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This produces output like the output gcc produces when
invoked with the -aux-info switch.
Run like this: cat include/tevent.h | ./script/mksigs.pl
This simple parser is probably too coarse to handle all
possible header files, but it treats tevent.h correctly...
Michael
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Michael
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These allow torture tests to perform cleanup after a failure, by
jumping to a goto label.
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This is the same as swrap_recv().
metze
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Jeremy.
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metze
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Guenther
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Should fix bug #6660.
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All:
Please find attached a patch to fix the timestring and http_timestring
tests on hosts that have a negative UTC offset (west of the Prime Meridian).
Sincerely,
Andrew Kroeger
>From 8a8ca35edccf64aa98f2f3ae1469c4c27db8215e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Andrew Kroeger <andrew@id10ts.net>
Date: Fri, 4 Sep 2009 01:31:50 -0500
Subject: [PATCH] util:tests: Correct time tests for negative UTC offsets.
The timestring and http_timestring tests were failing on hosts with negative
offsets from UTC. Due to the timezone offset, the returned values were back in
the year 1969 (before the epoch) and did not match the test patterns.
The correction computes the offset from UTC, and if it is negative that offset
is added onto the value given to the timestring() and http_timestring() calls so
that the returned values fall on 01-Jan-1970 and match the test pattern.
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metze
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When we get a double free abort from talloc it is often hard to work
out where the first free came from. This patch takes advantage of the
fact that _talloc_free() now takes a location the free was called from
to allow the double free abort code to print the location of the first
free that conflicts.
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SA_INFO_QUEUE_COUNT *MUST* be a power of 2, in order for the ring buffer
wrap to work correctly at the 32 bit boundary. Thanks to Petr
Vandrovec <petr@vandrovec.name> for this.
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Michael
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Strange: I had to place "test:: abi_checks" before the main
"test::" target here, otherwise the abi checks would not get run.
Michael
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Michael
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Simply run "make abi_checks" to call the abi check script appropriately.
Michael
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USAGE: abi_checks.sh LIBRARY_NAME header1 [header2 ...]
This creates symbol signature lists using the mksyms and mksigs scripts
and compares them with the checked in lists.
Michael
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This produces output like the output gcc produces when
invoked with the -aux-info switch.
Run like this: cat include/tdb.h | ./script/mksigs.pl
This simple parser is probably too coarse to handle all
possible header files, but it treats tdb.h correctly...
Michael
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Michael
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Michael
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Michael
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Michael
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Michael
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Simply run "make abi_checks" to call the abi check script appropriately.
Michael
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USAGE: abi_checks.sh LIBRARY_NAME header1 [header2 ...]
This creates symbol signature lists using the mksyms and mksigs scripts
and compares them with the checked in lists.
Michael
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This produces output like the output gcc produces when
invoked with the -aux-info switch.
Run like this: cat talloc.h | ./script/mksigs.pl
This simple parser is probably too coarse to handle all possible
header files, but it does treat talloc.h correctly.
Michael
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Michael
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When the first signal arrives, tevent_common_signal_handler() crashed: "ev" is
initialized to NULL, so the first "write(ev->pipe_fds[1], &c, 1);" dereferences
NULL.
Rusty, Tridge, please check. Also, can you tell me a bit more about the
environment you tested this in? I'd be curious to see where this survived.
Thanks,
Volker
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The "hack_fds" were never closed before; now they're inside event_context
they should be closed when that is destroyed.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
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I don't know if this is a problem in real life.
The code assumes there's only one tevent_context; all signals will notify
the first event context. That's counter-intuitive if you ever use more
than one, and there's nothing else in this code which prevents it AFAICT.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
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We carefully preserve the old signal handler, but we replace it before
we've set up everything; in particular, if we fail setting up the
pipe_hack we could write a NUL char to stdout (fd 0), instead of
calling the old signal handler.
Replace the signal handler as the very last thing we do.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
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In future, this may happen, and we don't want to clobber them.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
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To be completely honest, I don't quite know whether to laugh or cry at
this one:
1 + (0xFFFFFFFF & ~(s.seen - s.count))
== 1 + (~(s.seen - s.count)) # s.seen, s.count are uint32_t
== s.count - s.seen # -A == ~A + 1
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
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Michael
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Jeremy.
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Guenther
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This makes the lib/replace m4 work in lib/talloc as a standalone build
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