the new -i option were missing.
Fixed style bugs in previous commit:
(1) initialisation of a local variable in its declaration.
(2) inconsistency of (1) with style of nearby code.
(3) disorder of declaration for (1).
(4) a line longer than 80 characters.
(5) bitrot in the printf() -> err() cleanups to help bloat the line in (4).
local "login" name for rcmd(3). This is particularly useful for things
like portslave and other packages with terminal server functionality
where a login can either run ppp locally or get shunted off to another
box via rlogin depending on radius authentication etc. Quite often the
local box doesn't even have accounts, so a flag such as this is needed.
Obviously this is restricted to callers with uid == 0.
and was also a bit inconsistent: leading blanks, or any double blanks
generated empty arguments, but a trailing blank did not.
PR: bin/2630, bin/10914
Submitted by: Arne Henrik Juul <arnej@imf.unit.no>
of an empty buffer... the output file wasn't readable... also warn that
we can't checksum on stdout and print out the base64 encoded version of the
md5 checksum...
Site to actually return md5 digest: web.golux.com
Verified that fetch was broken: Ken Coar <Ken.Coar@Golux.Com>
This is useful for people who want index their home directory:
$ env LOCATE_CONFIG=$HOME/.locate.rc /usr/libexec/locate.updatedb
Submitted by: Dmitry Morozovsky <marck@rinet.ru>
the magicness of 200. Cleaned up the remaining parts. Circularisation
of the list of malloc types was a kernel bug (now fixed). Interfering
with applications' definitions of pgtok is a system header bug (not
fixed).
changed from a simple list to a circular one. We compensate by only
looping until we see the first address again. Before, things would
terminate because it was limited to 200 iterations. This lead to
bogus statistics and repeating stats for memory types.
This should be merged into 3.2, as the same bug is there.
* if run by root (or root process) drop privs
* ensure output size is not infinate (net finger only)
* ensure output lines are not infinate in length (net finger only)
* do not allow finger client to run longer than 3 minutes (net finger only)
"passwordtime" is what passwd(1) has actually been using. I suspect
passwordperiod was the original intent. I can't figure-out which,
if either, BSDi uses. If anyone knows...
That doesn't work well for tapes over 4G.
I use tcopy a lot to write images of a tape to tape as tape to tape
copying is terribly slow. Slower than it should be. Quickly found out
tcopy can not rewind a file when doing copy/verify.
PR: 11386
Submitted by: David Kelly dkelly@hiwaay.net
Reviewed by: phk
o main returns int not void
o use return 0 at end of main when needed
o use braces to avoid potentially ambiguous else
o don't default to type int
o #ifdef 0 -> #if 0
Reviewed by: obrien and chuckr
(and can be both files or directories). Show white space between
"(", ")", "!" and their corresponding `expression' arguments as
expected by the expression parser inside find(1).
Prompted by: David Honig <David.Honig@idt.com> on freebsd-doc
Message-Id: <199904132055.NAA09432@justinian.Eng.idt.com>