successful and failed su attempts will be recorded using the AUE_su
event type (login or lo class) if auditing is present in the system.
Currently, the records will have a header, subject, text (with the
actual diagnostics), a return and trailer token.
See audit_submit(3) for more information.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
extensions. This seems to be unnecessary and prevents less(1) from being
able to detect file changes, so remove the part.
Submitted by: Eric Huss <e-huss netmeridian com>
PR: bin/102624
Discussed with: des
MFC After: 3 days
Add "-C <column>" and "-d <delims>" options to chop up input lines.
Make '#' a comment character, rest of line is ignored.
Submitted by: Dmitry Morozovsky <marck@rinet.ru>
can use this small and nifty utility. Create compatibility
symlinks from /usr/bin for the time being to avoid breaking
custom scripts relying on the hardcoded path to the utility.
If pkill(1) takes root, its source should be repocopied some
day to src/bin.
Idea by: des
Discussed with: brooks (in cvs-src and cvs-all)
Also make both lowercase and uppercase suffix letters work
as byte-count suffixes, i.e. the following two commands are
equivalent now:
% split -b 4m foo
% split -b 4M foo
Submitted by: Roman Divacky [1]
Lots of help by: cperciva
Reviewed by: cperciva
MFC after: 1 week
Sort getopt option handling of -p too, while here.
The changes are adapted from a patch by Ruslan Ermilov, posted as
followup to docs/33852.
PR: docs/33852
Submitted by: Gary W. Swearingen <swear@blarg.net>
MFC after: 1 week
characters correctly. These characters are displayed "combined"
with a space character.
PR: misc/100215
Submitted by: "J.R. Oldroyd" <<fbsd AT opal.com>>
Reviewed by: "J.R. Oldroyd" <<fbsd AT opal.com>> (revised patch)
MFC after: 3 days
including to printf(). Using uintmax_t is also robust to further
extensions in both the C language and the bitwidth of kernel counters.
Tested on: i386 amd64 ia64
Move INET6 out of the RELEASE_CRUNCH conditional block
because it saves as little as 2% of the binary size and
IPv6 is rather popular today. (Some other binaries, e.g.,
telnetd, include INET6 for RELEASE_CRUNCH already.)
of incorrect and machine-dependent integer math. Now we can encrypt a file
on an i386 and decrypt it on an amd64, and vice versa.
Submitted by: Andrew Heybey < ath at niksun dot com >