Adjust dependencies for programs using libarchive
Add xz and linkage against liblzma to rescue system
Approved by: kientzle, delphij (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
This joint work of Dag-Erling Smørgrav and myself updates the
FFS quota system to support both traditional 32-bit and new 64-bit
quotas (for those of you who want to put 2+Tb quotas on your users).
By default quotas are not compiled into the kernel. To include them
in your kernel configuration you need to specify:
options QUOTA # Enable FFS quotas
If you are already running with the current 32-bit quotas, they
should continue to work just as they have in the past. If you
wish to convert to using 64-bit quotas, use `quotacheck -c 64';
if you wish to revert from 64-bit quotas back to 32-bit quotas,
use `quotacheck -c 32'.
There is a new library of functions to simplify the use of the
quota system, do `man quotafile' for details. If your application
is currently using the quotactl(2), it is highly recommended that
you convert your application to use the quotafile interface.
Note that existing binaries will continue to work.
Special thanks to John Kozubik of rsync.net for getting me
interested in pursuing 64-bit quota support and for funding
part of my development time on this project.
sigvec(2) references have been updated to sigaction(2), sigsetmask(2) and
sigblock(2) to sigprocmask(2), sigpause(2) to sigsuspend(2).
Some legacy man pages still refer to them, that is OK.
lot better than what's in the tree now. Edwin tested it at a prior
employer, but can't test it today. I've found that it works a lot
better with the various uboot versions that I've used in my embedded
work. Here's the pkg-descr from the port that describes the changes:
It all started when we got some new routers, which told me the
following when trying to upload configuration or download images
from it: The TFTP server doesn't support the blocksize option.
My curiousity was triggered, it took me some reading of RFCs and
other documentation to find out what was possible and what could
be done. Was plain TFTP very simple in its handshake, TFTP with
options was kind of messy because of its backwards capability: The
first packet returned could either be an acknowledgement of options,
or the first data packet.
Going through the source code of src/libexec/tftpd and going through
the code of src/usr.bin/tftp showed that there was a lot of duplicate
code, and the addition of options would only increase the amount
of duplicate code. After all, both the client and the server can
act as a sender and receiver.
At the end, it ended up with a nearly complete rewrite of the tftp
client and server. It has been tested against the following TFTP
clients and servers:
- Itself (yay!)
- The standard FreeBSD tftp client and server
- The Fedora Core 6 tftp client and server
- Cisco router tftp client
- Extreme Networks tftp client
It supports the following RFCs:
RFC1350 - THE TFTP PROTOCOL (REVISION 2)
RFC2347 - TFTP Option Extension
RFC2348 - TFTP Blocksize Option
RFC2349 - TFTP Timeout Interval and Transfer Size Options
RFC3617 - Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) Scheme and Applicability
Statement for the Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP)
It supports the following unofficial TFTP Options as described at
http://www.compuphase.com/tftp.htm:
blksize2 - Block size restricted to powers of 2, excluding protocol headers
rollover - Block counter roll-over (roll back to zero or to one)
From the tftp program point of view the following things are changed:
- New commands: "blocksize", "blocksize2", "rollover" and "options"
- Development features: "debug" and "packetdrop"
If you try this tftp/tftpd implementation, please let me know if
it works (or doesn't work) and against which implementaion so I can
get a list of confirmed working systems.
Author: Edwin Groothuis <edwin@FreeBSD.org>
Spaces and various other characters in pathnames are not passed through
literally by xargs in its default mode. Instead, use find . -exec ... {} +
Although the -- argument is not strictly required here, add it anyway to
avoid surprises when modifying the code to find -f -somedir ...
MFC after: 1 week
This option checks for empty pathnames and components starting with '-'.
Our -p option also checks for the latter, which remains the case.
MFC after: 1 week
Because script(1) now reliably terminates when the TTY is closed, it may
be the case that the call to wait3() occurs just before the child
process exits. This causes error codes to be ignored.
Just change script(1) to use waitpid() instead of wait3(). This makes it
more portable and prevents the need for a loop, since waitpid() only
returns a specified process.
PR: bin/146189
Tested by: amdmi3@, older version
MFC after: 2 weeks
handler, as the latter is not guaranteed to be signal safe, and we
do not really care about flushing the stream during SIGINT.
Suggested by: Maxim Konovalov <maxim.konovalov gmail com>
MFC after: 13 days
These are specified by POSIX but are not special builtins, and therefore
need to be available via execve() and utilities like time, nohup, xargs.
(Note that hash was moved from the XSI option to the base in the 2008
standard.)
Like most of the POSIX "regular builtin commands", these need to be executed
in a shell environment for full functionality, although they may still be of
some use outside one.
Unlike the POSIX special and regular builtin commands, POSIX does not
require these to be found before a PATH search, although that could be an
oversight.
Like some of the utilities already provided by usr.bin/alias, these may lead
to confusing results when invoked from csh(1).
It seems that identifier "_t" is sometimes used as a variable name,
even in our tree. Not that I endorse that, but still it's better
to require at least one character before _t suffix to consider
an identifier to be a type name.
Reported by: Alex Vasylenko <lxv@omut.org>
MFC after: 1 week
Although groff_mdoc(7) gives another impression, this is the ordering
most widely used and also required by mdocml/mandoc.
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: philip, ed (mentors)
* It is not extracted (because it is excluded)
* If it's not present in the archive, then an error is
reported (because the file was requested and not found)
* If it is present in the archive, no error is reported.
Previously, this would always report an error because the
exclusion prevented the entry from matching the inclusion.
Also, tar is now more reluctant to report unmatched inclusions.
Previously, "tar x file1 'file*'" against an archive that contained a
single entry "file1" would match file1 and then report an error for
the second pattern because it wasn't matched. It now considers both
inclusions to be matched and reports no error.
Bump the alignment to 16bytes because lint1 memory allocator is used for
objects that require 16bytes alignment on amd64 (ie. val_t). This makes
lint1 work when compiled with compiler(s) that use SSE for memcpy on amd64.
(e.g. clang).
Approved by: ed (mentor)
addresses (most of them apart from ::1): put a whitespace
between local and remote address:port pairs.
PR: bin/145194
Submitted by: Fedor Dikarev
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Remove the 3rd clause of the UC Berkeley copyrighted files.
- For the files added copyrighted by me, move the "All rights
reserved" to the next line.
- Repeating events which span multiple years (because of -A, -B or
just the three days before the end of the year).
- Support for lunar events (full moon, new moon) and solar events
(equinox and solstice, chinese new year). Because of this, the
options -U (UTC offset) and -l (longitude) are available to
compensate if reality doesn't match the calculated values.
MFC after: 1 month
Note that this is actually a no-op for most users, as this GNU
cpio was broken on -HEAD and 8-STABLE since last March until
the recent fix.
FreeBSD 8.0+ uses BSD cpio by default and the code is being
actively maintained.
Blessed by: kientzle
With hat: secteam
MFC after: 3 days
Using 'sysctl vfs' is not only ugly, but is also not reliable - not all
file system types create entries in vfs sysctl tree.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 1 week
starting from netgraph import in 1999.
netstat(8) used pointer to node as node address, oops. That didn't
work, we need the node ID in brackets to successfully address a node.
We can't look into ng_node, due to inability to include netgraph/netgraph.h
in userland code. So let the node make a hint for a userland, storing
the node ID in its private data.
MFC after: 2 weeks
arguments makes sense anymore. For example, what would a combination
of -3 (show three months) and -y (show the whole year) do?
We will abort on these cases.
- Move the debug option -d to -H (from highlight), while -d is now
used for setting the day of "today" so that -y and friends can
be tested.
Close the file descriptor to the TTY. There is no reason why the parent
process should keep track of the descriptor. This ensures that the
application inside properly drains the TTY during exit(2).
Reported by: alfred
MFC after: 2 weeks
in the input data but fallback to "binary comparison" instead.
POSIX says: "The input files shall be text files", nothing more,
so the text file with illegal sequence is valid input.
BTW, GNU sort does not fails on EILSEQ too.
in the input data but fallback to "binary equal" check instead.
POSIX says: "The input file shall be a text file", nothing more,
so the text file with illegal sequence is valid input.
BTW, GNU sort does not fails on EILSEQ too.
2) Speedup input processing a bit in complex cases like skipping fields,
chars or ignore case.
3) Enforce the implied LINE_MAX limit (from POSIX definition of "text file"
and POSIX uniq(1) description).
snprintf(3) doesn't set errno in the tested cases.
- If the same argument reference (for example %1) was specified more than
once, the command didn't necessarily fit to the final command buffer. Fix
this using a dynamic sbuf buffer. Add a few regression tests for the case.
PR: bin/95079
No objections: freebsd-hackers
- Add -A option (months after this month).
- Add -B option (months before this month).
- Fix highlighting of today in year overview.
- Fix aligning of "foreign" characters.
MFC after: 2 weeks
query routines. This code is necessarily more fragile in the presence of
kernel changes than querying the kernel via sysctl (the default), but
useful when investigating crashes or live kernel state via firewire.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks