"[EINVAL] ... The resulting file-position indicator would be set to a
negative value."
Moreover, in real life negative seek in stdio cause EOF indicator cleared
and not set again forever even if EOF returned.
2) Catch few possible off_t overflows.
Reviewed by: arch discussion
It was foiled because of dynamic copy relocations that caused compile-time
space to be reserved in .bss and at run time a blob of data was copied to
that space and everything used the .bss version.. The problem is that
the space is reserved at compile time, not runtime... So we *still* could
not change the size of FILE. Sigh. :-(
Replace it with something that does actually work and really does let us
make 'FILE' extendable. It also happens to be the same as Linux does in
glibc, but has the slight cost of a pointer. Note that this is the
same cost that 'fp = fopen(), fprintf(fp, ...); fclose(fp);' has.
Fortunately, actual references to stdin/out/err are not all that common
since we have implicit stdin/out/err-using versions of functions
(printf() vs. fprintf()).
is stored in _res_ext.sort_list, and sortlist for IPv4 is stored in
_res.sort_list for backward compatibility. However, both sort_list's
are maintaind by just one index _res.nsort. So, when IPv6 address is
specified to sortlist, empty entry was created in _res.sort_list. It
broke sortlist facility of gethostbyname().
Discussed on users@jp.ipv6.org.
/usr/src/lib/libpam/modules/pam_ssh/pam_ssh.c has couple of bugs which cause:
1) xdm dumps core
2) ssh1 private key is not passed to ssh-agent
3) ssh2 RSA key seems not handled properly (just a guess from source)
4) ssh_get_authentication_connectionen() fails to get connection because of
SSH_AUTH_SOCK not defined.
PR: 29609
Submitted by: Takanori Saneto <sanewo@ba2.so-net.ne.jp>
Backout previous revision. We should not expand plain text xrefs if
they appear in the literal text, e.g. in the error or warning message
of the library function. (Submitted by: bde)
Moved "out of memory" from warning to errors section.
o Replace strncpy examples with less confusing ones from
OpenBSD. These examples give more detail and also suggest
using strlcpy(3).
Reviewed by: des, ru, sheldonh
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 3 days