Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jason Evans 9233c4d942 Simplify sytem call renaming. Instead of _foo() <-- _libc_foo <-- foo(),
just use _foo() <-- foo().  In the case of a libpthread that doesn't do
call conversion (such as linuxthreads and our upcoming libpthread), this
is adequate.  In the case of libc_r, we still need three names, which are
now _thread_sys_foo() <-- _foo() <-- foo().

Convert all internal libc usage of: aio_suspend(), close(), fsync(), msync(),
nanosleep(), open(), fcntl(), read(), and write() to _foo() instead of foo().

Remove all internal libc usage of: creat(), pause(), sleep(), system(),
tcdrain(), wait(), and waitpid().

Make thread cancellation fully POSIX-compliant.

Suggested by:	deischen
2000-01-27 23:07:25 +00:00
Jason Evans 929273386f Add three-tier symbol naming in support of POSIX thread cancellation
points.  For library functions, the pattern is __sleep() <--
_libc_sleep() <-- sleep().  The arrows represent weak aliases.  For
system calls, the pattern is _read() <-- _libc_read() <-- read().
2000-01-12 09:23:48 +00:00
Peter Wemm 473ee77f29 Fix the fixfsfile() so that it works for both block and character devices
as root.  This could fix the "filesystem still dirty after fsck" problem.

Submitted by:   bde
1999-12-23 14:44:36 +00:00
Bruce Evans 2e4513990b Ignore the fs_spec entry for "/" in /etc/fstab if the device which
is actually mounted on "/" can be determined using statfs() and is
in /dev.  This fixes fsck operating on the wrong device when the
fs_spec entry is only an alias.  The aliased case became more
dangerous when the ROOTSLICE_HUNT hack was committed in mount(8).
ROOTSLICE_HUNT may be unnecessary now.
1999-01-01 14:14:44 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp 8b10240709 Minor cleanup, mostly unused vars and missing #includes. 1995-10-22 14:37:11 +00:00
Andrey A. Chernov bee5b8efe8 Change strtok() to strsep(), using strtok() can cause memory corruption
if user program use it too in the same time.
1995-03-24 16:33:44 +00:00
Jordan K. Hubbard 2d4ee3eaf6 Make errors in /etc/fstab print the line numbers where they occured.
Also be more tolerant of blank lines and comments in the file.
Submitted by:	jkh
1994-09-08 09:21:00 +00:00
Rodney W. Grimes 58f0484fa2 BSD 4.4 Lite Lib Sources 1994-05-27 05:00:24 +00:00