receives them from other hosts. This is meant to protect from both
nefarious users (which maybe broke into some remote host that we accept
print jobs from), and broken implementations of lpr on other platforms.
This is done by changing recvjob.c to call the new ctl_renametf()
routine in the new common_source/ctlinfo.[ch] files. This will not
affect jobs coming via lpr on the local machine.
Reviewed by: freebsd-print@bostonradio.org & freebsd-audit
MFC after: 16 days
often by just telling gcc that some internal routine is "__printflike"
(work done by Kris Kennaway <kris@FreeBSD.org>). Also fix the new warnings
which show up once gcc starts checking the "printf-like parameters" passed
to those routines.
MFC after: 1 week
sure when things got so bad (JHB says preemption worked just fine for months
before the AlbertVM commit). Even post DillionVM locking commit, Miatas
(DEC Personal Workstations) are very fragile -- not making it thru a world
build. With this patch it does.
Those hacking on SMPng will want to locally back out this commit. The rest
of us will want to run with it until the SMPng guys figure out the problem(s).
Submitted by: peter
This fixes a problem with using print filters (if=, of=, etc) that showed
up in -current around June 20th. That problem initially reported by
Georg-W Koltermann <gwk@sgi.com>, while most of the investigation that
led to this fix was done by Anton Berezin <tobez@FreeBSD.org>.
Reviewed by: freebsd-print@bostonradio.org
MFC after: 1 week
on Alpha 4100s.
Basically, if you're halting or you're rebooting, you should
tell all other processors to halt first. Define IPI_HALT- IPI_STOP
is not what we want for this purpose, which will call prom_halt(0)
on receipt.
The processor running the halt or reboot wil send an IPI_HALT to all
other processors, delay a bit, then continue to do what what it was
planning on doing (prom_halt({0|1})).
. Integrate fdc.h into fd.c, with the removal of ft(4) there's no longer
a reason to scatter things across two files.
. Sanitize comments. Convert them into the style(9)-recommended
multi-line form, make them sentences where apprpriate, etc.
. Declare all functions on top, and declare them in the order they
appear in the file. This order is totally chaotic, but Bruce
convinced me that reordering the file wouldn't make it better either.
. Kill a `possibly uninitialized' warning (only seen with -O2) in
fd_read_status().
. Make the comments at return (0|1) statements in fdstate() consistent.
. Nuke a ``keep the compiler happy'' dummy return at the end of fdstate(),
gcc is smart enough to detect that it would never be reached anyway.
cd src/share; find man[1-9] -type f|xargs perl -pi -e 's/[ \t]+$//'
BTW, what editors are the culprits? I'm using vim and it shows
me whitespace at EOL in troff files with a thick blue block...
Reviewed by: Silence from cvs diff -b
MFC after: 7 days
- Use '\0' for a char instead of NULL.
- Explicitly compare against the global `nullstring' to determine if
a non-NULL uaddr is not malloc'd.
- Remove some unnecessary casting of the argument to free().
- In rpcbproc_callit_com(), move the freeing of m_uaddr to the
cleanup code at the end of the function.
- To avoid confusion and possible alignment problems, change
netbufdup() to allocate the netbuf struct and the sockaddr buffer
separately, and change netbuffree() accordingly. This makes it
produce netbufs that are consistent with all other netbufs in
rpcbind.
comparing bit by bit.
Make the logic in in6_fillscopeid() match that in our ifconfig(8):
only set the scope ID if there is one in the address and none in
sin6_scope_id.
Correct a comment in network_init() that didn't make sense; it was
probably never updated after it was pasted from similar code in
addrmerge().