Linux systems, when we build as a tool we think we have lutimes but it
doesn't work on some filesystems at runtime. A bit ugly but effective
and without use of AC_TRY_RUN in the tool build. Tidier (than mine)
set_ftime reorganization from christos.
* Rename "config.h" to "nbtool_config.h" and
HAVE_CONFIG_H to HAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H.
This makes in more obvious in the source when we're using
tools/compat/config.h versus "standard autoconf" config.h
* Consistently move the inclusion of nbtool_config.h to before
<sys/cdefs.h> so that the former can provide __RCSID() (et al),
and there's no need to protect those macros any more.
These changes should make it easier to "tool-ify" a program by adding:
#if HAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H
#include "nbtool_config.h"
#endif
to the top of the source files (for the general case).
- correct -C processing
- add ability to read filenames and flags from a file
- don't print dangerous escape sequences to the terminal
- use strlcpy/strncpy properly.
- handle tmpfile creation better.
- improve documentation of options.
- handle stdout/stderr list selection correctly.
- kill gzip when we get interrupted.
- simplify gzip setup.
- add more flags to programs.
additional changes:
- librmt processing.
- set POSIXLY_CORRECT in options parsing.
- prevent more string overruns.
- support -T
we don't turn the switch on to replace tar and cpio yet.
leaving the ansi stuff)
- use longlong_t instead of quad_t (etc), and rename *uqd*() -> *ull*()
- clean up the NET2_STAT stuff similar to ftpd; provide #defines and
macros which select which cast to use, etc
- clean up the NET2_FTS and NET2_REGEX #define use
file. The temporary file code can be reenabled by building with
-DDIRS_USE_FILE.
Fixes a problem where sysinst would fail to unpack the base set because
the temporary file wouldn't fit in the ramdisk.
Continue partial write(2) on signals (xwrite()).
Partial read(2) at a few places are also continued (xread()).
Add {read,write}_with_restart() hooks for porting on systems
which don't restart interrupted read()/write() calls.
Reviewed and discussed in tech-kern and tech-userlevel lists.