$(.CURDIR}/obj search while retaining compatability of new
prefix with cwd for the current source tree builds.
.TARGETOBJDIR has been removed from make and CANONICALOBJDIR set in
bsd.obj.mk
The builtin object directory searching is defined specifically as:
If MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX is defined, the search order is
${MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX}${.CURDIR}
${.CURDIR}
Else if MAKEOBJDIR is defined, the search order is
${MAKEOBJDIR}
${.CURDIR}
Otherwise, default to the search order
${.CURDIR}/obj.`uname -m`
$(.CURDIR}/obj
/usr/obj${.CURDIR}
${.CURDIR}
Reviewed by: bde
/usr/bin/lock can be used to lock a terminal much like xlock does
for your X-windows session. Problem is, /usr/bin/lock cannot lock
your terminal indefinately. Rather you must specify a timeout
value, after which, your terminal is unlocked and become unsecured.
I have added a ``-n'' no timeout option to /usr/bin/lock
Currently the only way to get this functionality is to use a huge
timeout value and hope it is long enought (in time). This method
also requires you to know the maxium number of minutes you are
allowed to specify.
Submitted by: David E. O'Brien <obrien@Nuxi.cs.ucdavis.edu>
for gcc >= 2.5 and no-ops for gcc >= 2.6. Converted to use __dead2
or __pure2 where it wasn't already done, except in math.h where use
of __pure was mostly wrong.
ISO-8859-1, since the characters are simply being passed on to
groff
. introduce an option to override the silly default to `psroff' as
the post-processor
. document the new option
RPC calls to rpc.yppasswdd, but when using the special superuser-only
AF_UNIX socket access method, the server will properly handle all the
additional fields, including pw_change.)
I would also like to take this opportunity to say that Sprint sucks.
copy.
Dont leave stray INS@xxxx temp files around, especially when installing
something less than 8MB and the destination runs out of space, etc.
It still doesn't clean up the temp files on SEGV or other signals etc.
installing. mmap'ing stuff over a nfs mount took out my machine during
a 'make world' last night while I was asleep. I started out with a list
of fs's to avoid, when I realised that I really didn't know which ones
were safe with mmap, so I went for the ones I knew and implemented a
fallback compare.
"." means the object directory, so it is just confusing to use it
when nothing is included from the object directory unless the object
directory is also the source directory. It is confusing for "."
not to mean the source directory anyway, so used `-I.'s should be
replaced by `-I${.OBJDIR}'.
faster IO due mmap(2) [-m | -s]
better error check for damaged databases
support for databases in network byte order (SunOS/sparc)
optional case insensitve search [-i]
optional multiple databases
optional multiple pattern
new enviroment variable LOCATE_PATH for database(s)
[-S] print some statistic about the database
[-l number] limit output to number file names
[-c] suppress normal output; instead print a count of matching file names
Documented PWD. MACHINE and MAKEOBJDIR are are still undocumented
except in main.c. I will be changing MAKEOBJDIR back to its old
behaviour so that the comment in main.c actually applies.
Removed irrelevant misformatted text about make's name being argv[0].
- timeval in select loop was depending on not having the remaining time
returned from select(), causing a busy spin on an implementation that
does implement it.
- the err() usage was pretty bogus, some of the error messages had
strerror attached manually and then reattached by err().
2. Add a -l flag for symlinking to rather than copying file:/path style URLs.
3. Add a -T flag for setting the timeout interval (overrides FTP_TIMEOUT if set)
hline() to draw the window split rather than fudging it with dashes.
This causes the line to be drawn in line-draw characters if the terminal
description has them.
Suggested by: ache
- use termios, not sgtty
- dont use _putchar(), that was a BSD-curses specific feature not in
other curses packages (such as ncurses)
- use sigaction, not sigvec while I'm there
- box() does different things under sysv/ncurses on 1-line high windows,
and BSD-curses doesn't have hline(), so do it by adding characters
instead. That works on both styles of curses.
Bigram does not remove newline at end of filename. This
break particulary the bigram algorithm and /var/db/locate.database
grow up 15 %.
Bigram does not check for characters outside 32-127.
The bigram output is silly and need ~1/2 CPU time of
database rebuilding.
old:
locate.bigram < $filelist | sort | uniq -c | sort -nr
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
this can easy made bigram
new:
bigram < $filelist | sort -nr
code
Code does not check for char 31.
Use a lookup array instead a function. 3 x faster.
updatedb
rewritten
sync with bigram changes
read config file /etc/locate.rc if exists
submitted by: guido@gvr.win.tue.nl (Guido van Rooij)
concatdb - concatenate locate databases
mklocatedb - build locate database
installs something. This is not 100% right, since it has a false hit
when install -C snaps hard links.
Also, run strip(1) from the $PATH, otherwise you need a special version
of install to install (say) elf binaries which have a different strip.
With JDP's elfkit, the layout of the path determines which binary format
you are generating.
from a script as if it was done in the interactive editor.
When reassembling the gecos string, trim any excess trailing commas, they
look ugly in the passwd file. :-)
Have a simple Makefile tweak to prevent mortal users from changing their
fullname. As ISP's we have seem some real bizzare stuff here..
When decoding the change/expire string, allow the month number as a
synonym for the name of the month.. (ie: 1 as well as Jan or January)
Note that using numbers means there's a chance that you can get bitten
if you're not used to the American DD-MM-YY order.
possibility of a security hole. It now does what rdist-6 does, and calls
/usr/bin/rsh if not running as root. There are NO protocol changes, this
is 100% compatable with the old rdist, except that it does not need setuid
root privs.
However, there are some minor differences to the base rdist-6 code in that
if it is being run by root, it will call rcmd(3) directly rather than
piping everything through rsh(1). This is a little more efficient as it
doesn't involve context switching on pipe reads/writes.
Also, the -P option was added from rdist-6.1.2, which allows an alternative
rsh program to be specified, such as ssh. Note that it requires the fixes
to the ssh port to disable the unconditional USE_PIPES option that was
recently added. The rcmd(3) optimisation is disabled if a non-rsh program
is speficied.
for bootstrap" tweak to the lex Makefile to stop it building the library
too early.
This untangles things a bit more, it stops new bootstraps failing because
libl/libfl uses 'ld -O' before ld is updated.
shared memory size, average unshared data size, and average unshared
stack size were too high by a factor of 128/100, because the program
used a hard-coded hz value of 100. The correct value is the frequency
of the statistics clock, currently 128. The program now uses sysctl
to get the stathz value from the kernel.
Discussed with: bde@freebsd.org (Bruce Evans)
there is no target to make.
% make
make: make: no target to make.
%
Beause the function Punt() in main.c takes care of leading 'make:' and
trailing newline, so, there is no need to pass explicitly.
Submitted by: enami@ba2.so-net.or.jp
Obtained from: NetBSD GNATS
The fundamental problem with the original code is that it accesses
p[-2] which is one before the beginning of the input buffer for
empty lines. rev.1.6 just moved the problem from failures when
p[-2] happens to be '\\' to failures when it happens to be '\0'.
rev.1.5 was confused about the trailing newline and other things.
I went back to rev.1.5 and fixed it. The result is the same as
Keith Bostic's final version in PR 1356 except it loses more
gracefully for excessively long input lines.
Obtained from: Christos Zoulas <christos@deshaw.com> via NetBSD PR 2621,
[ slightly modified since we don't use libcompat anymore. ]
I'm not sure if this fixes the rdist security bug completely, but it
sure can't hurt!
This stuff should not be too destructive if the IPDIVERT is not compiled in..
be aware that this changes the size of the ip_fw struct
so ipfw needs to be recompiled to use it.. more changes coming to clean this up.
to 1K to avoid waiting too long between 2 progress reports in the case of a
slow transfer.
Move the signal()/setitimer() code just before the read loop because the
ftpio library set and reset the timer internally.
option to pwd_mkdb and adding this option to utilities invoking it.
Further, the filling of both the secure and insecure databases has been
merged into one loop giving also a performance improvemnet.
Note that I did *not* change the adduser command. I don't read perl
(it is a write only language anyway).
The change will drastically improve performance for passwd and
friends with large passwd files. Vipw's performance won't change.
In order to do that some kind of diff should be made between the
old and new master.passwd and depending the amount of changes, an
incremental or complete update of the databases should be agreed
upon.
has been broken at least since 4.4Lite moved most of the #defines out of
<sys/ioctl.h>. This should be done better. Only a few headers are
searched.
Added some #includes so that ioctl.c compiles. The networking headers
have a maze of undocumented interdependencies and ioctl.c now actually
supports networking ioctls.
1. Add a copyright at the top.
2. Make passive and binary modes work with new ftpio semantics.
3. Add a `mirror' (-m) flag which only copies the remote file if it's
not the same size or is newer.
1. Always use file modtime, and if that's not usable then default
to current time.
2. Allow HTTP_TIMEOUT to be set as an environment variable to override
default.
3. Handle SIGTERM.
Add a 'bootstrap' target which *must* be run before building the new
version, since the new scanner relies on the current version of flex to
build itself otherwise.
the 4.3BSD command. Rewritten from scratch after the old man page,
taking account for the different situation with man pages and source
tree hierarchy (re: /usr/src/gnu) of the FreeBSD project.
Reviewed by: wosch (actually loooong time ago)
resolution profiling on Pentiums. On a 100MHz Pentium, the resolution
is at best 10 ns and actually a few hundred ns, but units of 10's or
100's of ns would be inconvenient and the current units of 1 us are a
bit too coarse.
of mbufs in use. If the number reached, e.g., 4 digits, then later
decreased to 3 digits, the last digit of the 4-digit number was
not erased. This caused the display to show a wildly high number of
mbufs in use.
Submitted by: invalid opcode <coredump@nervosa.com>
makewhatis.local - start makewhatis(1) only for file systems
physically mounted on the system
Running makewhatis from /etc/weekly for rw nfs-mounted /usr may kill
your NFS server -- all clients start makewhatis at the same time!
So use this wrapper instead calling makewhatis directly.
Pointed out by: Bruce
is available before trying to go hunting for a domain name. This fixes
the following problem: you have +::::::::: in /etc/master.passwd but
NIS isn't running (no ypbind, no domain name set) -- passwd and chpass
will still try to change an NIS password instead of the local one.