Due to the use of signed vs. unsigned chars on our various platforms, one gets
"warning: comparison is always true due to limited range of data type"
from GCC 3.3.
mutually exclusive. The fact that the most recent one specified on the
command line is the one that takes effect is an implementation detail and
users should not rely on this.
This option is present on most uuidgen(1) implementations even
though normal file redirection can be used to achieve the same.
Submitted by: Hiten Pandya <hiten@unixdaemons.com>
The initial stack_block is staticly allocated and will be aligned
according to the alignment requirements of pointers, which does not
necessarily match the alignment enforced by ALIGN. To solve this a
more involved change is required: remove the static initial stack
and deal with an initial condition of not having a stack at all. This
change is therefore more risky than the previous ones, but unavoidable
(other than not using the platform default alignment).
Discussed with: tjr
Approved and reviewed by: tjr
Tested on: alpha, i386, ia64 and sparc64
The problem with the previous attempt, as noticed by Marcel, was that
stacknxt was being aligned to a pointer boundary instead of an
ALIGNBYTES + 1 boundary, which broke sparc64.
using the alignment from sys/param.h (16) instead of the alignment
from machdep.h (8) tickled a nasty bug in the memory allocator that I
haven't been able to track down yet.
one that is already there. This is consistent with GNU ps(1)'s BSD mode, and
POLA.
Reported by: Andy Farkas <andyf@speednet.com.au>
Tested by: Andy Farkas <andyf@speednet.com.au>
similar to "-h" on chown, chmod, etc, causing the operation to occur
on a final symlink in the provided path, rather than its target.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
determine whether a symlink has an ACL. Instead, assume that symbolic
links don't have ACLs and don't bother checking. Avoids spurious
ENOENT warnings when listing directories containing broken symlinks
on filesystems with ACLs enabled.
Pointed out by: rwatson, bde
do the wrong thing when the symlink doesn't have a target, by
considering !f_label in the construction of ch_options.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
is given as argument) that is not present in 4-Stable.
It was introduced when realpath(1) was split out of pwd(1).
The removed behavior is provided by pwd(1).
Reviewed by: mike
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
is reduced by 40k, dynamic by a few bytes.
Functional changes:
* "sleep -- arg" now returns usage() instead of ignoring the --
* "sleep -1" now returns immediately instead of returning usage()
Reviewed by: jmallett
- Gracefully handle the case where standard input is missing
a newline at EOF.
- Exit with status 1 instead of -1 (really 255) on error.
- Add a Diagnostics section to the manual page documenting
exit status.
Approved by: rwatson
listings if the file has an extended ACL (more than the required 3 entries).
This is what Solaris and IRIX do, and what the withdrawn POSIX.2c standard
required.
Reviewed by: rwatson (an earlier version of the patch)
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.
whether a named utility should behave in FreeBSD 4.x-compatible mode
or in a standard mode (default standard). The configuration is done
malloc(3)-style, with either an environment variable or a symlink.
Update expr(1) to use this new interface.
object to retrieve label information on, rather than directly
consuming the fts-provided paths (none of which are quite right).
This is based on the similar readlink() code, and may contain
the same bugs.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
than the LOMAC-specific interfaces for listing MAC labels. This permits
ls to view MAC labels in a manner similar to getfmac, when ls is used
with the -l argument. Next generation LOMAC will use the MAC Framework
so should "just" work with this and other policies. Not the prettiest
code in the world, but then, neither is ls(1).
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
the LOMAC-specific interface (which is being deprecated). The
revised LOMAC using the MAC framework will export levels listable
using this mechanism.
Approved by: re
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
appropriate. Before this, a 2.9 GB file was misleadingly reported as
"2G". This mostly brings unit_adjust() in line with what is in du(1).
Reviewed by: jmallett
Approved by: nik
are later stripped with rmescapes() in expandarg(). If the filename has
already been unescaped, doing it again in rmescapes() can walk off the
end of the string, leading to memory corruption and eventually SIGSEGV.
Noticed by: kris
commands. Commands like "if then ... fi" and "while do ... done" are no
longer accepted. Bodies of compound commands are still allowed to be
empty, because even though POSIX does not allow them, most shells do.
Instead use %ju and cast the argument.
WFORMAT=0 is still required in the Makefile because gcc warns about
some strftime() calls (I don't think this behaviour is useful.)
Tested on: sparc64, alpha, i386
off_t is for offsets in files, and it is signed so it was no better
than the original type of int for avoiding warnings from broken lints,
except accidentally on machines like i386's where size_t is smaller
than off_t.
pointers. This fixes two format warnings on 64 bits
archs which are fatal now that WFORMAT=0 has been removed.
It doesn't fully fix the sh(1) build on 64 bits platforms
though, there is still some quad_t issues that need to be
fixed.
Tested on: i386, sparc64
adding history and vi/emacs-style line editing to the shell itself.
Atty was a user-mode terminal emulator (like screen and window) that did
line editing and history.
the cumulative exit status being overwritten when directory permissions
were being set. This was particularly bad when called from mv(1) to
perform a cross-device move as the original files were deleted even if
the copy failed.
Reported by: Slaven Rezic <slaven.rezic@berlin.de>
Patch by: bde
PR: 42789
hack, thereby allowing future extensions to the structure (e.g., for extended
attributes) without rebreaking the ABI. FTSENT now contains a pointer to the
parent stream, which fts_compar() can then take advantage of, avoiding the
undefined behavior previously warned about. As a consequence of this change,
the prototype of the comparison function passed to fts_open() has changed
to reflect the required amount of constness for its use. All callers in the
tree are updated to use the correct prototype.
Comparison functions can now make use of the new parent pointer to access
the new stream-specific private data pointer, which is intended to assist
creation of reentrant library routines which use fts(3) internally.
Not objected to in spirit by: -arch
ps(1) formatting, using pgtok() to get the value in K, rather than printing
it in pages. This is consistent with behaviour before keyword.c:1.26 (et al)
which exists in STABLE today, and which uses the same metric as VSZ.
Submitted by: bde
Add some constness to avoid some warnings.
Remove use register keyword.
Deal with missing/unneeded extern/prototypes.
Some minor type changes/casts to avoid warnings.
Reviewed by: md5