the non-vfork case. Having said that, it would be nice if pipelines of
simple commands were vforked too. Right now they are not.
Explain that setpgid() might fail because we are doing it both in the
parent and the child case, because we don't know which one will come
first.
Suspending a pipeline prints %1 Suspended n times where n is the number
of processes, but that was there before. It is easy to fix, but I'll
leave the code alone for now.
Propagate isroot, throughout the eval process and maintain it properly.
Fixes sleep 10 | cat^C not exiting because sleep and cat ended up in
their own process groups, because wasroot was always true in the children.
Plus my changes:
- walking process group fix in foregrounding a job.
- reset of process group in parent shell if interrupted before the wait.
- move INTON lower in the dowait so that the job structure is
consistent.
- error check all setpgid(), tcsetpgrp() calls.
- eliminate unneeded strpgid() call.
- check that we don't belong in the process group before we try to
set it.
race conditions -- now we always synchronously wait for the job to finish.
In evalcommand(), add the same INTOFF/INTON locking as evalpipe(), to prevent
leaving internal state inconsistent, and also to insure that we synchronously
wait for the job.
-dynamic-linker=/libexec/ld.elf_so) if the BINDIR of the program being
built is /bin or /sbin.
The reason we do this is because now all programs *except* those in
/bin and /sbin (i.e. the "special cases") match the default the compiler
uses, which is what is used for things in e.g. xsrc, pkgsrc, and other
random 3rd party programs.
too. The code in display() could possibly be a bit smarter about this
requirement...
Fixes the problem in PR bin/18321 from David Laight and PR bin/18436
from FUKAUMI Naoki.
>here is a diff that will cause systrace to periodically save policies
>that have been modified. Useful if you run systrace on an xterm and
>kill it accidently. Or other applications like opera that are long
>running and can cause weird crashes.
for TARGET_CHAR when building mksyntax. This isn't perfect, but
it lets the host tool work on non-BSD systems without completely
redoing how sh is built.
be changed in the future to "yes".
If MKDYNAMICROOT == "no", there is no change from existing behaviour
of a static /bin and /sbin (and a few programs in elsewhere).
If MKDYNAMICROOT == "yes", the following changes occur:
in <bsd.own.mk>:
SHLIBDIR?= /lib
SHLINKDIR?= /lib
in various Makefiles, the following entry is DISABLED.
LDSTATIC?=-static
This results in all programs (except those "standalone" programs built
in sys/arch/*/stand) are linked dynamically, the shared linker is moved
from /usr/libexec to /lib (with a compat symlink), and the shared
libraries used by /bin and /sbin programs are moved from /usr/lib to
/lib (with compat symlinks).