localtime(3) returns NULL when passed an invalid time_t but date(1)
previously did not handle it. Exit with an error in that case.
PR: 220828
Reported by: Vinícius Zavam
Reviewed by: cem, kevans
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11660
Apart from the fact that subtle syntactic changes make a poor compile-time
option, the NOHACK case has been obviously broken since it was added,
because it uses q uninitialized if (*p != '\0').
No functional change is intended.
After the addition of SUBDIR.yes, uniquifying/ordering the SUBDIRs doesn't
make a whole lot of sense, and it's in effect a half measure.
Ordering SUBDIR (after adding SUBDIR.yes to it) in bsd.subdir.mk is a
separate change that warrants more discussion/testing, because while
the SUBDIR_PARALLEL work largely fixed dependency ordering for SUBDIRs,
there might be downstream FreeBSD consumers that rely on the SUBDIR
ordering.
MFC after: 2 months
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Differential Revision: D11398
With this patch, ",n" is an abbreviation for "1,n", ";n" abbreviates
".;n". The "n," and "n;" variants mean "n,n" and "n;n", respectively.
Also, piping to a shell command does not count as a save, so don't reset
the modified flag.
Obtained from: OpenBSD (CVS Rev. 1.58, 1.59)
If CDPATH is used non-trivially or the operand is "-", cd writes the
directory actually switched to. (We currently do this only in interactive
shells, but POSIX requires this in non-interactive shells as well.)
As mentioned in Austin group bug #1045, cd shall not return an error while
leaving the current directory changed. Therefore, ignore any write error.
While here, also add a check to verify that the link target
is updated in the testcase
MFC after: 1 month
MFC with: r320172
PR: 219943
Differential Revision: D11167
Submitted by: shivansh
Sponsored by: Google (GSoC 2017)
When '-F' option is used, the target directory needs to be unlinked.
Currently, the modified target ("target/source") is being unlinked, and
since it doesn't yet exist, the original target isn't removed.
This is fixed by skipping the block where target is modified to
"target/source" when '-F' option is set.
Hence, a symbolic link (with the same name as of the original target) to
the source_file is produced.
Update the test for ln(1) to reflect fix for option '-F'
MFC after: 1 month
PR: 219943
Differential Revision: D11167
Submitted by: shivansh
Sponsored by: Google (GSoC 2017)
The testcase fails today, so mark it with atf_expect_fail: in
particular, the target (B) isn't being unlinked and the documentation
doesn't suggest special handling for directories. Thus, there's either
a doc or an implementation bug in ln(1) that needs to be resolved.
MFC after: 1 month
MFC with: r319714, r319854, r319855
PR: 219943
Reviewed by: ngie
Submitted by: shivansh
Differential Revision: D11159 (part of a larger diff)
Sponsored by: Google, Inc (GSoC 2017)
file(1) can be compiled out of the system via MK_FILE == no, and the
output isn't guaranteed to be stable. It's better to use stat(1)/readlink(1)
instead to query symlink/file paths.
MFC after: 1 month
MFC with: r319714, r319854
Reported by: ngie
Submitted by: shivansh
Differential Revision: D11159 (part of a larger diff)
Sponsored by: Google, Inc (GSoC 2017)
* Verify that when creating a hard link to a symbolic link, '-L' option
creates a hard link to the target of the symbolic link
* Verify that when creating a hard link to a symbolic link, '-P' option
creates a hard link to the symbolic link itself
* Verify that if the target file already exists, '-f' option unlinks it so
that link may occur
* Verify that if the target file or directory is a symbolic link, '-shf'
option prevents following the link
* Verify that if the target file or directory is a symbolic link, '-snf'
option prevents following the link
* Verify that '-s' option creates a symbolic link
* Verify that '-w' option produces a warning if the source of a symbolic
link does not currently exist
Submitted by: shivansh
Reviewed by: asomers, ngie
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Google, Inc (GSoC 2017)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11084
Starting the fc -e editor can execute arbitrary script, and executing
arbitrary script with INTOFF in effect may cause unexpected results.
This change (together with other changes) serves mainly to allow asserting
that INTOFF is not in effect when starting the evaluation of a node.
Verify that echo(1) does not...
- ... print the trailing newline character with option '-n'.
- ... print the trailing newline character when '\c' is appended to
the end of the string.
Submitted by: shivansh
Reviewed by: asomers, ngie
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Google, Inc (GSoC 2017)
Differential Revision: D11036
Split the postive and negative parts into separate test cases. The positive
test case can only run on ZFS, because only ZFS supports files that large.
PR: 219757
Reported by: ngie
MFC after: 18 days
X-MFC-with: 319339
dd(1) tried to detect whether the seek offset would overflow, but it failed
to account for the case where the provided argument was negative and the
file was a regular file (negative seeks are allowed for character devices).
I fixed it, and added a regression test.
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1368659
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Allocating and deallocating repeatedly the 1024-byte buffer for stdout from
builtins costs CPU time for little or no benefit.
A simple loop containing builtins that write to a file descriptor, such as
i=0; while [ "$i" -lt 1000000 ]; do printf .; i=$((i+1)); done >/dev/null
is over 10% faster in a simple benchmark on an amd64 virtual machine.
Similarly to how STPUTC was changed, change struct output to store the
pointer just past the end of the available space instead of the size of the
available space, so after writing a character it is only necessary to
increment a pointer and not to decrement a counter.
It does not make much sense to generate the '-' in a pattern bracket
expression using arithmetic expansion, but it does not make sense to forbid
it either.
Try to avoid reprocessing the string if it is unnecessary.
It does not make much sense to generate the '-' in a pattern bracket
expression using arithmetic expansion, but it does not make sense to forbid
it either.
This test already passes.
The special case of modifying an existing alias does not work correctly if
the alias is currently in use. Instead, handle this case by unaliasing the
old alias (if any) and then creating a new alias.
Quoting http://mdocml.bsd.lv/mdoc/details/width.html
Do not use macros in the argument specifying the width,
since that's not portable. While GNU troff can handle it,
mandoc cannot.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
With the new expansion code (word splitting during instead of after other
expansion processing), tracing the result of command substitution is no
longer possible, so stop trying.
The parsed internal representation of words consists of a byte string with a
list of nodes (commands in command substitution). Each unescaped CTLBACKQ or
CTLBACKQ | CTLQUOTE byte corresponds to an entry in the list.
If param in ${param#%##%%word} is not set, the word is not expanded (in a
deviation of POSIX shared with other ash variants and ksh93). Erroneously,
the pointer in the list of commands (argbackq) was not advanced. This caused
the wrong command to be executed later if the outer word contained another
command substitution.
Example:
echo "${unsetvar#$(echo a)}$(echo b)"
wrote "a" but should write "b".
MFC after: 1 week
The exit status will be 124, as the timeout(1) utility uses.
Reviewed by: jilles
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9697
A follow-up fix for r314685.
Because the -w flag is parsed after ps(1) infers termwidth from COLUMNS and
stdout, and UNLIMITED happens to be the zero value, the single -w flag in
combination with a non-terminal stdout or COLUMNS=0 could result in output
truncated at 131 characters. (Despite the output being unlimited without
-w.)
Obviously, adding more -w shouldn't truncate output lines.
The committed patch is from bdrewery@, and I've reviewed and tested it.
Submitted by: bdrewery@
Reported by: bdrewery@
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Store the result in a proper long and then compare to the proper pid_t
for overflow, so that no MD assumptions are made.
Reviewed by: jilles
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9887
Code like t=$(stat -f %m "$file") segfaulted if -T was active and a trap
was taken while the shell was waiting for the child process to finish.
What happened was that the dotrap() call in waitforjob() was hit. This
re-entered command execution (including expand.c) at a point not expected by
expbackq(), and global state (unallocated stack string and argbackq) was
corrupted.
To fix this, change expbackq() to prepare for command execution to be
re-entered.
Reported by: bdrewery
MFC after: 1 week
If stdout isn't a tty, use unlimited width output rather than truncating to
79 characters. This is helpful for shell scripts or e.g., 'ps | grep foo'.
This hardcoded width has some history: In The Beginning of History[0], the
width of ps was hardcoded as 80 bytes. In 1985, Bloom@ added detection
using TIOCGWINSZ on stdin.[1] In 1986, Kirk merged a change to check
stdout's window size instead. In 1990, the fallback checks to stderr and
stdin's TIOCGWINSZ were added by Marc@, with the commit message "new
version."[2]
OS X Darwin has a very similar modification to ps(1), which simply sets
UNLIMITED for all non-tty outputs.[3] I've chosen to respect COLUMNS
instead of behaving identically to Darwin here, but I don't feel strongly
about that. We could match OS X for parity if that is desired.
[0]: https://svnweb.freebsd.org/csrg/bin/ps/ps.c?annotate=1065
[1]: https://svnweb.freebsd.org/csrg/bin/ps/ps.c?r1=18105&r2=18106
[2]:
https://svnweb.freebsd.org/csrg/bin/ps/ps.c?r1=40675&r2=40674&pathrev=40675
[3]:
https://opensource.apple.com/source/adv_cmds/adv_cmds-168/ps/ps.c.auto.html
PR: 217159
Reported by: Deepak Nagaraj <n.deepak at gmail.com>
Renumber cluase 4 to 3, per what everybody else did when BSD granted
them permission to remove clause 3. My insistance on keeping the same
numbering for legal reasons is too pedantic, so give up on that point.
Submitted by: Jan Schaumann <jschauma@stevens.edu>
Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/96
The use of DES for anything is discouraged, especially with a static IV of 0
If you still need bdes(1) to decrypt Kirk's video lectures, see
security/bdes in ports.
This commit brought to you by the FOSDEM DevSummit and the
"remove unneeded dependancies on openssl in base" working group
Reviewed by: bapt, brnrd
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: FOSDEM DevSummit
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9424
The problem here is that the archive is too short (< 512 bytes). The
buffer routines, try to read at least 512 bytes, even when we try to
determine what format file we have, which is wrong.
Obtained from: NetBSD (CVS rev 1.26)
MFC after: 5 days
Unlike UFS or TMPFS, ZFS sets uarch automatically whenever a file is
updated. The test must explicitly clear uarch to be portable across
filesystems. Also, it doesn't need to run as root.
PR: 215179
MFC after: 4 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8741
The return type for both fread(3) and fwrite(3) cannot be negative, this
renders some checks invalid and variable 'ct' unnecessary.
Also bump 'len' to size_t to avoid signed/unsigned comparison warnings.
kinfo_proc::ki_tdname is three characters shorter than
thread::td_name. Add a ki_moretdname field for these three
extra characters. Add the new field to kinfo_proc32, as well.
Update all in-tree consumers to read the new field and assemble
the full name, except for lldb's HostThreadFreeBSD.cpp, which
I will handle separately. Bump __FreeBSD_version.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8722
dd is a bootstrap tool and that header isn't installed as part of the
bootstrap environment for previous releases (eg freebsd-10.)
We'll figure it out in post and then re-commit it.
X1000 systems on chips.
Imgtec CI20 and Ingenic CANNA boards supported.
Submitted by: Alexander Kabaev <kan@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed by: Ruslan Bukin <br@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL