size_t and size_t *, respectively. Update callers for the new interface.
This is a better fix for overflows that occurred when dumping segments
larger than 2GB to core files.
version called the higher-level archive_read_data and
archive_read_data_skip functions, which screwed up state management of
those functions. This bit of mis-design has existed for a long time,
but became a serious issue with the recent changes to the
archive_read_data APIs, which added more internal state to the
high-level archive_read_data function. Most common symptom was a
failure to correctly read 'L' entries (long filename) from GNU-style
archives, causing the message ": Can't open: No such file or
directory" with an empty filename.
Pointed out by: Numerous port build failures
Thanks to: Kris Kennaway
called ttyldoptim().
Use this function from all the relevant drivers.
I belive no drivers finger linesw[] directly anymore, paving the way for
locking and refcounting.
exactly as done in the cmi driver. I am quite confident this is
safe since I'm runing this for more than two weeks now, on an SMP
box. A few people tested this patch for me successfully as well.
<sys/linedisc.h> (repocopied).
Temporarily use a nested include from <sys/tty.h> to get <sys/linedisc.h>
into relevant source files.
Introduce a set of inline functions named ttyld_...() to invoke
linedisc methods instead of groping around in the linesw array.
that as end-of-archive. Otherwise, a short read at this point
generates an error. This accomodates broken tar writers (such as the
one apparently in use at AT&T Labs) that don't even write a single
end-of-archive block.
Note that both star and pdtar behave this way as well.
In contrast, gtar doesn't complain in either case, and as a
result, will generate no warning for a lot of trashed archives.
Pointed out by: shells/ksh93 port (Thanks to Kris Kennaway)
class variables in addition to per-device variables. In plain English,
this means that dev.foo0.bar is now called dev.foo.0.bar, and it is
possible to to have dev.foo.bar as well.
instances of 64-bit arithmetic were costing 775 bytes, and the
inlining offered no benefit. Moreover, ambiguity as to the argument
types led to the introduction of a bug (see rev 1.56).
Also, remove some casts that are now clearly redundant.
Inspired by: 67467