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Revision 1.37 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Tue May 31 08:43:13 2022 UTC (8 months ago) by andvar
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: netbsd-10-base,
netbsd-10,
HEAD
Changes since 1.36: +3 -3
lines
Diff to previous 1.36 (colored)
fix various typos in comments, documentation and messages.
Revision 1.36 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sun Apr 10 09:50:44 2022 UTC (9 months, 3 weeks ago) by andvar
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.35: +3 -3
lines
Diff to previous 1.35 (colored)
fix various typos in comments and output/log messages.
Revision 1.33.2.1 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sat Nov 6 13:35:43 2021 UTC (14 months, 4 weeks ago) by martin
Branch: netbsd-9
CVS Tags: netbsd-9-3-RELEASE
Changes since 1.33: +67 -2
lines
Diff to previous 1.33 (colored) next main 1.34 (colored)
Pull up following revision(s) (requested by kre in ticket #1371): bin/sh/main.c: revision 1.87 bin/sh/main.c: revision 1.88 bin/sh/memalloc.h: revision 1.20 bin/sh/sh.1: revision 1.235 bin/sh/memalloc.c: revision 1.34 bin/sh/memalloc.c: revision 1.35 bin/sh/memalloc.h: revision 1.19 bin/sh/shell.h: revision 1.31 bin/sh/options.c: revision 1.56 PR bin/56464 After almost 30 years, finally do the right thing and read $HOME/.profile rather than .profile in the initial directory (it was that way in version 1.1 ...) All other ash descendants seem to have fixed this long ago. While here, copy a feature from FreeBSD which allows "set +p" (if a shell run by a setuid process with the -p flag is privileged) to reset the privileges. Once done (the set +p) it cannot be undone (a later set -p sets the 'p' flag, but that's all it does) - that just becomes a one bit storage location. We do this, as (also copying from FreeBSD, and because it is the right thing to do) we don't run .profile in a privileged shell - FreeBSD run /etc/suid_profile in that case (not a good name, it also applies to setgid shells) but I see no real need for that, we run /etc/profile in any case, anything that would go in /etc/suid_profile can just go in /etc/profile instead (with suitable guards so the commands only run in priv'd shells). One or two minor DEBUG mode changes (notably having priv'd shells identify themselves in the DEBUG trace) and sh.1 changes with doc of the "set +p" change, the effect that has on $PSc and a few other wording tweaks. XXX pullup -9 (not -8, this isn't worth it for the short lifetime that has left - if it took 28+ years for anyone to notice this, it cannot be having all that much effect). Use a type-correct end marker for strstrcat() rather than NULL, as for a function with unknown number & types of args, the compiler isn't able to automatically convert to the correct type. Issue pointed out in off list e-mail by Rolland Illig ... Thanks. The first arg (pointer to where to put length of result) is of a known type, so doesn't have the same issue - we can keep using NULL for that one when the length isn't needed. Also, make sure to return a correctly null terminated null string in the (absurd) case that there are no non-null args to strstrcat() (though there are much better ways to generate "" on the stack). Since there is currently just one call in the code, and it has real string args, this isn't an issue for now, but who knows, some day. NFCI - if there is any real change, then it is a change that is required. XXX pullup -9 (together with the previous changes)
Revision 1.35 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Tue Oct 26 10:07:20 2021 UTC (15 months, 1 week ago) by kre
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.34: +6 -4
lines
Diff to previous 1.34 (colored)
Use a type-correct end marker for strstrcat() rather than NULL, as for a function with unknown number & types of args, the compiler isn't able to automatically convert to the correct type. Issue pointed out in off list e-mail by Rolland Illig ... Thanks. The first arg (pointer to where to put length of result) is of a known type, so doesn't have the same issue - we can keep using NULL for that one when the length isn't needed. Also, make sure to return a correctly null terminated null string in the (absurd) case that there are no non-null args to strstrcat() (though there are much better ways to generate "" on the stack). Since there is currently just one call in the code, and it has real string args, this isn't an issue for now, but who knows, some day. NFCI - if there is any real change, then it is a change that is required. XXX pullup -9 (together with the previous changes)
Revision 1.34 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Tue Oct 26 00:05:38 2021 UTC (15 months, 1 week ago) by kre
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.33: +65 -2
lines
Diff to previous 1.33 (colored)
PR bin/56464 After almost 30 years, finally do the right thing and read $HOME/.profile rather than .profile in the initial directory (it was that way in version 1.1 ...) All other ash descendants seem to have fixed this long ago. While here, copy a feature from FreeBSD which allows "set +p" (if a shell run by a setuid process with the -p flag is privileged) to reset the privileges. Once done (the set +p) it cannot be undone (a later set -p sets the 'p' flag, but that's all it does) - that just becomes a one bit storage location. We do this, as (also copying from FreeBSD, and because it is the right thing to do) we don't run .profile in a privileged shell - FreeBSD run /etc/suid_profile in that case (not a good name, it also applies to setgid shells) but I see no real need for that, we run /etc/profile in any case, anything that would go in /etc/suid_profile can just go in /etc/profile instead (with suitable guards so the commands only run in priv'd shells). One or two minor DEBUG mode changes (notably having priv'd shells identify themselves in the DEBUG trace) and sh.1 changes with doc of the "set +p" change, the effect that has on $PSc and a few other wording tweaks. XXX pullup -9 (not -8, this isn't worth it for the short lifetime that has left - if it took 28+ years for anyone to notice this, it cannot be having all that much effect).
Revision 1.30.6.3 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Tue Apr 21 19:37:34 2020 UTC (2 years, 9 months ago) by martin
Branch: phil-wifi
Changes since 1.30.6.2: +2 -2
lines
Diff to previous 1.30.6.2 (colored) to branchpoint 1.30 (colored) next main 1.31 (colored)
Ooops, restore accidently removed files from merge mishap
Revision 1.30.6.2, Tue Apr 21 18:41:06 2020 UTC (2 years, 9 months ago) by martin
Branch: phil-wifi
Changes since 1.30.6.1: +2 -2
lines
FILE REMOVED
Sync with HEAD
Revision 1.30.6.1 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Mon Jun 10 21:41:04 2019 UTC (3 years, 7 months ago) by christos
Branch: phil-wifi
Changes since 1.30: +23 -7
lines
Diff to previous 1.30 (colored)
Sync with HEAD
Revision 1.33 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sat Feb 9 03:35:55 2019 UTC (3 years, 11 months ago) by kre
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: phil-wifi-20200421,
phil-wifi-20200411,
phil-wifi-20200406,
phil-wifi-20191119,
phil-wifi-20190609,
netbsd-9-base,
netbsd-9-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-9-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-9-0-RELEASE,
netbsd-9-0-RC2,
netbsd-9-0-RC1,
is-mlppp-base,
is-mlppp,
cjep_sun2x-base1,
cjep_sun2x-base,
cjep_sun2x,
cjep_staticlib_x-base1,
cjep_staticlib_x-base,
cjep_staticlib_x
Branch point for: netbsd-9
Changes since 1.32: +8 -2
lines
Diff to previous 1.32 (colored)
INTON / INTOFF audit and cleanup. No visible differences expected - there is a remote chance that some internal lossage may no longer occur in interactive shells that receive SIGINT (untrapped) at inopportune times, but you would have had to have been very unlucky to have ever suffered from that.
Revision 1.30.4.2 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Thu Sep 6 06:51:32 2018 UTC (4 years, 5 months ago) by pgoyette
Branch: pgoyette-compat
CVS Tags: pgoyette-compat-merge-20190127
Changes since 1.30.4.1: +13 -5
lines
Diff to previous 1.30.4.1 (colored) to branchpoint 1.30 (colored) next main 1.31 (colored)
Sync with HEAD Resolve a couple of conflicts (result of the uimin/uimax changes)
Revision 1.32 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Wed Aug 22 20:08:54 2018 UTC (4 years, 5 months ago) by kre
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: pgoyette-compat-20190127,
pgoyette-compat-20190118,
pgoyette-compat-1226,
pgoyette-compat-1126,
pgoyette-compat-1020,
pgoyette-compat-0930,
pgoyette-compat-0906
Changes since 1.31: +13 -5
lines
Diff to previous 1.31 (colored)
Fix (hopefully) the problem reported on current-users by Patrick Welche. we had incorrect usage of setstackmark()/popstackmark() There was an ancient idiom (imported from CSRG in 1993) where code can do: setstackmark(&smark); loop until whatever condition { /* do lots of code */ popstackmark(&smark); } popstackmark(&smark); The 1st (inner) popstackmark() resets the stack, conserving memory, The 2nd one is needed just in case the "whatever condition" was never true, and the first one was never executed. This is (was) safe as all popstackmark() did was reset the stack. That could be done over and over again with no harm. That is, until 2000 when a fix from FreeBSD for another problem was imported. That connected all the stack marks as a list (so they can be located). That caused the problem, as the idiom was not changed, now there is this list of marks, and popstackmark() was removing an entry. It rarely (never?) caused any problems as the idiom was rarely used (the shell used to do loops like above, mostly, without the inner popstackmark()). Further, the stack mark list is only ever used when a memory block is realloc'd. That is, until last weekend - with the recent set of changes. Part of that copied code from FreeBSD introduced the idiom above into more functions - functions used much more, and with a greater possibility of stack marks being set on blocks that are realloc'd and so cause the problem. In the FreeBSD code, they changed the idiom, and always do a setstackmark() immediately after the inner popstackmark(). But not for reasons related to a list of stack marks, as in the intervening period, FreeBSD deleted that, but for another reason. We do not have their issue, and I did not believe that their updated idiom was needed (I did some analysis of exactly this issue - just missed the important part!), and just continued using the old one. Hence Patrick's core dump.... The solution used here is to split popstackmark() into 2 halves, popstackmark() continues to do what it has (recently) done, but is now implemented as a call of (a new func) rststackmark() which does all the original work of popstackmark - but not removing the entry from the stack mark list (which remains in popstackmark()). Then in the idiom above, the inner popstackmark() turns into a call of rststackmark() so the stack is reset, but the stack mark list is unchanged. Tail recursion elimination makes this essentially free.
Revision 1.30.4.1 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sat Jul 28 04:32:56 2018 UTC (4 years, 6 months ago) by pgoyette
Branch: pgoyette-compat
Changes since 1.30: +6 -4
lines
Diff to previous 1.30 (colored)
Sync with HEAD
Revision 1.31 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sun Jul 22 20:37:57 2018 UTC (4 years, 6 months ago) by kre
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: pgoyette-compat-0728
Changes since 1.30: +6 -4
lines
Diff to previous 1.30 (colored)
Minor cleanups to growstackblock(). This should really change nothing that matters, but might be slightly more robust/complete.
Revision 1.29.62.1 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sun Jul 23 14:58:14 2017 UTC (5 years, 6 months ago) by snj
Branch: netbsd-8
CVS Tags: netbsd-8-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-8-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-8-1-RC1,
netbsd-8-0-RELEASE,
netbsd-8-0-RC2,
netbsd-8-0-RC1,
matt-nb8-mediatek-base,
matt-nb8-mediatek
Changes since 1.29: +20 -3
lines
Diff to previous 1.29 (colored) next main 1.30 (colored)
Pull up following revision(s) (requested by kre in ticket #103): bin/kill/kill.c: 1.28 bin/sh/Makefile: 1.111-1.113 bin/sh/arith_token.c: 1.5 bin/sh/arith_tokens.h: 1.2 bin/sh/arithmetic.c: 1.3 bin/sh/arithmetic.h: 1.2 bin/sh/bltin/bltin.h: 1.15 bin/sh/cd.c: 1.49-1.50 bin/sh/error.c: 1.40 bin/sh/eval.c: 1.142-1.151 bin/sh/exec.c: 1.49-1.51 bin/sh/exec.h: 1.26 bin/sh/expand.c: 1.113-1.119 bin/sh/expand.h: 1.23 bin/sh/histedit.c: 1.49-1.52 bin/sh/input.c: 1.57-1.60 bin/sh/input.h: 1.19-1.20 bin/sh/jobs.c: 1.86-1.87 bin/sh/main.c: 1.71-1.72 bin/sh/memalloc.c: 1.30 bin/sh/memalloc.h: 1.17 bin/sh/mknodenames.sh: 1.4 bin/sh/mkoptions.sh: 1.3-1.4 bin/sh/myhistedit.h: 1.12-1.13 bin/sh/nodetypes: 1.16-1.18 bin/sh/option.list: 1.3-1.5 bin/sh/parser.c: 1.133-1.141 bin/sh/parser.h: 1.22-1.23 bin/sh/redir.c: 1.58 bin/sh/redir.h: 1.24 bin/sh/sh.1: 1.149-1.159 bin/sh/shell.h: 1.24 bin/sh/show.c: 1.43-1.47 bin/sh/show.h: 1.11 bin/sh/syntax.c: 1.4 bin/sh/syntax.h: 1.8 bin/sh/trap.c: 1.41 bin/sh/var.c: 1.56-1.65 bin/sh/var.h: 1.29-1.35 An initial attempt at implementing LINENO to meet the specs. Aside from one problem (not too hard to fix if it was ever needed) this version does about as well as most other shell implementations when expanding $((LINENO)) and better for ${LINENO} as it retains the "LINENO hack" for the latter, and that is very accurate. Unfortunately that means that ${LINENO} and $((LINENO)) do not always produce the same value when used on the same line (a defect that other shells do not share - aside from the FreeBSD sh as it is today, where only the LINENO hack exists and so (like for us before this commit) $((LINENO)) is always either 0, or at least whatever value was last set, perhaps by LINENO=${LINENO} which does actually work ... for that one line...) This could be corrected by simply removing the LINENO hack (look for the string LINENO in parser.c) in which case ${LINENO} and $((LINENO)) would give the same (not perfectly accurate) values, as do most other shells. POSIX requires that LINENO be set before each command, and this implementation does that fairly literally - except that we only bother before the commands which actually expand words (for, case and simple commands). Unfortunately this forgot that expansions also occur in redirects, and the other compound commands can also have redirects, so if a redirect on one of the other compound commands wants to use the value of $((LINENO)) as a part of a generated file name, then it will get an incorrect value. This is the "one problem" above. (Because the LINENO hack is still enabled, using ${LINENO} works.) This could be fixed, but as this version of the LINENO implementation is just for reference purposes (it will be superseded within minutes by a better one) I won't bother. However should anyone else decide that this is a better choice (it is probably a smaller implementation, in terms of code & data space then the replacement, but also I would expect, slower, and definitely less accurate) this defect is something to bear in mind, and fix. This version retains the *BSD historical practice that line numbers in functions (all functions) count from 1 from the start of the function, and elsewhere, start from 1 from where the shell started reading the input file/stream in question. In an "eval" expression the line number starts at the line of the "eval" (and then increases if the input is a multi-line string). Note: this version is not documented (beyond as much as LINENO was before) hence this slightly longer than usual commit message. A better LINENO implementation. This version deletes (well, #if 0's out) the LINENO hack, and uses the LINENO var for both ${LINENO} and $((LINENO)). (Code to invert the LINENO hack when required, like when de-compiling the execution tree to provide the "jobs" command strings, is still included, that can be deleted when the LINENO hack is completely removed - look for refs to VSLINENO throughout the code. The var funclinno in parser.c can also be removed, it is used only for the LINENO hack.) This version produces accurate results: $((LINENO)) was made as accurate as the LINENO hack made ${LINENO} which is very good. That's why the LINENO hack is not yet completely removed, so it can be easily re-enabled. If you can tell the difference when it is in use, or not in use, then something has broken (or I managed to miss a case somewhere.) The way that LINENO works is documented in its own (new) section in the man page, so nothing more about that, or the new options, etc, here. This version introduces the possibility of having a "reference" function associated with a variable, which gets called whenever the value of the variable is required (that's what implements LINENO). There is just one function pointer however, so any particular variable gets at most one of the set function (as used for PATH, etc) or the reference function. The VFUNCREF bit in the var flags indicates which func the variable in question uses (if any - the func ptr, as before, can be NULL). I would not call the results of this perfect yet, but it is close. Unbreak (at least) i386 build .... I have no idea why this built for me on amd64 (problem was missing prototype for snprintf witout <stdio.h>) While here, add some (DEBUG mode only) tracing that proved useful in solving another problem. Set the line number before expanding args, not after. As the line_number would have usually been set earlier, this change is mostly an effective no-op, but it is better this way (just in case) - not observed to have caused any problems. Undo some over agressive fixes for a (pre-commit) bug that did not need these changes to be fixed - and these cause problems in another absurd use case. Either of these issues is unlikely to be seen by anyone who isn't an idiot masochist... PR bin/52280 removescapes_nl in expari() even when not quoted, CRTNONL's appear regardless of quoting (unlike CTLESC). New sentence, new line. Whitespace. Improve the (new) LINENO section, markup changes (with thanks to wiz@ for assistace) and some better wording in a few placed. I am an idiot... revert the previous unintended commit. Remove some left over baggage from the LINENO v1 implementation that didn't get removed with v2, and should have. This would have had (I think, without having tested it) one very minor effect on the way LINENO worked in the v2 implementation, but my guess is it would have taken a long time before anyone noticed... Correct spelling in comments of DEBUG only code... (Perhaps) temporary fix to pkgtools (cwrappers) build (configure). Expanding `` containing \ \n sequences looks to have been giving problems. I don't think this is the correct fix, but it will do no worse harm than (perhaps) incorrectly calculating LINENO in this kind of (rare) circumstance. I'll look and see if there should be a better fix later. s/volatile/const/ -- wonderful how opposites attract like this. NFC (normal use) - DEBUG only change, when showing empty arg list don't omit terminating \n. Free stack memory in a couple of obscure cases where it wasn't being done (one in probably dead code that is never compiled, the other in a very rare error case.) Since it is stack memory it wasn't lost in any case, just held longer than needed. Many internal memory management type fixes. PR bin/52302 (core dump with interactive shell, here doc and error on same line) is fixed. (An old bug.) echo "$( echo x; for a in $( seq 1000 ); do printf '%s\n'; done; echo y )" consistently prints 1002 lines (x, 1000 empty ones, then y) as it should (And you don't want to know what it did before, or why.) (Another old one.) (Recently added) Problems with ~ expansion fixed (mem management related). Proper fix for the cwrappers configure problem (which includes the quick fix that was done earlier, but extends upon that to be correct). (This was another newly added problem.) And the really devious (and rare) old bug - if STACKSTRNUL() needs to allocate a new buffer in which to store the \0, calculate the size of the string space remaining correctly, unlike when SPUTC() grows the buffer, there is no actual data being stored in the STACKSTRNUL() case - the string space remaining was calculated as one byte too few. That would be harmless, unless the next buffer also filled, in which case it was assumed that it was really full, not one byte less, meaning one junk char (a nul, or anything) was being copied into the next (even bigger buffer) corrupting the data. Consistent use of stalloc() to allocate a new block of (stack) memory, and grabstackstr() to claim a block of (stack) memory that had already been occupied but not claimed as in use. Since grabstackstr is implemented as just a call to stalloc() this is a no-op change in practice, but makes it much easier to comprehend what is really happening. Previous code sometimes used stalloc() when the use case was really for grabstackstr(). Change grabstackstr() to actually use the arg passed to it, instead of (not much better than) guessing how much space to claim, More care when using unstalloc()/ungrabstackstr() to return space, and in particular when the stack must be returned to its previous state, rather than just returning no-longer needed space, neither of those work. They also don't work properly if there have been (really, even might have been) any stack mem allocations since the last stalloc()/grabstackstr(). (If we know there cannot have been then the alloc/release sequence is kind of pointless.) To work correctly in general we must use setstackmark()/popstackmark() so do that when needed. Have those also save/restore the top of stack string space remaining. [Aside: for those reading this, the "stack" mentioned is not in any way related to the thing used for maintaining the C function call state, ie: the "stack segment" of the program, but the shell's internal memory management strategy.] More comments to better explain what is happening in some cases. Also cleaned up some hopelessly broken DEBUG mode data that were recently added (no effect on anyone but the poor semi-human attempting to make sense of it...). User visible changes: Proper counting of line numbers when a here document is delimited by a multi-line end-delimiter, as in cat << 'REALLY END' here doc line 1 here doc line 2 REALLY END (which is an obscure case, but nothing says should not work.) The \n in the end-delimiter of the here doc (the last one) was not incrementing the line number, which from that point on in the script would be 1 too low (or more, for end-delimiters with more than one \n in them.) With tilde expansion: unset HOME; echo ~ changed to return getpwuid(getuid())->pw_home instead of failing (returning ~) POSIX says this is unspecified, which makes it difficult for a script to compensate for being run without HOME set (as in env -i sh script), so while not able to be used portably, this seems like a useful extension (and is implemented the same way by some other shells). Further, with HOME=; printf %s ~ we now write nothing (which is required by POSIX - which requires ~ to expand to the value of $HOME if it is set) previously if $HOME (in this case) or a user's directory in the passwd file (for ~user) were a null STRING, We failed the ~ expansion and left behind '~' or '~user'. Changed the long name for the -L option from lineno_fn_relative to local_lineno as the latter seemed to be marginally more popular, and perhaps more importantly, is the same length as the peviously existing quietprofile option, which means the man page indentation for the list of options can return to (about) what it was before... (That is, less indented, which means more data/line, which means less lines of man page - a good thing!) Cosmetic changes to variable flags - make their values more suited to my delicate sensibilities... (NFC). Arrange not to barf (ever) if some turkey makes _ readonly. Do this by adding a VNOERROR flag that causes errors in var setting to be ignored (intended use is only for internal shell var setting, like of "_"). (nb: invalid var name errors ignore this flag, but those should never occur on a var set by the shell itself.) From FreeBSD: don't simply discard memory if a variable is not set for any reason (including because it is readonly) if the var's value had been malloc'd. Free it instead... NFC - DEBUG changes, update this to new TRACE method. KNF - white space and comment formatting. NFC - DEBUG mode only change - convert this to the new TRACE() format. NFC - DEBUG mode only change - complete a change made earlier (marking the line number when included in the trace line tag to show whether it comes from the parser, or the elsewhere as they tend to be quite different). Initially only one case was changed, while I pondered whether I liked it or not. Now it is all done... Also when there is a line tag at all, always include the root/sub-shell indicator character, not only when the pid is included. NFC: DEBUG related comment change - catch up with reality. NFC: DEBUG mode only change. Fix botched cleanup of one TRACE(). "b" more forgiving when sorting options to allow reasonable (and intended) flexibility in option.list format. Changes nothing for current option.list. Now that excessive use of STACKSTRNUL has served its purpose (well, accidental purpose) in exposing the bug in its implementation, go back to not using it when not needed for DEBUG TRACE purposes. This change should have no practical effect on either a DEBUG shell (where the STACKSTRNUL() calls remain) or a non DEBUG shell where they are not needed. Correct the initial line number used for processing -c arg strings. (It was inheriting the value from end of profile file processing) - I didn't notice before as I usually test with empty or no profile files to avoid complications. Trivial change which should have very limited impact. Fix from FreeBSD (applied there in July 2008...) Don't dump core with input like sh -c 'x=; echo >&$x' - that is where the word after a >& or <& redirect expands to nothing at all. Another fix from FreeBSD (this one from April 2009). When processing a string (as in eval, trap, or sh -c) don't allow trailing \n's to destroy the exit status of the last command executed. That is: sh -c 'false ' echo $? should produce 1, not 0. It is amazing what nonsense appears to work sometimes... (all my nonsense too!) Two bugs here, one benign because of the way the script is used. The other hidden by NetBSD's sort being stable, and the data not really requiring sorting at all... So as it happens these fixes change nothing, but they are needed anyway. (The contents of the generated file are only used in DEBUG shells, so this is really even less important than it seems.) Another ancient (highly improbable) bug bites the dust. This one caused by incorrect macro usage (ie: using the wrong one) which has been in the sources since version 1.1 (ie: forever). Like the previous (STACKSTRNUL) bug, the probability of this one actually occurring has been infinitesimal but the LINENO code increases that to infinitesimal and a smidgen... (or a few, depending upon usage). Still, apparently that was enough, Kamil Rytarowski discovered that the zsh configure script (damn competition!) managed to trigger this problem. source .editrc after we initialize so that commands persist! Make arg parsing in kill POSIX compatible with POSIX (XBD 2.12) by parsing the way getopt(3) would, if only it could handle the (required) -signumber and -signame options. This adds two "features" to kill, -ssigname and -lstatus now work (ie: one word with all of the '-', the option letter, and its value) and "--" also now works (kill -- -pid1 pid2 will not attempt to send the pid1 signal to pid2, but rather SIGTERM to the pid1 process group and pid2). It is still the case that (apart from --) at most 1 option is permitted (-l, -s, -signame, or -signumber.) Note that we now have an ambiguity, -sname might mean "-s name" or send the signal "sname" - if one of those turns out to be valid, that will be accepted, otherwise the error message will indicate that "sname" is not a valid signal name, not that "name" is not. Keeping the "-s" and signal name as separate words avoids this issue. Also caution: should someone be weird enough to define a new signal name (as in the part after SIG) which is almost the same name as an existing name that starts with 'S' by adding an extra 'S' prepended (eg: adding a SIGSSYS) then the ambiguity problem becomes much worse. In that case "kill -ssys" will be resolved in favour of the "-s" flag being used (the more modern syntax) and would send a SIGSYS, rather that a SIGSSYS. So don't do that. While here, switch to using signalname(3) (bye bye NSIG, et. al.), add some constipation, and show a little pride in formatting the signal names for "kill -l" (and in the usage when appropriate -- same routine.) Respect COLUMNS (POSIX XBD 8.3) as primary specification of the width (terminal width, not number of columns to print) for kill -l, a very small value for COLUMNS will cause kill -l output to list signals one per line, a very large value will cause them all to be listed on one line.) (eg: "COLUMNS=1 kill -l") TODO: the signal printing for "trap -l" and that for "kill -l" should be switched to use a common routine (for the sh builtin versions.) All changes of relevance here are to bin/kill - the (minor) changes to bin/sh are only to properly expose the builtin version of getenv(3) so the builtin version of kill can use it (ie: make its prototype available.) Properly support EDITRC - use it as (naming) the file when setting up libedit, and re-do the config whenever EDITRC is set. Get rid of workarounds for ancient groff html backend. Simplify macro usage. Make one example more like a real world possibility (it still isn't, but is closer) - though the actual content is irrelevant to the point being made. Add literal prompt support this allows one to do: CA="$(printf '\1')" PS1="${CA}$(tput bold)${CA}\$${CA}$(tput sgr0)${CA} " Now libedit supports embedded mode switch sequence, improve sh support for them (adds PSlit variable to set the magic character). NFC: DEBUG only change - provide an externally visible (to the DEBUG sh internals) interface to one of the internal (private to trace code) functions Include redirections in trace output from "set -x" Implement PS1, PS2 and PS4 expansions (variable expansions, arithmetic expansions, and if enabled by the promptcmds option, command substitutions.) Implement a bunch of new shell environment variables. many mostly useful in prompts when expanded at prompt time, but all available for general use. Many of the new ones are not available in SMALL shells (they work as normal if assigned, but the shell does not set or use them - and there is no magic in a SMALL shell (usually for install media.)) Omnibus manual update for prompt expansions and new variables. Throw in some random cleanups as a bonus. Correct a markup typo (why did I not see this before the prev commit??) Sort options (our default is 0..9AaBbZz). Fix markup problems and a typo. Make $- list flags in the same order they appear in sh(1) Do a better job of detecting the error in pkgsrc/devel/libbson-1.6.3's configure script, ie: $(( which is intended to be a sub-shell in a command substitution, but is an arith subst instead, it needs to be written $( ( to do as intended. Instead of just blindly carrying on to find the missing )) somewhere, anywhere, give up as soon as we have seen an unbalanced ')' that isn't immediately followed by another ')' which in a valid arith subst it always would be. While here, there has been a comment in the code for quite a while noting a difference in the standard between the text descr & grammar when it comes to the syntax of case statements. Add more comments to explain why parsing it as we do is in fact definitely the correct way (ie: the grammar wins arguments like this...). DEBUG and white space changes only. Convert TRACE() calls for DEBUg mode to the new style. NFC (when not debugging sh). Mostly DEBUG and white space changes. Convert DEEBUG TRACE() calls to the new format. Also #if 0 a function definition that is used nowhere. While here, change the function of pushfile() slightly - it now sets the buf pointer in the top (new) input descriptor to NULL, instead of simply leaving it - code that needs a buffer always (before and after) must malloc() one and assign it after the call. But code which does not (which will be reading from a string or similar) now does not have to explicitly set it to NULL (cleaner interface.) NFC intended (or observed.) DEBUG changes: convert DEBUG TRACE() calls to new format. ALso, cause exec failures to always cause the shell to exit with status 126 or 127, whatever the cause. 127 is intended for lookup failures (and is used that way), 126 is used for anything else that goes wrong (as in several other shells.) We no longer use 2 (more easily confused with an exit status of the command exec'd) for shell exec failures. DEBUG only changes. Convert the TRACE() calls in the remaining files that still used it to the new format. NFC. Fix a reference after free (and consequent nonsense diagnostic for attempts to set readonly variables) I added in 1.60 by incompletely copying the FreeBSD fix for the lost memory issue.
Revision 1.30 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sat Jun 17 07:22:12 2017 UTC (5 years, 7 months ago) by kre
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: phil-wifi-base,
pgoyette-compat-base,
pgoyette-compat-0625,
pgoyette-compat-0521,
pgoyette-compat-0502,
pgoyette-compat-0422,
pgoyette-compat-0415,
pgoyette-compat-0407,
pgoyette-compat-0330,
pgoyette-compat-0322,
pgoyette-compat-0315,
perseant-stdc-iso10646-base,
perseant-stdc-iso10646
Branch point for: phil-wifi,
pgoyette-compat
Changes since 1.29: +20 -3
lines
Diff to previous 1.29 (colored)
Many internal memory management type fixes. PR bin/52302 (core dump with interactive shell, here doc and error on same line) is fixed. (An old bug.) echo "$( echo x; for a in $( seq 1000 ); do printf '%s\n'; done; echo y )" consistently prints 1002 lines (x, 1000 empty ones, then y) as it should (And you don't want to know what it did before, or why.) (Another old one.) (Recently added) Problems with ~ expansion fixed (mem management related). Proper fix for the cwrappers configure problem (which includes the quick fix that was done earlier, but extends upon that to be correct). (This was another newly added problem.) And the really devious (and rare) old bug - if STACKSTRNUL() needs to allocate a new buffer in which to store the \0, calculate the size of the string space remaining correctly, unlike when SPUTC() grows the buffer, there is no actual data being stored in the STACKSTRNUL() case - the string space remaining was calculated as one byte too few. That would be harmless, unless the next buffer also filled, in which case it was assumed that it was really full, not one byte less, meaning one junk char (a nul, or anything) was being copied into the next (even bigger buffer) corrupting the data. Consistent use of stalloc() to allocate a new block of (stack) memory, and grabstackstr() to claim a block of (stack) memory that had already been occupied but not claimed as in use. Since grabstackstr is implemented as just a call to stalloc() this is a no-op change in practice, but makes it much easier to comprehend what is really happening. Previous code sometimes used stalloc() when the use case was really for grabstackstr(). Change grabstackstr() to actually use the arg passed to it, instead of (not much better than) guessing how much space to claim, More care when using unstalloc()/ungrabstackstr() to return space, and in particular when the stack must be returned to its previous state, rather than just returning no-longer needed space, neither of those work. They also don't work properly if there have been (really, even might have been) any stack mem allocations since the last stalloc()/grabstackstr(). (If we know there cannot have been then the alloc/release sequence is kind of pointless.) To work correctly in general we must use setstackmark()/popstackmark() so do that when needed. Have those also save/restore the top of stack string space remaining. [Aside: for those reading this, the "stack" mentioned is not in any way related to the thing used for maintaining the C function call state, ie: the "stack segment" of the program, but the shell's internal memory management strategy.] More comments to better explain what is happening in some cases. Also cleaned up some hopelessly broken DEBUG mode data that were recently added (no effect on anyone but the poor semi-human attempting to make sense of it...). User visible changes: Proper counting of line numbers when a here document is delimited by a multi-line end-delimiter, as in cat << 'REALLY END' here doc line 1 here doc line 2 REALLY END (which is an obscure case, but nothing says should not work.) The \n in the end-delimiter of the here doc (the last one) was not incrementing the line number, which from that point on in the script would be 1 too low (or more, for end-delimiters with more than one \n in them.) With tilde expansion: unset HOME; echo ~ changed to return getpwuid(getuid())->pw_home instead of failing (returning ~) POSIX says this is unspecified, which makes it difficult for a script to compensate for being run without HOME set (as in env -i sh script), so while not able to be used portably, this seems like a useful extension (and is implemented the same way by some other shells). Further, with HOME=; printf %s ~ we now write nothing (which is required by POSIX - which requires ~ to expand to the value of $HOME if it is set) previously if $HOME (in this case) or a user's directory in the passwd file (for ~user) were a null STRING, We failed the ~ expansion and left behind '~' or '~user'.
Revision 1.28.22.1 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sun Mar 23 00:11:41 2008 UTC (14 years, 10 months ago) by matt
Branch: matt-armv6
Changes since 1.28: +3 -3
lines
Diff to previous 1.28 (colored) next main 1.29 (colored)
sync with HEAD
Revision 1.29 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Fri Feb 15 17:26:06 2008 UTC (14 years, 11 months ago) by matt
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: yamt-pf42-baseX,
yamt-pf42-base4,
yamt-pf42-base3,
yamt-pf42-base2,
yamt-pf42-base,
yamt-pf42,
yamt-pagecache-tag8,
yamt-pagecache-base9,
yamt-pagecache-base8,
yamt-pagecache-base7,
yamt-pagecache-base6,
yamt-pagecache-base5,
yamt-pagecache-base4,
yamt-pagecache-base3,
yamt-pagecache-base2,
yamt-pagecache-base,
yamt-pagecache,
wrstuden-revivesa-base-3,
wrstuden-revivesa-base-2,
wrstuden-revivesa-base-1,
wrstuden-revivesa-base,
wrstuden-revivesa,
tls-maxphys-base,
tls-maxphys,
tls-earlyentropy-base,
tls-earlyentropy,
riastradh-xf86-video-intel-2-7-1-pre-2-21-15,
riastradh-drm2-base3,
riastradh-drm2-base2,
riastradh-drm2-base1,
riastradh-drm2-base,
riastradh-drm2,
prg-localcount2-base3,
prg-localcount2-base2,
prg-localcount2-base1,
prg-localcount2-base,
prg-localcount2,
pgoyette-localcount-base,
pgoyette-localcount-20170426,
pgoyette-localcount-20170320,
pgoyette-localcount-20170107,
pgoyette-localcount-20161104,
pgoyette-localcount-20160806,
pgoyette-localcount-20160726,
pgoyette-localcount,
netbsd-8-base,
netbsd-7-nhusb-base-20170116,
netbsd-7-nhusb-base,
netbsd-7-nhusb,
netbsd-7-base,
netbsd-7-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-7-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-7-1-RC2,
netbsd-7-1-RC1,
netbsd-7-1-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-7-1-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-7-1,
netbsd-7-0-RELEASE,
netbsd-7-0-RC3,
netbsd-7-0-RC2,
netbsd-7-0-RC1,
netbsd-7-0-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-7-0-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-7-0,
netbsd-7,
netbsd-6-base,
netbsd-6-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-1-RC4,
netbsd-6-1-RC3,
netbsd-6-1-RC2,
netbsd-6-1-RC1,
netbsd-6-1-5-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-1-4-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-1-3-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-1-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-1-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-1,
netbsd-6-0-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-0-RC2,
netbsd-6-0-RC1,
netbsd-6-0-6-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-0-5-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-0-4-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-0-3-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-0-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-0-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-6-0,
netbsd-6,
netbsd-5-base,
netbsd-5-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-2-RC1,
netbsd-5-2-3-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-2-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-2-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-2,
netbsd-5-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-1-RC4,
netbsd-5-1-RC3,
netbsd-5-1-RC2,
netbsd-5-1-RC1,
netbsd-5-1-5-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-1-4-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-1-3-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-1-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-1-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-1,
netbsd-5-0-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-0-RC4,
netbsd-5-0-RC3,
netbsd-5-0-RC2,
netbsd-5-0-RC1,
netbsd-5-0-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-0-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-5-0,
netbsd-5,
mjf-devfs2-base,
mjf-devfs2,
matt-premerge-20091211,
matt-nb6-plus-nbase,
matt-nb6-plus-base,
matt-nb6-plus,
matt-nb5-pq3-base,
matt-nb5-pq3,
matt-nb5-mips64-u2-k2-k4-k7-k8-k9,
matt-nb5-mips64-u1-k1-k5,
matt-nb5-mips64-premerge-20101231,
matt-nb5-mips64-premerge-20091211,
matt-nb5-mips64-k15,
matt-nb5-mips64,
matt-nb4-mips64-k7-u2a-k9b,
matt-mips64-premerge-20101231,
matt-mips64-base2,
matt-armv6-nbase,
localcount-20160914,
khorben-n900,
keiichi-mipv6-base,
keiichi-mipv6,
jym-xensuspend-nbase,
jym-xensuspend-base,
jym-xensuspend,
hpcarm-cleanup-nbase,
hpcarm-cleanup-base,
cherry-xenmp-base,
cherry-xenmp,
bouyer-socketcan-base1,
bouyer-socketcan-base,
bouyer-socketcan,
bouyer-quota2-nbase,
bouyer-quota2-base,
bouyer-quota2,
agc-symver-base,
agc-symver
Branch point for: netbsd-8
Changes since 1.28: +3 -3
lines
Diff to previous 1.28 (colored)
Fix inconsistent definitions
Revision 1.28 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Thu Aug 7 09:05:34 2003 UTC (19 years, 6 months ago) by agc
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: wrstuden-fixsa-newbase,
wrstuden-fixsa-base-1,
wrstuden-fixsa-base,
wrstuden-fixsa,
netbsd-4-base,
netbsd-4-0-RELEASE,
netbsd-4-0-RC5,
netbsd-4-0-RC4,
netbsd-4-0-RC3,
netbsd-4-0-RC2,
netbsd-4-0-RC1,
netbsd-4-0-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-4-0,
netbsd-4,
netbsd-3-base,
netbsd-3-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-3-1-RC4,
netbsd-3-1-RC3,
netbsd-3-1-RC2,
netbsd-3-1-RC1,
netbsd-3-1-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-3-1,
netbsd-3-0-RELEASE,
netbsd-3-0-RC6,
netbsd-3-0-RC5,
netbsd-3-0-RC4,
netbsd-3-0-RC3,
netbsd-3-0-RC2,
netbsd-3-0-RC1,
netbsd-3-0-3-RELEASE,
netbsd-3-0-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-3-0-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-3-0,
netbsd-3,
netbsd-2-base,
netbsd-2-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-2-1-RC6,
netbsd-2-1-RC5,
netbsd-2-1-RC4,
netbsd-2-1-RC3,
netbsd-2-1-RC2,
netbsd-2-1-RC1,
netbsd-2-1,
netbsd-2-0-base,
netbsd-2-0-RELEASE,
netbsd-2-0-RC5,
netbsd-2-0-RC4,
netbsd-2-0-RC3,
netbsd-2-0-RC2,
netbsd-2-0-RC1,
netbsd-2-0-3-RELEASE,
netbsd-2-0-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-2-0-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-2-0,
netbsd-2,
matt-mips64-base,
matt-mips64,
matt-armv6-prevmlocking,
matt-armv6-base,
hpcarm-cleanup,
cube-autoconf-base,
cube-autoconf,
abandoned-netbsd-4-base,
abandoned-netbsd-4
Branch point for: matt-armv6
Changes since 1.27: +3 -7
lines
Diff to previous 1.27 (colored)
Move UCB-licensed code from 4-clause to 3-clause licence. Patches provided by Joel Baker in PR 22249, verified by myself.
Revision 1.27 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Wed Jan 22 20:36:04 2003 UTC (20 years ago) by dsl
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.26: +3 -3
lines
Diff to previous 1.26 (colored)
Support command -p, -v and -V as posix Stop temporary PATH assigments messing up hash table Fix sh -c -e "echo $0 $*" -a x (as posix) (agreed by christos)
Revision 1.26 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sun Nov 24 22:35:41 2002 UTC (20 years, 2 months ago) by christos
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: fvdl_fs64_base
Changes since 1.25: +15 -26
lines
Diff to previous 1.25 (colored)
Fixes from David Laight: - ansification - format of output of jobs command (etc) - job identiers %+, %- etc - $? and $(...) - correct quoting of output of set, export -p and readonly -p - differentiation between nornal and 'posix special' builtins - correct behaviour (posix) for errors on builtins and special builtins - builtin printf and kill - set -o debug (if compiled with DEBUG) - cd src obj (as ksh - too useful to do without) - unset -e name, remove non-readonly variable from export list. (so I could unset -e PS1 before running the test shell...)
Revision 1.25 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Mon Oct 7 14:26:49 2002 UTC (20 years, 4 months ago) by christos
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.24: +38 -45
lines
Diff to previous 1.24 (colored)
- it is wrong to put inton/intoff arount ckmalloc(), because the code around it is the one that does this. - whitespace fixes.
Revision 1.24 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Fri Oct 4 13:15:51 2002 UTC (20 years, 4 months ago) by christos
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.23: +5 -5
lines
Diff to previous 1.23 (colored)
Rename ALIGN to SHELL_ALIGN and simplify macro so that it does not have side effects, and add double to it, so that it aligns doubles correctly too. This is just a workaround to fix the sparc64 problem where ALIGN() is now defined in some include file to be 16 instead of 8. Thanks to martin for debugging this.
Revision 1.21.10.2 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Fri Nov 3 02:35:57 2000 UTC (22 years, 3 months ago) by tv
Branch: netbsd-1-5
CVS Tags: netbsd-1-5-RELEASE,
netbsd-1-5-PATCH003,
netbsd-1-5-PATCH002,
netbsd-1-5-PATCH001,
netbsd-1-5-BETA2
Changes since 1.21.10.1: +21 -2
lines
Diff to previous 1.21.10.1 (colored) to branchpoint 1.21 (colored) next main 1.22 (colored)
Pullup 1.23 [hubertf]: Fixes PR 11283.
Revision 1.23 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Wed Nov 1 19:56:01 2000 UTC (22 years, 3 months ago) by christos
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: netbsd-1-6-base,
netbsd-1-6-RELEASE,
netbsd-1-6-RC3,
netbsd-1-6-RC2,
netbsd-1-6-RC1,
netbsd-1-6-PATCH002-RELEASE,
netbsd-1-6-PATCH002-RC4,
netbsd-1-6-PATCH002-RC3,
netbsd-1-6-PATCH002-RC2,
netbsd-1-6-PATCH002-RC1,
netbsd-1-6-PATCH002,
netbsd-1-6-PATCH001-RELEASE,
netbsd-1-6-PATCH001-RC3,
netbsd-1-6-PATCH001-RC2,
netbsd-1-6-PATCH001-RC1,
netbsd-1-6-PATCH001,
netbsd-1-6,
ELRICshvfork-base,
ELRICshvfork
Changes since 1.22: +21 -2
lines
Diff to previous 1.22 (colored)
PR/11283: Hubert Feyrer: random memory corruption executing commands: Fix from FreeBSD: growstackblock() sometimes relocates a stack_block considered empty without properly relocating stack marks referencing that block. The first call to popstackmark() with the unrelocated stack mark as argument then causes sh to abort. Relocating the relevant stack marks seems to solve this problem. The patch changes the semantics of popstackmark() somewhat. It can only be called once after a call to setstackmark(), thus cmdloop() in main.c needs an extra call to setstackmark().
Revision 1.21.10.1 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sun Oct 22 19:04:50 2000 UTC (22 years, 3 months ago) by tv
Branch: netbsd-1-5
Changes since 1.21: +6 -3
lines
Diff to previous 1.21 (colored)
Pullup 1.22 [he]: Wrap malloc() calls with an INTOFF/INTON pair. Fixes PR 8414.
Revision 1.22 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sat Oct 21 04:37:17 2000 UTC (22 years, 3 months ago) by mycroft
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.21: +6 -3
lines
Diff to previous 1.21 (colored)
Wrap malloc() calls with an INTOFF/INTON pair. Fixes PR 8414.
Revision 1.20.2.1 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Fri May 8 06:01:04 1998 UTC (24 years, 9 months ago) by mycroft
Branch: netbsd-1-3
CVS Tags: netbsd-1-3-PATCH003-CANDIDATE2,
netbsd-1-3-PATCH003-CANDIDATE1,
netbsd-1-3-PATCH003-CANDIDATE0,
netbsd-1-3-PATCH003,
netbsd-1-3-PATCH002
Changes since 1.20: +5 -4
lines
Diff to previous 1.20 (colored) next main 1.21 (colored)
Sync with trunk, per request of christos.
Revision 1.21 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sat Jan 31 12:36:17 1998 UTC (25 years ago) by christos
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: wrstuden-devbsize-base,
wrstuden-devbsize-19991221,
wrstuden-devbsize,
netbsd-1-5-base,
netbsd-1-5-BETA,
netbsd-1-5-ALPHA2,
netbsd-1-4-base,
netbsd-1-4-RELEASE,
netbsd-1-4-PATCH003,
netbsd-1-4-PATCH002,
netbsd-1-4-PATCH001,
netbsd-1-4,
minoura-xpg4dl-base,
minoura-xpg4dl,
comdex-fall-1999-base,
comdex-fall-1999
Branch point for: netbsd-1-5
Changes since 1.20: +5 -4
lines
Diff to previous 1.20 (colored)
Include our local includes after the system's ones.
Revision 1.20 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Fri Jul 4 21:02:08 1997 UTC (25 years, 7 months ago) by christos
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: netbsd-1-3-base,
netbsd-1-3-RELEASE,
netbsd-1-3-PATCH001,
netbsd-1-3-BETA
Branch point for: netbsd-1-3
Changes since 1.19: +3 -2
lines
Diff to previous 1.19 (colored)
Fix compiler warnings.
Revision 1.17.2.1 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sun Jan 26 04:57:25 1997 UTC (26 years ago) by rat
Branch: netbsd-1-2
CVS Tags: netbsd-1-2-PATCH001
Changes since 1.17: +9 -9
lines
Diff to previous 1.17 (colored) next main 1.18 (colored)
Update /bin/sh from trunk per request of Christos Zoulas. Fixes many bugs.
Revision 1.19 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sat Jan 11 02:04:38 1997 UTC (26 years, 1 month ago) by tls
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.18: +6 -6
lines
Diff to previous 1.18 (colored)
kill 'register'
Revision 1.18 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Wed Oct 16 15:45:10 1996 UTC (26 years, 3 months ago) by christos
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.17: +5 -5
lines
Diff to previous 1.17 (colored)
PR/2808: Remove trailing whitespace (from FreeBSD)
Revision 1.17 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Mon May 20 14:49:32 1996 UTC (26 years, 8 months ago) by cgd
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: netbsd-1-2-base,
netbsd-1-2-RELEASE,
netbsd-1-2-BETA
Branch point for: netbsd-1-2
Changes since 1.16: +4 -4
lines
Diff to previous 1.16 (colored)
Fix growstackblock() 'newlen' calculations: (1) it needs to be ALIGNed for both halves of the 'if,' and (2) if you're going to claim that you now have ALIGN(newlen) bytes left, you should have actually allocated ALIGN(newlen), rather than just 'newlen' bytes.
Revision 1.16 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Thu May 11 21:29:29 1995 UTC (27 years, 9 months ago) by christos
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: netbsd-1-1-base,
netbsd-1-1-RELEASE,
netbsd-1-1-PATCH001,
netbsd-1-1
Changes since 1.15: +1 -1
lines
Diff to previous 1.15 (colored)
Merge in my changes from vangogh, and fix the x=`false`; echo $? == 0 bug.
Revision 1.15 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Tue Mar 21 09:09:29 1995 UTC (27 years, 10 months ago) by cgd
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.14: +7 -2
lines
Diff to previous 1.14 (colored)
convert to new RCS id conventions.
Revision 1.14 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sat Dec 31 23:56:54 1994 UTC (28 years, 1 month ago) by mycroft
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.13: +1 -11
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Diff to previous 1.13 (colored)
Fix that last bug in a less expensive way.
Revision 1.13 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sat Dec 31 01:56:16 1994 UTC (28 years, 1 month ago) by cgd
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.12: +11 -1
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Diff to previous 1.12 (colored)
take two: make grabstackstr() work correctly, in the face of strange filling.
Revision 1.12 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Fri Dec 30 06:33:59 1994 UTC (28 years, 1 month ago) by mycroft
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.11: +10 -9
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Diff to previous 1.11 (colored)
Remove previous misguided change.
Revision 1.11 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Fri Dec 23 13:21:01 1994 UTC (28 years, 1 month ago) by cgd
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.10: +10 -11
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Diff to previous 1.10 (colored)
don't play fast and loose with memory block allcation. try to allocate in more-round sizes, but realize that not everybody will fill them up exactly.
Revision 1.10 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sun Dec 4 07:12:19 1994 UTC (28 years, 2 months ago) by cgd
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.9: +12 -5
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Diff to previous 1.9 (colored)
from James Jegers <jimj@miller.cs.uwm.edu>: quiet -Wall, and squelch some of the worst style errors.
Revision 1.9 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Fri Sep 23 11:28:43 1994 UTC (28 years, 4 months ago) by mycroft
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.8: +2 -2
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Diff to previous 1.8 (colored)
Eliminate uses of some obsolete functions.
Revision 1.8 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sat Jun 11 16:12:08 1994 UTC (28 years, 8 months ago) by mycroft
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: netbsd-1-0-base,
netbsd-1-0-RELEASE,
netbsd-1-0-PATCH1,
netbsd-1-0-PATCH06,
netbsd-1-0-PATCH05,
netbsd-1-0-PATCH04,
netbsd-1-0-PATCH03,
netbsd-1-0-PATCH02,
netbsd-1-0-PATCH0,
netbsd-1-0
Changes since 1.7: +2 -1
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Diff to previous 1.7 (colored)
Add RCS ids.
Revision 1.7 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Thu May 12 17:08:55 1994 UTC (28 years, 9 months ago) by jtc
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.6: +1 -2
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Diff to previous 1.6 (colored)
use prototypes provided by header files instead of our own
Revision 1.6 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Thu May 12 17:03:44 1994 UTC (28 years, 9 months ago) by jtc
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.5: +1 -0
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Diff to previous 1.5 (colored)
Include appropriate header files to bring function prototypes into scope.
Revision 1.5 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Wed May 11 17:10:16 1994 UTC (28 years, 9 months ago) by jtc
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.4: +3 -4
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Diff to previous 1.4 (colored)
sync with 4.4lite
Revision 1.1.1.2 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs] (vendor branch), Wed May 11 17:01:35 1994 UTC (28 years, 9 months ago) by jtc
Branch: WFJ-920714,
CSRG
CVS Tags: lite-1
Changes since 1.1.1.1: +3 -3
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Diff to previous 1.1.1.1 (colored)
44lite code
Revision 1.4 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sun Aug 1 18:58:10 1993 UTC (29 years, 6 months ago) by mycroft
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.3: +2 -2
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Diff to previous 1.3 (colored)
Add RCS identifiers.
Revision 1.3 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Tue Mar 23 00:28:28 1993 UTC (29 years, 10 months ago) by cgd
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: netbsd-alpha-1,
netbsd-0-9-base,
netbsd-0-9-RELEASE,
netbsd-0-9-BETA,
netbsd-0-9-ALPHA2,
netbsd-0-9-ALPHA,
netbsd-0-9,
netbsd-0-8
Changes since 1.2: +1 -1
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Diff to previous 1.2 (colored)
changed "Id" to "Header" for rcsids
Revision 1.2 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Mon Mar 22 08:04:00 1993 UTC (29 years, 10 months ago) by cgd
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.1: +1 -0
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Diff to previous 1.1 (colored)
added rcs ids to all files
Revision 1.1.1.1 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs] (vendor branch), Sun Mar 21 09:45:37 1993 UTC (29 years, 10 months ago) by cgd
Branch: WFJ-920714,
CSRG
CVS Tags: patchkit-0-2-2,
WFJ-386bsd-01
Changes since 1.1: +0 -0
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Diff to previous 1.1 (colored)
initial import of 386bsd-0.1 sources
Revision 1.1 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs], Sun Mar 21 09:45:37 1993 UTC (29 years, 10 months ago) by cgd
Branch: MAIN
Initial revision