tr -[cC]s '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]'
case (or vice versa):
chars taken from s2 can be different this time
due to lack of complex upper/lower processing,
so fill string2 again to not miss some.
1st one is relatively minor: according our own manpage, upper and lower
classes must be sorted, but currently not.
2nd one is serious:
tr '[:lower:]' '[:upper:]'
(and vice versa) currently works only if upper and lower classes
have exact the same number of elements. When it is not true, like for
many ISO8859-x locales which have bigger amount of lowercase letters,
tr may do nasty things.
See this page
http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007908799/xcu/tr.html
for detailed description of desired tr behaviour in such cases.
frame, occupying scratch registers r16 and up. We don't have to
save any scratch registers for syscalls, so we have plenty of
room there. Consequently, when we fetch the registers from the
process, we automaticly have all the arguments and don't need
to read them seperately.
would print it with probability 1/2**32. It seems that the correct
behavior is to print 4 with probability 1/4, but I'd like to avoid
breaking POLA until all the range inconsistencies in jot can be fixed
in one pass. See PR for details.
PR: 54878
Submitted by: David Brinegar <jot.3.brinegar@spamgourmet.com>
regular expression as the first argument to a substitute command. If
used to test a sed which (erroneously) evaluates this at translation
time rather than at execution time, the bugged sed is put into an
infinite loop. This mode of failure seems excessive. Such a failing
sed is the Free Software Foundation's sed 3.02.
The specific test was also not being executed for the BSD sed.
Both problems are now fixed.
PR: misc/25585
Submitted by: Walter Briscoe <w.briscoe@ponl.com>
Approved by: schweikh (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Previously, there were two copies of telnet; a non-crypto version
that lived in the usual places, and a crypto version that lived in
crypto/telnet/. The latter was built in a broken manner somewhat akin
to other "contribified" sources. This meant that there were 4 telnets
competing with each other at build time - KerberosIV, Kerberos5,
plain-old-secure and base. KerberosIV is no longer in the running, but
the other three took it in turns to jump all over each other during a
"make buildworld".
As the crypto issue has been clarified, and crypto _calls_ are not
a problem, crypto/telnet has been repo-copied to contrib/telnet,
and with this commit, all telnets are now "contribified". The contrib
path was chosen to not destroy history in the repository, and differs
from other contrib/ entries in that it may be worked on as "normal"
BSD code. There is no dangerous crypto in these sources, only a
very weak system less strong than enigma(1).
Kerberos5 telnet and Secure telnet are now selected by using the usual
macros in /etc/make.conf, and the build process is unsurprising and
less treacherous.
for a lot of unrelated error conditions, at least report the line
number where it bailed.
Don't use multiline string literals for Usage, gcc 3.3 doesn't like them.
means actually setting 'len', for example. Which will make uname -i
work on some systems where it did not. Anywhere where it did work,
it was a matter of coincidence.
Submitted by: redpixel on EFnet.
Fix the usage synopsis.
Amend the copyright notice to reflect the fact that there's no Berkeley
code left.
Fix a typo in a comment, improve the descriptions of the way we use
some global variables (relevant to the bug below), and note that
division-by-zero has side effects so the current expression evaluator
can't be trivially extended to arithmetic in its current design.
Avoid hitting an abort(); /* bug */ when in "text mode" (i.e.
ignoring comment state) by updating the line parser state properly.
PR: 53907
Use newly added __detect_path_locale() helper to lookup _PathLocale value.
It adds boundary checking for PATH_LOCALE environment variable value and
check for super-user fallback.
Makefile:
Add lib/libc/locale to compiler's include path (for setlocale.h)
These are probably machine independent, but
there is no way for the developers to test them other than on x86.
They will become MD as testing becomes possible.
special files it was treated like -l. This commit adds the -x option
in for special files as well.
PR: bin/46249
Submitted by: Colin Percival <cperciva@sfu.ca>
properly, clean up quota(1). quota(1) has the ability to query
quotas either directly from the kernel, or if that fails, by reading
the quota.user or quota.group files specified for the file system
in /etc/fstab. The setuid bit existed solely (apparently) to let
non-operator users query their quotas and consumption when quotas
weren't enabled for the file system.
o Remove the setuid bit from quota(1).
o Remove the logic used by quota(1) when running setuid to prevent
users from querying the quotas of other users or groups. Note
that this papered over previously broken kernel access control;
if you queried directly using the system call, you could access
some of the data "restricted" by quota(1).
In the new world order, the ability to inspect the (live) quotas of
other uids and gids via the kernel is controlled by the privilege
requirement sysctl. The ability to query via the file is controlled
by the file permissions on the quota database backing files
(root:operator, group readable by default).
properly, clean up quota(1). quota(1) has the ability to query
quotas either directly from the kernel, or if that fails, by reading
the quota.user or quota.group files specified for the file system
in /etc/fstab. The setuid bit existed solely (apparently) to let
non-operator users query their quotas and consumption when quotas
weren't enabled for the file system.
o Remove the setuid bit from quota(1).
o Remove the logic used by quota(1) when running setuid to prevent
users from querying the quotas of other users or groups. Note
that this papered over previously broken kernel access control.
read at least 1 byte from the input file without problems. This
fixes a bug in uncompress(1) that causes the accidental removal
of files that happen to have the same name as the output file,
even when the uncompression fails and is aborted, i.e.:
$ echo hello world > hello
$ touch hello.Z
$ ls -l hello*
-rw-rw-r-- 1 giorgos giorgos 12 Jun 14 13:33 hello
-rw-rw-r-- 1 giorgos giorgos 0 Jun 14 13:33 hello.Z
$ ./uncompress -f hello
uncompress: hello.Z: Inappropriate file type or format
$ ls -l hello*
-rw-rw-r-- 1 giorgos giorgos 0 Jun 14 13:33 hello.Z
$
PR: 46787
Submitted by: keramida
- Don't fail if we can't open /dev/null since this can happen if
xargs is jail'ed or chroot'ed.
These fixes were submitted by Todd Miller from the OpenBSD project.
There was one problem in those fixes that broke -o, which is corrected
here and should be committed to the OpenBSD repo by Todd soon.
MFC in: 3 days
This is a style bug. err() is declared is non-returning so that every
use of it doesn't need to be encrufted with NOTREACHED. It's too bad
that only gcc understands the declaration.
Asked by: bde@
userland, and the kernel. In the kernel by way of the 'ident[]' variable
akin to all the other stuff generated by newvers.sh. In userland it is
available to sysctl consumers via KERN_IDENT or 'kern.ident'. It is exported
by uname(1) by the -i flag.
Reviewed by: hackers@
Alan Eldridge
Born December 15, 1961 in Iowa
Died June 6, 2003 in Denver, Colorado
Thank you for your contributions, you
will be greatly missed.
http://freebsd.kde.org/memoriam/alane.php
(This change suggested by ru@ - thanks).
cat ${.ALLSRC} > ${.TARGET}
rather than
ln -sf ${.ALLSRC} ${.TARGET}
not to depends on absolute-path of symbolic links.
Commented by: marcel, obrien, bde
whose true and false clauses were equivalent with a check that we are
not about to stumble off the end of the line.
Reported by: peter
Pointy hat to: fanf
There are two bugs: in the s///g case, the substitution didn't occur
at the end of the line; in the s///N case, the code didn't count
forwards along the line properly. See the sg, s3, s4, and s5 tests
in src/tools/regression/usr.bin/sed/.
Reviewed by: tjr
1) add a "-p pid", which is rather useful for selecting a single pid in
a combined trace file (eg: with ktrace -i).
2) display binary genio data in a more precise format.
the last csh script needed for a buildworld. You should now be able
to buildworld on a system that was compiled with NO_TCSH=true.
Verified to produce the same result for the one file being generated
during buildworld, share/doc/papers/kernmalloc/appendix.ms.
Reviewed by: hackers@
MFC after: 2 weeks
The -l option is deprecated (hence undocumented in usage() and
SYNOPSIS), as was threatened in the commitlog accompanying rev.
1.10 of main.c.
Approved by: re (blanket)
the preformatted files are compressed with the same program
as the source, and if the source files are uncompressed, the
preformatted files are also uncompressed.
PR: bin/52213
Submitted by: Krister Joas <krister@gazonk.net>, ru
Approved by: re (jhb)
prime objectives are:
o Implement a syscall path based on the epc inststruction (see
sys/ia64/ia64/syscall.s).
o Revisit the places were we need to save and restore registers
and define those contexts in terms of the register sets (see
sys/ia64/include/_regset.h).
Secundairy objectives:
o Remove the requirement to use contigmalloc for kernel stacks.
o Better handling of the high FP registers for SMP systems.
o Switch to the new cpu_switch() and cpu_throw() semantics.
o Add a good unwinder to reconstruct contexts for the rare
cases we need to (see sys/contrib/ia64/libuwx)
Many files are affected by this change. Functionally it boils
down to:
o The EPC syscall doesn't preserve registers it does not need
to preserve and places the arguments differently on the stack.
This affects libc and truss.
o The address of the kernel page directory (kptdir) had to
be unstaticized for use by the nested TLB fault handler.
The name has been changed to ia64_kptdir to avoid conflicts.
The renaming affects libkvm.
o The trapframe only contains the special registers and the
scratch registers. For syscalls using the EPC syscall path
no scratch registers are saved. This affects all places where
the trapframe is accessed. Most notably the unaligned access
handler, the signal delivery code and the debugger.
o Context switching only partly saves the special registers
and the preserved registers. This affects cpu_switch() and
triggered the move to the new semantics, which additionally
affects cpu_throw().
o The high FP registers are either in the PCB or on some
CPU. context switching for them is done lazily. This affects
trap().
o The mcontext has room for all registers, but not all of them
have to be defined in all cases. This mostly affects signal
delivery code now. The *context syscalls are as of yet still
unimplemented.
Many details went into the removal of the requirement to use
contigmalloc for kernel stacks. The details are mostly CPU
specific and limited to exception_save() and exception_restore().
The few places where we create, destroy or switch stacks were
mostly simplified by not having to construct physical addresses
and additionally saving the virtual addresses for later use.
Besides more efficient context saving and restoring, which of
course yields a noticable speedup, this also fixes the dreaded
SMP bootup problem as a side-effect. The details of which are
still not fully understood.
This change includes all the necessary backward compatibility
code to have it handle older userland binaries that use the
break instruction for syscalls. Support for break-based syscalls
has been pessimized in favor of a clean implementation. Due to
the overall better performance of the kernel, this will still
be notived as an improvement if it's noticed at all.
Approved by: re@ (jhb)
netstat(1) not display it for now because its effects are not yet
completely implemented and we're about to cut 5.2-RELEASE.
This is temporary.
Approved by: re (scottl, rwatson)
inode birthtime display, and quite a bit of mdoc cleanup, which brings
it much more in line with our mdoc style.
Approved by: re (bmah)
Obtained from: Andrew Brown <atatat@NetBSD.org> (content), Grant Beattie <grant@NetBSD.org> (mdoc)
the new inode birthtime field, a few other small cleanups, and
synchronization with our #include <sys/types.h>.
Approved by: re (bmah)
Obtained from: Andrew Brown <atatat@NetBSD.org>
65536 / (sizeof(int) * CHAR_BITS) `int's instead of
65536 / (sizeof(int) * CHAR_BITS) bytes to avoid a possible
segmentation fault if ports above 16383 are specified via the
-p option on a platform with 4 byte wide ints.
Approved by: re (bmah)
Reported by: Marco Wertejuk <wertejuk@mwcis.com>