this return an error.
This re-enables display of the first entry in /var/account/acct instead
of the error "lastcomm: /var/account/acct: Invalid argument"
Fix handling of -v option.
Don't treat negative offsets as valid positive ones.
Clean up the ETA and transfer rate code. Show transfer rate along with
ETA if the verbose level is higher than 1.
* Be less strict about multi-line preprocessor directives (e.g. those
with comments hanging off the right-hand end) since they're more
of a problem in practise than I expected. Prompted by phk.
* Fix the handling of "ignore" symbols.
* Style pedantry from OpenBSD and Ted Unangst <tedu@stanford.edu>,
including some whitespace fixes and removal of strcpy()
(and not including excessively strict KNF enforcement).
* Fix some typos and terminological inconsistencies.
teach it about ia64 specific section types, dynamic tags and machine
type. This is a mostly insignificant change given the amount of
work that this tool obviously needs...
string from a silent implicit non-global substitution to a non-silent
explicit fatal error. Archored substitutions are those containing '^'
or '$'.
The problem with changing the substitution to prevent an infinite
number of matches is that it doesn't provide the necessary feedback
to the user that there's a bug in the/a makefile. Reporting the bug
without making the condition fatal makes the feedback mostly useless
due to the way that make fails to prefix the error with program name,
makefile file name and line number information.
Note that global substitutions of the empty string anchored with '^'
(start of string) or '$' (end of string) do not cause an infinite
number of matches and are therefore not reported and hence are non-
fatal.
Suggested by: bde
Tested with: buildworld
global substitution. In general it's a makefile bug to globally
substitute the empty string, but it's a bug in make(1) if a bug
in the makefile yields an infinite running time of make(1).
Not objected to by: arch@
pointer types, and remove a huge number of casts from code using it.
Change struct xfile xf_data to xun_data (ABI is still compatible).
If we need to add a #define for f_data and xf_data we can, but I don't
think it will be necessary. There are no operational changes in this
commit.
ifstat Display the network traffic going through active interfaces
on the system. Idle interfaces will not be displayed until
they receive some traffic.
For each interface being displayed, the current, peak and
total statistics are displayed for incoming and outgoing
traffic. By default, the ifstat display will automatically
scale the units being used so that they are in a human-read-
able format. The scaling units used for the current and peak
traffic columns can be altered by the scale command.
Submitted by: Trent Nelson <trent@arpa.com>
"The unifdef utility exits 0 if the output is an exact copy of the input,
1 if not, and 2 if in trouble."
This causes an 'Error code 1 (ignored)' in the world output, which upsets
the whereintheworld scripts that the tinderboxes use.
However, this stuff here is a relic. We do not enable HAVE_TCL_INTERP
nor HAVE_PERL_INTERP.. The Makefile hooks to turn them on have gone ages
ago, and this stuff was here for release building purposes only. Rather
than fight with the tinderbox builds, clean house a bit and remove the
last remaining unused relics of this stuff.
* The partial-evaluation of #elif sequences was broken and the
spaghetti logic of its implementation was too hard to understand.
I've re-done it using a straight-forward table-driven push-down
automaton.
* The pre-processor line parser did not allow for all of the weird
places that people might put comments, which could have caused it
to add syntax-errors to the output by removing a #if line containing
the start- or end-marker of a comment.
* The lexer didn't need to special-case the handling of string-literals
or character-constants, but it did need to learn about line-continuations
(backslash-newline).
* The input routine was buggy and bit-rotten and trivially replacable
with fgets(). I've also made the program static- and const-safe and
improved the presentation-order. The formatting of the state-transition
tables remains non-stylish.
This commit-messsage was brought to you by code-point 45.
MFC-after: one-week
from "unix" back to "local". Add some compat stuff so both
ways work for some time.
Reviewed by: phk
Approved by: imp (UPDATING)
Requested by: iedowse, lukem@netbsd.org
characters was reversed, resulting in some network appliances, including
at least some NAS devices from Ascend, not recognizing our finger(1)
request.
PR: 45914
Submitted by: J R Matthews <jrm@delta-e.com.au>
Approved by: re (rwatson)
MFC after: 2 weeks
The /usr/bin/perl wrapper isn't solving many of the problems it was
imported to deal with. There are limitations to it that don't have a
clear "fix".
Reviewed by: markm, kris
Extorted approval from: re(jhb)
Revert to using the .Tn POSIX and .Tn ANSI instead of \*[Px] and \*[Ai]
strings; using these strings is unsafe in troff mode, as they include a
change in a font size.
Approved by: re
Has been seen to work on several cards and communicating with
several mobile phones to use them as modems etc.
We are still talking with 3com to try get them to allow us to include
the firmware for their pccard in the driver but the driver is here..
In the mean time
it can be downloaded from the 3com website and loaded using the utility
bt3cfw(8) (supplied) (instructions in the man page)
Not yet linked to the build
Submitted by: Maksim Yevmenkin <myevmenk@exodus.net>
Approved by: re
the deprecated utime(3). utimes(2) uses timeval, but utime(3) uses
time_t's. If you do bad things (like I did) by mixing up include files
with libc, then install can do strange things if you mismatch the time_t
stuff. utime() is emulated entirely within libc.
Approved by: re (jhb)
time_t. Deal with the possibility that time_t != int32_t. This boils
down to this sort of thing:
- time(&ut.ut_time);
+ ut.ut_time = time(NULL);
and similar for ctime(3) etc. I've kept it minimal for the stuff
that may need to be portable (or 3rd party code), but used Matt's time32
stuff for cases where that isn't as much of a concern.
Approved by: re (jhb)
Registry (LACNIC) with the -l option and support for recursive IP
address searches.
PR: 44448
Submitted by: David Wolfskill <david@catwhisker.org>
MFC after: 1 week
1) Missing include.
2) Constness.
3) ANSIfication.
4) Avoid some shadowing.
5) Add/clarify some error messages.
6) Some int functions were using return without a value.
7) Mark some parameters as unused.
8) Cast a value we know is non-negative to a size_t before comparing.
to Fatal errors, because the logic that we use to try to continue is far
too broken, and makes things look and act weird, because we end up pointing
past the end of a buffer boundry into freed memory in the caller, as we
don't come close to setting the lengthPtr to a sane value.
Reviewed by: make@
(This only changes failure cases which would have died horrid deaths to
explicit clean death failure cases.)
o Remove static function uuid_print(); use uuid_to_string(3) in
combination with printf(3) to achieve the same,
o Remove unneeded includes,
o Add a reference to uuid(3) to the manpage.
Different code that processes the input in similar ways should be
called in similar ways. File-local stuff should be static. Output
errors should be checked for. Diffs sometimes have to be big.
when the filename comes from the untrusted input. This is a work-around
for careless people who don't routinely check the begin line of the file
or run uudecode -i and instead report "vulnerabilities" to CERT.
http://www.kb.cert.org/vuls/id/336083