Presumably the issue was with arparse.[ch]. Those are now in FREEBSD-Xlist
and FREEBSD-deletelist. So we do not import the Bison produced files that
was causing the problem.
Submitted by: ru
(the two may be different (ie, build vs. runtime))
Allow ldscript's SEARCH_DIR do be rooted somewhere other than `/'.
(in this case at TOOLS_PREFIX)
These changes are most helpful during `make buildworld' so that the shared
libs built in the middle of `make buildworld' are used vs. the ones in
/usr/lib on the build machine.
Submitted by: ru
The code will be fixed for all known security vulnerabilities,
and a make.conf(5) knob (ENABLE_SUID_MAN) will be provided for
those who still want it installed setuid for whatever reasons.
The catpaging and setuidness features of man(1) combined make
it vulnerable to a number of security attacks. Specifically,
it was possible to overwrite system catpages with arbitrarily
contents by either setting up a symlink to a directory holding
system catpages, or by writing custom -mdoc or -man groff(1)
macro packages and setting up GROFF_TMAC_PATH in environment
to point to them. (See PR below for details).
This means man(1) can no longer create system catpages on a
regular user's behalf. (It is still able to if the user has
write permissions to the directory holding catpages, e.g.,
user's own manpages, or if the running user is ``root''.)
To create and install catpages during ``make world'', please
set MANBUILDCAT=YES in /etc/make.conf. To rebuild catpages
on a weekly basis, please set weekly_catman_enable="YES" in
/etc/periodic.conf.
PR: bin/32791
back (as of man.c,v 1.45), change the meaning of the -m option
from poorly documented and badly coded "alternate system" to a
much more useful "different architecture for the same system".
PR: docs/31261
It is here in case we decide we want the directory to match the binary name
since neither the binary nor the source file(s) are named 'cccp' any longer.
Really irritating changes are the "forced" layering of malloc + friends
in order to use the GNU versions. Sorry, we have a *very* fine malloc,
and we will use it. Period. Even more irritating is that the GNU people
now want to replace ctype also!! So we partially dike it out here.
We now have to use the GCC stdarg.h varargs.h. We simply have no choice
as it has an internal representation that we really cannot properly define
in our headers.
This thing grew. We now have to link with many more files as if it
were one of the driver programs. We also have to deal with the very
irritating layering of malloc and friends. Our malloc works *very*
well thank you. Thus we will use it.
We now fake out the native libgcc.mk + GNU autoconf'ed Makefile.
This gives us the flexability we will need to support our new arches
(StrongARM, Sparc64, PowerPC, and IA-64). If this new way proves to
be too much a hassle, I still have a close-to-being-finished version
that is more like the 2.95 version of this file.