this change is in preparation for amd64. the systab calling
convention was also changed to return uintptr (as segattach
returns a pointer) and the arguments are now passed as
va_list which handles amd64 arguments properly (all arguments
are passed in 64bit quantities on the stack, tho the upper
part will not be initialized when the element is smaller
than 8 bytes).
this is partial. xalloc needs to be converted in the future.
when user does read of exactly 12*12 bytes on draw
ctl file, the snprint() adds one more \0 byte writing
beyond the user buffer and corrupting memory.
fix this by not snprint()ing the final space and add
it manually.
according to a comment in linux driver, reading Isrc2
register caused interrupts to be disabled. we used
to read Isrc2 in ifstat() and it was confirmed that
reading ifstat locks up ethernet. removing the Isrc2
read in ifstats, and also reenable interrupts after
reading Isrc2 when the interrupt was not for us.
(this is from the linux driver)
in replenish(), set ring software write pointer (Sring.wp)
*before* the hardware write index register. otherwise
rx() could get status notification for completed
receive but wont find the rx descriptor in the ring.
handle uint wrap arround when calculating ring fill
count and remaining count.
the stats and ifstats files in the 3rd level of a netif
are not per connection, but for the interface.
this made fstat fail for /net/ether0/N/*stats where N > 0
as the NETID() bits in the qid didnt compare.
cachechars() used to skip over characters on its own when
loadchar() could not find the character or a PJW replacement.
this resulted in wrong width calculation. now we just return
and handle the case inside _string and _stringwidth.
fix subfont leak in stringwidth()
remove annoying prints in stringwidth()
scrollwheel now works proportional to y mouse position.
special case is when shift is hold down. then scrollwheel
will work like before and scroll one line up or down.
from erik quanstros 9fans post:
i think the list insertion code needs a single-read
test that f->alarm != 0. to prevent the 0 from
acting like a fencepost. e.g. trying to insert -10 into
list -40 -30 0 -20.
if(alarms.head) {
l = &alarms.head;
for(f = *l; f; f = f->palarm) {
>> fw = f->alarm;
>> if(fw != 0 && (long)(fw - when) >= 0) {
up->palarm = f;
*l = up;
goto done;
}
l = &f->palarm;
}
*l = up;
}
disabling mouse packet streaming command 0xf5 can fail
when a packet is currently transmitted.
this can be seen when one moves the mouse while running:
while(){echo accelerated >/dev/mousectl; sleep 0.5}
make sure not to dereference Proc* nil pointer. this can potentially
happen from devip which has code like:
if(er->read4p)
postnote(er->read4p, 1, "unbind", 0);
the process it is about to kill can zero er->read4p at any time,
so there is the possibility of the condition to be true and then
er->read4p becoming nil.
check if the process has already exited (p->pid == 0) in postnote()
under p->debug qlock.
when alarmkproc is commited to send the alarm note to the process,
the process might have exited already, or worse, being reused for
another process. pexit() zeros p->alarm at the beginning, but the
kalarmproc() might read p->alarm before pexit() zeroed it, decide
to send the note, then get preempted and pexit() releases the proc.
once kalarmproc() is resumed, the proc might be already something
different and we send the note to the wrong thing.
we now check p->alarm under the debug qlock. that way, pexit()
cannot make progress while we test the condition.
remove the error label arround postnote(). postnote does not raise
error.
make sure noteid is valid (>0).
prohibit changing note group of kernel processes. this is also
checked for in pgrpnote().
prevent "none" user from changing its note group to another "none"
sessions. this would allow him to send notes other none processes
other than its own.
this works differently from mischiefs original patch. instead of
overloading the address bar, we popup our own enter box. the
function can be invoked from the menu or by hitting ^F.
add new functions pageaddr() that returns a string describing
the page to be loaded. it is in the form of:
/path/to/file!pagename!subpage!....
one can jump to such a page by calling trywalk(name, addr)
where name and addr get concatinated with ! to form a page
address and then the currently loaded pages are walked up
to the nearest page which is then returned. (or nil when
not found). the remaining address will be set in the global
pagewalk variable.
once pages get loaded (asynchronously), pagewalk1() gets
called again on addpage() and continues the walking up to the
last page.
new program flag -j <addr> was added to jump to a page on
startup.
page address (without filename) can also be supplied in
plumb message with the "addr" attribute.
rio looks backwards in the line for the beginning of a filename
that needs to be completed with ^F. this change makes the
characters: =, ^, ( and { stoppers, so filename completion
will work in all these cases:
foobar=/foo/ba^F; for(i in (fo^F ba^F)){/bin/baz^F
this means completion will not work for prefixes having these
special characters in them.
thanks to burnzez for bringing it up.
dont spam the console with qfull warnings. this makes things worse.
handle loopback packets as stated in the comment. we call etheriq()
with fromwire=1 for loopback packets so etheriq() can pass the packet
on (without copying) or free it. dont inhibit interrupts while calling
etheriq(). etheriq() can safely be called from process and interrupt
context. it is unclear what this was supposed to fix and testing didnt
seem to have any odd effects.
(11:02:29 PM) me: why is buf in /sys/src/9/port/devssl.c:/^sslwrite only 128 bytes?
(11:02:58 PM) me: it makes it so you can't use a 128 bytes secret as negotiated by infauth in a secretin or secretout ctl message
(11:03:30 PM) me: which in turn means you can't use such a secret with pushssl(2)
(11:06:15 PM) me: inferno's sslwrite is limited to 32 bytes, but its ssl library writes to the secret files instead of to the ctl file
(11:08:50 PM) mischief: what should it be instead of 128 bytes
(11:08:58 PM) me: larger
(11:09:16 PM) mischief: how about 129 bytes?
(11:09:59 PM) me: also broken in 9front, by the way
(11:15:14 PM) me: i guess it should be replaced with parsecmd
get rid of the service buffer limit. keep service buffers
on a global freelist protected by lock.
dont fatal when we hit the process limit. instead, just
abort the rpc with an error.
handle rendezvous() interrupts.
when a replicated source image with a clipr with clipr.min > Pt(0, 0),
drawclip() would properly translate the src->clipr on the dstr
but then clamp the source rectangle back on src->r.
while traversing down multiple layers, this would cause the translation to
be applied multiple times to the dst rectangle giving the wrong image result.
this change adds a new drawclipnorepl() function that avoids the clamping
of source and mask rectangles to src->r and mask->r. this is then used in
libmemlayer.
the final memimagedraw() call will call drawclip() which will do the final
claming.
a testcase is provided:
#include <u.h>
#include <libc.h>
#include <draw.h>
Image *blue;
Image *red;
void
main(int, char *argv[])
{
Image *i;
if(initdraw(nil, nil, argv[0]) < 0)
sysfatal("initdraw: %r");
i = allocimage(display, screen->r, screen->chan, 1, DWhite);
red = allocimage(display, Rect(0,0,1,1), screen->chan, 1, DRed);
blue = allocimage(display, Rect(0,0,1,1), screen->chan, 1, DPaleblue);
replclipr(red, 1, Rect(10, 10, 110, 110));
replclipr(blue, 1, Rect(11, 11, 111, 111));
/* draw on non-layer, works correctly */
draw(i, i->r, red, nil, ZP);
draw(i, i->r, blue, nil, ZP);
draw(screen, screen->r, i, nil, i->r.min);
flushimage(display, 1);
/* draw on (screen) layer is too far to the right */
draw(screen, screen->r, red, nil, ZP);
draw(screen, screen->r, blue, nil, ZP);
flushimage(display, 1);
for(;;){
sleep(1000);
}
}
the nt blob ends with 4 zero bytes, this is not the same as
the EOL av-pair terminator!
this makes ntlmv2 work with windows xp with LmCompatibityLevel = 3
extending factotums and the auth servers mschap implementation
to handle variable length NT response for NTLMv2.
fix some minor bugs.
only tested with cifs so far.
replaced the p->pid != 0 check with up->parentpid != 0 so
p->pid == up->parentpid is never true for p->pid == 0.
avoid allocating the wait records when up->parentpid == 0.
when a process got forked with RFNOWAIT, its p->parent will still
point to the parent process, but its p->parentpid == 0.
this causes the "parent still alive" check in pexit to get confused
as it only checked p->pid == up->parentpid. this condition is *TRUE*
in the case of RFNOWAIT when the parent process is actually dead
(p->pid == 0) so we attached the wait structure to the dead parent
leaking the memory.