's no serious mutex stuff in here yet either: I need
to talk more with jhb to figure out the right way to do this. That
said, I don't think there will be any problems.
This driver should also work on the alpha. It's not turned on in
GENERIC.
- check the msg.tsp_type value prior to using it as an
index into char *tsptype[]
- use strlcpy's instead of strcpy's
- & handle short packets properly.
Submitted by: "Andrew R. Reiter" <arr@watson.org>
Obtained from: OpenBSD
block sizes.
This orginally worked in PAO-3 and worked on their r330 branch but got
broken in PAO-3 around December 1998!
Approved by: imp
Obtained from: PAO-3
creation.
* Tag the internal err() function with __printflike to allow checking
for non-constant format string arguments (none exist)
* Use fmtcheck() to sanitize the tar command obtained via -t to make
sure it doesn't contain extraneous format operators.
Reviewed by: mikeh
MFC after: 1 week
longer includes machine/elf.h.
* consumers of elf.h now use the minimalist elf header possible.
This change is motivated by Binutils 2.11.0 and too much clashing over
our base elf headers and the Binutils elf headers.
of a/x -> b and then negotiate a/x -> c by simply expecting SIOCAIFADDR
to do the change.
This was broken by the last commit that optimised out the deletion and
re-addition of the same a/x -> b combination, and forgot to compare
the old/new destination addresses.
Conveniently enough, this problem didn't effect setups where the
default route goes via the ppp link, and most other setups don't
care what the the destination address is actually set to. It broke
test environments where ppp connects to the local machine rather
badly though....
account at creation, create accounts with a "*" password (so you can
use alternate authentication schemes without fearing a "default" password
biting you later), and blank passwords.
Yes, adduser could create a blank password account, but this makes it
slightly more difficult to shoot yourself in the foot.
The /etc/adduser.conf entries are:
# use password-based authentication for new users
# defaultusepassword = "yes" | "no"
defaultusepassword = "yes"
# enable account password at creation
# (the password will be prepended with a star if the account isn't enabled)
# defaultenableaccount = "yes" | "no"
defaultenableaccount = "yes"
# allow blank passwords
# defaultemptypassword = "yes" | "no"
defaultemptypassword = "no"
Requested by: alfred
Reviewed by: alfred
valid keyword handling and the holiday file processing
- don't issue a warning in case the holiday file is not found
- enable inclusion of ../Makefile.inc to reenable compiling-in monitor
support into isdnd
- update manual page, add a comma and correct authors mail address
This driver supports PCI Xr-based and ISA Xem Digiboard cards.
dgm will go away soon if there are no problems reported. For now,
configuring dgm into your kernel warns that you should be using
digi. This driver is probably close to supporting Xi, Xe and Xeve
cards, but I wouldn't expect them to work properly (hardware
donations welcome).
The digi_* pseudo-drivers are not drivers themselves but contain
the BIOS and FEP/OS binaries for various digiboard cards and are
auto-loaded and auto-unloaded by the digi driver at initialisation
time. They *may* be configured into the kernel, but waste a lot
of space if they are. They're intended to be left as modules.
The digictl program is (mainly) used to re-initialise cards that
have external port modules attached such as the PC/Xem.
after the port build/install. The former cleans up "dirty" port work
directories that happen to be lying around, and the latter cleans up
after we're done so that they won't trip up someone else.
PR: ports/25106
Submitted by: tim@bishnet.net, nik, mwm@mired.org
extensive pass through the rpcbind code soon, but I might as well
bring these in now.
- (NetBSD util.c r1.5) Move the initialisation of `tbuf' to avoid
a case where it could end up containing junk from the stack. This
should address the issue in PR bin/26806.
- (NetBSD util.c r1.6) Don't `merge' AF_LOCAL addresses, fix a few
memory leaks.
PR: bin/26806
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
Obtained from: NetBSD
/usr/X11R6/bin should be there. This helps all the ports that need to
run `mkfontdir' and error out as many port maintainers do not realize
`mkfontdir' isn't in the path.
Prompted by: pkg_add pcemu
make the code not automatically dead but actually use the debug level
in order to determine if output is needed. Fix non-existant from_addr()
by #define'ing it to inet_ntoa().
Remove hardcoded -g from Makefile.
Reported by: "John W. De Boskey" <jwd@bsdwins.com>
Tested by: "John W. De Boskey" <jwd@bsdwins.com>
We now unwrap IP/IP and apply filter rules to both the outer
layer (with ``set filter blah x.x.x.x y.y.y.y ipip'') and to
the payload (reinterpreted by the filter rules).
``set log tcp/ip'' will now show both the outer wrapper and
the (reinterpreted) payload contents.
always look up -network and -mask addresses numerically before
trying getnetbyname(). Without this, we may end up attempting DNS
queries on silly names such as "127.0.0.0.my-domain.com". See the
commit log from revisions 1.21 and 1.20 for further details.
removes the last path component until the mount() succeeds. However,
the code never checks if it has passed the mountpoint, so in some
cases where the mount() never succeeds, it can end up applying the
flags from a mounted filesystem to the underlying one.
Add a sanity check to the code which removes the last path component:
test that the fsid associated with the new path is the same as that
of the old one.
PR: bin/7872
a number of assumptions related to the parsing of options in
/etc/exports, and missed a few necessary new error checks.
The main problems related to netmasks: an IPv6 network address
missing a netmask would result in the filesystem being exported to
the whole IPv6 world, non-continuous netmasks would be made continuous
without any warnings, and nothing prevented you specifying an IPv4
mask with an IPv6 address.
This change addresses these issues. As a side-effect we now store
netmasks in sockaddr structs (this matches the kernel interface,
and is closer to the way it used to be). Add a flag OP_HAVEMASK to
keep track of whether or not we have successfully got a mask from
any source. Replace some mask-related helper functions with versions
that use the sockaddr-based masks.
Also tidy up get_net() and fix the code that interprets IPv4 partial
networks such as "127.1" as network rather than host addresses.
Properly zero out some structures that were ending up partially
containing junk from the stack, fix a few formatting issues, and
add a comment noting some assumptions about export arguments.
would call malloc, stdio and other library functions from the signal
handler which is not safe due to reentrancy problems.
Instead, add a simple handler that just sets a flag, and call the
more complex function from main() when necessary. Unfortunately to
be able to check this flag, we must expand the svc_run() call, but
the RPC library makes that relatively easy to do.
- Remove some horrible code that faked a "struct addrinfo" to be
later passed to freeaddrinfo(). Instead, add a new group type
"GT_DEFAULT" used to denote that the filesystem is exported to the
world, and treat this case separately.
- Don't clear the AI_CANONNAME flag in a struct addrinfo returned
by getaddrinfo. There's still a bit more struct addrinfo abuse
left in here.
- Simplify do_mount() slightly by using an addrinfo pointer to keep
track of the current address.
- Revert del_mlist() to its pre-tirpc prototype. Unlike NetBSD's version,
ours lets the caller generate any syslog() messages, so that it
can include the service name in the message.
- Initialise a few local variables to clarify the logic and avoid some
compiler warnings.
- Remove a few unused functions and local variables, and fix some
whitespace issues.
- Reinstate the logic for avoiding duplicate host entries that got
removed accidentally in revision 1.41 (added in r1.5). This bit
was submitted in a slightly different form by Thomas Quinot.
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>,
Thomas Quinot <quinot@inf.enst.fr>
PR: bin/26148
group file. Because of the way the group sorting works while printing
out the new file it's not possible at this time to restore comments
in other locations, but at least they won't just disappear altogether.
one user who differs only by case. The other perl tools assume (or enforce)
the all lowercase requirement, therefore making the search through
master.passwd case insensitive seemed a reasonable optimization, IMO.
I understand, although I do not sympathize with, the argument that someone
might want to do this on purpose, and might subsequently want to use the
wrong tool for the job. So, this fix should hopefully satisfy both camps.
the following fixes had been made:
- check the size of the font being loaded and compare it with possible sizes
to minimise possibility of loading something that is not a fontfile at all
and turning console screen into garbage;
- prevent buffer overflow (and coredump as a result ) when loading valid
uuencoded file with size that exceeds allocated buffer;
- correct and improve several error messages.
Approved by: -audit, -hackers (silently)
being present in the environment if the user has CDROM defined, or
has specified a device on the command line.
This avoids users of ports like 'workman' that use these variables
getting gratuitous warnings from cdcontrol.
Suggested by: John Sellens <jsellens@generalconcepts.com>
Paxson et al, Status: Informational, May 1998), we should use "bits per
second" and "k" as 1000 not 1024 for throughput measures.
Submitted by: Eduardo Souza Machado da Silva <esms@acm.org>