Commit Graph

8695 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
stefanf
3a40eb39cf Signal handlers are supposed to take an int parameter.
Approved by:	das (mentor)
2004-06-08 12:24:47 +00:00
stefanf
80a3e78252 Remove a couple of casts added for an ancient Sun compiler.
Approved by:	das (mentor)
2004-06-08 12:20:40 +00:00
stefanf
76718df136 The third operand of the conditional operator should have type void too.
Approved by:	das (mentor)
2004-06-08 12:03:48 +00:00
das
86ee9527d4 In fts_build(), if we try to chdir and fail (e.g. due to lack of search
permission), try to continue in FTS_DONTCHDIR mode.  Of course this
won't work for long paths, but we can't descend more than one pathname
component beyond the directory anyway if we lack search permission.

Here is a transcript demonstrating the change, where oldls is ls(1)
linked with the old fts(3):

	das@VARK:~> mkdir t && touch t/{a,b,c} && chmod u-x t
	das@VARK:~> oldls t
	a       b       c
	das@VARK:~> oldls -l t
	das@VARK:~> \ls t
	a       b       c
	das@VARK:~> \ls -l t
	ls: a: Permission denied
	ls: b: Permission denied
	ls: c: Permission denied

I had forgotten about this patch until bde reminded me.  He reports
using it without problems for over a year.

PR:	45723
2004-06-08 06:23:23 +00:00
das
9372d79f04 Rename cantwrite() to prepwrite(). The latter is less confusing,
since the macro isn't really a predicate, and it has side-effects.
Also, don't set errno if prepwrite() fails, since this is done in
prepwrite() now.
2004-06-08 05:45:48 +00:00
das
a1e60d89fb Rename cantwrite() to prepwrite(). The latter is less confusing,
since the macro isn't really a predicate, and it has side-effects.
2004-06-08 05:45:32 +00:00
das
55edbf12e7 Set errno to EBADF on attempts to write to a stream that is not
writable.  Affected callers include fwrite(), put?(), and *printf().
The issue of whether this is the right errno for funopened streams is
unresolved, but that's an obscure case, and some errno is better than
no errno.

Discussed with:	bde, jkh
2004-06-08 05:44:52 +00:00
kientzle
71abd863dc Correct some spelling errors. 2004-06-08 00:23:27 +00:00
yar
913f695456 Use ".In" to mark up C include file names. 2004-06-07 21:52:20 +00:00
yar
7c97f69840 Each sentence should begin on a new line. 2004-06-07 21:48:02 +00:00
yar
62c876af4f Extend and improve the mdoc(7) markup of this page.
Reviewed by:	ru
2004-06-07 21:43:14 +00:00
tjr
bdd43780eb Avoid clobbering the red zone when running on the new context's stack in
_amd64_restore_context().
2004-06-07 21:25:16 +00:00
kientzle
7312caabc5 Linux (at least Debian) requires sys/types.h to get off_t. 2004-06-07 18:42:50 +00:00
yar
68060b2236 Finally document the option to avoid zombie creation
through ignoring SIGCHLD.
2004-06-07 11:01:39 +00:00
das
e2928bd733 Add round(3) and roundf(3) and the associated documentation.
PR:		59797
Submitted by:	"Steven G. Kargl" <kargl@troutmask.apl.washington.edu>
Reviewed by:	bde (earlier version, last year)
2004-06-07 08:05:36 +00:00
kientzle
5707dd1fa5 History: A few very, very old tar programs used the filename to
distinguish files from dirs (trailing '/' indicated a dir).  Since
POSIX.1-1987, this convention is no longer necessary.  However, there
are current tar programs that pretend to write POSIX-compliant
archives, yet store directories as "regular files", relying on this
old filename convention to save them.  <sigh> So, move the check for
this old convention so it applies to all tar archives, not just those
identified as "old."

Pointed out by: Broken distfile for audio/faad port
2004-06-07 06:34:51 +00:00
kientzle
a340d81a04 Tar bidder should just return a zero bid ("not me!") if
it sees a truncated input the first time it gets called.
(In particular, files shorter than 512 bytes cannot be tar archives.)
This allows the top-level archive_read_next_header code to
generate a proper error message for unrecognized file types.

Pointed out by: numerous ports that expect tar to extract non-tar files ;-(
Thanks to: Kris Kennaway
2004-06-07 04:32:10 +00:00
das
04b52e2cd3 Add fenv.h, fenv.c, and the associated documentation to the libm
build.  To facilitate this, add ${.CURDIR}/${ARCH} to make's search
path unconditionally.

Reviewed by:	standards@
2004-06-06 10:06:57 +00:00
das
535ca6faf5 Add documentation for:
- fenv(3)
- feclearexcept(3), fegetexceptflag(3), feraiseexcept(3),
  fesetexceptflag(3), fetestexcept(3)
- fegetround(3), fesetround(3)
- fegetenv(3), feholdexcept(3), fesetenv(3), feupdateenv(3)

Reviewed by:	standards@
2004-06-06 10:06:26 +00:00
das
53f61273e3 Add an fenv.h implementation for the sparc64 port.
Reviewed by:	standards@
2004-06-06 10:05:57 +00:00
das
31eea9495c Add an fenv.h implementation for the powerpc port.
Reviewed by:	standards@
2004-06-06 10:05:10 +00:00
das
3cbeb05df0 Add an fenv.h implementation for the ia64 port.
Reviewed by:	standards@
2004-06-06 10:04:43 +00:00
das
b1670fc3d8 Add an fenv.h implementation for the i386 port.
Reviewed by:	standards@
2004-06-06 10:04:17 +00:00
das
3994165f74 Add an fenv.h implementation for the arm port.
It does not appear to be possible to cross-build arm from i386 at the
moment, and I have no ARM hardware anyway.  Thus, I'm sure there are
bugs.  I will gladly fix these when the arm port is more mature.

Reviewed by:	standards@
2004-06-06 10:03:59 +00:00
das
0252cb85b9 Add an fenv.h implementation for the amd64 port.
Reviewed by:	standards@
2004-06-06 10:03:25 +00:00
das
0cf0cfc69d Add an fenv.h implementation for the alpha port. All of the standard
features appear to work, subject to the caveat that you tell gcc you
want standard rather than recklessly fast behavior
(-mieee-with-inexact -mfp-rounding-mode=d).

The non-standard feature of delivering a SIGFPE when an application
raises an unmasked exception does not work, presumably due to a kernel
bug.  This isn't so bad given that floating-point exceptions on the
Alpha architecture are not precise, so making them useful in userland
requires a significant amount of wizardry.

Reviewed by:	standards@
2004-06-06 09:58:55 +00:00
kientzle
d1cd1e13da Pointy hat: We can't avoid a chown() call without checking both UID
and GID.  Suppress a premature attempt at optimization.
2004-06-05 06:08:40 +00:00
kientzle
b74d5e60b1 YAPHtM: Yet Another Pointy Hat to Me.
After calculating new dir permissions that allow creating files,
don't be stupid and use the original permissions.  <sigh>
2004-06-05 05:34:45 +00:00
kientzle
5b8c67e0c6 Recognize when we've accidentally created "foo/."
and don't complain about it.
2004-06-05 05:30:41 +00:00
kientzle
3cf722bc81 Correctly reset archive_read_data state everytime a header is read. 2004-06-04 23:25:20 +00:00
kientzle
396de58967 Correct the layering violation in read_body_to_string. The previous
version called the higher-level archive_read_data and
archive_read_data_skip functions, which screwed up state management of
those functions.  This bit of mis-design has existed for a long time,
but became a serious issue with the recent changes to the
archive_read_data APIs, which added more internal state to the
high-level archive_read_data function.  Most common symptom was a
failure to correctly read 'L' entries (long filename) from GNU-style
archives, causing the message ": Can't open: No such file or
directory" with an empty filename.

Pointed out by:  Numerous port build failures
Thanks to: Kris Kennaway
2004-06-04 23:24:21 +00:00
brian
1a106ea8b6 Handle read_block() failures by ignoring the disk rather than
dumping core.
2004-06-04 11:49:11 +00:00
kientzle
f3849cee68 When we go to read the next tar header, if we get zero bytes, accept
that as end-of-archive.  Otherwise, a short read at this point
generates an error.  This accomodates broken tar writers (such as the
one apparently in use at AT&T Labs) that don't even write a single
end-of-archive block.

Note that both star and pdtar behave this way as well.
In contrast, gtar doesn't complain in either case, and as a
result, will generate no warning for a lot of trashed archives.

Pointed out by: shells/ksh93 port  (Thanks to Kris Kennaway)
2004-06-04 10:27:23 +00:00
kientzle
958eff641b Be more careful about the initial read (used for "tasting" the compression):
* Check for and return input errors
  * Treat empty file (zero-length read) as a fatal error
2004-06-04 01:36:10 +00:00
kientzle
7cabd201ce Refactor the extraction code somewhat. In particular,
push extract data down into archive_read_extract.c and out
of the library-global archive_private.h; push dir-specific
mode/time fixup down into dir restore function; now that the
fixup list is file-local, I can use somewhat more natural
naming.

Oh, yeah, update a bunch of comments to match current reality.
2004-06-03 23:29:47 +00:00
des
477bef801b Add __BEGIN_DECLS / __END_DECLS so this can be used in C++ code.
MFC after:	1 week
2004-06-03 15:04:24 +00:00
roam
9fb4190027 Fix the ordering in the description of the dlsym() lookup procedure to
reflect src/libexec/rtld-elf/rtld.c rev. 1.68 - the globally-loaded
objects (RTLD_GLOBAL) are searched before the local object's DAG's.

PR:		62770
Submitted by:	Kimura Fuyuki <fuyuki@nigredo.org>
2004-06-03 10:13:26 +00:00
bde
f744761f22 Fixed lots of 1 ULP errors caused by a broken approximation for pi/2.
We approximate pi with more than float precision using pi_hi+pi_lo in
the usual way (pi_hi is actually spelled pi in the source code), and
expect (float)0.5*pi_lo to give the low part of the corresponding
approximation for pi/2.  However, the high part for pi/2 (pi_o_2) is
rounded to nearest, which happens to round up, while the high part for
pi was rounded down.  Thus pi_o_2+(float)0.5*pi (in infinite precision)
was a very bad approximation for pi/2 -- the low term has the wrong
sign and increases the error drom less than half an ULP to a full ULP.

This fix rounds up instead of down for pi_hi.  Consistently rounding
down instead of up should work, and is the method used in e_acosf.c
and e_asinf.c.  The reason for the difference is that we sometimes
want to return precisely pi/2 in e_atan2f.c, so it is convenient to
have a correctly rounded (to nearest) value for pi/2 in a variable.
a_acosf.c and e_asinf.c also differ in directly approximating pi/2
instead pi; they multiply by 2.0 instead of dividing by 0.5 to convert
the approximation.

These complications are not directly visible in the double precision
versions because rounding to nearest happens to round down.
2004-06-02 17:09:05 +00:00
kientzle
b335f63ed5 Add MLINKS for new API functions. 2004-06-02 08:16:21 +00:00
kientzle
d5f7a83e1b Refactor read_data:
* New read_data_block is both sparse-file aware and uses zero-copy semantics
 * Push read_data_block down into specific formats (opens door to
   various encoded entry bodies, such as zip or gtar -S)
 * Reimplement read_data, read_data_skip, read_data_into_fd in terms
   of new read_data_block.
 * Update documentation
It's unfortunate that I couldn't just call the new interface
archive_read_data, but didn't want to upset the API that much.
2004-06-02 08:14:43 +00:00
ume
9fe08d77b1 use source address as a hint to determine destination address
by getipnodebyname().
2004-06-02 06:49:36 +00:00
das
152a4c4166 Port a bugfix from FDLIBM 5.3. The bug really only applies to tan()
and not tanf() because float type can't represent numbers large enough
to trigger the problem.  However, there seems to be a precedent that
the float versions of the fdlibm routines should mirror their double
counterparts.

Also update to the FDLIBM 5.3 license.

Obtained from:	FDLIBM
Reviewed by:	exhaustive comparison
2004-06-02 04:39:44 +00:00
das
75a66e7e89 Merge a bugfix from FDLIBM 5.3 to ensure that the error in tan()
is always less than 1 ulp.  Also update to the 5.3 license.

Obtained from:	FDLIBM
2004-06-02 04:39:29 +00:00
bp
a22e58fe44 Distinguish cases when ncp module not loaded and when module have old
interface.
2004-06-02 03:41:10 +00:00
bde
dbfd4ab6f2 Merged from double precision case (e_pow.c 1.10: sign fixes). 2004-06-01 19:33:30 +00:00
brooks
38ea4501c0 Add Aerospace Corporation copyrights to EUI64 support files.
Suggested by:	marcel, imp
2004-06-01 19:30:13 +00:00
bde
152787c7f1 Fixed the sign of the result in some overflow and underflow cases (ones
where the exponent is an odd integer and the base is negative).

Obtained from:	fdlibm-5.3

Sun finally released a new version of fdlibm just a coupe of weeks
ago.  It only fixes 3 bugs (this one, another one in pow() that we
already have (rev.1.9), and one in tan().  I've learned too much about
powf() lately, so this fix was easy to merge.  The patch is not verbatim,
because our base version has many differences for portability and I
didn't like global renaming of an unrelated variable to keep it separate
from the sign variable.  This patch uses a new variable named sn for
the sign.
2004-06-01 19:28:38 +00:00
bde
719aa077cb Fixed another precision bug in powf(). This one is in the computation
[t=p_l+p_h High].  We multiply t by lg2_h, and want the result to be
exact.  For the bogus float case of the high-low decomposition trick,
we normally discard the lowest 12 bits of the fraction for the high
part, keeping 12 bits of precision.  That was used for t here, but it
doesnt't work because for some reason we only discard the lowest 9
bits in the fraction for lg2_h.  Discard another 3 bits of the fraction
for t to compensate.

This bug gave wrong results like:

      powf(0.9999999, -2.9999995) = 1.0000002 (should be 1.0000001)
        hex values: 3F7FFFFF C03FFFFE 3F800002 3F800001

As explained in the log for the previous commit, the bug is normally
masked by doing float calculations in extra precision on i386's, but
is easily detected by ucbtest on systems that don't have accidental
extra precision.

This completes fixing all the bugs in powf() that were routinely found
by ucbtest.
2004-06-01 19:03:31 +00:00
bde
ad1b692494 Fixed 2 bugs in the computation /* t_h=ax+bp[k] High */.
(1) The bit for the 1.0 part of bp[k] was right shifted by 4.  This seems
    to have been caused by a typo in converting e_pow.c to e_powf.c.
(2) The lower 12 bits of ax+bp[k] were not discarded, so t_h was actually
    plain ax+bp[k].  This seems to have been caused by a logic error in
    the conversion.

These bugs gave wrong results like:

    powf(-1.1, 101.0) = -15158.703 (should be -15158.707)
      hex values: BF8CCCCD 42CA0000 C66CDAD0 C66CDAD4

Fixing (1) gives a result wrong in the opposite direction (hex C66CDAD8),
and fixing (2) gives the correct result.

ucbtest has been reporting this particular wrong result on i386 systems
with unpatched libraries for 9 years.  I finally figured out the extent
of the bugs.  On i386's they are normally hidden by extra precision.
We use the trick of representing floats as a sum of 2 floats (one much
smaller) to get extra precision in intermediate calculations without
explicitly using more than float precision.  This trick is just a
pessimization when extra precision is available naturally (as it always
is when dealing with IEEE single precision, so the float precision part
of the library is mostly misimplemented).  (1) and (2) break the trick
in different ways, except on i386's it turns out that the intermediate
calculations are done in enough precision to mask both the bugs and
the limited precision of the float variables (as far as ucbtest can
check).

ucbtest detects the bugs because it forces float precision, but this
is not a normal mode of operation so the bug normally has little effect
on i386's.

On systems that do float arithmetic in float precision, e.g., amd64's,
there is no accidental extra precision and the bugs just give wrong
results.
2004-06-01 18:08:39 +00:00
tjr
5dc6beb6a4 Change the signature of ftok from (const char *, char) to (const char *, int)
Obtained from:	NetBSD (christos)
2004-06-01 06:53:07 +00:00