"begin [0-7]* *". Now `begin with, ' is not a header line.
Do a boundary check for body characters. Characters less than 33 or
greater than 96 are out of range. If characters are out of range
uudecode print a error message and die.
eliminates the "X-authentication-warning" header line that
has been coming out since I made it so that sendmail is
run totally as the user whose calendar file is currently
being processed.
the kernel malloc, netstat was never updated to reflect the fact that
there are once again allocated-but-free mbufs, just as there are
clusters, and so the information presented about how much memory was
allocated to the network was bogus. Fixed.
- Fix the bug with URIs of the form ftp://host/filename.
- Fix some more string-termination bugs in util.c.
- Use safe_malloc() rather than testing the return value of
regular malloc() in 15 places.
- Implement HTTP authentication, for both servers and proxies.
Currently only ``basic'' authentication is supported; This Is A Bug
(but less of one tjhan nmot supporting any authentication).
I think there is only one more feature which is required for full
HTTP/1.1 support, which is Transfer-Encoding: chunked; this should
not be toohard, but it isn't very important, either.
Jan 1st (and probably other dates as well) for some variable
events. E.g.
01/SunThird whatever...
Was being printed as:
Jan 0 Whatever
when calendar was run on January 1st.
Closes PR#2461.
1) Implement redirects (or try to, at least).
2) Implement automatic retry after 503 errors when Retry-After is given.
3) Implement a -a flag to enable both of these behaviors.
4) Recognize Transfer-Encoding headers and emit a warning that the file
is likely to be damaged.
5) Bug fix: only write the amount of data we read.
6) Actually document some of these.
7) Fix the usage message to display flags in semi-alphabetical order.
recognize it any more. This makes the following significant changes:
- The main body of the program doesn't know a thing about URIs,
HTTP, or FTP. This makes it possible to easily plug in other
protocols. (The next revision will probably be able to dynamically
add new recognizers.)
- There are no longer arbitrary timeouts for the protocols. If you want
to set one for yourself, use the environment variables.
- FTP proxies are now supported (if I implemented it right).
- The HTTP implementation is much more complete, and can now do restarts,
preserve modtimes, and mrun in mirror mode. It's not yet up to 1.1,
but it's getting there.
- Transaction TCP is now used for sending HTTP requests. The HTTP/1.1 syntax
for requesting that the connection be closed after one request is
implemented.
In all of this, I have doubtless broken somebody. Please test it and tell me
about the bugs.
This error results from changing the name for the msdos file system
from "pcfs" to "msdos". Close PR #1105
submitted by: Thomas Wintergerst <thomas@lemur.nord.de>,
Slaven Rezic <eserte@cs.tu-berlin.de>
- Use MAP_FAILED instead of the constant -1 to indicate
failure (required by POSIX).
- Removed flag arguments of '0' (required by POSIX).
- Fixed code which expected an error return of 0.
- Fixed code which thought any address with the high bit set
was an error.
- Check for failure where no checks were present.
Discussed with: bde
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
date: 1994/10/09 07:37:18; author: davidg; state: Exp; lines: +7 -1
#if 0'd out the meat of the swap code until I get a chance to rewrite it.
...mainly by stealing the code from pstat(8).
calendar -t 0101 -f file
Previously calendar's time processing routine directly
modified the "0101" argument" which confused getopt.
The time routines now make a copy of the argument
to mess with.
Note that LOGIN_CAP_AUTH code (login authentication) is not (yet) enabled
and requires /usr/libexec/login_<style> authentication program support to
be added at a later date. The Makefile contains a macro LC_AUTH to turn
it on and prevent unnecessarily linking against skey/krb libs and the
addition of klogin.c module.
All other aspects of login_cap support are fully functional.
return EX_TEMPFAIL if the file was already locked. This makes it easier
to distinguish between lock collisions and failures within the command
being executed.
Also, don't complain if the unlink() fails in the cleanup handler. It
doesn't matter anyway, and it obscured the exit status returned from
the command that was executed.
Tor Egge reports counter wrap and requests and update to quad_t sized
counters, which is also a good thing to do, but I'm unhappy about adding
two more instructions into the code path every time we doink a counter.
Maybe with or after the Lite2 merge...
Submitted by: Tor Egge <Tor.Egge@idt.ntnu.no>
Add some buffer overrun fixes from OpenBSD and myself.
Add skey calculator kludge from OpenBSD.
TODO: do a real merge of dab's sources... probably just make telnet and
telnetd contrib software.
Obtained from: OpenBSD, dab@bsdi.com
don't just hard code them into the Makefile.
(This is the optional stuff to use perl scripts as a vi scripting language.
eg, to load a sample script, type: :perl do 'wc.pl';
this loads /usr/share/vi/perl/wc.pl to add the "wc" command. Then, one can
do this: :perl wc Yes, this is a trivial example. There are more
useful examples, eg 'make' output parsing along the lines of emacs's
"compile" mode. The tcl extension is similar and enabled by default since
we ship with tcl.)
in a different location. (Sigh, the initial import gratuitously
changed the directory structure here, rendering the vendor branch a
little useless.)
Note: the French message catalog needs updating. By now, i've simply
appended the English messages. NB: French message # 123 has been
wrong, please correct whoever is going to deal with this.
(which doesn't use the setting at all), but when linking with
recent versions of libncurses, ncurses screws up without it for some reason
(presumably a ncurses bug).
Turn off error messages from locate(1), we can't do very much about
its database not being ok anyway at this time.
Closes PR # bin/2183: whereis returns environ...
terminated properly. Fix is from the PR and works for the test cases I
threw at it. Should be safe and desirable for back porting to 2.2 or
earlier if there are people still comitting to -stable.
Submitted by: Marc Slemko <marcs@znep.com>
Closes PR: 1864
file (like /etc/termcap). /usr/src/etc/Makefile depends on there
being an etc-magic install rule here, and who-knows-what depends on
`magic' being in /etc.
Fixed some style bugs - don't use -c for installing files in the obj
directory...
language text files.
Should finally close PR # bin/1925: file does not consider cyrillic
text..., though i've never got any response from the originator about
my suggestion.
While i was at it, also move out the `magic' file to /usr/share/misc,
there's nothing that magic with this file to justify its life under
/etc.
do it themselves. (Some of these programs actually depended on this
beyond compiling the definition of struct ifinfo!) Also fix up some
other #include messes while we're at it.
an auto stack variable that was about to disappear. It broke with some
nis passwd changes because of a gethostbyname() call that uses a fair bit
of stack.. This was a timebomb waiting to go off at any time and could
have been causing subtle corruption for a while.
AARGH!!
This is HIGHLY reccomended for 2.2 and presumably 2.1.6
heck. Watch through our hidden camera, ladies and gentlemen,
as this one-line addition to the syslog output generates hundreds
of thousands of lines of email in response, all from people
decrying the evils of electronic noise pollution! :-)
What this change does, simply speaking, is syslog it every time
someone changes their local password. I need this at a local ISP to
tell whether people are reacting to expires in a timely fashion or
not. To disable it, uncomment -DLOGGING in the Makefile.
If your users change their passwords so often as to fill your logfile,
then you may also have another administrative problem to deal with.
Do not exit with status 0 if mkdep(1) cannot create output,
e.g. if .depend is not writable or the FS is readonly mounted.
Store arguments as comments for debugging purpose.
after I installed the last SNAP :). Because of the way the 'use NIS
or local?' logic is set up here, it was possible to force the use
of the NIS password changer even though the specified user didn't exist
in NIS (i.e. # passwd foo, where foo is a local-only user). In this
case, we fall intp yp_passwd() without the corresponding yp_password
structure being filled in, which leads to an NULL pointer dereference.
Also fixed the logic like I just did with chpass so that if the user
is both in NIS and the local password database, the program makes a
more sensible guess as to which one to use (if NIS is turned on in
/etc/master.passwd, then use NIS, else default to local).
enabled in /etc/master.passwd & friends. This allows the 'USER_YP_AND_LOCAL'
case to make a more sensible guess (if NIS is enabled, default to NIS,
otherwise default to local -- this is better than defaulting to NIS
all the time).
Machine come and go...
Little patch removes lists down for over 4 days from the list.
(If you haven't noticed they are down in that period, you should
turn them off!)
Closes: PR#bin/1361
Submitted by: xaa@stack.urc.tue.nl
For definitions without an "nc" entry, some parts have now been
mis-detected as `non-comment'. Avoid this by not converting the
noregexp in case the "nc" capability has not been found. I begin to
wonder why things like missing "ab"/"ae"'s do work at all...
Detected by: nate
When you ask pr to use form feeds at the end of pages and specify a page
length and tell pr to not put the fancy headers and footers on each
pages, then pr will not separate the pages with a form feed.
Closes PR: bin/1237
Submitted by: Warner Losh <imp@village.org>
which is what syslogd presumably uses too. Notice that the "protocol"
is bogus in not defining the timezone. "protocol" because it hardly
deserves the name :-)
closes bin/1739
Reported by: Stefan Zehl <sec@wg.camelot.de>
types being on the same line as the function name, this finally closes
PR # bin/1785. Also allow :: and ~ as part of the function name, for
C++.
Still, C++ operator overloading will not be recognized as a valid
function name. Fixing this would require a major overhaul of the \p
recognition parser.
. correct a typo in regexp.c,
. implement a new "nc" (non-comment) feature to describe exceptions from
the comment detection; there were problems in Perl with the $# operator
that could not be solved by any other means,
. prevent blocklevel from becoming negative (due to earlier misdetected
sequences), this is probably a workaround for the problem described
in PR # bin/1785,
. update the Perl description to use the "nc" feature,
. update the man page for the "nc" and the undocumented "ab"/"ae"
features.
for the GPROF4 case. This allows a simpler method to be used for
non-statistical profiling (it allows overhead adjustments to be
subtracted from one counter without harm if that counter goes
negative; otherwise the adjustment would have to be distributed).
32 bit counters were already too small for GPROF4 with a 200MHz
clock. int64_t counters should be used.
Man page to come...
For now use: <brandelf -t Linux linuxbin> to brand, and just
<brandelf> to verify branding on a ELF file. FreeBSD native is
set with <brandelf -t FreeBSD freebsdbin>.
Old locate(1) programs still works with the new database format, print
some garbage for 8 bit characters, but don't core (maybe except char 30).
7-Bit Puritan should not notice any difference. Same speed,
Same database size if the database contain only ASCII characters.
Reviewed by: ache
parse.c(1.9) was:
revision 1.9
date: 1996/09/12 03:03:25; author: bde; state: Exp; lines: +7 -6
Fixed handling of `!=' assignment. Don't warn if the shell's output is
null, but warn if there was an error reading it.
Suggested by: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>