13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
uqs
1ab3783e1a mdoc: move CAVEATS, BUGS and SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS sections to the
bottom of the manpages and order them consistently.

GNU groff doesn't care about the ordering, and doesn't even mention
CAVEATS and SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS as common sections and where to put
them.

Found by:	mdocml lint run
Reviewed by:	ru
2010-05-13 12:07:55 +00:00
uqs
3960614646 mdoc: order prologue macros consistently by Dd/Dt/Os
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)
2010-04-14 19:08:06 +00:00
joel
82b1c5f931 The NetBSD Foundation has granted permission to remove clause 3 and 4 from
their software.

Obtained from:	NetBSD
2010-03-02 17:20:04 +00:00
das
70fb465112 Teach fmtcheck() about wint_t, intmax_t, char *, intmax_t *, and
wide string arguments.

Also simplify the code that handles length modifiers and make it
more conservative. For instance, be explicit about the modifiers
allowed for %d, rather than assuming that anything other than L,
q, t, or z implies an int argument.
2008-08-02 06:02:42 +00:00
ru
01548ace15 Mechanically kill hard sentence breaks. 2004-07-02 23:52:20 +00:00
ru
51fe7c1a88 mdoc(7) police: "The .Fa argument.". 2002-12-19 09:40:28 +00:00
tjr
1d227bb4c8 Add a Bugs section and note that fmtcheck() is out of sync with printf();
it does not recognise any of the conversions or modifiers added in C99.
2002-10-16 04:03:02 +00:00
ru
dfc3706596 can not -> cannot. 2002-08-13 14:10:36 +00:00
chris
c54abf6b04 Move appropriate information out of DESCRIPTION' and into SECURITY
CONSIDERATIONS'.

Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-07-03 15:31:47 +00:00
ru
623da62a5a mdoc(7) police: Use the new .In macro for #include statements. 2001-10-01 16:09:29 +00:00
ru
6787c701a8 mdoc(7) police: expand plain text xrefs. 2001-08-08 11:48:28 +00:00
ru
16a48734c9 mdoc(7) police: fix markup. 2001-04-18 15:43:06 +00:00
kris
0f958ee746 Add fmtcheck(), a function for checking consistency of format string
arguments where the format string is obtained from user data, or
otherwise difficult to verify statically.

Example usage:

printf(fmtcheck(user_format, standard_format), arg1, arg2);

checks the format string user_format for consistency (same number/order/
type of format operators) with standard_format.  If they differ,
standard_format is used instead to avoid potential crashes or security
violations.

Obtained from:  NetBSD
Reviewed by:    -arch
2001-04-17 07:59:52 +00:00