after similar calls related to struct pwd in libutil/pw_util.c:
- gr_equal()
Perform a deep comparison of two struct grp's. It does a thorough, yet
unoptimized comparison of all the members regardless of order.
- gr_make()
Create a string (see group(5)) from a struct grp.
- gr_dup()
Duplicate a struct grp. Returns a value that is a single contiguous
block of memory.
- gr_scan()
Create a struct grp from a string (as produced by gr_make()).
MFC after: 3 weeks
a number in human-readable form is converted to int64_t, for example:
123b -> 123
10k -> 10240
16G -> 17179869184
First version submitted by: Eric Anderson <anderson@freebsd.org>
Approved by: re (bmah)
Further contemplation has convinced me that this was
not going to really solve the problem of environment-poisoning
without raising serious administrative headaches. There
must be a better way...
This function removes all environment variables except
the ones listed on a "whitelist."
The function accepts two whitelist arguments.
If the first is NULL, a built-in default list will be
used. This allows callers to get a variety of behaviors:
* Default screening: provide NULL for both lists
* Custom screening: provide a custom list for the first argument
* Modified default screening: provide NULL for first arg,
list of additional variables to preserve in the second arg
Idea from: Jacques Vidrine
MFC after: 2 weeks
symbols exported by newer versions of libc, and so we want applications
depending on the newer library code to be required to link against the
newer libc.
Discussed with: scottl, kris, imp
binaries in /bin and /sbin installed in /lib. Only the versioned files
reside in /lib, the .so symlink continues to live /usr/lib so the
toolchain doesn't need to be modified.
extattr namespace routines to the libc/posix1e directory. While
the extattr calls are not strictly POSIX.1e, POSIX.1e wasn't
strictly ever approved, so I think that's OK.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
utility functions which convert between string namespace names and
numeric constants used by the interface. Right now, two namespaces
are supported, EXTATTR_NAMESPACE_SYSTEM ("system") and
EXTATTR_NAMESPACE_USER ("user"). These functions are used by
various userland EA utilities, rather than hard coding the routines
all over the place.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
getting libutil/libcrypt to work properly. I've determined that GCC
thinks it can inline all functions, including weak-symboled ones, if
it feels like it.
Create a new stub.c and move any stubs there to prevent inlining.
Thanks to jdp and William S. Duncanson for helping me finally find the
problem.
and bump __FreeBSD_version to 500012 to mark the occasion.
setproctitle() is prototyped in unistd.h as opposed to stdlib.h
where OpenBSD and NetBSD have it.
Reviewed by: peter
for crypt(3) by now. In any case:
Add crypt_set_format(3) + documentation to -lcrypt.
Add login_setcryptfmt(3) + documentation to -lutil.
Support for switching crypt formats in passwd(8).
Support for switching crypt formats in pw(8).
The simple synopsis is:
edit login.conf; add a passwd_format field set to "des" or "md5"; go nuts :)
Reviewed by: peter
Now libutil depends on libc.so.4, so needs to update the major version.
Without this, old binaries which use libutil and build with libc.so.3
will coredump on recent 4.0.
Solicited comment for cvs-committers and there seems to be no objection.
Approved by: jkh
string to u_long and back using two functions, flags_to_string and
string_to_flags, which co-existed with 'ls'. As time has progressed
more and more other tools have used these private functions to
manipulate the file flags.
Recently I moved these functions from /usr/src/bin/ls to libutil,
but after some discussion with bde it's been decided that they
really ought to go in libc.
There are two already existing libc functions for manipulating file
modes: setmode and getmode. In keeping with these flags_to_string
has been renamed getflags and string_to_flags to setflags.
The manual page could probably be improved upon ;)
I'll convert sysinstall to use shortly) and a simple call which uses
this mechanism to implement an /etc/auth.conf file. I'll let Mark Murray
handle the format and checkin of the sample auth.conf file.
Reviewed by: markm