MATH_ERREXCEPTION and math_errhandling, so that C99 applications at
least have the possibility of determining that errno is not set for
math functions. Set math_errhandling to the non-standard-conforming
value of 0 for now to indicate that we don't support either method
of reporting errors. We intentionally don't support MATH_ERRNO
because errno is a mistake, and we are missing support for
MATH_ERREXCEPTION (<fenv.h>, compiler support for <fenv.h>, and
actually setting the exception flags correctly).
- Add DECL wrappers to libgeom.h.
- Rename structure members in libgeom.h to use a lg_ prefix for member
names. This is required because a few structures had members named
'class' which made g++ very unhappy.
- Catch gstat(8) and gconcat(8) up to these API changes.
Reviewed by: phk
Portability: Thanks to Juergen Lock, libarchive now compiles cleanly
on Linux. Along the way, I cleaned up a lot of error return codes and
reorganized some code to simplify conditional compilation of certain
sections.
Bug fixes:
* pax format now actually stores filenames that are 101-154
characters long.
* pax format now allows newline characters in extended attributes
(this fixes a long-standing bug in ACL handling)
* mtime/atime are now restored for directories
* directory list is now sorted prior to fix-up to permit
correct restore of non-writable dir heirarchies
structure and call stdio functions. In 5.X this was broken when FILE
locking was introduced into libc.
This change makes most (relevant) stdio functions work again when the
_extra file in FILE isn't initialised (and can't be without a libc
function to do it since the __sFILEX structure is private to libc).
This doesn't yet address the issue of selective restore
of hardlinked files. With cpio format, it's possible to correctly
restore any linked file; the API doesn't yet fully support this.
(There's no way for the library to inform a client whether or not
there's a file body associated with this entry. The assumption
right now is that "hardlink" entries have no file body.)
cleanups, handling 'ls -l-', handling '--*'
Note this is in the same time back out of our v1.3
"Don't print an error message if the bad option is '?'"
because it directly violates POSIX.
the size in the archive_entry object to zero if that format doesn't
store a body for that file type. This allows the client to determine
whether or not it should feed the file body to the archive. In
particular, cpio stores the file body for hardlinks, tar and shar
don't. With this change, bsdtar now correctly archives hardlinks in all
supported formats.
While I'm here, make shar output be more aggressive about creating directories.
Before this, commands such as:
bsdtar -cv -F shar some/explicit/path/to/a/file
wouldn't create the directory. Some simple logic to remember the last
directory creation helps reduce unnecessary mkdirs here.
At this point, I think the only flaw in libarchive's cpio support is
the failure to recognize hardlinks when reading.
While I'm here, fix a bug in reading filenames from
cpio files. (Copy should count the length of the name,
not the number of bytes available for input.)
that this provokes. "Wherever possible" means "In the kernel OR NOT
C++" (implying C).
There are places where (void *) pointers are not valid, such as for
function pointers, but in the special case of (void *)0, agreement
settles on it being OK.
Most of the fixes were NULL where an integer zero was needed; many
of the fixes were NULL where ascii <nul> ('\0') was needed, and a
few were just "other".
Tested on: i386 sparc64
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...
- Fix syntax
- Remove the (slightly wrong) duplicate explanation of the error condition
- Change reference to invalid multibyte character into invalid wide character
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
-static to CFLAGS). It just turned rev.1.5 into an obfuscated no-op.
As explained in the log for rev.1.5, testing should be done in the
host environment but there is a problem in cross-compilation environments.
As not explained in the log for rev.1.6, there was apparently a practical
problem with cross-compiling (makeworld should have set -static in
LDFLAGS but apparently didn't). Cross-compilation was especially
complicated because the relevant programs are test programs that were
run at beforeinstall time -- dynamic libraries might or might not exist
depending on the build options. The complications became moot in
rev.1.8 when beforeinstall was renamed "test".
The getaddrinfo(3), getipnodebyname(3) and resolver(3) can coincide now
with what should be totally reentrant, and h_errno values will now
be preserved correctly, but this does not affect interfaces such as
gethostbyname(3) which are still mostly non-reentrant.
In all of these relevant functions, the thread-safety has been pushed
down as far as it seems possible right now. This means that operations
that are selected via nsdispatch(3) (i.e. files, yp, dns) are protected
still under global locks that getaddrinfo(3) defines, but where possible
the locking is greatly reduced. The most noticeable improvement is
that multiple DNS lookups can now be run at the same time, and this
shows major improvement in performance of DNS-lookup threaded programs,
and solves the "Mozilla tab serialization" problem.
No single-threaded applications need to be recompiled. Multi-threaded
applications that reference "_res" to change resolver(3) options will
need to be recompiled, and ones which reference "h_errno" will also
if they desire the correct h_errno values. If the applications already
understood that _res and h_errno were not thread-safe and had their own
locking, they will see no performance improvement but will not
actually break in any way.
Please note that when NSS modules are used, or when nsdispatch(3)
defaults to adding any lookups of its own to the individual libc
_nsdispatch() calls, those MUST be reentrant as well.
the caller does not specify the rule number -- instead, the kernel
module is probed for the next available rule, which is then used.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, McAfee Research
through a realloc like function.
Make the malloc_active variable a local static to this new function.
Don't warn about recursion more than once per base call.
constify malloc_func.
has been hit, this makes it cover more cases.
Call the message function directly rather than fiddle with flag-saving
when we find an unknown character in our options.
The 'A' flag should not trigger on legal out of memory conditions.
has been executed. On return from the signal handler
the call will either be restarted or EINTR will be returned,
but it will not go back to its previous state. So, it is
sufficient to simply change the state to 'running' without
actually trying to wake up the thread.
a PTHREAD_RWLOCK_INITIALIZER to do for rwlocks what
a similarly named symbol does for statically initialized mutexes.
This symbol was dropped in The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6
and does not exist in IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003, but it should still be
supported for backwards compatibility.
Pointy hat: mtm
o Instead of checking both the passed in pointer and its value
for NULL, only check the latter. Any caller that passes in
a NULL pointer is obviously wrong.
o Fix mutex priority protocols. Keep separate counts of priority
inheritance and protection mutexes to make things easier.
This will not have much affect since this is only the
userland side, and the rest involves kernel scheduling.
Unfortunately, the stock zlib.h is not:
line 885: 'err' parameter shadows global 'err' definition from <err.h>
Back the WARNS level down to 3 to accomodate borked zlib.h.
reply with a 416 error code (requested range not satisfiable) because
we ask it to start at the end of the file. Handle this gracefully by
considering a 416 reply a success if the requested offset exactly
matches the length of the file and the requested length is zero.
This is the second of two commits; bring in the userland support to finish.
Teach libipsec and setkey about the tcp-md5 class of security associations,
thus allowing administrators to add per-host keys to the SADB for use by
the tcpsignature_compute() function.
Document that a single SPI must be used until such time as the code which
adds support to the SPD to specify flows for tcp-md5 treatment is suitable
for production.
Sponsored by: sentex.net
These files had tags after teh copyright notice,
inside the comment block (incorrect, removed),
and outside the comment block (correct).
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
These files had tags after the copyright notice,
inside the comment block (incorrect, removed),
and outside the comment block (correct).
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
What it is:
A library for reading and writing various streaming archive
formats, especially tar and cpio. Being a library, it should
be easy to incorporate into pkg_* tools, sysinstall, and any
other place that needs to read or write such archives.
Features:
* Full automatic detection of both compression and archive format.
* Extensible internal architecture to make it easy to add new formats.
* Support for "pax interchange format," a new POSIX-standard tar format
that eliminates essentially all of the restrictions of historic formats.
* BSD license
Thanks to: jkh for pushing me to start this work, gordon for
encouraging me to commit it, bde for answering endless style
questions, and many others for feedback and encouragement.
Status: Pretty good overall, though there are still a few rough edges and
the library could always use more testing. Feedback eagerly solicited.
overridden by the threads library to provide a userland version
of non-pshared semaphores and cancellation points. Also add
a sem_timedwait().
The libc version of semaphores always uses kernel semaphores
regardless of whether pshared is set or not. When threads are
not present, it is difficult to get sem_wait() or sem_timedwait()
to do the right thing (since pthread_cond_timedwait() and
pthread_cond_wait() are stubs in libc and just return immediately).
caller without closing the disk device and freeing allocated
memory. Not closing the disk device prevents GEOM from retasting
after spoiling.
Pointy hat: marcel
thread library for i386, amd64, and ia64. For alpha
and sparc64 the library is not changed and remains libkse,
and links are installed so that libpthread -> libc_r.
The gcc -pthread option will be changed in a separate
commit so that it links to -lpthread instead of -lc_r.
Approved by: re@
what do I get for my troubles? libc breaks offcourse!
Reimplement a hack (in libthr) that allows libc to use
rwlocks without initializing them first. The hack was reimplemented
so that only a private libc version of the rwlock locking functions
initializes an uninitialized rwlock. The application version will
correctly fail.
the system call got interrupted and the absolute timeout is
converted to a relative timeout, it may happen that we get a
negative number. In such a case, simply set the timeout to
zero so that if the event that the thread wants to wait for has
happened it can still return successfully, but if it hasn't
happened then the thread doesn't suspend indefinitely. This should
fix certain applications (including mozilla) that seem to hang
indefinitely sometimes.
Noticed and debugged by: Morten Johansen <root@morten-johansen.net>
return an error value that made Write_Disk() abort. While on the
subject, improve the initialization of the error variable in read_gpt()
and update_gpt() even though nothing was broken there.
and NgAllocRecvData(), that dynamically allocate buffer for a binary
message, an ascii message, and a data packet, respectively. The size
of the allocated buffer is equal to the socket's receive buffer size
to guarantee that a message or a data packet is not truncated.
- Get rid of the static size buffer in NgSendAsciiMsg().
OK'ed by: archie, julian
instead of creating them by hand and storing them in the CVS tree. Add
gensnmptree to the bootstrap tools (it is used to generated these files).
This simplifies the update procedure.
Submitted by: ru
- bzipfs and gzipfs now properly return errno values directly from their
read routines rather than returning -1.
- missing errno values on error returns for the seek routines on almost
all filesystems were added.
- fstat() now returns -1 if an error occurs rather than ignoring it.
- nfs's readdir() routine now reports valid errno values if an error or
EOF occurs rather than EPERM (It was just returning 0 for success and
1 for failure).
- nullfs used the wrong semantics for every function besides close() and
seek(). Getting it right for close() appears to be an accident at that.
- read() for buffered files no longer returns 0 (EOF) if an error occurs,
but returns -1 instead.
Extend libsdp(3) API to allow service registration and removal.
Fix uninitialized variable bug in sdpcontrol(8).
Reviewed by: imp (mentor)
No objection: ru
This results in no functional change, aside from fixing a data
corruption bug on LP64 platforms. The code here could still use a
significant amount of cleanup.
PR: 56502
Submitted by: hrs (earlier version)
o Simplify the logic by removing a lot of unnecesary nesting
o Reduce the amount of local variables
o Zero-out the allocated structure and get rid of
all the unnecessary setting to 0 and NULL;
Refactor _pthread_mutex_destroy
o Simplify the logic by removing a lot of unnecesary nesting
o No need to check pointer that the mutex attributes points
to. Checking passed in pointer is enough.
a list in the thread structure to keep track of the locks and
how many times they have been locked. This list is checked
on every lock and unlock. The traversal through the list is
O(n). Most applications don't hold so many locks at once that
this will become a problem. However, if it does become a problem
it might be a good idea to review this once libthr is
off probation and in the optimization cycle.
This fixes:
o deadlock when a thread tries to recursively acquire a
read lock when a writer is waiting on the lock.
o a thread could previously successfully unlock a lock it did not own
o deadlock when a thread tries to acquire a write lock on
a lock it already owns for reading or writing [ this is admittedly
not required by POSIX, but is nice to have ]
- Update and improve the documentation for %[aA]
o Like %[eE], %[aA] may round the result if a precision is specified.
o Grammar police: Fix a split infinitive.
o The FreeBSD implementation does better than the minimum required
by C99 (literal translation of the mantissa). The digit before
the hexadecimal-point is never 0 unless the number itself is 0.
o Clarify that the exponent field represents a decimal exponent of 2.
o Discuss the fact that multiple valid representations are possible.
o Remove the entry in the BUGS section claiming that %[aA] is not
implemented.
- Remove the entry in the BUGS section claiming that the ' flag for
printing thousands separators is unimplemented for floating-point.
- Remove the entry in the BUGS section claiming that the L modifier
reduces the precision to "double" before conversion.
on the release media -- only put what is different in the crypto
version compared to the base version. This reduces PAM entries
in /usr/lib in the "crypto" distribution to:
libpam.a
libpam.so@
libpam.so.2
pam_krb5.so@
pam_krb5.so.2
pam_ksu.so@
pam_ksu.so.2
pam_ssh.so@
pam_ssh.so.2
The libpam.so* is still redundant (it is identical to the "base"
version), but we can't set DISTRIBUTION differently for libpam.a
and libpam.so.
(The removal of libpam.so* from the crypto distribution could be
addressed by the release/scripts/crypto-make.sh script, but then
we'd also need to remove redundant PAM headers, and I'm not sure
this is worth a hassle.)
these are not fully implemented and ifdef'd out, the bugs have
never manifested themselves. Specifically:
- Fix a memory leak in the case where %a follows another
floating-point format.
- Make the %a/%A code behave like %e/%E with respect to
precision.
- It is no longer valid to assume that '-' and '0x' are
mutually exclusive.
- Address other minor issues.
Makes it possible to have multiple packet aliasing instances in a
single process by moving all static and global variables into an
instance structure called "struct libalias".
Redefine a new API based on s/PacketAlias/LibAlias/g
Add new "instance" argument to all functions in the new API.
Implement old API in terms of the new API.
For pshared semaphore, this commit still does not enable cancellation
point, I think there should be a pthread_enter_cancellation_point_np
for libc to implement a safe cancellation point.
code and simply return EINVAL (which is allowed by the standard) in
all those pthread functions that previously initialized it.
o Refactor the pthread_rwlock_[try]rdlock() and pthread_rwlock_[try]wrlock()
functions. They are now completeley condensed into rwlock_rdlock_common()
and rwlock_wrlock_common(), respectively.
o If the application tries to destroy an rwlock that is currently
held by a thread return EBUSY where it previously went ahead and
freed all resources associated with the lock.
o Refactor _pthread_rwlock_init() to make it look (relatively) sane.
o When obtaining a read lock on an rwlock the check for whether it
would exceed the maximum allowed read locks should happen *before*
we obtain the lock.
o The pthread_rwlock_* functions shall *never* return EINTR, so make
sure to requeue/resuspend the thread if it encounters such an error.
o Make a note that pthread_rwlock_unlock() needs to ensure it holds a
lock on an rwlock it tries to unlock. It will be implemented in a
separate commit because it requires some additional rwlock infrastructure.
associated floppy if needed into a static split_openfile() function.
- Use this function in splitfs_open() to open the first chunk rather
than using open() directly. This allows the first chunk to be located
on a different disk than the actual foo.split file.
getpwent(3) or getpwuid(3) when using NIS adjunct maps. The bug was
present in the internal `nis_passwd' function. The lookup in the
adjunct map used the name passed into `nis_passwd', however no name
was of course supplied by getpwent or getpwuid. Correctly use the
name from the `struct pwd' that was found instead.
PR: bin/59962
Submitted by: Gabriel Gomez <ggomez@fing.edu.uy>
in contributed sources with just a hack made possible
by bsd.sys.mk,v 1.33. This is better because it just
nulls out the warning flags rather than adding gcc(1)
specific -w option to CFLAGS.
must first attach to the traced process. If the tracing process
exits without detaching, the traced process will be killed rather
than continued. For the duration of the tracing session, the traced
process is reparented to the tracing process (with resulting expected
behaviors). It is permissible to trace more than one other process
at a time. When using waitpid() to monitor the behavior of the traced
process, signals are intercepted: they may optionally then be
forwarded using ptrace(). Signals are generated normally by and for
the process, but also by the tracing facility (SIGTRAP).
Product of: Suffering
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
at it, use the ANSI C generic pointer type for the second argument,
thus matching the documentation.
Remove the now extraneous (and now conflicting) function declarations
in various libc sources. Remove now unnecessary casts.
Reviewed by: bde
incorrectly when encountering `large' groups (many members and/or many
long member names). The reporter tracked this down to the glibc NSS
module compatibility code (nss_compat.c): it would prematurely record
that a NSS module was finished iterating through its database in some
cases.
Two aspects are corrected:
1. nss_compat.c recorded that a NSS module was finished iterating
whenever the module reported something other than SUCCESS. The
correct logic is to continue iteration when the module reports
either SUCCESS or RETURN. The __nss_compat_getgrent_r and
__nss_compat_getpwent_r routines are updated to reflect this.
2. An internal helper macro __nss_compat_result is used to map glibc
NSS status codes to BSD NSS status codes (e.g. NSS_STATUS_SUCCESS ->
NS_SUCCESS). It provided the obvious mapping.
When a NSS routine is called with a too-small buffer, the
convention in the BSD NSS code is to report RETURN. (This is used
to implement reentrant APIs such as getpwnam_r(3).) However, the
convention in glibc for this case is to set errno = ERANGE and
overload TRYAGAIN. __nss_compat_result is updated to handle this
case.
PR: bin/60287
Reported by: Lachlan O'Dea <odela01@ca.com>
on a rwlock while there are writers waiting. We normally favor
writers but when a reader already has at least one other read lock,
we favor the reader. We don't track all the rwlocks owned by a
thread, nor all the threads that own a rwlock -- we just keep
a count of all the read locks owned by a thread.
PR: 24641
waiting on a locked mutex. This involves passing a struct timespec
from the pthread mutex locking interfaces all the way down to the
function that suspends the thread until the mutex is released.
The timeout is assumed to be an absolute time (i.e. not relative to
the current time).
Also, in _thread_suspend() make the passed in timespec const.
o Remove some code duplication between _thread_init(), which is run once
to initialize libthr and the intitial thread, and pthread_create(), which
initializes newly created threads, into a new function called from both
places: init_td_common()
o Move initialization of certain parts of libthr into a separate
function. These include:
- Active threads list and it's lock
- Dead threads list and it's lock & condition variable
- Naming and insertion of the initial thread into the
active threads list.
ó++ ABI document at http://www.codesourcery.com/cxx-abi/abi.html#dso-dtor
The ABI was initially defined for ia64, but GCC3 and Intel compilers
have adopted it on other platforms.
This is the patch from PR bin/59552 with a number of changes by
me.
PR: bin/59552
Submitted by: Bradley T Hughes (bhughes at trolltech dot com)
C++ ABI document at http://www.codesourcery.com/cxx-abi/abi.html#dso-dtor
The ABI was initially defined for ia64, but GCC3 and Intel compilers
have adopted it on other platforms.
This is the patch from PR bin/59552 with a number of changes by
me.
PR: bin/59552
Submitted by: Bradley T Hughes (bhughes at trolltech dot com)