more human readable by telling the human print routines to use
a smaller buffer to format the value.
This makes it so a value that was previously being printed
as 600000K will now print as 586M.
under it while running. Note that this is still not perfect:
- Try to do something intelligent if kvm_read() fails to read a routing
table structure such as an rtentry, radix_node, or ifnet.
- Don't follow left and right node pointers in radix_nodes unless
RNF_ACTIVE is set in rn_flags. This avoids walking through freed
radix_nodes.
MFC after: 1 week
1) Add missing parens around assignment that is compared to zero.
2) Make some variables that only take non-negative values unsigned.
3) Some casts/type changes to fix other constness warnings.
4) Make one variable a const char *.
5) Make sure termwidth is positive, it doesn't make sense for it to be negative.
Approved by: dds
directory, and jail directory within procstat. While this functionality
is available already in fstat, encapsulating it in the kern.proc.filedesc
sysctl makes it accessible without using kvm and thus without needing
elevated permissions.
The new procstat output looks like:
PID COMM FD T V FLAGS REF OFFSET PRO NAME
76792 tcsh cwd v d -------- - - - /usr/src
76792 tcsh root v d -------- - - - /
76792 tcsh 15 v c rw------ 16 9130 - -
76792 tcsh 16 v c rw------ 16 9130 - -
76792 tcsh 17 v c rw------ 16 9130 - -
76792 tcsh 18 v c rw------ 16 9130 - -
76792 tcsh 19 v c rw------ 16 9130 - -
I am also bumping __FreeBSD_version for this as this new feature will be
used in at least one port.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Approved by: rwatson
were recently), a simple 'make cleandepend; make depend' is sufficient
to keep the tree buildable after a cvs update when doing incremental
builds.
However, kdump and truss use a script which searches for header files
that define ioctls, and generates C code that includes them. This
script will usually not need updating when a header file is removed,
so the normal dependency mechanism will not realize that it needs to
be re-run. One is therefore left with code that references dead files
but will only be removed by a full 'make clean', which defeats the
purpose of incremental builds.
To work around this, modify the cleandepend target in bsd.dep.mk to
also remove any files listed in a new variable named CLEANDEPFILES,
and modify kdump's and truss's Makefiles accordingly.
MFC after: 2 weeks
GNU tar changed -l to match SUSv2 a couple of years ago,
so bsdtar no longer needs to pander to this particular GNUism.
Thanks to: Debian maintainers
MFC after: 7 days
- Handle wrapping correctly when \r appears in the input, and don't
remove the \r from the output.
- For lines longer than 79 characters, don't drop every 80th character.
- Style: Braces around compound while statement.
PR: 114498
Submitted by: Niclas Zeising <niclas.zeising@gmail.com> (earlier version)
more carefully inspecting the return value from sysctl(3). [1]
- Use calloc instead of malloc+memset of zero.
Submitted by: Alexander Chernikov <admin su29 net> [1]
PR: bin/119581
MFC after: 2 weeks
current state, it can handle all but four of the 991 zip files (including
jar files) I was able to identify in the ports tree. The remaining four
are two self-extracting archives and two which have garbage preceding the
first local header. This limitation is a feature of libarchive(3) which
I am currently working to resolve.
The code is unnecessarily large due to the need to emulate the exact
command-line syntax and behaviour of ports/unzip. My initial incompatible
implementation was one quarter the size of the one I am committing here.
* prototypes for optarg/optind on platforms that don't already have them
* Disambiguate version number macros
* Remove unnecessary PACKAGE_NAME macro
* Hook for forthcoming bsdtar test suite
* Sync version number up with the portable distribution
(This does a couple of things that the standard library's strmode()
doesn't; it proved useful in bsdcpio as well, so I pushed it down
into libarchive.)
sys/types.h polution that FreeBSD has in one of its include files.
Since this is a bootstrap tool, include more than is strictly
necessary for FreeBSD.
unused in one go.
From the original PR:
I've observed that linux apps running under the linuxulator
have a habit of leaving behind shared memory segments which
are unused, but which eventually cause the system to run
out of free segments and these apps will stop working.
ipcrm(1) currently only allows removal of unused message
queues, shared memory segments and semaphores on an individual
basis, or those having a matching (non-zero) key. However
it would often be convenient to just do a complete cleanup
of everything, usually as root.
PR: bin/118292
Submitted by: Callum Gibson <callumgibson@optusnet.com.au>
Not reviewed by: grog@
Approved by: grog@
This turns out to be due to an argument botch for hid_report_size.
The PR contained patches to fix the argument botch.
Submitted by: Maurice Castro
PR: usb/118915
because of the absence of a destination directory or if the
"destination directory" is not a directory.
PR: bin/11826
Submitted by: Denis Eremenko <moonshade@pnhz.kz>
Approved by: grog@
X-MFC after: various freezes
user/system/idle stats. -h feeds the memory column through
humanize_number() to reduce the amount of column overflowing. -H turns
this off. -h is turned on by default if stdout is a tty.
no per-thread name is available or the name is identical to the
process name, display "-" instead. Very slightly shrink the COMM
entry to make a bit more room, although this doesn't help with
stack traces much.
Suggested by: thompsa
of the missing functionality from procfs(4) and new functionality for
monitoring and debugging specific processes. procstat(1) operates in
the following modes:
-b Display binary information for the process.
-c Display command line arguments for the process.
-f Display file descriptor information for the process.
-k Display the stacks of kernel threads in the process.
-s Display security credential information for the process.
-t Display thread information for the process.
-v Display virtual memory mappings for the process.
Further revision and modes are expected.
Testing, ideas, etc: cognet, sam, Skip Ford <skip at menantico dot com>
Wesley Shields <wxs at atarininja dot org>
This should fix the double free() bug where there's no tailing newline(\n)
character:
current# echo -n test | tail
testAssertion failed: (run->magic == ARENA_RUN_MAGIC), function
arena_dalloc, file /usr/src/lib/libc/stdlib/malloc.c, line 2448.
Abort (core dumped)
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
doesn't use the default CFLAGS which contain -fno-strict-aliasing.
Until the code is cleaned up, just add -fno-strict-aliasing to the
CFLAGS of these for the tinderboxes' sake, allowing the rest of the
tree to have -Werror enabled again.
current tty as returned from ttyname(3) so it can try to avoid writing to
the current tty if possible. Previously, it did this by trimming off any
leading directory (effectively performing a basename(3) on the path
returned from ttyname(3)). However, this chopped off too much of the path
for ttys who have directories in their name such as pts(4). Instead, just
strip off the leading /dev/ from the path returned by ttyname(3). This
fixes write(1) when using pts(4).
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: rwatson
to be specified together with either -u or -t to have an effect,
and exit status of 2 is not possible after a Perl->C conversion.
- While here, fix markup.
the open file-listing. It is added as a separate source file, so it can
respect WITH_/WITHOUT_CDDL as compile-flags.
- The warnlevel of the Makefile was decreased to quell solaris #pragma
warnings.
- Expect that fstat(1) doesn't work with kernel compiled with
DEBUG_VFS_LOCKS/DEBUG_LOCKS for now.
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
kthread_add() takes the same parameters as the old kthread_create()
plus a pointer to a process structure, and adds a kernel thread
to that process.
kproc_kthread_add() takes the parameters for kthread_add,
plus a process name and a pointer to a pointer to a process instead of just
a pointer, and if the proc * is NULL, it creates the process to the
specifications required, before adding the thread to it.
All other old kthread_xxx() calls return, but act on (struct thread *)
instead of (struct proc *). One reason to change the name is so that
any old kernel modules that are lying around and expect kthread_create()
to make a process will not just accidentally link.
fix top to show kernel threads by their thread name in -SH mode
add a tdnam formatting option to ps to show thread names.
make all idle threads actual kthreads and put them into their own idled process.
make all interrupt threads kthreads and put them in an interd process
(mainly for aesthetic and accounting reasons)
rename proc 0 to be 'kernel' and it's swapper thread is now 'swapper'
man page fixes to follow.
test MK_INSTALLLIB, users can set WITHOUT_INSTALLLIB. The old
NO_INSTALLLIB is still supported as several makefiles set it.
- While here, fix an install when instructed not to install libs
(usr.bin/lex/lib/Makefile).
PR: bin/114200
Submitted by: Henrik Brix Andersen
At least one port (net-mgmt/net-snmp) creates man-pages which are
in the format:
.SH NAME
The Net-SNMP agent \- The snmp agent responds to SNMP queries from management stations.
.PP
.SS "Modules"
At this moment, makewhatis determines the end of the .SH NAME section
as where it finds .SH again, but there is none here, is it "terminated"
by the .SS.
PR: bin/116706
Submitted by: edwin@
Approved by: re (Ken Smith), grog (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
support for wide characters.
If the sizeof (wchar_t) times max_length would yield a value beyond
representation in a size_t, exit with a usage error up front, rather than
strange errors down the line from trying to malloc (well, realloc) with a size
of 0.
This is perhaps not the optimal behaviour - a clamp may be more appropriate as
we clamp the value of max_length now anyway, but this is at least better than
segfaulting or worse. On systems which are friendly to malloc with a value of 0
the results could end up being strange corruption of the output.
since "local" includes also synthetic file systems (e.g. /dev, /proc)
and loopback mounts.
This version uses lsvfs to identify file system types that are local
and additionally not synthetik, loopback mounts, or read-only. This
has been suggested by Craig Rodrigues half a year ago. The patch that
has been committed is based on his suggestion, but slightly modified.
The comments in locate.rc have been updated to reflect the change and
o include zfs and xfs in the example file system parameter that can
be used to override the default outlined above.
PR: 114101
Submitted by: rodrigc at crodrigues dot org (Craig Rodrigues)
MFC: 2 weeks
inspect all local file systems, not only ufs and ext2fs. A number
of local file systems has been added over time, and at least zfs
has the potential to become a popular choice. Without this change
a ZFS root file system causes the script to ignore all file-systems
and leads to an empty locate db. (An alternative is to add all the
relevant file systems individually, which means that at least zfs,
xfs, ntfs, ntfs-3g, msdosfs should be added, probably more).
This commit includes the following core components:
* sample configuration file for sensorsd
* rc(8) script and glue code for sensorsd(8)
* sysctl(3) doc fixes for CTL_HW tree
* sysctl(3) documentation for hardware sensors
* sysctl(8) documentation for hardware sensors
* support for the sensor structure for sysctl(8)
* rc.conf(5) documentation for starting sensorsd(8)
* sensor_attach(9) et al documentation
* /sys/kern/kern_sensors.c
o sensor_attach(9) API for drivers to register ksensors
o sensor_task_register(9) API for the update task
o sysctl(3) glue code
o hw.sensors shadow tree for sysctl(8) internal magic
* <sys/sensors.h>
* HW_SENSORS definition for <sys/sysctl.h>
* sensors display for systat(1), including documentation
* sensorsd(8) and all applicable documentation
The userland part of the framework is entirely source-code
compatible with OpenBSD 4.1, 4.2 and -current as of today.
All sensor readings can be viewed with `sysctl hw.sensors`,
monitored in semi-realtime with `systat -sensors` and also
logged with `sensorsd`.
Submitted by: Constantine A. Murenin <cnst@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code 2007 (GSoC2007/cnst-sensors)
Mentored by: syrinx
Tested by: many
OKed by: kensmith
Obtained from: OpenBSD (parts)
them (for example when they have logged in from an ip6 source).
- Stick with the initial call to getaudit(2), if it returns E2BIG, use
getaudit_addr(2) instead and set the "extended" flag to indicate that
we the calling credential has an extended subject state.
- Additionally, add the printing of the machine/at_addr (the ip/ip6
addresses)
MFC after: 1 week
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
lock experienced contention a number of processes would race to acquire
lock when it was released. This problem resulted in a lot of CPU
load as well as locks being picked up out of order.
Unfortunately, a regression snuck in which allowed multiple threads
to pickup the same lock when -k was not used. This could occur when
multiple processes open a file descriptor to inode X (one process
will be blocked) and the file is unlinked on unlock (thereby removing
the directory entry allow another process to create a new directory
entry for the same file name and lock it).
This changes restores the old algorithm of: wait for the lock, then
acquire lock when we want to unlink the file on exit (specifically
when -k is not used) and keeps the new algorithm for when -k is used,
which yields fairness and improved performance.
Also, update the man page to inform users that if lockf(1) is being
used to facilitate concurrency between a number of processes, it
is recommended that -k be used to reduce CPU load and yeld
fairness with regard to lock ordering.
Collaborated with: jdp
PR: bin/114341
PR: bin/116543
PR: bin/111101
MFC after: 1 week
the threading libraries is built. This simplifies the
logic in makefiles that need to check if the pthreads
support is present. It also fixes a bug where we would
build a threading library that we shouldn't have built:
for example, building with WITHOUT_LIBTHR and the default
value of DEFAULT_THREADING_LIB (libthr) would mistakenly
build the libthr library, but not install it.
Approved by: re (kensmith)
- p_sflag was mostly protected by PROC_LOCK rather than the PROC_SLOCK or
previously the sched_lock. These bugs have existed for some time.
- Allow swapout to try each thread in a process individually and then
swapin the whole process if any of these fail. This allows us to move
most scheduler related swap flags into td_flags.
- Keep ki_sflag for backwards compat but change all in source tools to
use the new and more correct location of P_INMEM.
Reported by: pho
Reviewed by: attilio, kib
Approved by: re (kensmith)
have real idle processes for that.
- Fix the display on SMP by not scaling the sum of %CPU down
to 1. Instead, display raw data as computed by the kernel,
like in top(1).
Reviewed by: bde
Approved by: re (bmah)
MFC after: 1 week
of threaded RPC servers to work out of the box.
Spotted by: Changming Sun <changming at staff.sina.com.cn>
Sponsored by: SINA Corporation
Approved by: re (kensmith)
<netinet/tcp_fsm.h> is included into any compilation unit that needs
tcpstates[]. Also remove incorrect extern declarations and TCPDEBUG
conditionals. This allows kernels both with and without TCPDEBUG to
build, and unbreaks the tinderbox.
Approved by: re (rwatson)
containing 64-bit arguments would have explicit padding.
On 64-bit platforms there was no padding, so the dummy
argument was not covering anything. On 32-bit platforms
with weak alignment (i.e. i386) the 64-bit argument did
not need to be aligned, so there too an aditional argument
was introduced. On 32-bit platforms with strong alignment
(i.e. PowerPC) the dummy argument in fact cover the padding.
By elimininating the dummy argument, 64-bit platforms now
have 1 argument less. This also applies to 32-bit platforms
with weak alignment. On PowerPC this doesn't matter, because
the padding is still there. We just don't "name" it.
Deal with those 3 cases.
Approved by: re (kensmith)
general, when support was added to netstat for fetching data using sysctl,
no provision was left for fetching equivalent data from a core dump, and
in fact, netstat would _always_ fetch data from the live kernel using
sysctl even when -M was specified resulting in the user believing they
were getting data from coredumps when they actually weren't. Some specific
changes:
- Add a global 'live' variable that is true if netstat is running against
the live kernel and false if -M has been specified.
- Stop abusing the sysctl flag in the protocol tables to hold the protocol
number. Instead, the protocol is now its own field in the tables, and
it is passed as a separate parameter to the PCB and stat routines rather
than overloading the KVM offset parameter.
- Don't run PCB or stats functions who don't have a namelist offset if we
are being run against a crash dump (!live).
- For the inet and unix PCB routines, we generate the same buffer from KVM
that the sysctl usually generates complete with the header and trailer.
- Don't run bpf stats for !live (before it would just silently always run
live).
- kread() no longer trashes memory when opening the buffer if there is an
error on open and the passed in buffer is smaller than _POSIX2_LINE_MAX.
- The multicast routing code doesn't fallback to kvm on live kernels if
the sysctl fails. Keeping this made the code rather hairy, and netstat
is already tied to the kernel ABI anyway (even when using sysctl's since
things like xinpcb contain an inpcb) so any kernels this is run against
that have the multicast routing stuff should have the sysctls.
- Don't try to dig around in the kernel linker in the netgraph PCB routine
for core dumps.
Other notes:
- sctp's PCB routine only works on live kernels, it looked rather
complicated to generate all the same stuff via KVM. Someone can always
add it later if desired though.
- Fix the ipsec removal bug where N_xxx for IPSEC stats weren't renumbered.
- Use sysctlbyname() everywhere rather than hardcoded mib values.
MFC after: 1 week
Approved by: re (rwatson)
NET_NEEDS_GIANT, which will shortly be removed. This is done in a
away that it may be easily reattached to the build before 7.1 if
appropriate locking is added. Specifics:
- Don't install netatm include files
- Disconnect netatm command line management tools
- Don't build libatm
- Don't include ATM parts in rescue or sysinstall
- Don't install sample configuration files and documents
- Don't build kernel support as a module or in NOTES
- Don't build netgraph wrapper nodes for netatm
This removes the last remaining consumer of NET_NEEDS_GIANT.
Reviewed by: harti
Discussed with: bz, bms
Approved by: re (kensmith)
being output in verbose mode when doing recursive[1].
- Use better representation of S:
PR: bin/114470
Submitted by: Ighighi <ighighi gmail com> [1]
Approved by: re (hrs)
whether we should ignore case, determine the flag by calling
compile_flags() first. Also, make sure that we obtain an
initialized cmd->u.s buffer before processing further. We
may want to refine this solution later, but for now, make
the changes in order to unbreak world build after a sed(1)
with rev. 1.29 of compile.c is installed.
Approved by: re (hrs)
This was needed during the IPSEC->FAST_IPSEC->IPSEC transition
period to not break the build after picking up netipsec header
files. Now that the FAST_IPSEC kernel option is gone and the
default is IPSEC again those defines are superfluous.
Approved by: re (rwatson)
setenv(3) by tracking the size of the memory allocated instead of using
strlen() on the current value.
Convert all calls to POSIX from historic BSD API:
- unsetenv returns an int.
- putenv takes a char * instead of const char *.
- putenv no longer makes a copy of the input string.
- errno is set appropriately for POSIX. Exceptions involve bad environ
variable and internal initialization code. These both set errno to
EFAULT.
Several patches to base utilities to handle the POSIX changes from
Andrey Chernov's previous commit. A few I re-wrote to use setenv()
instead of putenv().
New regression module for tools/regression/environ to test these
functions. It also can be used to test the performance.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to 700050 due to API change.
PR: kern/99826
Approved by: wes
Approved by: re (kensmith)
- Fix logic handling execve(). We will not be able to
obtain information otherwise.
- truss coredump [1].
- truss does not work against itself [2].
PR: bin/58970 [1], bin/45193 [2]
Submitted by: Howard Su
Approved by: re (kensmith)
o shorten explainations which are over 80 columns in console.
o group rows
o clean up and change explanations a little bit.
Obtained from: weongyo.jeong@gmail.com
"static". The header file generated by "rpcgen -h" will always declare
it as extern, leading to a "static after extern" error being issued by
gcc-4.2. This caused only a warning in gcc-3.x, but it has been wrong
all the time.
This change does not modify the code generated by "rpcgen -m", it only
affects rpcgen used to generate server stubs with a local main function.
This is the minimal patch. It does not remove the now obsolete "storage"
parameter from write_program() and write_programs() in an attempt to keep
differences to other systems' versions of rpcgen as small as possible.
priorities, etc.) in the NICE field:
Use a combination of pri_native and pri_user instead of pri_level to
guess the original realtime priority. Using pri_level here has been
wrong since 2001/02/12. Using only pri_native here would be correct
if the kernel actually initialized it reasonably. (The kernel exports
its raw td_base_priority as pri_native, but userland mostly wants a
refined base priority). Give up on waiting pri_native to work correctly
and only use it when there is nothing better (for kthreads).
This should reduce printing of bizarre pseudo-nice values. Bizarre
values are still printed if we observe a transient borrowed priority
for a kthread (transient borrowing is the main thing that makes the
raw td_base_priority almost useless in userland), or if there is a
kernel bug. One current kernel bug involves the kernel idprio thread
pagezero permanently changing its priority from PRI_MAX_IDLE (255) to
PUSER (160). Then the bizarre value "ki-6" is printed instead of
"ki31". Here "-6" is PRI_MIN_IDLE - PUSER = -64 truncated to 2
characters. We are observing a transient borrowed priority that has
become permanent due to a bug.
ps/print.c:priorityr() needs similar changes (including ones in stage 2
here).
- Add and document the KVM and KVM_SUPPORT options that
are needed for the ifmcstats(3) makefile
- Garbage collect unused variables
- Add missing inclusion of bsd.own.mk where needed
Approved by: kan (mentor)
Reviewed by: ru
and protocol-independent host mode multicast. The code is written to
accomodate IPv6, IGMPv3 and MLDv2 with only a little additional work.
This change only pertains to FreeBSD's use as a multicast end-station and
does not concern multicast routing; for an IGMPv3/MLDv2 router
implementation, consider the XORP project.
The work is based on Wilbert de Graaf's IGMPv3 code drop for FreeBSD 4.6,
which is available at: http://www.kloosterhof.com/wilbert/igmpv3.html
Summary
* IPv4 multicast socket processing is now moved out of ip_output.c
into a new module, in_mcast.c.
* The in_mcast.c module implements the IPv4 legacy any-source API in
terms of the protocol-independent source-specific API.
* Source filters are lazy allocated as the common case does not use them.
They are part of per inpcb state and are covered by the inpcb lock.
* struct ip_mreqn is now supported to allow applications to specify
multicast joins by interface index in the legacy IPv4 any-source API.
* In UDP, an incoming multicast datagram only requires that the source
port matches the 4-tuple if the socket was already bound by source port.
An unbound socket SHOULD be able to receive multicasts sent from an
ephemeral source port.
* The UDP socket multicast filter mode defaults to exclusive, that is,
sources present in the per-socket list will be blocked from delivery.
* The RFC 3678 userland functions have been added to libc: setsourcefilter,
getsourcefilter, setipv4sourcefilter, getipv4sourcefilter.
* Definitions for IGMPv3 are merged but not yet used.
* struct sockaddr_storage is now referenced from <netinet/in.h>. It
is therefore defined there if not already declared in the same way
as for the C99 types.
* The RFC 1724 hack (specify 0.0.0.0/8 addresses to IP_MULTICAST_IF
which are then interpreted as interface indexes) is now deprecated.
* A patch for the Rhyolite.com routed in the FreeBSD base system
is available in the -net archives. This only affects individuals
running RIPv1 or RIPv2 via point-to-point and/or unnumbered interfaces.
* Make IPv6 detach path similar to IPv4's in code flow; functionally same.
* Bump __FreeBSD_version to 700048; see UPDATING.
This work was financially supported by another FreeBSD committer.
Obtained from: p4://bms_netdev
Submitted by: Wilbert de Graaf (original work)
Reviewed by: rwatson (locking), silence from fenner,
net@ (but with encouragement)
Correct long-standing off-by-one error in -W option.
Submitted by: edwin@
Shorten some long lines. These files are still not completely
style(9) compliant.
* Implement --use-compress-program using new libarchive feature.
* Minor portability improvement by adjusting casts used to
print out uids, gids, and device numbers.
Thanks to: Joerg Sonnenberger for the --use-compress-program implementation.
MFC after: 15 days
Backwards compatibility with the new acct(5) format will be
implemented through the explicit versioning of acct records,
not through an export/import procedure.
failed path is one which was specified on the command line.
This is a compromise between the situation prior to revision 1.57
(where a race between tar(1) and rm(1) could cause tar(1) to
spuriously report an error) and the situation after revision 1.57
(where "tar -c /no/such/path" prints a warning but returns with
an exit code of zero).
Inspired by: rafan
MFC after: 1 week
Not because I admit they are technically wrong and not because of bug
reports (I receive nothing). But because I surprisingly meets so
strong opposition and resistance so lost any desire to continue that.
Anyone who interested in POSIX can dig out what changes and how
through cvs diffs.
"The setenv( ) function shall fail if:
[EINVAL] The name argument is a null pointer, points to an empty string,
or points to a string containing an '=' character."
The fix (like all others in this subject) is backward-compatible.
"The setenv( ) function shall fail if:
[EINVAL] The name argument is a null pointer, points to an empty string,
or points to a string containing an '=' character."
The fix (like all others in this subject) is backward-compatible.
o Print "unknown ICMP" instead of "(null)" if we don't have a description for a icmp type.
Based on code
Submitted by: Christoph Weber-Fahr
PR: misc/112126
MFC after: 2 weeks
each file independently from other files. The new semantics are
desired in the most of practical cases, e.g.: delete lines 5-9
from each file.
Keep the previous semantics of -i under a new option, -I, which
uses a single continuous address space covering all files to edit
in-place -- they are too cool to just drop them.
Add regression tests for -i and -I.
Approved by: dds
Compared with: GNU sed
Discussed on: -hackers
MFC after: 2 weeks
This fixes infinite restart in the following case:
Makefile: foo
foo: bar
do-something
Unlike GNU make, BSD make considers "Makefile" node as remade even
if "foo" is up-to-date and was not actually rebuilt.
GNU make does not consider nodes without commands as remade if child nodes
were not actually rebuilt.
Most probably, more proper fix would be to bring BSD make behaviour in-line
with GNU make but this would be more intrusive change.
occur on the write side of extracting a file to ARCHIVE_WARN errors
when returning them from archive_read_extract.
In bsdtar: Use the return code from archive_read_data_into_fd and
archive_read_extract to determine whether we should continue trying to
extract an archive after one of the entries fails.
This commit makes extracting a truncated tarball complain once about
the archive being truncated, instead of complaining twice (once when
trying to extract an entry, and once when trying to seek to the next
entry).
Discussed with: kientzle
titles extracted from argv vector instead of the real executable names.
This is useful when you want to watch applications that set their status
information via setproctitle(3).
Approved by: alfred
MFC after: 2 weeks