'locale not used' statement from comments and BUGS section of manpage.
strtol(): fix non-portable 'cutoff' calculation using the same method as
in strtoll().
Cleanup 'cutoff' calculation, remove unneded casts. Misc. cleanup to
make all functions looks the same.
Implement EINVAL reaction per POSIX, document it in manpage, corresponding
POSIX example quotes here:
------------------------------------------------
If the subject sequence is empty or does not have the expected form, no
conversion is performed; the value of str is stored in the object pointed
to by endptr, provided that endptr is not a null pointer.
If no conversion could be performed, 0 shall be returned and errno may be
set to [EINVAL].
[EINVAL] The value of base is not supported.
Since 0, {LONG_MIN} or {LLONG_MIN}, and {LONG_MAX} or {LLONG_MAX} are
returned on error and are also valid returns on success, an application
wishing to check for error situations should set errno to 0, then call
strtol( ) or strtoll ( ), then check errno.
-----------------------------------------------------
are not used'. This is incorrect, as addr must be passed (caddr_t)1
to do anything useful. The source for gdb and a short test program
will confirm that this man page was in error.
PR: docs/27758
Submitted by: Jiangyi Liu <jyliu@163.net>
sys/capability.h--this compiled fine on i386 where (int) and (ssize_t)
are the same, but broke on Alpha where they differ.
Submitted by: Mike Barcroft <mike@FreeBSD.org>
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
plain regular files, i.e. files with __SOPT flag set. Fix it, so ftell(stdout)
always returns the same as lseek(1, 0, 1) now.
NOTE: this bug was in original stdio code
__swrite() and __sseek() to higher level. According to funopen(3) they all
are just wrappers to something like standard read(2), write(2) and
lseek(2), i.e. must not touch stdio internals because they are replaceable
with any other functions knows nothing about stdio internals. See example
of funopen(3) usage in sendmail sources f.e.
NOTE: this is original stdio bug, not result of my range checkin added.
internal functions there may fail and set (i.e. overwrite) errno in normal
(not error) situation). In original variant errno testing after call
(as POSIX suggest) is wrong when errno overwrite happens.
0, return that we can't specify it, i.e. error with ESPIPE.
(hint from: "Peter S. Housel" <housel@acm.org>)
Back out sinit() addition, not needed after various code simplifications.
support functions:
cap_subset_np() - Is cap1 a subset of cap2
cap_equal_np() - Is cap1 equal to cap2
o Introduce implementations of POSIX.1e capability support functions:
cap_copy_ext() - Externalize capability
cap_copy_int() - Internalize capability
cap_size() - Determine size required for cap_copy_ext()
Submitted by: tmm
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
When file offset tends to be negative due to internal and ungetc buffers
additions counted, try to discard some ungetc data first, then return EBADF.
Later one can happens if lseek(fileno(fd),...) called f.e. POSIX says that
ungetc beyond beginning of the file results are undefined, so we can just
discard some of ungetc data in that case.
Don't rely on gcc cast when checking for overflow, use OFF_MAX.
Cosmetique.
o Unify <machine/endian.h>'s across all architectures.
o Make bswapXX() functions use a different spelling of u_int16_t and
friends to reduce namespace pollution. The bswapXX() functions
don't actually exist, but we'll probably import these at some
point. Atleast one driver (if_de) depends on bswapXX() for big
endian cases.
o Deprecate byteorder(3) prototypes from <sys/types.h>, these are
now prototyped indirectly in <arpa/inet.h>.
o Deprecate in_addr_t and in_port_t typedefs in <sys/types.h>, these
are now typedef'd in <arpa/inet.h>.
o Change byteorder(3) prototypes to use standards compliant uint32_t
(spelled __uint32_t to reduce namespace pollution).
o Document new preferred headers and standards compliance.
Discussed with: bde
PR: 29946
Reviewed by: bmilekic