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Used to construct SELinux policies in the AOSP build.
I left loopfiles_lines with its hard-coded '\n' because although cut(1)
also has a -z option, I can't find any case where it's used in any of
the codebases searchable by me. (And fmt(1), the other user, doesn't
even have the option.) YAGNI.
Bug: http://b/122744241
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For a definition of "fix" that's even _more_ of a deviation from posix, but
matches what debian does...
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Used by AOSP build.
Also switch to new FLAG macro.
Bug: http://b/122739027
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Without this change, a successful modprobe on Android exits with status 1
because Android doesn't have /etc/modprobe.conf or /etc/modprobe.d/ ---
neither of which seem to be required on desktop Linux either.
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It's in the Linux 4.20 kernel headers.
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If we do, we won't flush, and we might not output everything.
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Otherwise in verbose mode we output bogus errors instead of `Success`.
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Previously, when trying to listen on a socket without using one of -4,
-6, or -s, we tried to create an AF_UNSPEC socket, which fails.
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From RFC 768, if UDP packet checksum computation yields a result of
zero, change it to hex 0xFFFF. The current udhcpc checksum verification
would yield false positive for this case. A better way is to compute the
checksum with the original checksum field and the result should be zero
for good udp packet.
Signed-off-by: Yangchun Fu <yangchun@google.com>
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Internally, Google uses all the longopts; Android currently only uses
this one. I was tempted to add the others, but went with "add them when a
toybox user needs them" rather than "add them when you've seen them used".
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Annoyingly coreutils and busybox both have the --status functionality,
but coreutils only accepts --status and busybox only accepts -s. Although
all extant users known to me use --status I've supported both (a) for
maximum compatibility and (b) because Rob hates longopts :-)
Also, -c/--check don't take argument(s): they alter the interpretation
of all the FILE... arguments.
I removed a bunch of dead code here, but I couldn't switch us over to
loopfiles_lines because I didn't want to regress on the "warn if any
check file contains no hashes", and loopfiles_lines doesn't give you
any way to recognize that you've moved on to the next file.
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Handling -e by gluing together multiple regexes with | wasn't portable,
break down and do a linked list with for loops.
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When necessary, realloc() the line to add 4 aligned bytes of storage at
the end, stick the unsigned offset in there, and then fish it back out for
display (and add 1 because offset is 0 based and display is 1 based).
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Several parameters common on Linux are missing on macOS.
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Be consistent about upper versus lower case. (Upper seems to have the
majority, so I went with that, though I'm happy to provide the opposite
patch as long as we're consistent!)
Be consistent about using \t. (Though saving a few bytes seems like it
might be better done in the code that generates help.h rather than
directly in the source, since tabs make careful ASCII art layout hard
enough that we regularly have things misaligned.)
Remove trailing periods (most of which seem to have been added by me).
Always use the US "human readable" rather than my British
"human-readable", and be more consistent about declaring whether we're
showing multiples of 1000 or 1024.
Just say "verbose" rather than adding a useless "mode" or "output".
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I realized (after being questioned about my motivation) that I hadn't
added a test for the -u behavior. Adding the missing test confirmed the
usual "if there isn't a test, the code is broken", but now I think I
actually understand how we're supposed to choose between DIR, $TMPDIR,
and /tmp. I've added more tests to back this up, and rewritten the code
one more time so that we pass all the tests.
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Old versions of glibc had warn_unused_result on mktemp(3), despite it
always returning its argument. Still, we can silence the warning and
save a line, so...
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Don't hard-code Linux's buffer size.
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Even if we don't build ps, we can't have a Linux-only struct in GLOBALS.
The obvious alternative to this would be to have a fake struct sysinfo
in lib/portability.h. Since having a real macOS replacement for
sysinfo(2) seems unlikely at this point, I went this route instead.
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The new tests pass on the host (coreutils 8.28) and with toybox after
this patch is applied.
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bionic, glibc, macOS, and musl all have strcasestr
(see http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/strstr.3.html).
macOS (via BSD) has a strnstr that does what strnstr sounds like it
should do by analogy with strnlen and strncpy.
So we at least need to rename strnstr, but it probably makes more sense
just to switch to strcasestr instead.
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Used by OTA package scripts in AOSP, and quite widely inside Google.
I've also added --lines because it seems crazy to support one and not
the other, and --lines is also widly used inside Google too.
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There are a bunch of if (!memcmp(s+28,...)) lines,
let's make them "else if"
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default in Yocto 2.6 Thud release" and identified several error_exit() and
friends that should use the _raw versions.
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At least the AOSP build doesn't try to _set_ the hostname...
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