The offset is already accounted for in xs->lastrcvd and doesn't
have to be subtracted again.
Reported by: Florian Smeets <flo@smeets.im>
Submitted by: Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik@gmail.com>
Tested by: Florian Smeets <flo@smeets.im>
MFC after: 1 week
o Report the instantaneous bandwidth instead of an average since the
beginning of the download.
o At the finish of the download report the average bandwidth and also
the total time it took instead of 00m00s.
Reviewed by: des
MFC after: 1 week
In addition to adding `static' where possible:
- bin/date: Move `retval' into extern.h to make it visible to date.c.
- bin/ed: Move globally used variables into ed.h.
- sbin/camcontrol: Move `verbose' into camcontrol.h and fix shadow warnings.
- usr.bin/calendar: Remove unneeded variables.
- usr.bin/chat: Make `line' local instead of global.
- usr.bin/elfdump: Comment out unneeded function.
- usr.bin/rlogin: Use _Noreturn instead of __dead2.
- usr.bin/tset: Pull `Ospeed' into extern.h.
- usr.sbin/mfiutil: Put global variables in mfiutil.h.
- usr.sbin/pkg: Remove unused `os_corres'.
- usr.sbin/quotaon, usr.sbin/repquota: Remove unused `qfname'.
progress information. The first is that fetch_read() (used in the HTTP
code but not the FTP code) can enter an infinite loop if it has previously
been interrupted by a signal. The second is that when it is interrupted,
fetch_read() will discard any data it may have read up to that point.
Luckily, both bugs are extremely timing-sensitive and therefore difficult
to trigger.
PR: bin/153240
Submitted by: Mark <markjdb@gmail.com>
MFC after: 3 weeks
but the use of fseek() means fetch(1) can't correctly resume a transfer
that was interrupted past the 2 GB mark.
Pointed out by: ache@
MFC after: 3 weeks
in append mode. Open it in read-write mode instead. Also move the
fseek up one level to cover the (unlikely but not impossible) case where
the server accepts ranges but does not send a Content-Size header.
PR: bin/117277
MFC after: 3 weeks
returned by the server matched what we requested, and blindly appended
what we received to what we already had. This could go two ways: if the
delivered offset was higher than expected, the local file would contain
duplicate data, while if it was lower than expected, there would be data
missing from the middle of the file. Furthermore, if the transfer was
interrupted again, each subsequent attempt would compound the error.
Fix the first problem by restarting the transfer from scratch if there
is a gap, and the second by explicitly seeking to the correct location
in the local file so as to overwrite any duplicated data.
PR: bin/117277
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 3 weeks
T_secs already had a non-zero default. Unbreak by moving the default to
ftp_timeout / http_timeout.
Submitted by: Christoph Mallon <christoph.mallon@gmx.de>
MFC after: 2 weeks
rather than usually returning 1 but in a few instances using a sysexits(3)
return value.
2. Remove a few unused variables from libfetch.
PR: docs/122470 (1, only)
Reviewed by: des
fetch(1) accepts a new argument -i <file> that if specified will cause
the file to be downloaded only if it is more recent than the mtime of
<file>.
libfetch(3) accepts the mtime in the url structure and a flag to
indicate when this behavior is desired.
PR: bin/87841
Submitted by: Jukka A. Ukkonen <jau@iki.fi> (partially)
Reviewed by: des, ru
MFC after: 3 weeks
meaningless. In particular, don't assume that it is left untouched if
stat(2) fails; that assumption happens to fail at high optimization
levels on some platforms.
MFC after: 1 week
Use %ju and an (uintmax_t) cast to print size_t values.
Use %jd and an (intmax_t) cast to print off_t values.
Use off_t variables to hold the difference between two off_t values.
Don't bother with unsigned char where char will do nicely.
Fix handling of -v option.
Don't treat negative offsets as valid positive ones.
Clean up the ETA and transfer rate code. Show transfer rate along with
ETA if the verbose level is higher than 1.
Re-add alarm(2) calls around the calls to fetchStat(3) and fetchXGet(3),
since these calls can still time out on DNS lookups or TCP connect(2).
Remove the alarm(2) calls in the main loop, since all methods properly
handle transfer timeouts (as opposed to connection timeouts).
Set the sigalrm flag if a timeout occurs in the main loop.
Move the signal: label up a little so we still set the atime and mtime
when the transfer times out or is interrupted, so that restarted transfers
will work as expected (as long as the file still exists).
MFC after: 2 weeks