Fix reading big-endian binary cpio archives, and add a test.
While I'm here, add a note about Solaris ACL extension for cpio,
which should be relatively straightforward to support.
Thanks to: Edward Napierala, who sent me a big-endian cpio archive
from a Solaris system he's been playing with.
Pointy hat: me
Make test_fuzz a bit more sensitive by actually reading the body
of each entry instead of skipping it.
While I'm here, move the "UnsupportedCompress" macro into the
only file that still uses it.
* Fix parsing of POSIX.1e ACLs from Solaris tar archives
* Test the above
* Preserve the order of POSIX.1e ACL entries
* Update tests whose results depended on the order of ACL entries
* Identify NFSv4 ACLs in Solaris tar archives and warn that
they're not yet supported. (In particular, don't try to parse
them as POSIX.1e ACLs.)
Thanks to: Edward Napierala sent me some Solaris 10 tar archives to test
* Split whiny skip function to create a new best-effort skip_lenient()
* Correctly increment the top-level file position only for the top filter
* Simulate skip by reading against the current filter, not the top filter
The latter two bugs aren't currently visible because no existing
filter delegates skip operations.
access to the file data (if the file exists on
disk). This was broken for the first regular
file; fix it and add a test so it won't break again.
In particular, this fixes the following idiom for creating
a tar archive in which every file is owned by root:
tar cf - --format=mtree . \
| sed -e 's/uname=[a-z]*/uname=root/' -e 's/uid=[0-9]*/uid=0/' \
| tar cf - @-
descriptions of the GNU tar "posix-style" sparse format,
clarification of the Solaris tar ACL storage,
and a few comments about Mac OS X tar's resource storage.
This should make it easier to make Linux BlueZ libhci port.
Reviewed by: Iain Hibbert < plunky -at- rya-online -dot- net > of NetBSD
MFC after: 1 week
Inspired by: Linux BlueZ
Inspired by: NetBSD
OpenBSM history for imported revision below for reference.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Apple, Inc.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
OpenBSM 1.1
- Change auditon(2) parameters and data structures to be 32/64-bit architecture
independent. Add more information to man page about auditon(2) parameters.
- Add wrapper functions for auditon(2) to use legacy commands when the new
commands are not supported.
- Add default for 'expire-after' in audit_control to expire trail files when
the audit directory is more than 10 megabytes ('10M').
- Interface to convert between local and BSM fcntl(2) command values has been
added: au_bsm_to_fcntl_cmd(3) and au_fcntl_cmd_to_bsm(3), along with
definitions of constants in audit_fcntl.h.
- A bug, introduced in OpenBSM 1.1 alpha 4, in which AUT_RETURN32 tokens
generated by audit_submit(3) were improperly encoded has been fixed.
- Fix example in audit_submit(3) man page. Also, make it clear that we want
the audit ID as the argument.
- A new audit event class 'aa', for post-login authentication and
authorization events, has been added.
Not an issue for FreeBSD, since the base system has the necessary libraries.
Since all decompressors are always available now, we can unconditionally
enable them in archive_read_support_compression_all().
Since FreeBSD doesn't have liblzma in the base system, the
read side will always fall back to the unxz/unlzma commands for now.
(Which will in turn fail if those commands are not currently
installed.) The write side does not yet have a fallback, so
that will just fail.
fixes to read_support_compression_program. In particular, failure of
the external program is detected a lot earlier, which gives much more
reasonable error handling.
corrections to the Windows support to reconcile differences
between Visual Studio and Cygwin. Includes parts of
revisions 757, 774, 787, 815, 817, 819, 820, 844, and 886.
Of particular note, r886 overhauled the UTF-8/Unicode conversions to
work correctly regardless of whether the local system uses 16-bit
or 32-bit wchar_t. (I assume that systems with 16-bit wchar_t
use UTF-16 and those with 32-bit wchar_t use UCS-4.) This revision
also added a preference for wcrtomb() (which is thread-safe) on
platforms that support it.
r751: Change __archive_strncat() to use a void * source, which reduces
the amount of casting needed to use this with "char", "signed char"
and "unsigned char".
r752: Use additions instead of multiplications when growing buffer;
faster and less chance of overflow.
support for virtual core files (aka minidumps). physical core
files are not supported.
The implementation is cross-tool ready and can be used in a non-
powerpc hosted debugger to analyze PowerPC core files. It also
accepts core files that still have the dump header, as can be
the case within Juniper where TFTP-based kernel core files are
supported and savecore is not used to "extract" the core file
from some dump device.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
because it means getdelim() returns -1 for both error and EOF, and
never returns 0. However, this is what the original GNU implementation
does, and POSIX inherited the bug.
Reported by: marcus@
dlfunc() called dlsym() to do the work, and dlsym() determines the dso
that originating the call by the return address. Due to this, dlfunc()
operated as if the caller is always the libc.
To fix this, move the dlfunc() to rtld, where it can call the internal
implementation of dlsym, and still correctly fetch return address.
Provide usual weak stub for the symbol from libc for static binaries.
dlfunc is put to FBSD_1.0 symver namespace in the ld.so export to
override dlfunc@FBSD_1.0 weak symbol, exported by libc.
Reported, analyzed and tested by: Tijl Coosemans <tijl ulyssis org>
PR: standards/133339
Reviewed by: kan
these functions were moved into the kernel:
- Move the version entries from gen/ to sys/. Since the ABI of the actual
routines did not change, I'm still exporting them as FBSD 1.0 on purpose.
- Add FBSD-private versions for the _ and __sys_ variants.
This does not include the new hash routines since they will cause problems
when reading old hash files.
Since mpool(3) has been changed, provide a compatibility shim for older
binaries.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
open(). The previous logic only initializes the database when O_CREAT is
set, but as long as we can open and write the database, and the database
is empty, we should initialize it anyway.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
an invariant (actually, an ugly hack) to fail, and all Hell would break
loose.
When deleting a big key, the offset of an empty page should be bsize, not
bsize-1; otherwise an insertion into the empty page will cause the new key to
be elongated by 1 byte.
Make the packing more dense in a couple of cases.
- fix NULL dereference exposed on big bsize values;
Obtained from: NetBSD via OpenBSD
if the result is truncated.
db/hash/hash_page.c: use the same way to create temporary file as
bt_open.c; check snprintf() return value.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
all; before freeing memory, zero out them before we release it as free
heap. This will eliminate some potential information leak issue.
While there, remove the PURIFY option. There is a slight difference between
the new behavior and the old -DPURIFY behavior, with the latter initializes
memory with 0xff's. The difference between old and new approach does not
generate observable difference.
Obtained from: OpenBSD (partly).
Now, getaddrinfo(3) returns two SOCK_STREAMs, IPPROTO_TCP and
IPPROTO_SCTP. It confuses some programs. If getaddrinfo(3) returns
IPPROTO_SCTP when SOCK_STREAM is specified by hints.ai_socktype, at
least Apache doesn't work. So, I made getaddrinfo(3) to return
IPPROTO_SCTP with SOCK_STREAM only when IPPROTO_SCTP is specified
explicitly by hints.ai_protocol.
PR: bin/128167
Submitted by: Bruce Cran <bruce__at__cran.org.uk> (partly)
MFC after: 2 week
by temporary pretending that the process is still multithreaded.
Current malloc lock primitives do nothing for singlethreaded process.
Reviewed by: davidxu, deischen