ETA might be over and will appear to drop rapidly, rather than being under
and appear not to change. the original code makes sense when you're testing
by suspending & resuming the client. however, the unfudged number is probably
better in reality, especially for slow spurty networks.
requested by ITOH Yasufumi <itohy@netbsd.org> in [bin/7977]
lpage page local files
pdir as dir, but through your $PAGER
pls as ls, but through your $PAGER
* implement docase() (a la dotrans() et al) and use appropriately, rototilling
some duplicated code
* globulize(): modify to return a pointer to the strdup()ed result in all cases,
and hack the code that calls it to take this into account
* replace strcpy() and strncpy() with strlcpy()
* put(), getit(): use some aptly named local vars instead of argv[...]
* delint
prototype for idle() in <unistd.h> (which i thought was against namespace
and sensibility guidelines, but...)
* consistently use xsignal() instead of signal(). we get known behaviour
in all cases (SA_RESTART), which is good for some borken foreign systems.
* remove signal.h from most files; it's unnecessary now
* fetch_url(): use `long chunksize' instead of ssize_t; it's more portable, and
we're setting chunksize with strtol() anyway
* xsignal(): only use SA_RESTART if it exists. SunOS 4.x doesn't have it
but has the inverse (SA_INTERRUPT). the original function i was inspired
from had this support (lib/signal.c, W. Richard Stevens' `UNP 2nd ed Vol 1').
* remove <termios.h> from util.c; it should be unnecessary now
prototype for idle() in <unistd.h> (which i thought was against namespace
and sensibility guidelines, but...)
* consistently use xsignal() instead of signal(). we get known behaviour
in all cases (SA_RESTART), which is good for some borken foreign systems.
* remove signal.h from most files; it's unnecessary now
* fetch_url(): use `long chunksize' instead of ssize_t; it's more portable, and
we're setting chunksize with strtol() anyway
* xsignal(): only use SA_RESTART if it exists. SunOS 4.x doesn't have it
but has the inverse (SA_INTERRUPT). the original function i was inspired
from had this support (lib/signal.c, W. Richard Stevens' `UNP 2nd ed Vol 1').
* remove <termios.h> from util.c; it should be unnecessary now
it's more portable and more obvious
* remove the mkgmtime() && HAVE_TIMEGM stuff:
a) why should netbsd have to define HAVE_TIMEGM to compile cleanly?
b) foreign compiles of ftp should just be linked with working
timegm function
a more portable version of this ftp client will be released as a 3rdparty
product; no use polluting our code with half-baked attempts...
* abort_remote(): replace borken MIN(4,BUFSIZ) with just BUFSIZ; it
should have been MAX(4,BUFSIZ), but it's probably safe to assume that
BUFSIZ is at least 3... (fix from simonb)
* auth_url(): use the correct variable when calculating a buffer size.
add lots of comments about how to size up the buffers, and add extra
checks to hopefully ensure that there won't be an overflow (unless
someone modifies the length of the sprintf()s).
* as part of the above, slightly rework the way the `*' bar is calculated.
also fixes a display bug when > 160 stars were needed to be printed.
the maximum progress bar width at this time is 256.
* remove some code that checks the port that was #if 0-ed out as part of the
ipv6 migration; it's not going to be used again.
* document the above three commands
* rototill the way the sndbuf and rcvbuf work. remove resetsockbufsize()
* use the appropriate socket buffer size as the size of the buffer that
the read()/write() loops use. speeds up things in some cases.
connection destination, hoping this to help ftpd's behavior with
scoped IPv6 addresses.
I'm not sure if it is the right way, but it is the best way available to us.
LPRT or EPRT command gives no information about which interface (or scope)
to be used for new data connection.
ftp(1): On data connection establishment, warn if scoped address is used.
If peer (ftp daemon) does not handle scoped address, data connection
may not work right.
This seems to be sort of protocol spec hole, not implementation issue.
- just display the hostname:port of the proxy url, rather than the full url.
this prevents someone `shoulder surfing' a proxy username/password
in $http_proxy. [suggested by perry]
- compact verbose notes for http fetchs; now displays
(via host:port, with authorization, with proxy authorization)
with each component being optional.
(and a couple introduced with the ipv6 mods...)
- don't override host with the canonical name; this prevented fetches from
http/1.1 virtual hosts from working if the virtual host was a CNAME.
[noted by bernd]
- call freeaddrinfo() if res was built with getaddrinfo()
the an empty directory (e.g, between `some' and `path' in
`ftp://host/some//path'), then execute `CWD ' (without a path).
This command will probably fail on rfc 959 compliant servers, so
issue a warning in this case and bail. [noted by cgd].
(i wonder if the people who wrote rfc 1738 actually realised that this
requirement appears to contravene the spec for `cwd' in rfc 959 ?)
* replace isurl() with isipv6addr(), and use appropriately. fixes
auto-login with `classic ftp URLs' (e.g, `ftp somehost:')
* cleanup and rework some of the ipv6 stuff in parse_url()
* prevent potential coredump in fetch_ftp() when parsing `;type=X'
* KNF a few lines
* fix a couple of comments
* cleanup the man page a bit
this is mainly for (hypothetical) ftp server which disconnect clients
that use EPSV/EPRT. I've never seen any ftp server like this, but
epsv4 command may be of use when such an ftp server is found.
xfer rate stuff, but i never completed the changes that didn't need it
set).
fixes a coredump noticed on current-users@ by Chan Yiu Wah <c5666305@hkstar.com>