Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
phk
c6bdff3132 Make the diagnostics a little more useful.
A word of wisdom, don't do this:

|	cd /usr/bin
|	for i in *
|	do
|		cp $i /tmp/a
|		gzip -9 < /tmp/a > $i
|	done

It will compress files with multiple links several times.  do it this way:

|	cd /usr/bin
|	for i in *
|	do
|		gunzip -f < $i > /tmp/a
|		gzip -9 < /tmp/a > $i
|	done
1994-10-22 11:55:16 +00:00
phk
ab856e27b3 I belive imgact_gzip is finally reentrant. It is also a whole lot more
readable.

inflate is now much more general, and is there if anybody feels like making
a uncompressing filesystem or something like that (hint hint !)
1994-10-22 11:40:38 +00:00
csgr
f418b6577e - remove unnecessary #includes (I think a couple of redundant ones remain)
- excise some unused code (#if 0'd out - don't want to nuke it yet)
- fix problems with "make depend" - some macros were screwing it up
- get rid of some static local variables

There still seems to be a small reentrancy problem somewhere.
1994-10-11 11:29:17 +00:00
csgr
20af18de70 First stage of getting imgact_gzip reentrant:
1) cut this up into /sys/sys/inflate.h, sys/kern/inflate.c
sys/kern/ingact_gzip.c
2) make a lot more things static
3) make a lot of globals const
4) make some args const
5) first stage of making globals into a struct (not used yet)

The vm_allocate() call which was introduced between revisions 1.4 and
1.5 of imagact_gzip.c broke things.  I have backed that out for the time
being.  (Davidg: help please)

WARNING: if you have gzip enabled in your kernel, you must now run
config again, as another source file has been added.  Otherwise your
kernel compile will fall over.

This is all still WIP.  More commits to come.

Suggestions from: phk.
1994-10-07 22:27:00 +00:00
phk
52abae4377 Steven Wallace provided a program which broke this stuff. I guess there are
more weird kinds of a.out than anyone can argue for.  This code failed to
load the first 28K of the text-segment, in the case where the first page
of the a.out contains only the a.out-header, and the text is still at 0x0.
Thanks Steven !
1994-10-06 18:22:24 +00:00
phk
533de3420b David Greenman told me to do this: (Thanks!) use vm_allocate to allocate
the uncompression buffer.  Now malloc(M_GZIP) is used for all the Huffman-
tree stuff only.  Numbers so far indicate < 15Kb Malloc use + 32 Kb for
the abovementioned buffer while uncompressing.
1994-10-05 00:58:33 +00:00
phk
ddf9ae4419 Added M_GZIP for the imgact_gzip code. The gzip-code is likely to be used
for other weird things in the future (hint, hint!)
1994-10-04 06:51:42 +00:00
phk
edef5d36b8 Based on the applause (in this case: not downright rejection :-) I have
cleaned up much of the cruft in this thing.

No printf's in the case where things go well.

Gzip-headers can contain filenames and comments (as long as they're
shorter than the page-size.)

I don't think we leak memory, in the "exec/aout" code.  I'm not quite sure
about the inflate code yet, but I don't think memory is lost.

Q:  Can I add a class M_GZIP to <sys/malloc.h> and bump M_LAST one up
without any thing else needing tweaking ?

Poul-Henning
1994-10-04 03:09:13 +00:00
phk
d92766a8ef First bug-fix. This this depends on something odd. I am looking at it,
but every now and then it will fail without an explanation :-(
1994-10-03 23:14:48 +00:00
phk
6e8d358dec ***
WARNING:  THIS MATERIAL MIGHT GO AWAY!
This material needs the core-groups approval to stay here for the 2.0 release.
If the core-group does not concent to this commit, it will be backed out.
***

It is a non-gpl'ed "unzip" which will allow execution of a.out files which
have been sent through "gzip -9".  The idea being saved disk-space.

Just now this code has quality rating:  "working prototype".

To compress a file to be used with this, do it exactly this way:

gzip -9 -v < /bin/FOO > /tmp/FOO
remember to chmod /tmp/FOO as needed.

DON'T compress all of you binaries right away !  There are several things
which you should consider first:

1. Using compressed binaries, you use >MUCH< more VM, and thus swap-space.

2. It is slow.

3. It might crash your machine.

Apart from that, I welcome comments...

NB:  There is also a change to sys/conf/files, but cvs core-dumped on me,
so it didn't get into the logs or emailed, but the commit seems to have
happended OK.
1994-10-03 05:23:01 +00:00