I was perplexed when an example I'd written to show the values for these
variables changing as an xterm window was resized didn't work, and looking
into it I see that size tracking for LINES and COLS seems to be one SVR4
enhancement which didn't come across with libncurses.
refilled) a file that was either line- or un-buffered, all files were
flushed. According to the code comment, the flush (according to ANSI)
is supposed to happen on write + line buffered output files, not _all_
files.
Obtained from: OpenBSD / Theo de Raadt, possibly from proven@cygnus.com
set sin_len
close one ftp port bounce attack
have rresvport() use bindresvport() rather than duplicate the code,
rresvport() is a superset of bindresvport().
Obtained from: OpenBSD / Jason Downs / Theo de Raadt, minor tweaks by me.
this man page to prevent half of it from coming out with underlines.
This man page needs to be gone over to fully convert it to mdoc format.
This closes PR#1440.
Submitted by: Jens Schweikhardt <schweikhardt@rus.uni-stuttgart.de>
2. Remove pkg_* support - tcl7.5's channel interface has rendered this
almost entirely unsupportable (at least in the way it currently stands).
Submitted-By: jmz & jkh
- buffer expansions were not working right due to a return code botch.
- signed types instead of size_t's meant somebody else went and put
casts in, I've changed the types to what they should have been.
part that does zic(8)/zdump(8) is still yet to be imported (but the old
zic and zdump will work just fine with these header files and the
data format has not changed).
directly in order to obtain binding information, check that the local
ypbind is using a reserved port and return YPERR_YPBIND if it isn't.
We should not trust any ypbind running on a port >= IPPORT_RESERVED;
it may have been started by a malicious user hoping to trick us into
talking to a bogus ypserv.
Note that we do not check the ypserv port returned to us from ypbind.
It is assumed that ypbind has already done a reserved port test (or not,
depending on whether or not it was started with -s); if we trust the
authenticity of the local ypbind, we should also trust its judgement.
Obtained from: OpenBSD