If turned on no NIS support and related programs will be built.
Lost parts rediscovered by: Danny Braniss <danny at cs.huji.ac.il>
PR: bin/68303
No objections: des, gshapiro, nectar
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
seed, the random number generator rand(3) still sucks and is unlikely
sufficient for crypto use. Correct what appears to be a cut and paste
error from the srandomdev() man page.
Submitted by: Ben Mesander
can't use the i386_set_ldt() family of routines, because they are not
implemented. Instead, use the recently exposed direct access sysarch
routines for setting what %fs and %gs point to.
Use this for the i386 TLS _set_tp() routine, but only when compiling to
run as a 32 bit support binary for amd64 kernels.
syslog(3) if we are a priveleged program (sshd, su, etc.).
- Make syslogd open an additional socket /var/run/logpriv, with 0600
permissions.
- In libc, try to use this socket.
- Do not loop forever if we are using this socket (partial backout of 1.31)
Reviewed by: dwmalone, Andrea Campi <andrea webcom it>
Approved by: julian (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
_(use space as padding), and 0(zero padding).
These GNU extensions are widely used ones that is worthy for us to
have.
Discussed with: stefanf, roam, -current
Approved by: murray
Prodded by: ports/72722, ports/72723
MFC After: 1 month
Requested by: bde
o Remove unneeded sys/types.h and netinet/in.h from the synopsis and
the example.
o We do have struct in_addr in arpa/inet.h, so no need for netinet/in.h.
o Mention where AF_* constants defined are.
Educated by: bde
__isnan() and __isnanf() must remain in libc for hysterical raisins.
On the other hand, __isnanl() must live in libm because libm uses it
internally and can't depend on older versions of libc to provide it.
Fortunately, we don't need __isnanl() in both libraries.
Prodded by: ale
PR: 71698
MT5 candidate
caused by refering broken (uninitialized?) pointer which is retrieved
from __bt_new() (and from mpool_new()).
I don't know why this linp[0] is read before stored because this
should be controlled by .lower and .upper member of PAGE structure
which are correctly initialized.
But this workaround fixes the problem on my environment and this
module has #ifdef PURIFY option which initializes new and reused
memory from mpool by memset(p, 0xff, size) like as I did.
Please feel free to fix the real bug instead of my workaround.
multibyte character support:
- In CHadd(), avoid writing past the end of the character set bitmap when
the opposite-case counterpart of wide characters with values less than
NC have values greater than or equal to NC.
- In CHaddtype(), fix a braino that caused alphabetic characters to be
added to all character classes! (but only with REG_ICASE)
PR: 71367
By using r8 instead of r14 to do the swap, we put the dst argument
in the return register. Since bcopy() doesn't clobber r8, we don't
have to do anything else. This fixes ports/textproc/aspell.
documenting the obsoleteness of the msync(2) syscall and its single
remaining purpose.
PR: 70916
Submitted by: Radim Kolar <hsn@netmag.cz>
MFC after: 3 days
mpool_open(3) - it is *not* really used for synchronization; in fact,
it is not used at all.
PR: 70929
Submitted by: Martin Kammerhofer <dada@sbox.tugraz.at>
MFC after: 3 days
_mcount() stub when profiling is enabled. Emit this code sequence
for assembly routines as welli (MCOUNT definition in <machine/asm.h>.
We do not pass the GOT entry however as the 4th argument, because it's
not used. The _mcount() stub calls __mcount(), which does the actual
work. Define _MCOUNT_DECL to define __mcount. We do not have an
implementation of mcount(), so we define MCOUNT as empty, but have a
weak alias to _mcount() in _mcount.S.
Note that the _mcount() stub in the kernel is slightly different from
the stub in userland. This is because we do not have to worry about
nested routines in the kernel.
64 bit systems, years roughly -2^31 through 2^31 can be represented in
time_t without any trouble. 32 bit time_t systems only range from
roughly 1902 through 2038. As a consequence, none of the date munging
code for all the various calendar tweaks before then is present. There
are other problems including the fact that there was no 'year zero' and
so on. So rather than get excited about trying to figure out when the
calendar jumped by two weeks etc, simply disallow negative (ie: prior to
1900) years.
This happens to have an important side effect. If you bzero a 'struct
tm', it corresponds to 'Jan 0, 1900, 00:00 GMT'. This happens to be
representable (after canonification) in 64 bit time_t space. Zero tm
structs are generally an error and mktime normally returns -1 for them.
Interestingly, it tries to canonify the 'jan 0' to 'dec 31, 1899', ie:
year -1. This conveniently trips the negative year test above, which
means we can trivially detect the null 'tm' struct.
This actually tripped up code at work. :-/ (Don't ask)
19 column positions wide in the first line and 20 in the rest of the lines.
This fixes the example to provide the correct output.
PR: 53454
Noticed by: Kuang-che Wu <kcwu@kcwu.homeip.net>
Submitted by: Marc Silver <marcs@draenor.org>
Approved by: re (scottl)
example. The externs haven't been needed in about 10 years, so
there's no reason to have them other than for hysterical raisins. And
the California Rasins haven't been around for a long time...
to describe the 4.4BSD extension of accepting arguments outside the range
of unsigned char. This gives us freedom to remove this extension when we
remove the <rune.h> interface in FreeBSD 6.
These convert plain ASCII characters in-line, making them only slightly
slower than the single-byte ("NONE" encoding) version when processing
ASCII strings.
convenient when the source string isn't null-terminated.
Implement the other conversion functions (mbstowcs(), mbsrtowcs(), wcstombs(),
wcsrtombs()) in terms of these new functions.
for statfs(2). This is false, if the pathname specified
is a regular file, then the information for the file
system that the file lives on will be returned.
Approved by: bmilekic (mentor)
gcc is using. This fixes devstat consumers (like vmstat, iostat,
systat) so they don't print crazy zillion digit numbers for
disk transfers and bandwidth.
According to gcc, long doubles are 64-bits, rather than 128 bits
like the SVR4 ABI spec wants them to be.. Note that MacOSX also treats
long doubles as 64-bits, and not 128 bits, so we are in good company.
Reviewed by: das
Approved by: grehan
- It was added to libc instead of libm. Hopefully no programs rely
on this mistake.
- It didn't work properly on large long doubles because its argument
was converted to type double, resulting in undefined behavior.
The getfsstat(2) function expects a buffer and a count, and returns a count.
The confusing part is that the count it takes is a byte count, while the
return value is a count of the number of structures it has filled out.
Spell this out.
idea is that we perform multibyte->wide character conversion while parsing
and compiling, then convert byte sequences to wide characters when they're
needed for comparison and stepping through the string during execution.
As with tr(1), the main complication is to efficiently represent sets of
characters in bracket expressions. The old bitmap representation is replaced
by a bitmap for the first 256 characters combined with a vector of individual
wide characters, a vector of character ranges (for [A-Z] etc.), and a vector
of character classes (for [[:alpha:]] etc.).
One other point of interest is that although the Boyer-Moore algorithm had
to be disabled in the general multibyte case, it is still enabled for UTF-8
because of its self-synchronizing nature. This greatly speeds up matching
by reducing the number of multibyte conversions that need to be done.
consequently the exponent is only 11 bits. Testing whether the
exponent equals 32767 in that case only effects to compiler warnings
and thus build breakage.
isnormal() the hard way, rather than relying on fpclassify(). This is
a lose in the sense that we need a total of 12 functions, but it is
necessary for binary compatibility because we have never bumped libm's
major version number. In particular, isinf(), isnan(), and isnanf()
were BSD libc functions before they were C99 macros, so we can't
reimplement them in terms of fpclassify() without adding a dependency
on libc.so.5. I have tried to arrange things so that programs that
could be compiled in FreeBSD 4.X will generate the same external
references when compiled in 5.X. At the same time, the new macros
should remain C99-compliant.
The isinf() and isnan() functions remain in libc for historical
reasons; however, I have moved the functions that implement the macros
isfinite() and isnormal() to libm where they belong. Moreover,
half a dozen MD versions of isinf() and isnan() have been replaced
with MI versions that work equally well.
Prodded by: kris
class. This is necessary in order to implement tr(1) efficiently in
multibyte locales, since the brute force method of finding all characters
in a class is infeasible with a 32-bit (or wider) wchar_t.
under the RETURN VALUES section so it is consistent with others.
Cleanup the return value text for getenv(3) a little while I am here.
PR: docs/58033
MFC after: 3 days
with ``__'' to avoid polluting the namespace. This doesn't change the
documented rune interface at all, but breaks applications that accessed
_RuneLocale directly.
This is a corresponding change to bin/67994. I'll soon commit
bin/67994 into 4-STABLE. Actually, 5-CURRENT's getaddrinfo()
doesn't have the problem mentiond in bin/67994. However, it is
good to be in sync variable name with 4-STABLE and KAME.
PR: bin/67994
Submitted by: JINMEI Tatuya <jinmei@ocean.jinmei.org>
permission), try to continue in FTS_DONTCHDIR mode. Of course this
won't work for long paths, but we can't descend more than one pathname
component beyond the directory anyway if we lack search permission.
Here is a transcript demonstrating the change, where oldls is ls(1)
linked with the old fts(3):
das@VARK:~> mkdir t && touch t/{a,b,c} && chmod u-x t
das@VARK:~> oldls t
a b c
das@VARK:~> oldls -l t
das@VARK:~> \ls t
a b c
das@VARK:~> \ls -l t
ls: a: Permission denied
ls: b: Permission denied
ls: c: Permission denied
I had forgotten about this patch until bde reminded me. He reports
using it without problems for over a year.
PR: 45723
writable. Affected callers include fwrite(), put?(), and *printf().
The issue of whether this is the right errno for funopened streams is
unresolved, but that's an obscure case, and some errno is better than
no errno.
Discussed with: bde, jkh
reflect src/libexec/rtld-elf/rtld.c rev. 1.68 - the globally-loaded
objects (RTLD_GLOBAL) are searched before the local object's DAG's.
PR: 62770
Submitted by: Kimura Fuyuki <fuyuki@nigredo.org>
multibyte representation in conversion state objects, store the
accumulated wide character, set number and number of bytes remaining
to avoid having to derive them every time mbrtowc() is called.
through byte by byte with mbrtowc(). In the usual case (buffer is big
enough to contain the multibyte character, character does not straddle
buffer boundary) this results in only one call to mbrtowc() for each
wide character read.
to the initial state when a stream is opened or seeked upon. Use the
stream's conversion state object instead of a freshly-zeroed one in
fgetwc(), fputwc() and ungetwc().
This is only a performance improvement for now, but it would also be
required in order to support state-dependent encodings.
of fcntl(2), flock(2), and lockf(3) advisory locks.
Add such a paragraph to the flock(2) manpage for the
sake of consistency.
Reviewed by: Cyrille Lefevre and Kirk McKusick on -arch
MFC after: 2 weeks
Correct my previous commit and add a comment to the manpage
indicating that the user must set errno to 0 if they wish to
distinguish "no such user" from "error".
Pointed out by: Jacques Vidrine (nectar@)
low bound, and the number of bytes remaining instead of storing the
raw byte sequence and deriving them every time mbrtowc() is called.
This is much faster -- about twice as fast in some crude benchmarks.
Remove "sys/types.h" as "sys/param.h" is already included
Use cast rather than back-pointer to convert from public to private
version of FTS data, and so avoid littering fts.h with any of the
details.
Pointed out By: bde, kientzle
"A trailing newline is added if none is present."
The code in syslogd, stderr, and console output always adds a newline
at the EOL. However, the existing code never actually removed a
trailing newline, and apparently relied on syslogd to convert it
into a space character. Thus, the existing newline was converted
to a trailing space at the EOL by syslogd, while stderr, and console
output resulted in an empty line.
MFC after: 2 weeks
RuneRange arrays. This is much faster when there are hundreds of
ranges (as is the case in UTF-8 locales) and was inspired by a
similar change made by Apple in Darwin.
of stat(2) calls by keeping an eye of the number of links a directory
has. It assumes that each subdirectory will have a hard link to its
parent, to represent the ".." node, and stops calling stat(2) when
all links are accounted for in a given directory.
This assumption is really only valid for UNIX-like filesystems: A
concrete example is NTFS. The NTFS "i-node" does contain a link
count, but most/all directories have a link count between 0 and 2
inclusive. The end result is that find on an NTFS volume won't
actually traverse the entire hierarchy of the directories passed
to it. (Those with a link count of two are not traversed at all)
The fix checks the "UFSness" of the filesystem before enabling the
optimisation.
Reviewed By: Tim Kientzle (kientzle@)
*printf() and *scanf(). Currently, this reduces the size of libc.so
by 9K on i386. But the real savings are for static binaries that use
*printf() or *scanf() but not strtod(); with an FP-disabled libc,
these binaries will not depend on the gdtoa routines, making each
binary about 22K smaller.
floating-point support, remove default definition of FLOATING_POINT
from the source, and change the compile-time option to
NO_FLOATING_POINT.
- Remove the HEXFLOAT option. It saves an insignificant amount of
space (<0.1% of the size of libc on i386) and complicates vfprintf()
and checkfmt().
after their change from an array of char to an array of enum.
This fixes problems that occurred when using positional arguments in
format strings, particularly with more than STATIC_ARG_TBL_SIZE (8)
of them.
PR: 65841
Submitted by: Steven Smith (mostly)
adjunct maps are used. One symtom of this bug is sshd saying:
login_get_lastlog: Cannot find account for uid X
when logging in. The problem here is caused by an incorrect reuse of the rv
variable when previous values are needed later.
res_search only incremented got_servfail for h_errno == TRY_AGAIN *AND*
hp->rcode == SERVFAIL. However, there are cases such as timeouts where
rcode is not always set to SERVFAIL. This leads to inconsistent nameserver
operation during multi-domain and truncated dot searches, especially during
booting when portions of the network are being brought up simultanious with
dns lookups.
This patch attempts to correct the problem by unconditionally terminating
the search if TRY_AGAIN is returned (after res_query has gone through all
retries and name servers) instead of trying other domain elements in the
domain seach path.
This patch should fix reported problems (which I can reproduce) with some
NFS mounts failing during boot. This occured because mount_nfs thought the
host name lookup returned a definitive failure using a non-dotted host name
when, in fact, it timed out on the first part (host.search.domain.name) and
got a definitive host-not-found response on the second part (host.).
Generally speaking, search path name server timeouts can exceed 60 seconds
per element and most machines which consistently timeout on earlier portions
of a search path are effectively non-operational due to the imposed delays.
It is more important for DNS lookups to return the proper error code then
to be able to recover a valid lookup in later portions of the search path
in these situations.
Obtained from: DragonFly
MFC after: 3 weeks
on temporary nameserver failure. This is necessary to get
getipnodebyname(3) to correctly return h_errno=TRY_AGAIN instead
of HOST_NOT_FOUND.
Reviewed by: green, thomas
MFC after: 1 week
case where an /etc/nsswitch.conf file was present, but could not
be opened (e.g. due to permissions). Previously, the open failure
condition was suppressed, and the built-in defaults were used. In
revision 1.11, however, propagated the open failure causing all
nsdispatch() invocations to return NS_UNAVAIL, and thus many APIs
including getpwnam and gethostbyname unconditionally failed.
This commit restores the previous behavior.
Pointy hat: nectar (+1 for obstinance; ache had to use clue bat)
Reported by: ache
solved by a simple 'make world'. The signalcontext function was going
to the trouble of generating an even 16 byte alignment, but in fact it
needed to be odd aligned to simulate the 8-byte return address having
been pushed by the caller. This fixes yet another group of crashes in
applications using libpthread. And yet again, it was my fault all along.
While here, rename the duplicate internal ctx_wrapper() functions to
makectx_wrapper() and sigctx_wrapper() so that traces aren't ambiguous.
library, it may pull in that thread library at run time. If the
process started out single-threaded, this could cause attempts to
release locks that do not exist. Guard against this possibility by
checking __isthreaded before invoking thread primitives.
A similar problem remains if the process is linked against one thread
library, but the NSS module is linked against another. This can only
be avoided by careful design of the NSS module.
Submitted by: Sean McNeil <sean@mcneil.com> (mostly; bugs are mine)
ferror(), fileno() and clearerr(), using the value of __isthreaded to
decide between the fast inline single-threaded code and the more
general function equivalent. This gives most of the performance
benefits of the old unsafe macros while preserving thread safety.
structure and call stdio functions. In 5.X this was broken when FILE
locking was introduced into libc.
This change makes most (relevant) stdio functions work again when the
_extra file in FILE isn't initialised (and can't be without a libc
function to do it since the __sFILEX structure is private to libc).
cleanups, handling 'ls -l-', handling '--*'
Note this is in the same time back out of our v1.3
"Don't print an error message if the bad option is '?'"
because it directly violates POSIX.
that this provokes. "Wherever possible" means "In the kernel OR NOT
C++" (implying C).
There are places where (void *) pointers are not valid, such as for
function pointers, but in the special case of (void *)0, agreement
settles on it being OK.
Most of the fixes were NULL where an integer zero was needed; many
of the fixes were NULL where ascii <nul> ('\0') was needed, and a
few were just "other".
Tested on: i386 sparc64
- Fix syntax
- Remove the (slightly wrong) duplicate explanation of the error condition
- Change reference to invalid multibyte character into invalid wide character
The getaddrinfo(3), getipnodebyname(3) and resolver(3) can coincide now
with what should be totally reentrant, and h_errno values will now
be preserved correctly, but this does not affect interfaces such as
gethostbyname(3) which are still mostly non-reentrant.
In all of these relevant functions, the thread-safety has been pushed
down as far as it seems possible right now. This means that operations
that are selected via nsdispatch(3) (i.e. files, yp, dns) are protected
still under global locks that getaddrinfo(3) defines, but where possible
the locking is greatly reduced. The most noticeable improvement is
that multiple DNS lookups can now be run at the same time, and this
shows major improvement in performance of DNS-lookup threaded programs,
and solves the "Mozilla tab serialization" problem.
No single-threaded applications need to be recompiled. Multi-threaded
applications that reference "_res" to change resolver(3) options will
need to be recompiled, and ones which reference "h_errno" will also
if they desire the correct h_errno values. If the applications already
understood that _res and h_errno were not thread-safe and had their own
locking, they will see no performance improvement but will not
actually break in any way.
Please note that when NSS modules are used, or when nsdispatch(3)
defaults to adding any lookups of its own to the individual libc
_nsdispatch() calls, those MUST be reentrant as well.