requires that some ordering requirements are checked by the
back-end C code instead of the parser (dirspecs, maxpart).
* Be more careful to require newline tokens in the grammer where
they are expected, and deal with blank lines, etc. This allows
elimination of a trailing context on newline in the scanner.
* Let the parser set values for "needs-count" and "needs-flag"
instead of making those special cases in the scanner.
* Get rid of '= ' preceeding actions (obsolete yacc syntax)
* Make the scanner not insert an extra newline after includes.
(It was just an accidental side-effect of the ENDFILE stuff.)
(1.2 release is, however, and this should be pulled up and released ASAP)
The previous version (1.11) checked into current limits the duration of
setuid-root periods much more than the 1.2 released version does, so the
attacker DID get a shell, but it was not a root shell.
but which were never added to pstat -v: UNION, ASYNC, DEFEXPORTED,
EXPORTANON, EXKERB. Also, sort according to the apparent local style
(order in mount.h, rather than alphabetical).
to wake up. This is needed because the active filter applied in user
space may fail to match VJ compressed packets. (The kernel applies its
copy of the filter before it runs VJ compression.)
already match the running kernel. Fixes an inconsistency
where /var/db/kvm_filename.db would be created, but only
if /var/db/kvm_netbsd.db didn't match the running kernel.
(1) bsd.prog.mk already includes bsd.subdir.mk, and
(2) including bsd.subdir.mk first screws up the clean/cleandir targets
in such a way that the program's objects don't get blown away
when you make clean.
This is a compromise between the Solaris 2.5 naming of this file
(/var/yp/binding/domain/ypservers and /var/yp/binding/domain/vers)
and traditional NetBSD naming (/var/yp/binding/domain.vers).
Changing to the Solaris naming makes the C library incompatible
with ypbind. While it's easy to change the C library, I don't feel
right about introducing a gratuitous incompatibility.
The current name (/var/yp/domain/ypservers) conflicts with the name
of the YP map listing slave servers for a domain.
Per discussion w/ Chris Demetriou and Luke Mewburn.
of YP servers a client should bind to, mostly verbatim, but slightly
modified for better semantics when nagging servers if a ypset has been
issued. Default to broadcast mode if no .ypservers file is present.
Documentation changes to match, slightly tweaked by Scott Reynolds and
myself.
Closes PR #1759.
Implement a better scheme where we `find' the login ttys by looking in
/etc/ttys. Of course this scheme breaks when /etc/ttys changes, but such
is life.
- some cleanups...
lpd run in a mode where the it listens only to the local unix domain
socket and not to the network. Changes are similar but not identical
to the supplied patches.
it to "."
- include sockio.h if needed to define SIOCGIFCONF (for svr4)
- use POSIX signals and wait macros
- add -S silent flag, so that the client does not print messages unless there
is something wrong
- use flock or lockf as appropriate
- use fstatfs or fstatvfs to find out if a filesystem is mounted over nfs,
don't depend on the major() = 255 hack; it only works on legacy systems.
- use gzip -cf to make sure that gzip compresses the file even when the file
would expand.
- punt on defining vsnprintf if _IOSTRG is not defined; use sprintf...
To compile sup on systems other than NetBSD, you'll need a copy of daemon.c,
vis.c, vis.h and sys/cdefs.h. Maybe we should keep those in the distribution?
on tech-kern. (See man page.) Implementation by Greg Hudson.
Also, remove special case for i386 in vector handling, although this code isn't
actually used any more.
The problem here is setuid(euid) is used far too much. Since I removed
many of these calls, and added no new ones, I do not think this weakens
security. In fact, it quite likely improves it quite a bit, since
access() is called as the real userid, and the file is opened for printing
as the real userid rather than the (setuid-root) effective one.
map. SunOS ypservers maps place the host name in the key and the val,
but HP-UX and NetBSD ypservers maps place the hostname only in the
key, leaving the val empty. Since there is no clear standard for this map,
best to play it safe.
there are some PC/Mac oriented devices that use non-standard speeds,
furthermore that's just not the way we do things anymore.
"Bad" baud rates are no longer caught with their own error message,
but the condition will still be diagnosed when the tcsetattr() fails.
- check malloc returns
- null terminate strncpy() strings
- use snprintf instead of sprintf
- pass the right arguments to the right functions
- check usage
- use err(3) and warn(3) instead of printfs.
Correct length arg to haddrtoa() in report of duplicate address.
The string value for a generic tag should not include the null.
(Including the null in reponses really annoys HP printers!)
When reading hardware addresses, allow colon separators
(only works if the whole H/W address is in quotes).
Also, change `.Os 4.2' => `.Os 4.4' (this man page is from 4.4 lite), and
for now, refer to the "BSD 4.3 Line printer manual", because that is what
we now have in lpr/SMM.doc (SMM.doc needs updating too).
believe that's been missing for so long!)
While I'm here, remove all of the non-hp300 cruft. The hp300 port is the
only thing that uses config.old(8) now'a'days. Yes, this is a little
embarassing.
by Mike Grupenhoff <kashmir@umiacs.umd.edu> in PR #2485.
While I'm here, do some long-overdue cleanup, including function prototypes,
and update for modern libkvm interfaces.
ypbind; sleep 10; ypwhich
to fail (where failure is defined as ypwhich hangs until it gives up,
complaining about not being able to communicate with ypbind). Failure
mode pointed out by Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@cs.cmu.edu>.