and use these timeout in the lpq, lpd and lprm programs.
these stop hung remote printers that accept tcp connections but do
not process jobs from hanging the whole system and letting the sysadmin
have a clue about what is going on with this rogue printer.
- add a -r flag to lpd to allow `of' filters for remote jobs.
i know there are ways around this, but i just don't care.
- add a -f flag to lpf to add missing carriage returns.
useful when printing UNIX files to an, eg, LaserWriter that wants CR's
as well as LF's in raw text. stair-stepped text is no fun.
- implement child process accounting: we just have a limit on the number
of children we can have (settable by the sysadmin), and we sleep when
this number is reached. this can reduce malicious not-so-malicious
attacks on the print server by a rogue remote client..
- use setproctitle() where appropriate so the sysadmin has a clue about
what each of the lpd's here are doing.
this was useful to help diagnose a problem (that the above child process
accounting change reduces the lossages of) where a rogue client was
attempting "lpq" operations on one stuck queue in rapid succession,
causing the lpd server to be extremely slow, due to the large number
of lpd processes running.
i have been running these changes in production for about a year.
every letter, add appropriate index lines. Problem reported by Mike
Castle <dalgoda@ix.netcom.com> against the Linux port of the NetBSD games
collection.
the string tokenisation must be performed by the caller (which is
generally easy because it's almost always a static command).
* change do_conversion() to return a char *argv[] instead of char *cmd.
tokenisation of the command is done internally.
* change retrieve() to take char *argv[] instead of char *cmd.
(to take advantage of the above changes). fixes [bin/8173]
* use fparseln() instead of fgetln()
* store conversions in listed order (rather than reverse order)
* use stringlists instead of handrolling code to manage an argv.