Fixup remaining Plan9 dependencies (chartorune()).
Add Makefile for UNIX-like systems (tested with Linux and APE).
Make error printing consistent, use Errstr() explicitely.
Get rid of NSTATUS buffer limit, just malloc it.
git used to track cache size in object
count, rather than bytes. This had the
unfortunate effect of making memory use
depend on the size of objects -- repos
with lots of large objects could cause
out of memory deaths.
now, we track sizes in bytes, which should
keep our memory usage flatter.
Untangle the lexer and interpreter thread state.
Fix the file and line number error reporting, getting rid of
Xsrcfile instruction, as the whole code block can only come
from a single file, stuff the source file in slot[1] of the
code block instead.
Remove limitations for globber (path element limits)
and be more intelligent about handling globbing by
inserting Xglob instruction only when needed and not
run it over every Xsimple argument list.
Remove fragile ndot magic and make it explicit by adding
the -q flag to . builtin command.
Add -b flag for full compilation.
Make exitnext() smart, so we can speculate thru rcmain and
avoid the fork().
Get rid of all print(2) format functions and use io
instead.
Improve the io library, adding rstr() to handle tokenization,
which allows us to look ahead in the already read buffer
for the terminators, avoiding alot of string copies.
Auto indent pcmd(), to make line number reporting more usefull.
Implement here documents properly, so they can work everywhere.
We seem to have a botch in the protocol negotiation, where
we leak some protocol packets into the packfile; this will
need to be fixed before we put this change in.
The initial working directory of a new window may be set by a
`-cd directory` option. However, the `-cd directory` option is
not capable of handling paths with spaces when used via wctl.
To enable paths with spaces the function
/sys/src/cmd/rio/wctl.c:/^parsewctl is extended to handle quoted
directory paths.
Before applying the patch the following will fail to open a new
window by writing to /dev/wctl:
<snip>
% rio -i window
% mkdir '/tmp/path with space'
% echo new -cd '''/tmp/path with space''' window -x rc >> /dev/wctl
% pwd
/tmp/path with space
<snap>
The following invocation fails as well:
<snip>
% window -cd '/tmp/path with space'
% pwd
/tmp/path with space
<snap>
After applying the patch the above sequences work as expected,
opening a window running rc with the working directory set to
'/tmp/path with space'.
exportfs -d logs 9p traffic to /tmp/exportdb.
-f allows writing to a different file.
exportfs silently continues if it doesn't have
permissions to create or write to /tmp/exportdb.
These are poor behaviors.
A better default is to write to stderr, since it
is 9P debug info that is better immediately printed,
and not user info that is better handled by syslog().
As a result, -f is obsolete and thus removed.
Redirect responsibility is now on rc.
As a side effect, rc will fail if it doesn't
have permissions to write.
exportfs(4) is updated to reflect all changes
and with a better Synopsis.
oexportfs is changed to match exportfs.
oexportfs(4) is updated to reflect all changes.
The Synopsis is not changed due to the number of flags.
Removed -f from iostats.
iostats(4) is updated to reflect all changes.
---
http://fqa.9front.org/fqa1.html#1.2 states the supported archs.
However, clean and nuke also remove build files for 0 (spim) and q
(power). 'mk all' using those archs fails; 'mk kernels' also tries to
build all the kernels, even those which are not supported. For
example, I tried to build the power arch (qc, qa, ql) and without
surprise it failed (when building dtracy): ...
mk dtracy
qc -FTVw dtracy.c
yacc -v -d -D1 parse.y
qc -FTVw cgen.c
qc -FTVw act.c
qc -FTVw type.c
== regfree ==
REGISTER R0 <11> STRUCT DTAct cgen.c:302
== regfree ==
REGISTER R0 <11> STRUCT DTAct act.c:266
== regfree ==
qc -FTVw agg.c
cgen.c:299 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
cgen.c:299 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
cgen.c:302 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
cgen.c:302 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
cgen.c:302 error in regfree: 0 [0]
REGISTERmk: qc -FTVw cgen.c : exit status=rc 387386: qc 387392: error R0
<11> STRUCT DTAct act.c:269
act.c:250 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
act.c:250 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
act.c:266 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
act.c:266 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
act.c:266 error in regfree: 0 [0]
act.c:269 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
act.c:269 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
act.c:269 error in regfree: 0 [0]
act.c:274 unknown type in regalloc: STRUCT DTAct
act.c:274 bad opcode in gmove INT -> STRUCT DTAct
act.c:274 error in regfree: 0 [0]
too many errors
mk: for(i in cc ... : exit status=rc 382748: rc 387379: mk 387381: error
mk: date for (i ... : exit status=rc 373781: rc 382226: mk 382227: error
cpu%
The patch below skips over non-supported architectures. Is that
something we want? This way, 'mk kernels' should work without a
problem (tested on amd64). Then if someone works on getting those
architectures supported again in the future, they can be added back
in.
snoopy shares ndb/dns's dns parser code, but has its own
copy of rralloc() function, which is responsible to allocating
auxiolary data structures on an RR depending on the type.
ndb/dns gained some support for some new types, but snoopy's
copy of rralloc() was not updated, resulting the auxiolary
structures to be nil, and the shared parsing routines crashes
when trying to dereference them.
this just syncs the copies, we might consider moving rralloc()
into its own file so it can be completely shared.
Git currently gets a bit confused if you try to
manipulate files by absolute path. There were also a
number of places where user-controlled file paths ended
up getting passed to regex interpretation, which could
confuse things.
This change mainly does 2 things:
- Adds a 'drop' function which drops
a non-regex prefix from a string, and uses
that to manipulate paths, simplifies 'subst',
and removes 'subst -g', which was only used
with fixed regexes; sed does this job fine.
- When getting a path from a user, we
make it absolute and then strip out the head
Along the way it cleans up a couple of stupids:
- 'for(f in $list) if(! ~ $#f 0) use $f:
$f can't be a nil list because of
list flattening.
- removes a useless substitution here:
all=`$nl{{git/query -c $1 $2; git/query -c $2 $3} | sed 's/^..//' | \
gsubst '^('$ourbr'|'$basebr'|'$theirbr')/*' | sort | uniq}
where git/query -c doesn't produce
paths prefixed with the query.
exportfs -d logs 9p traffic to /tmp/exportdb.
-f allows writing to a different file.
exportfs silently continues if it doesn't have
permissions to create or write to /tmp/exportdb.
These are poor behaviors.
A better default is to write to stderr, since it
is 9P debug info that is better immediately printed,
and not user info that is better handled by syslog().
As a result, -f is obsolete and thus removed.
Redirect responsibility is now on rc.
As a side effect, rc will fail if it doesn't
have permissions to write.
exportfs(4) is updated to reflect all changes
and with a better Synopsis.
Update tinc(8) man page to:
1. state the implementation aligns with 1.0.36 of tinc.org;
2. use same hostname as mentioned in usage line.
Fix typos in tinc.c.
The '-m' flag was added to date largely
to support git scripts. It predates the
tmdate code, which is why it exists, but
it's a recent enough addition that nothing
I'm aware of uses it, other than git.
As a result, it would be good to remove
it, so let's do that.
As part of the transition to 64 bit userspace
APIs, we need to make our libc functions which
take arrays all accept and deal with large sizes.
This does the work for qsort.
According to the ASN.1 BER spec, we should be encoding
all sequences (including empty ones) as constructed:
8.9.1 The encoding of a sequence value shall be constructed.
8.10.1 The encoding of a sequence-of value shall be constructed.
8.11.1 The encoding of a set value shall be constructed.
8.12.1 The encoding of a set-of value shall be constructed.
However, we were only setting them as constructed when the
list was non-empty.
This changes it, and makes letsencrypt happy with the CSRs that
we generate.