common. Add one do-nothing element to each set. This ensures that
the linker realizes that they are linker sets rather than simple
commons, and makes it possible to link c++rt0.o into every shared
library regardless of whether it is a C++ library or not. Without
this change, the constructors and destructors in the main program
could be executed multiple times.
This change is going to make it possible to get rid of the
CPLUSPLUSLIB makefile variable once and for all. It is a piece of
the solution to PR gnu/3505 (gcc -shared). Finally, it fixes a
heretofore unreported bug: If CPLUSPLUSLIB was set in a makefile
for a C++ shared library that had no static constructors or
destructors in it, then the main program's constructors and
destructors would be executed multiple times.
uid/gid in question was in the cache, but did not exist
in the password file. This causes the -nouser and -nogroup
options to find(1) to only print the first file owned by
an unknown user/group in some cases.
Use snprintf instead of sprintf to avoid buffer overflows
Use snprintf in uu_lockerr instead of lots of hardcoded constants
and not null-terminated strncpy
Return "" for OK and "device in use" for INUSE, it allows simple
strcpy(buf, uu_lockerr(retcode)) without testing for special OK
case (NULL was there) and obtaining meaningful result for INUSE
("" was there) without special testing for it too.
which don't provide a non-blocking interface.
This is a short term "fix" which changes a half-lose to a half-win.
The thread that accesses a device that does not provide a non-blocking
interface will block for its time slice.
A medium term solution would be to use rfork. A long-term solution
would be some sort of kernel thread/SMP implementation.
in uu_lock(). Add uu_lockerr() for turning the results of
uu_lock into something printable. Remove bogus section in man page
about race conditions allowing both processes to get the lock.
Include libutil.h and use uu_lock() correctly where it should.
Suggested by: ache@freebsd.org
passes on the status across fork/exec.
The previous version had some typos, referred to itself as link(2) in
one place :-), and didn't really match openbsd's implementation either.
Now that I've mentioned typos, hopefully our Typo Police and Xref Police
will be gentle with me. :-)