gzipped binaries and since systems with larger data stores, it is no
longer reasonable to expect to fit the tripwire binary and database onto
a single floppy disk.
PR: 80978
- Add the TWCONFIG variable to install a user defined tw.config instead
of the one supplied with the port.
- Add the NO_DB_BUILD variable to skip the database build during install
for users upgrading or reinstalling the port who wish to use an existing
or previously installed Tripwire database.
Change MAINTAINER from me (Cy.Schubert@uumail.gov.bc.ca) to
me (cy@FreeBSD.org).
PR: ports/35127
Submitted by: cjc
- Fix the Makefiles to obey the CC and CFLAGS settings
- Fix patches/patch-ab to be PREFIX/LOCALBASE safe
- Fix the post-install to not compress the gunzip and tripwire executables
that go onto a floppy -- there is no support for the gzip-ed ELF binaries
at all, and even for the older AOUT ones such support was optional
- Replaces the /kernel with `sysctl -n kern.bootfile` in the tw.conf as the
tw.conf.freebsd2 is copied into the right place.
- Replace the use of mktemp(3) with tmpfile(3) (see patches/patch-mktemp).
This also caused a removal of a few buffers (of size MAXPATHLEN+256) and
quite a few strcpy and sprintf invocations.
PR: 18634
Submitted by: Mikhail Teterin <mi@aldan.algebra.com>
[Has anyone figured-out what makes the number 393 so interesting to PW, now?]
I wonder what was going through Jordan's head during his infamous
$Id$-smashing commit.
Before I forget....
Thanks to naddy@mips.rhein-neckar.de (Christian Weisgerber) for prompting
this commit. See msg-id: 7geokh$tje$1@mips.rhein-neckar.de
statements are a little strong (like /.cshrc being used in single user mode),
it does appear /root was already protected.
PR: ports/7200
Submitted by: Joe Greco <greco@ns.sol.net>
The CERT FTP site no longer contains Tripwire. A little digging and
sleuthing reveals that Spaf has the stuff over at coast.cs.purdue.edu
anyways. It appears that it might move again in the future, see
ftp://coast.cs.purdue.edu/pub/COAST/Tripwire/README-1297
Changed floppy generation code to chmod gunzip to executable by a
better strategic location for the chmod command. The former code
failed to do this, meaning gunzip couldn't be run from the floppy.
"Ooops". Yes, I actually do use this code! Honest! :-)