- FreeBSD's NIS server can supply a master.passwd map, which has
more fields in it than a standard passwd map, so we need a
_master_pw_breakout() fuction.
- When doing passwd map lookups, look for master.passwd.* by attempting
a _yp_first() on master.passwd.byname. If it exists, we're being served
by a FreeBSD NIS server and we should use this map.
- If we aren't the superuser, retrieve only the standard passwd maps.
If we're being served by a FreeBSD system, then the passwd map has
no passwords in it, and it won't serve us the master.passwd map unless
we're superuser anyway.
There's a small speed hit for the superuser inherent in the check for
the master.passwd map, but this lets us dynamically decide what to do
rather than rely on a non-standard config file somewhere. Since all
of this is bypassed for normal users, they shouldn't notice the
difference.
1) Changed LIB_SCCS and SYSLIB_SCCS to LIB_RCS and SYSLIB_RCS.
2) Changed sccsid[] variables to rcsid[]
3) Moved all RCSID strings into .text
4) Converted all SCCSID's to RCS $Id$'s
5) Added missing $Id$'s after copyright.
YP by disallowing `+' entries as logins in all cases. (This handles the
case of a `+' entry in the password file but YP not running, which should
never happen but is easy enough to check for so we'll apply some
prophylaxis.)
Embalm. Rewrite to do things much the same as gcc-2: use fistpq for speed
and elegance, and mishandle overflow consistently. __fixunsdfsi() is no
longer called by gcc.
getcwd() has two off-by-one bugs in FreeBSD-2.0:
1. getcwd(buf, size) fails when the size is just large enough.
2. getcwd(buf + 1, 1) incorrectly succeeds when the current directory
is "/". buf[0] and buf[2] are clobbered.
(I modified Bruce's original patch to return the proper error code
[ERANGE] in the case of #2, but otherwise... -DG)
This program demonstrates the bug:
---
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
int main(void)
{
char buf[5];
int errors;
errors = 0;
if (chdir("/tmp") != 0) {
perror("chdir");
abort();
}
if (getcwd(buf, 5) == NULL) {
perror("oops, getcwd failed for buffer size = size required");
++errors;
}
if (chdir("/") != 0) {
perror("chdir");
abort();
}
buf[0] = 0;
buf[2] = 1;
if (getcwd(buf + 1, 1) != NULL) {
fprintf(stderr,
"oops, getcwd succeeded for buffer size = one too small\n");
++errors;
}
if (buf[0] != 0) {
fprintf(stderr,
"oops, getcwd scribbled on memory before start of buffer\n");
++errors;
}
if (buf[2] != 1) {
fprintf(stderr,
"oops, getcwd scribbled on memory after end of buffer\n");
++errors;
}
exit(errors == 0 ? 0 : 1);
}
pointer returned by realloc(). All callers free the pointer if the
execve fails. Nuke the caching. This essentially restores buildargv()
to the 1.1.5 version. Also fix a memory leak if realloc() fails. Also
nuke similar but non-broken caching in execvp(). malloc() should be
efficient enough.
command available yet.
Changed an entry in getprcent.3 from rpcinfo(8C) to rpcinfo(8).
Changed an entry in getrpcport.3 from 3R to 3.
Changed two entries in rpc.3 from 3N to 3.
incredibly obnoxious, but also makes inverse mappings work when the local
resolver is in a cache-only configuration. (Maybe this is actually
a bug in BIND?)
pointer if len is 0. I should have looked at the revision history - I would
have found that Bruce already fixed the bug with len=0 over a month ago.
Whoever said that the bug was in 2.0 was wrong.
for Wine support. The current snapshot of wine works fine with this.
This should go into the beta as the code which it calls in the kernel is
already there, and works fine.
later be applied to a number of programs (inetd for instance) to clean
out the bogus code doing the same thing, modulus all the bugs.
If you need to read a '#'-is-a-comment-file, please use these routines.
I realize that the shlib# should be bumped (for the non-US world:
increased by something), but will defer this until something significant
happens.
From: Chris Torek <torek@bsdi.com>
Here is a semi-official patch (apply to /usr/src/lib/libc/stdio/fseek.c,
rebuild libc, install). The current code fails when the seek:
- is optimized, and
- is to just past the end of the block currently in the buffer, and
- is followed by another seek with no intervening read operation, and
- the destination of subsequent seek is within the block left in the
buffer (seeking to the beginning of a block does not force a read,
so the buffer still contains the previous block)
so it is indeed rather obscure.
I may have a different `final' fix, as this one `loses' the buffer
contents on a seek that goes just past the end of the current block.
[Footnote: seeks are optimized only on read-only opens of regular
files that are buffered by the file's optimal I/O size. This is
what you get with fopen(path, "r") and no call to setvbuf().]
Obtained from: [ BSDI mailing list ]
While trying to figure out why rlogind wasn't working right for root,
I noticed that man wouldn't come back with a man page for iruserok, but
it would for ruserok. Checking the lib/net directory's Makefile.inc
file shows that the link to the rcmd man page just isn't getting
created.
>How-To-Repeat:
Do a 'man iruserok' and notihing will come back, where a 'man ruserok'
will.
Submitted by: Brian Moore <ziff@houdini.eecs.umich.edu>
Obtained from: NetBSD-bugs mailing list
getnet* configuration. (It's highly unlikely that you'd want to do
something different, and network lookups aren't common enough to justify
their own configuration file.)
!!!!!!!!
NB
!!!!!!!!
You MUST pwd_mkdb /etc/master.passwd before attempting to use the new
libc, or things may go wrong. (I doubt anything actually /will/ go
wrong, but the actual behavior is undefined. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.)
The database format is, however, backwards-compatible, so old executables
will still work.
>From: jtk@atria.com (John T. Kohl)
in rcmd:
It calls select() with a hardcoded "number of file descriptors" argument
of 32, rather than computing it based on the sockets about which it
cares.
- Now we work out the nfds arg, and do some error checking
Submitted by: Geoff.
Don't add to POBJS or SOBJS. bsd.lib.mk does it. Some objects were
duplicated.
Don't add to CLEANFILES. bsd.lib.mk does it. Some objects were
quadruplicated.
Define variables that are only used once close to where they are
used.
The ifdefs for avoiding building of profiled/shared objects when
NOPROFILE/NOPIC are set were not actually committed. The ifdefs
belong in bsd.lib.mk anyway.
long long. Done by plugging both eax and edx with -1. This will clobber
edx unnecessarily when the return value is only 32bit...though probably
always an okay thing to do, it could stand a better fix.
This was the cause of gawk being broken (boy was THAT ever a subtle
bug!!!).
are running under. Here's how to bootstrap (order is important):
1) Re-compile gcc (just the driver is all you need).
2) Re-compile libc.
3) Re-compile your kernel. Reboot.
4) cd /usr/src/include; make install
You can now detect the compilation environment with the following code:
#if !defined(__FreeBSD__)
#define __FreeBSD_version 199401
#elif __FreeBSD__ == 1
#define __FreeBSD_version 199405
#else
#include <osreldate.h>
#endif
You can determine the run-time environment by calling the new C library
function getosreldate(), or by examining the MIB variable kern.osreldate.
For the time being, the release date is defined as 199409, which we have
already established as our target.
1.1.5 support for YP, fixing a bug in 1.1.5 that prevented YP from ever
working reliably. (I'm amazed that there were no bug reports.)
IWBRNI someone could write a host.conf(5) manual page. Please look at
the code before doing so; this version is somewhat more flexible in the
format of its input.