Commit Graph

439 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nate Williams c524c9334d Bring in the man page additions for PT_ATTACH/DETACH|GET/SET_REGS that
were deleted out after the initial import now that Peter's code has
implemented them in -current.
1996-01-24 20:17:17 +00:00
Wolfram Schneider 3f22919355 note in bugs section: madvise not yet implemented 1996-01-23 23:33:55 +00:00
Mike Pritchard 86cfd0dd41 Changed the description of SIGSYS to better reflect what
it means when that signal is received.  Closes PR# 686.
1996-01-22 12:31:15 +00:00
Julian Elischer aaf0927a09 Obtained from: uthreads package 1996-01-22 00:32:08 +00:00
Julian Elischer f70177e76e Reviewed by: julian and (hsu?)
Submitted by:	 John Birrel(L?)

changes for threadsafe operations
1996-01-22 00:02:33 +00:00
Nate Williams ae5d6711ff - FreeBSD'ized the ptrace manpage by removing non-FreeBSD specific portions.
- install ptrace.2
1996-01-20 17:56:06 +00:00
Nate Williams 55b697783d This commit was generated by cvs2svn to compensate for changes in r13519,
which included commits to RCS files with non-trunk default branches.
1996-01-20 17:35:25 +00:00
Nate Williams 6f2c1e42c7 ptrace(2) manpage 1996-01-20 17:35:25 +00:00
Mike Pritchard 270d3d754a Fix a variety of minor typos and cross references in a bunch of
man pages.

Masanobu Saitoh <msaitoh@spa.is.uec.ac.jp>
Giles Lean <giles@nemeton.com.au>
<soda@sra.co.jp>
1996-01-20 07:29:11 +00:00
Jordan K. Hubbard 4fab558b60 Return pointer to new hash node when search inserts it (e.g. there
was some datum given).
1996-01-13 14:25:04 +00:00
Peter Wemm 4faad310d3 The last of the bind-4.9.3-REL resolver merges. 1996-01-13 09:03:58 +00:00
Mike Pritchard b6607b59c8 Correct the strspn() man page so that it no longer references
itself as strcspn().

Obtained from:  NetBSD-bugs mailing list (PR# 1905)
1996-01-10 11:06:25 +00:00
Peter Wemm ab83cd2d54 Merge the 4.9.3-rel code into the res_* parts. The gethostXXXbyYYY
parts are not quite so simple..
1996-01-07 09:15:02 +00:00
Peter Wemm 25ae517921 This commit was generated by cvs2svn to compensate for changes in r13304,
which included commits to RCS files with non-trunk default branches.
1996-01-07 06:57:27 +00:00
Peter Wemm ffa065a6d4 Part of bind-4.9.3-rel.. This is for my convenience and reference.
This import to the vendor branch changes no files...
1996-01-07 06:57:27 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 926cb56114 Fix a fencepost error.
Found by: Lars Fredriksen <fredriks@mcs.com>
1996-01-05 23:30:41 +00:00
Peter Wemm 01cc6d5ae0 Document the change that I made to pipe(2) 1996-01-01 15:40:31 +00:00
Peter Wemm 3b7e1cc80f Bump libutil revision after recent addition of setproctitle().
Install (optional) libutil.h with prototypes for the functions and
document this in the man page.

minor cleanups to the various routines, include the prototype file, declare
return codes etc.
1996-01-01 08:27:41 +00:00
Joerg Wunsch 7560bb26ff Finally complete my fix for the behaviour of getpass(3) upon receipt
of signals.  Signals are now properly caught, tty state is being
restored, and the previous sigaction triggered.  Upon receipt of a
sigcont, echo is turned off again.

SIGTSTP causes a buffer flush, the man page mentions this.  (Although
i rather think of it as a feature than a bug.)

This is likely to be my last FreeBSD action for 1995, xearth shows
me that our .au guys must already write 1996. :-)
1995-12-31 14:00:25 +00:00
Peter Wemm 6065a0be11 This commit was generated by cvs2svn to compensate for changes in r13122,
which included commits to RCS files with non-trunk default branches.
1995-12-30 19:02:48 +00:00
Peter Wemm a5b996a7ec recording cvs-1.6 file death 1995-12-30 19:02:48 +00:00
Bruce Evans bb369b53b2 Added $Id$. 1995-12-30 07:01:50 +00:00
Bruce Evans 912e603778 Implemented non-statistical kernel profiling. This is based on
looking at a high resolution clock for each of the following events:
function call, function return, interrupt entry, interrupt exit,
and interesting branches.  The differences between the times of
these events are added at appropriate places in a ordinary histogram
(as if very fast statistical profiling sampled the pc at those
places) so that ordinary gprof can be used to analyze the times.

gmon.h:
Histogram counters need to be 4 bytes for microsecond resolutions.
They will need to be larger for the 586 clock.
The comments were vax-centric and wrong even on vaxes.  Does anyone
disagree?

gprof4.c:
The standard gprof should support counters of all integral sizes
and the size of the counter should be in the gmon header.  This
hack will do until then.  (Use gprof4 -u to examine the results
of non-statistical profiling.)

config/*:
Non-statistical profiling is configured with `config -pp'.
`config -p' still gives ordinary profiling.

kgmon/*:
Non-statistical profiling is enabled with `kgmon -B'.  `kgmon -b'
still enables ordinary profiling (and distables non-statistical
profiling) if non-statistical profiling is configured.
1995-12-29 15:30:05 +00:00
Gary Palmer b3d64ab72f Oops. I seem to have over-corrected with my last commit. It should be
right this time
1995-12-29 08:23:59 +00:00
Gary Palmer d28b4295fd Correct what seem to me to be some mistakes in the references and
standards sections. Also add a missing `,' to each file.
1995-12-28 21:06:07 +00:00
Joerg Wunsch 5237ee4167 Don't block SIGINT in getpass(3); this doesn't make sense. 1995-12-27 23:23:00 +00:00
David Greenman aacd7f348e Be smarter about handling overlapped copies and only go backwards if it
is really necessary. Going backwards on a P6 is much slower than forwards
and it's a little slower on a P5. Also moved the count mask and 'std'
down a few lines - it's a couple percent faster this way on a P5.
1995-12-27 18:47:45 +00:00
Peter Wemm 0050777196 Bring in an initial version of setproctitle().. This is intended to
replace the dozen other various hacks in the code that do all sorts
of crude things including spamming the envrionment strings with the new
argv string.

This version is mainly inspired by the sendmail version, with a couple of
ideas taken from the NetBSD implementation as well.
1995-12-26 22:50:08 +00:00
Bruce Evans 432889653c Added prototypes. 1995-12-26 13:25:13 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 9100bbac3d Preallocate a small structure, so we can sbrk(2) further back.
Reviewed by:	phk
Submitted by:	Kaleb Keithly <kaleb@x.org>
1995-12-18 12:03:54 +00:00
Bill Paul 9d80b1dd94 Clean up a few things left dangling after the last commit. The new
XDR routines auto-generated by rpcgen don't quite match the format of
the original ones even though tey have the same names (that was one of
the things wrong with the old XDR routines).
1995-12-15 03:26:40 +00:00
Bill Paul 0e276383fa Now that rpcgen is squared away, arrange to have all the NIS XDR routines
rpcgen-erated on the fly (just like librpcsvc).

Makefile: Add rule for generating yp_xdr.c and yp.h.

xdryp.c: gut everything except the special ypresp_all XDR function
         needed to to handle yp_all() (this one can't be created on
         the fly), and xdr_datum(), which isn't used internally by
         libc, but which as documented as being there in yp_prot.h,
         so what the hell. We now get everything else from yp_xdr.c.

yplib.c: change a few structure member names to match those found in
         yp.h instead of those declared in yp_prot.h.
1995-12-14 05:16:45 +00:00
Peter Wemm 04936d2e08 Change phkmalloc so that the page directory is now floating and allocated
via mmap() up around the shared library area.  Previously the directory
was allocated from space from it's own memory pool.  Because of the way it
was being extended on processes with large malloced data segments (ie: inn)
once the page directory was extended for some reason, it was not possible
to lower the heap size any more to return pages to the OS.
(If my understanding is correct, page directory expansion occurs at 4MB,
12MB, 20MB, 28MB, etc.)  I was seeing INN allocate a large amount of short
term memory, pushing it over the 28MB mark, and once it's transient demands
hit 28MB, it never freed it's pages and swap space again.)

I've been running this in my libc for about a month...

Also, seperate MALLOC_STATS from EXTRA_SANITY..  I found it useful to call
malloc_dump() from within INN from a ctlinnd command to see where the hell
all the memory was going.. :-)  I've left MALLOC_STATS enabled, as it has
no run-time or data storage cost.

Reviewed by: phk
1995-12-11 14:28:12 +00:00
Bill Paul baadb8c9e4 Fix minor annoyance: have clnt_perror(), clnt_perrno() and
clnt_pcreateerror() emit strings with newlines appended like other
platforms do.
1995-12-10 17:40:18 +00:00
David Greenman 0b7a315970 Include sys/time.h, not sys/user.h.
Submitted by:	"Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@hub.org>
1995-12-08 08:47:41 +00:00
Bruce Evans 6bf4655faa Fixed type mismatches. 1995-12-07 12:50:56 +00:00
Bill Paul de32dbbd5d Small tweak: don't try closing /etc/netgroup if we haven't opened it yet. 1995-12-02 21:54:59 +00:00
Bruce Evans 1d064c3b2d Restored [u]cmpdi2.c which are needed for switching on [unsigned] long
long values.
1995-12-01 09:38:35 +00:00
Bruce Evans dce5165a30 Removed cmpdi2.c from ${SRCS}. I think it is no more needed than ucmpdi2.
Restored order in ${SRCS}.
1995-11-29 15:11:43 +00:00
Bill Paul 0f98415ed4 - Make _do_ypbind() check for /var/run/ypbind.lock and attempt to flock()
it before before trying to establish a binding. If /var/run/ypbind.lock
  doesn't exist, or if it exists and isn't locked, then ypbind isn't
  running, which means NIS is either turned off or hosed.

- Have _yp_check() call yp_unbind() after it sucessfully calls yp_bind()
  to make sure it frees resources correctly. (I don't think there's really
  a memory leak here, but it seems somehow wrong to call yp_bind() without
  making a corresponding call to yp_unbind() afterwards.)

This makes the NIS code behave a little better in cases where libc makes
calls to NIS, but it isn't running correctly (i.e. there's no ypbind).

This cleans up some strange libc behavior that manifests itself if
you have the system domain name set, but aren't actually running NIS.
In this event, the getrpcent(3) code could try to call into NIS and
cause several inexplicable "clnttcp_create error: RPC program not
registered" messages to appear. This happens because _yp_check() checks
if the system domain name is set and, if it is, proceeds to call
yp_bind() to attempt to establish a binding. Since there is no
binding file (remember: ypbind isn't running, so /var/yp/binding
will be empty), _yp_dobind() will attempt to contact ypbind to
prod it into binding the domain. And because ypbind isn't running,
the code generates the 'clnttcp_create' error. Ultimately the
_yp_check() fails and the getrpcent(3) code rolls over to the /etc/rpc
file, but the error messages are annoying, and the code should be
smart enough to forgo the binding attempt when NIS is turned off.
1995-11-05 05:39:04 +00:00
Bill Paul 215032be8c Add NIS support to getservent(3) functions (getservbyport() and getservbyname()
both call getservent() to do most of the work, so we only need to modify
this file to take care of everybody).

Note that there is only one NIS services map (services.byname) even
though there are getservbyname() and getservbyport() library functions.
1995-11-04 19:07:27 +00:00
Garrett Wollman 2f7778001d Document recent changes in socket buffers and listen(2). 1995-11-03 18:34:38 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov f9cbdf410e Move more stuff out to XPG4
Handle negative chars inside runetype/tolower/toupper
1995-11-03 08:59:02 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp d12f212098 Add #include <sys/user.h>. 1995-10-28 16:14:18 +00:00
Adam David 5f0d67bea7 misc typos 1995-10-27 16:56:53 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 9f23763a01 Remove unneded ctype.h 1995-10-26 22:32:00 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 7f3f016d8c Fix it for chars with 8bit set 1995-10-23 20:49:58 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 34d08e870e Treat empty encoding as "C" encoding 1995-10-23 20:20:11 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 377da8e867 Optimize PathLocale handling.
Handle C/POSIX/"" properly.
Don't reset collate to C when it is unnecessary
1995-10-23 20:08:24 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 2d542a0868 Don't reset LC_TIME to C when it isn't neccessary 1995-10-23 19:52:43 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 24c9187962 Use fake (empty) startup_setlocale for XPG4 1995-10-23 02:25:53 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 9d45c3af90 Reduce static binaries bloat by splitting out normally unused
setinvalidrune()
1995-10-23 02:13:05 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 350a3d3e48 Migrate from XPG4 to XPG3 (libxpg4 will be added soon)
Remove big part of my startup_setlocale hack.
Add missing manpage links.
1995-10-23 01:34:17 +00:00
Bruce Evans 3b4058284e Fixed lint from cc -Wall.
Cleaned up includes.
1995-10-22 18:43:26 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 29285d6cc5 minor cleanup, #includes. 1995-10-22 14:53:58 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 88640ee125 Mino cleanup, #includes & unused vars. 1995-10-22 14:53:17 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp c0d41487f2 Minor cleanup, #include's and unused vars.
Added compile-time warning to an old funky function.
1995-10-22 14:52:30 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 4c3af266f6 Well, cvs commit core'ed on me, I belive I have got all the locks out,
but a commit mail got lost, it's the same as for this commit:

 lib/libc/gen  confstr.c crypt.c disklabel.c fstab.c getcap.c
          getgrent.c  getgrouplist.c getpass.c getpwent.c
          initgroups.c nlist.c  psignal.c pwcache.c setmode.c
          sleep.c sysconf.c sysctl.c  syslog.c usleep.c
 lib/libc/locale  none.c read_runemagi.c setlocale.c
 lib/libc/net  gethostbydns.c getnetbydns.c getnetbynis.c
 lib/libc/nls  msgcat.c
 lib/libc/quad  Makefile.inc
 lib/libc/regex  engine.c regcomp.c regerror.c

	Minor cleanup, mostly unused vars and missing #includes.
	Limit the number of quad functions we pull in for 'i386'.
	I still belive the quad stuff should go back into gcc.
	Add compile-time warnings about crypt functions.
1995-10-22 14:51:39 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp f824233e9e Remove EXTRA_SANITY, fix a unused var. 1995-10-22 14:47:00 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 16252f1166 More cleanup.
Uhm, I also forgot: I took "EXTRA_SANITY" out of malloc.c
1995-10-22 14:40:55 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp e2a4bdf63c limit the number of functions we pull in for 'i386'.
I still belive this stuff should go back into gcc.
1995-10-22 14:40:17 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 739398ee03 and so on... 1995-10-22 14:39:22 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp fce61be7f5 As above. 1995-10-22 14:39:06 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 696cbd5ff2 As above.
Oh I also put in a couple of compile-time warnings for the crypt stuff.
1995-10-22 14:38:48 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 8b10240709 Minor cleanup, mostly unused vars and missing #includes. 1995-10-22 14:37:11 +00:00
Peter Wemm fc370289ab Add $Id$ since this version of the file has diverged from the BSD base a
fair bit.  I forgot to add it when I made the fixes some time ago.
1995-10-21 07:05:01 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 32e0d22da8 Propogate default table to restricted 8859-1 template
(only control/graph/punct/print tags used)
Based on: kaleb@x.org and Bruce suggestions
1995-10-19 19:29:55 +00:00
Joerg Wunsch b788806eb4 Remove the bugs section. sh(1) now has a ulimit builtin. 1995-10-19 18:45:44 +00:00
David Greenman 283e0c0eb7 Doubled the performance of getenv()/__findenv() by rewriting it to not
use strncmp()..
1995-10-17 21:37:41 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp eba2673a3f Add moncontrol.3 -> monstartup.3 link here. 1995-10-15 17:40:20 +00:00
Bill Paul 3948edc24c Another tweak/speedup pass:
- Fix buffer overflow problem once and for all: do away with the buffer
  copies to 'user' prior to calling _scancaches() and just pass a pointer
  to the buffer returned by yp_match()/yp_first()/yp_next()/whatever.
  (We turn the first ':' to a NUL first so strcmp() works, then change it
  back later. Submitted by Bill Fenner <fenner@parc.xerox.com> and
  tweaked slightly by me.

- Give _pw_breakout_yp() the 'more elegant solution' I promised way back when.
  Eliminate several copies to static buffers and replace them with just
  one copy. (The buffer returned by the NIS functions is at most
  YPMAXRECORD bytes long, so we should only need one static buffer of
  the same length (plus 2 for paranoia's sake).)

- Also in _pw_breakout_yp(): always set pw.pw_passwd to the username
  obtained via NIS regardless of what pw_fields says: usernames cannot
  be overridden so we have no choice but to use the name returned by
  NIS.

- _Again_ in _pw_breakout_yp(): before doing anything else, check that
  the first character of the NIS-returned buffer is not a '+' or '-'.
  If it is, drop the entry. (#define EXTRA_PARANOIA 1 :)

- Probe for the master.passwd.* maps once during __initdb() instead
  of doing it each time _getyppass() or _nextyppass() is called.

- Don't copy the NIS data buffers to static memory in _getyppass()
  and _nextyppass(): this is done in _pw_breakout_yp() now.

- Test against phkmalloc and phkmalloc/2 (TNG!) to make sure we're
  free()ing the yp buffers sanely.

- Put _havemaster(), _getyppass() and nextyppass() prototypes under
  #ifdef YP. (Somehow they ended up on the wrong side of the #endif.)

- Remove unused variable ___yp_only.
1995-10-11 21:35:08 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 7aa70c9e8e phkmalloc/2
"zero' and 'junk' options to help find and diagnose malloc abuse.
EXTRA_SANITY defaults "junk" to on.
Don't dump the internal state, unless EXTRA_SANITY.
General code cleanup.
Error messages cleaned up a bit, more checking earlier.
EXTRA_SANITY is default at this time (just in case).
Performance (without EXTRA_SANITY) is better, beats gnumalloc in
both time & space most of the time:

	# In-memory test.
	./malloc 50000000 2000 8192
	159.2u 1.5s 2:41.85 99.3% 5+7742k 0+0io 0pf+0w
	./gnumalloc 50000000 2000 8192
	272.6u 0.4s 4:35.01 99.3% 5+8533k 0+0io 0pf+0w

	# Swap-space test.
	./malloc 500000 14000 8192
	6.5u 4.1s 4:08.87 4.3% 5+49209k 0+0io 9772pf+0w
	./gnumalloc 500000 14000 8192
	16.2u 14.5s 15:36.14 3.2% 5+54100k 0+0io 47651pf+0w

	# Small items test.
	./malloc 20000000 20000 2048
	67.0u 0.3s 1:07.83 99.2% 5+18199k 0+0io 4pf+0w
	./gnumalloc 20000000 20000 2048
	66.2u 0.3s 1:07.03 99.3% 5+18107k 0+0io 0pf+0w

SANITY is not an option anymore. (!!)
1995-10-08 18:44:20 +00:00
Bill Paul eb6c139019 Some NIS bug stomping:
- In some cases, we don't properly resolve _all_ possible group memberships.
  If a user is a member of both local and NIS groups, we sometimes lose some
  of the membership info from NIS. (Reported by: Thorsten Kukuk
  <kukuk@uni-paderborn.de>)

- Make NIS +groupname overrides actually work the way the SunOS group(5)
  man page says they should (make them work for all cases: getgrent(),
  getgrnam() and getgrgid()).

- When not compiled with -DYP, grscan() should ignore entries that
  begin with a '+'. When compiled _with_ -DYP, grscan() should ignore
  +groupname entries that don't refer to real NIS groups.

- Remove redundant redeclaration of fgets(), strsep() and index() inside
  grscan(). We already #include all the right header files for these.

Note: -groupname exclusion as specified in the Sun documentation still
isn't supported. This'll be a 2.2 addition. Right now I just want this
stuff to work.
1995-10-06 21:29:01 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp fcce81cde3 remove GCC support functions from libc.
Should never have been here in the first place.
1995-10-05 10:24:57 +00:00
Peter Wemm 11e67a9f2e Fix the problem that I aroused with the last commit..
What was happening, is if syslogd was not running, syslog() would do
a strcat("\r\n") on a non-null-terminated buffer, and write it to the console.

This meant that sometimes extra characters could be written to the console
during boot, depending on the stack contents.

This totally avoids the potential problem by using writev() like the rest
of the does, and avoid modifying the buffer after the trouble we've gone to
to carefully protect it.

This is actually a trivial fix, in spite of the long commit message.. :-)
It only appeared during boot and shutdown with syslogd stopped.
1995-10-05 00:11:15 +00:00
Peter Wemm 216b9a0d22 Make a link-time warning for the use of gets().
IMHO, the run-time warning should come out, but I'm not game to start that
fight yet...  This uses a feature of the gnu linker.

Inspired by:  NetBSD
1995-10-04 18:29:01 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp bf529a66d9 Calling sbrk(2) with zero argument doesn't need to generate a syscall.
Reviewed by:	bde
1995-10-04 15:58:57 +00:00
Joerg Wunsch 5f5555b1ea Add man pages for the SYSV shm* and sem* functions.
This partially closes PR # docs/177.
This should probably also go into 2.1.

Submitted by:	daveho@infocom.com (David Hovemeyer)
1995-10-03 19:17:21 +00:00
Bruce Evans 372e515faa This gets() used \r\n, which is doggish. 1995-09-29 18:52:47 +00:00
Peter Wemm fcc3b6999e Make ttyname() use posix-style tcgetattr() to check to see that it's
running on a tty.  (Same as isatty()) The old-style TIOCGETP ioctl
wouldn't fly if the kernel didn't have COMPAT_43.
Submitted by:	Carl Fongheiser <cmf@netins.net>
1995-09-22 17:01:28 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 182b05e19e A buglet when dumping and a stylistic point from Mike.
Submitted by:	Mike Pritchard <mpp@mpp.minn.net>
1995-09-22 14:11:00 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 81df7b69ef ``phkmalloc''
Performance is comparable to gnumalloc if you have sufficient RAM, and
it screams around it if you don't.
Compiled with "EXTRA_SANITY" until further notice.
see malloc.3 for more details.
1995-09-16 09:28:13 +00:00
Peter Wemm 7c8e2aa48c Fix security bugs with a "new approach", using stdio's powerful buffer
control hooks.
It is similar to an unrolled multi-part snprintf(), in that a "FILE *" is
attached to a string buffer.  There is also an optimisation for the case
where the syslog format string does not contain %m, which should improve
performance of "informational" logging, like from ftpd.
1995-09-15 13:53:39 +00:00
David Greenman 03a9df25d1 Indicate that backlog limit is 32. 1995-09-15 10:02:07 +00:00
Bill Paul 400b841301 getgrent.c: adjust _nextypgroup() slightly so that it continues processing
the group map after encountering a badly formatted entry.

getpwent.c: same as above for _nextyppass(), and also turn a couple of
sprintf()s into snprintf()s to avoid potential buffer overruns. (The
other day I nearly went mad because of a username in my NIS database
that's actually 9 characters long instead of 8. Stuffing a 9-character
username into an 8-character buffer can do some strange things.)

(This reminds me: I hope somebody's planning to fix the buffer overrun
security hole in syslog(3) before 2.1 ships.)
1995-09-05 19:52:59 +00:00
Bill Paul 4cc738f763 Clear up a minor bogosity in yp_match(): we have YPMATCHCACHE turned
on, which is fine, except that _yp_dobind() is called before we check
the cache. The means we can return from the cache check (if we have
a hit) without calling _yp_unbind().

We should do the cache check first and _then_ drop into the section
that binds the server and does the yp_match query.
1995-09-02 04:16:21 +00:00
Bill Paul d454389cc2 getpwent.c: turn the code that checks the override caches into a
seperate function to avoid duplication. Also fix getpwent() a
small bit to properly handle the case where the magic NIS '+'
entry appears before the end of the password file.

getgrent.c: be a little more SunOS-ish. Make it look like the NIS
group map is 'inserted' at the the point(s) where the magic NIS '+'
entry/entries appear.

getgrent: fix a file descriptor leak: remember to close the netgroup
file after we determine that we're using NIS-only innetgr() lookups.
1995-09-02 04:08:55 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 85b3ab5887 National date/time representation in syslog logfiles looks ugly,
change strftime to ctime. Logfiles must have default (english) date/time
representation for access/view from various places.
1995-08-29 13:21:53 +00:00
Peter Wemm 613749bbf2 Remove the CFLAGS+=-I${CURDIR}/net that I previously added.
Since Bruce changed the #include <res_config.h> to #include "res_config.h"
this is no longer needed, and only makes the 'make' more verbose for
no real reason.
1995-08-21 17:50:01 +00:00
Bruce Evans 4fc61ca748 Define DEBUG as 1 instead of as nothing so that it doesn't conflict with
-DDEBUG in libresolv/Makefile.
1995-08-21 09:16:02 +00:00
Bruce Evans e6507d611f Fix bogus include paths, some of which stopped libresolv from compiling. 1995-08-21 09:15:40 +00:00
Peter Wemm e5ad4f8712 Update the resolver part of libc to bind-4.9.3-beta24 level (from beta9p1)
Note that this was done by selective patching from diffs, to not conflict
with the 4.4bsd base code..  This was *not* a trivial task..  I have been
testing this code (apart from cosmetic changes) in my libc for a while now.

Obtained from: Paul Vixie <paul@vix.com>
1995-08-20 20:03:06 +00:00
Peter Wemm fdf4460bf9 fgetline does not exist.. fgetln is in it's place. Correct the X-Ref.
Noticed by:	Brian Tao, Bruce Evans
1995-08-18 14:22:00 +00:00
Joerg Wunsch 665994990b There is no such file as /usr/include/ufs/quota.h. There is a file
/usr/include/ufs/ufs/quota (#include <ufs/ufs/quota.h>) that seems to work
ok though.

Closes PR # docs/670: quotactl man page incorr...

Submitted by:	evans@scnc.k12.mi.us (Jeffrey Evans)
1995-08-15 19:38:00 +00:00
Bill Paul 97cb50947e Submitted by: Bill Fenner <fenner@parc.xerox.com>
Fix for PR #510. The original problem was that __ivaliduser() was
failing to grant access to a machine listed in a +@netgroup specified
in /etc/hosts.equiv, even though the host being checked was most
certainly in the +@netgroup.

The /etc/hosts.equiv file in question looked like this:

localhost
+@netgroup

The reason for the failure was had to do with gethostbyaddr(). Inside
the __ivaliduser() routine, we need to do a gethostbyaddr() in order
to get back the actual name of the host we're trying to validate since
we're only passed its IP address. The hostname returned by gethostbyaddr()
is later passed as an argument to innetgr(). The problem is that
__icheckhost() later does a gethostbyname() of its own, which clobbers
the buffer returned by gethostbyaddr().

The fix is just to copy the hostname into a private buffer and use
_that_ as the 'host' argument that gets passed to innetgr().

And here I was crawling all over the innetgr() code thinking the
problem was there. *sigh*
1995-08-14 23:52:49 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 48b9e85079 Forget to close file
Submitted by: SANETO Takanori sanewo@strg.sony.co.jp
1995-08-11 08:44:31 +00:00
Satoshi Asami bfa4762780 Bump shlib minor because xdr_* functions have been enabled. Do NOT
bump it again if something else is added before 2.2.

The xdr_* functions are enabled only in the 2.2 (-current) branch
so far.  If that modification is moved to the 2.1 (-stable) branch,
this one should, too.

Reviewed by:	the mailing lists
1995-08-09 06:50:52 +00:00
Bill Paul 22397ec3c3 Fix _listmatch() so that it doesn't fall off the end of the list string. 1995-08-08 02:51:16 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 8df736f7dc Fix manpage to reflect current sources 1995-08-07 23:36:08 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 5ad178d854 Restore %s format support from previous version 1995-08-07 23:35:41 +00:00
Bill Paul 1e890b056a Just when you thought it was safe...
- getnetgrent.c: address some NIS compatibility problems. We really need
to use the netgroup.byuser and netgroup.byhost maps to speed up innetgr()
when using NIS. Also, change the NIS interaction in the following way:

If /etc/netgroup does not exist or is empty (or contains only the
NIS '+' token), we now use NIS exclusively. This lets us use the
'reverse netgroup' maps and is more or less the behavior of other
platforms.

If /etc/netgroup exists and contains local netgroup data (but no '+').
we use only lthe local stuff and ignore NIS.

If /etc/netgroup exists and contains both local data and the '+',
we use the local data nd the netgroup map as a single combined
database (which, unfortunately, can be slow when the netgroup
database is large). This is what we have been doing up until now.

Head off a potential NULL pointer dereference in the old innetgr()
matching code.

Also fix the way the NIS netgroup map is incorporated into things:
adding the '+' is supposed to make it seem as though the netgroup
database is 'inserted' wherever the '+' is placed. We didn't quite
do it that way before.

(The NetBSD people apparently use a real, honest-to-gosh, netgroup.db
database that works just like the password database. This is
actually a neat idea since netgroups is the sort of thing that
can really benefit from having multi-key search capability,
particularly since reverse lookups require more than a trivial
amount of processing. Should we do something like this too?)

- netgroup.5: document all this stuff.

- rcmd.c: some sleuthing with some test programs linked with my own
version of innetgr() has revealed that SunOS always passes the NIS
domain name to innetgr() in the 'domain' argument. We might as well
do the same (if YP is defined).

- ether_addr.c: also fix the NIS interaction so that placing the
'+' token in the /etc/ethers file makes it seem like the NIS
ethers data is 'inserted' at that point. (Chances are nobody will
notice the effect of this change, which is just te way I like it. :)
1995-08-07 03:42:14 +00:00
Bruce Evans 59eab48836 Install non-source files with the optional flag ${COPY}, not with the flag -c. 1995-08-06 12:41:07 +00:00
Bruce Evans 48cfb668fc Change `install' to `${INSTALL}' so that default install flags can be
specified in the top level Makefiles.

Previously I missed dozens of Makefiles that skip the install after
using `cmp -s' to decide that the install isn't necessary.
1995-08-06 12:24:38 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov d0e0d9c4c5 Fix default %c to be ctime-compatible as supposed (by Solaris too) 1995-08-06 11:48:16 +00:00
Garrett Wollman 35482326b2 The European Commission went out and invented a new sort of summer-time
changeover, so we have to extend the format of timezone files (in a backward-
compatible way, of course).  This probably means that libc needs a minor
version number bump before 2.2 is released (or maybe not).
1995-08-05 20:28:08 +00:00
Garrett Wollman 21271a8c7a Don't depend on bogusly-installed <tzfile.h>. 1995-08-05 20:25:24 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 6240d16c20 Fix cut&paste error: LC_COLLATE should be LC_TIME 1995-08-05 17:32:06 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov e20b74fb9e Add time locale loading 1995-08-05 17:31:17 +00:00
Bruce Evans f57698ff43 Move rtprio.2 from usr.sbin/rtprio to lib/libc/sys, overwriting the bogus
version in the latter directory.

Reviewed by:	davidg
1995-08-05 07:31:19 +00:00
Garrett Wollman c28fbb7baa Implement locale-sensitive strftime () from ADO (heavily modified
by me).  This probably loses for multibyte characters, but I have no
way of telling.  I'll let ache decide whether to add this support to
startup_setlocale.  Note that for this to make any sense at all, the
symlinks in /usr/share/locale must go.  (For the moment, this doesn't
make any difference since there are no locales supplied.)

Obtained from:	Arthur David Olson <ado@elsie.nci.nih.gov>
1995-08-04 18:43:01 +00:00
Bill Paul 19f61b3433 Reviewed by: David Greenman
Back out the 'help NIS rebind faster' hack. This change used a
connect()/send() pair rather than the original sendto() to allow
RPC to pass ICMP host unreachable and similar errors up to RPC
programs that use UDP. This is not a terrible thing by itself, but it can
cause trouble in environments with multi-homed hosts: if the portmapper
on the multi-homed machine sends a reply with a source address
that's different than the one associated with the connection by
connect(), the kernel will send a port unreachable message and
drop the reply. For the sake of compatibility with everybody else
on the planet, it's best to revert to the old behavior.

*long, heavy sigh*
1995-08-02 09:14:23 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 765d5b0d6f Make strtod conforms manpage, use isspace to skip initial whitespaces
instead of hardcoded whitespaces
1995-08-01 22:20:16 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov e7241b8ffe Similar changes like in strtol, all this family is VERY broken
in 8bit environment (isalpha at the end of digits)
1995-08-01 22:04:57 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 2bdca0d9f0 strtol and atoi VERY broken in 8bit chars locale, i.e. if you pass something
like 38400<any 8bit char, isalpha> it not detect this stuff and
produce very big number instead. Fixed by operating with unsigned char
and checking for isascii. (secure/telnetd hits by it f.e.)
1995-08-01 21:38:00 +00:00
Mike Pritchard a9680d7112 Null terminate all strings returned by the dummy uname() routine,
and make sure that the version string is somewhat sane.  This
closes out PR#462.

Reviewed by: Bruce Evans
1995-07-31 10:10:02 +00:00
Joerg Wunsch fb2deeabfb bkr() returns an int, and not a pointer. Document this.
Closes PR #pending/630.

Pointed out by: phk

Obtained from:
1995-07-23 07:01:05 +00:00
Bruce Evans 8e3d84bb83 Confirmed to work by: rcarter@geli.com (Russell Carter)
Enable xdr_float.c.  I believe it works on i386's although it isn't
portable enough to be in a machine-independent directory.
1995-07-22 23:32:13 +00:00
Peter Wemm acc7e87c9b Slight adjustment to previous fix for __ivaliduser(). It was checking for
the comment before checking for long lines, so there was a possibility
that the wrap-around might be used as an exploitable hostname.
Reviewed by:
Submitted by:
Obtained from:
1995-07-16 17:03:58 +00:00
Joerg Wunsch 8f26c8ef60 Make ruserok() accept the #-starting comment lines we used to have
in our default /etc/hosts.equiv.

Closes PR #conf/620: Default /etc/hosts.equiv...
1995-07-16 10:12:32 +00:00
Bruce Evans 4baa77295e The declaration of sigaction was missing a `const'. 1995-07-16 09:44:58 +00:00
Bruce Evans 52a69cb00b Fix the synopsis of signal() again. Now it is uglier but correct.
(Declarations of signal that don't use typedefs can't be formatted
in the standard man page form.)
1995-07-16 09:41:03 +00:00
Joerg Wunsch 2c413cbe50 Fix the prototypes for getservby{name,port}().
Closes PR #docs/568: minor manpage bug

Submitted by:	Michael Smith (email address no longer valid)
1995-07-09 08:17:01 +00:00
Bill Paul bc8e373c9b The ypprot_err() function incorrectly maps YP_NODOM to YPERR_NODOM.
Strange as it sounds, it should map to YPERR_DOMAIN instead.

The YP_NODOM protocol error code is generally returned by ypserv when you
ask it for data from a domain that it doesn't support. By contrast,
the YPERR_NODOM error code means 'local domain name not set.'
Consequently, this incorrect mapping leads to yperr_string() generating
a very confusing error message. YPERR_DOMAIN says 'couldn't
bind to a server which serves this domain' which is much closer
to the truth.
1995-07-05 06:04:20 +00:00
Bill Paul 6c0828a6c6 Do the same sanity checking in _pw_breakout_yp() that we do in
_gr_breakout_yp(): if we encounter a NULL pointer generated as the
result of a badly formatted NIS passwd entry (e.g. missing fields),
we punt and return an error code, thereby silently skipping the
bad entry.
1995-06-26 16:04:57 +00:00
Bill Paul e0ee807b3d Fix for a potential problem reported by a user I bumped into on IRC
last night:

_gr_breakout_yp() doesn't check for badly formatted NIS group entries.
For example, a bogus entry like this:

bootp::user1,user2,user3

will lead to a null pointer dereference and a SEGV (note that the GID
field is missing -- this results in one of the strsep(&result, ":")
returning NULL). The symtpom of this problem is programs dumping
core left and right the moment you add a + entry to /etc/group.
Note that while this is similar to an earlier bug, it's caused by a
different set of circumstances.

The fix is to check for the NULL pointers and have _gr_breakout_yp()
punt and return a failure code if it catches one. This is more or
less the behavior of SunOS: if a bad NIS group entry is encountered,
it's silently ignored. I don't think our standard (non-NIS) group
parsing code behaves the same way. It doesn't crash though, so I'm
citing the 'it ain't broken, don't fix it' rule and leaving it alone.

I'll probably have to add similar checks to _pw_breakout_yp() in
getpwent.c to ward off the same problems. It's rare that bad NIS
map entries like this occur, but we should handle them gracefully
when they do.
1995-06-26 14:59:46 +00:00
Bill Paul dbf973c0c7 Fixes for PR #508 and #509 ('botched 'Bad netgroup' error message' and
'cycle in netgroup check too greedy').

PR #508 is apparently due to an inconsistency in the way the 4.4BSD
netgroup code deals with bad netgroups. When 4.4BSD code encounters
a badly formed netgroup entry (e.g. (somehost,-somedomain), which,
because of the missing comma between the '-' and 'somedomain,' has
only 2 fields instead of 3), it generates an error message and
then bails out without doing any more processing on the netgroup
containing the bad entry. Conversely, every other *NIX in the world
that usees netgroups just tries to parse the entry as best it can
and then silently continues on its way.

The result is that two bad things happen: 1) we ignore other valid entries
within the netgroup containing the bogus entry, which prevents
us from interoperating with other systems that don't behave this way,
and 2) by printing an error to stderr from inside libc, we hose certain
programs, in this case rlogind. In the problem report, Bill Fenner
noted that the 'B' from 'Bad' was missing, and that rlogind exited
immediately after generating the error. The missing 'B' is apparently
not caused by any problem in getnetgrent.c; more likely it's getting
swallowed up by rlogind somehow, and the error message itself causes
rlogind to become confused. I was able to duplicate this problem and
discovered that running a simple test program on my FreeBSD system
resulted in a properly formatted (if confusing) error, whereas triggering
the error by trying to rlogin to the machine yielded the missing 'B'
problem.

Anyway, the fixes for this are as follows:

- The error message has been reformatted so that it prints out more useful
  information (e.g. Bad entry (somehost,-somedomain) in netgroup "foo").
  We check for NULL entries so that we don't print '(null)' anymore too. :)

- Rearranged things in parse_netgrp()  so that we make a best guess at
  what bad entries are supposed to look like and then continue processing
  instead of bailing out.

- Even though the error message has been cleaned up, it's wrapped inside
  a #ifdef DEBUG. This way we match the behavior of other systems. Since we
  now handle the error condition better anyway, this error message becomes
  less important.

PR #507 is another case of inconsistency. The code that handles
duplicate/circular netgroup entries isn't really 'too greedy; -- it's
just too noisy. If you have a netgroup containing duplicate entries,
the code actually does the right thing, but it also generates an error
message. As with the 'Bad netgroup' message, spewing this out from
inside libc can also hose certain programs (like rlogind). Again, no
other system generates an error message in this case.

The only change here is to hide the error message inside an #ifdef DEBUG.
Like the other message, it's largely superfluous since the code handles
the condition correctly.

Note that PR #510 (+@netgroup host matching in /etc/hosts.equiv) is still
being investigated. I haven't been able to duplicate it myself, and I
strongly suspect it to be a configuration problem of some kind. However,
I'm leaving all three PRs open until I get 510 resolved just for the
sake of paranoia.
1995-06-23 14:47:54 +00:00
Jeffrey Hsu e78bad2371 Don't cast void functions to void.
Obtained from: NetBSD commit by jtc on June 16, 1995.
1995-06-20 18:31:16 +00:00
Bill Paul 85e8f5bee2 Make _havemaster() use yp_first() (again) instead of yp_order() to
ward off possible NIS+ evil. (I might be overly paranoid with this,
but it doesn't hurt, so...)
1995-06-17 04:00:02 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 0b2c143cff Add /usr/local/share/nls to default search path 1995-06-17 03:02:21 +00:00
Rodney W. Grimes d3628763db Merge RELENG_2_0_5 into HEAD 1995-06-11 19:33:05 +00:00
Rodney W. Grimes 6c06b4e2aa Remove trailing whitespace. 1995-05-30 05:51:47 +00:00
Rodney W. Grimes 709e8f9ae1 Remove trailing whitespace. 1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
Nate Williams 43e6a2a89d Add a missing link from the setpgid manpage to the setpgrp manpage. 1995-05-27 04:17:04 +00:00
David Greenman dbe38b75e5 Fixed typo. 1995-05-15 12:23:03 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 4f5129899a Parse ^? now, our termcap use it and some termcaps from other
systems use it too
1995-05-14 22:29:13 +00:00
Bill Paul 62967ca2b2 Cosmetic changes and paranoia checks:
ypbind.c:
Make fewer assumtions about the state of the dom_alive and dom_broadcasting
flags in roc_received().

If select() fails, use syslog() to report the error rather than perror().

Check that all our malloc()s succeed. Report malloc() failure in
ypbindproc_setdom_2() to callers.

yplib.c:

Use #defined constants in ypbinderr_string() rather than hard-coded values.
1995-05-03 18:33:10 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov ff17906bc9 Fix bracket error for LogMask
Submitted by: Ruslan Belkin <rus@home2.UA.net>
1995-05-02 17:46:30 +00:00
Joerg Wunsch 85c30cfa12 Added function and man page for ftok(3), used in conjunction with
the so-called "System V IPC".

Submitted by:	jbeukema@HK.Super.Net (John Beukema)
Obtained from:  Th. Lockert <tholo@sigmasoft.com>, via NetBSD
1995-05-01 08:53:21 +00:00
Bill Paul 04adcdacbf Small fix for the following problems:
- If you take the wheel entry out of /etc/group and turn on NIS,
the '+:*::' line is incorrectly flagged as the entry for wheel (the
empty gid section is translated to 0), hence getgrgid() returns '+'
as the name of the group instead of 'wheel.'

- Using just '+:' as the 'turn on NIS' switch in /etc/group makes
getgrgid() dump core because of a null pointer dereference. (Last
time I was in here, I foolishly assumed that fixing the core dump
problems with getgrnam() and getgrent() would fix getgrgid() too.
Silly me.)
1995-04-29 17:14:50 +00:00
Bill Paul 456ebbf8f5 ypbind.c: Major overhaul.
- Moved to a more client-driven model. We aggressively attempt to keep
the default domain bound (as before) but we give up on non-default
domains if we lose contact with a server and fail to get a response
after one round of broadcasting. This helps drastically reduce the
amount of network bandwitdh that ypbind consumes: if a client references
the secondary domain at some later point, this will prod ypbind into
establishing a new binding anyway, so continuously broadcasting without
need is pointless.

Note that we still actively seek out a binding for our default domain
even if no client program has queried us yet. I'm not exactly sure if
this matches SunOS's behavior or not, but I decided to do it this way
since we can get into all sorts of trouble if our default domain comes
unbound. Even so, we're still much quieter than we used to be.

- Removed a bunch of no-longer pertinent comments and a couple of
chunks of #ifdef 0'ed code that no longer fit in to the new layout.

- Theo deRaadt must have become frustrated with the callback mechanism
in clnt_broadcast(), because he shamelessly stole the clnt_broadcast()
code right out of the RPC library and hacked it up to suit his needs.
(Comments and all! :)

I can understand why: clnt_broadcast() blocks while awaiting replies.
Changing this behavior requires surgery. However, you can work around
this: fork the broadcast into a child process and relay the results
back to the parent via a pipe. (Careful obervation has shown that the
SunOS ypbind forks children for broadcasting too, though I can only
guess what sort of interprocess communication it uses. pipe() seems to
do the job well enough.)

This may seem like the long way around, but it's not really that
hard to implement, and I'd prefer to use documented RPC library functions
wherever possible. We're careful to limit the number of simultaneous
broadcasters to avoid swamping the system (the current limit is 5).
Each clnt_broadcast() call only sends out a small number of packets
at increasing intervals. We're also careful not to spawn more than one
bradcaster for a given domain.

- Used clntudp_bufcreate() and clnt_call() to implement a ping()
function for directly querying a particular server so that we can
check if it's still alive. This lets me completely remove the old
bradcasting code and use actual RPC library calls instead, at the
cost of more than a few handfulls of torn-out hair. (Make no mistake
folks: I *HATE* RPC.) Currently, the ping interval is one minute.

- Fixed another potential 'nfds too big for select()' bug: use
_rpc_dtablesize() instead of getdtablesize().

- Quieted gcc -Wall a bit.

- Probably a bunch of other stuff that I've forgotten.

ypbind.8:

- Updated man page to reflect modifications.

ypwhich.c:

- Small mind-o fix from last time: decode error results from
ypbind correctly (*groan*)

yplib.c:

- same as above

- Change behavior of _yp_dobind() a little: if we get back a 'Domain
not bound' error for a given domain, retry a few times before giving
up and passing the error back to the caller. We have to sleep for a
few seconds between tries since the 'Domain not bound' error comes
back immediately (by repeatedly looping, we end up pounding on ypbind).
We retry at most 20 times at 5 second intervals. This gives us a full
minute to get a response. This seems to deviate a bit from SunOS
behavior -- it appears to wait forever -- but I don't like the idea
of perpetually hanging inside a library call.

Note that this should fix the problems some people have with bindings
not being established fast enough at boot time; sometimes amd is started
in /etc/rc after ypbind has run but before it gets a binding set up. The
automounter gets annoyed at this and tends to exit. By pausing ther YP
calls until a binding is ready, we avoid this situation.

- Another _yp_dobind() change: if we determine that our binding files
are unlocked or nonexistent, jump directly to code that pokes ypbind
into restablishing the binding. Again, if it fails, we'll time out
eventually and return.
1995-04-26 19:03:16 +00:00
Bruce Evans a87df1c4d5 Remove setre*id*. 1995-04-25 10:00:04 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov 045aff38e6 Add setreuid/setregid to MAN section 1995-04-23 15:06:16 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov b48757c256 Add setreuid/setregid 1995-04-23 12:34:48 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov c6d8816ea8 Fix history info 1995-04-23 12:31:13 +00:00
Bill Paul 243ae8c754 in _freecaches(): strdup() allocates us memory -- remember to free it. 1995-04-22 17:28:04 +00:00
Bill Paul 644161688b small NIS binding fixes:
ypbind.c: if a client program asks ypbind for the name of the server
for a particular domain, and there isn't a binding for that domain
available yet, ypbind needs to supply a status value along with its
failure message. Set yprespbody.ypbind_error before returning from
a ypbindproc_domain request.

yplib.c: properly handle the error status messages ypbind now has the
ability to send us. Add a ypbinderr_string() function to decode the
error values.

ypwhich.c: handle ypbind errors correctly: yperr_string() can't handle
ypbind_status messages -- use ypbinderr_string instead.
1995-04-21 18:04:36 +00:00
Bruce Evans 55e2b2c608 Fix bugs in opendir():
- it succeeded on non-directories (see POSIX 5.1.2.4).
- it hung on (non-open) named pipes.
- it leaked memory if the second malloc() failed.
- it didn't preserve errno across errors in close().
1995-04-21 15:23:27 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov db4dc2ff6e If locale not available, fallback to strcasecmp, not to strcmp 1995-04-16 22:43:45 +00:00
Bill Paul 8efe1172e2 Head off potential core dump in _havemaster() (we don't need to free any
memory here: the underlying YP routines handle this one for us).
1995-04-15 03:11:55 +00:00
Bill Paul c98fda6ec8 Better conformance to SunOS behavior: if we can't match a user to one
of the plus or minus lists at all, reject him. This lets you create
a +@netgroup list of users that you want to admit and reject everybody
else. If you end your +@netgroup list with the wildcard line
(+:::::::::) then you'll have a +@netgroup list that remaps the
specified people but leaves people not in any netgroup unaffected.
1995-04-14 14:56:28 +00:00