Hi folks
The following patch adds a new log message output to syslogd. This
output omits hostname and priority and is used in d-i to make the syslog
output better readable without lossing information.
Bastian
I am applying this since I have syslogd hacked up in my wife's
access point with the same format string.... Might as well make
this hack official.
-Erik
On Sat, Jun 19, 2004 at 10:57:37PM +0200, Bastian Blank wrote:
> The following patch changes klogd to use openlog/syslog themself
> instead of calling syslog_msg which always calls the triple
> openlog/syslog/closelog.
Updated patch: get rid of syslog_msg entirely. Request from Erik Andersen.
Bastian
Package: BusyBox
Version: 1.0.0-pre10
Passing the -q <integer> option to inetd causes it to dereference an
invalid pointer (optarg). The attached patch provides a fix to this
problem.
Robin
The updated patch adds a config option to explicitely enable 64 bit
arithmetic.
Also it removes the arith prototype from libbb.h as it is not used
outside of ash.
Bastian
this patch has been slightly modified by Erik for cleanliness.
test it before checking in..." New entry for famous last words list.)
Add the missing backslash at the end of the new sed doc string line.
(This one actually compiled with "show verbose applet usage messages"...)
Yes, I know busybox is in feature freeze. If this two-liner is too much
that's fine, but it's handy.
This patch allows busybox mount to support "-o move" just like it
supports "-o bind", which is the equivalent of util-linux "mount --move".
Usage is:
mount -o move /mnt/point/1 /mnt/point/2
where /mnt/point/1 is an already mounted filesystem; it will be moved to
/mnt/point/2.
Here is a patch that adds egrep -L support (the opposite of egrep -l).
I realize this is probably too late for 1.0. But I offer it for your
future consideration.
egrep -L is used in some networking startup scripts I inherited.
-Rick
add sed -r support.
I bumped into a couple of things that want to use extended regular expressions
in sed, and it really isn't that hard to add. Can't say I've extensively
tested it, but it's small and isn't going to break anything that doesn't use
it, so...
Rob
Run this test, against both busybox and a non-busybox version of "tee".
while true; do i=$[$i+1]; echo "hello $i"; sleep 1; done | ./busybox tee
Now run the busybox one again with the following small patch applied:
Hi,
I just re-reviewed the patch I just sent...and it needed to be BUFSIZ-3 in
dos2unix.c . tempFn is BUFSIZ so the last addressable spot it BUFSIZ-1. The loop
increments by 2. That's why it should be BUFSIZ-3.
Best Regards,
Steve Grubb
Hello,
I found and patched 2 more bugs. The first is a misplaced semi-colon. The second
one is a buffer overflow. I doubt the buffer overflow is triggered in real life.
But you never know what those wily hackers are up to.
Thanks,
Steve Grubb
Hello,
Last November a bug was found in iproute. CAN-2003-0856 has more information.
Basically, netlink packets can come from any user. If a program performs action
based on netlink packets, they must be examined to make sure they came from the
place they are expected (the kernel).
Attached is a patch against pre8. Please apply this before releasing 1.00 final.
All users of busy box may be vulnerable to local attacks without it.
Best Regards,
Steve Grubb
applet via an alias to id.
- Add G option
- Pedantic option checking
- If effective group and user differs from the real one show both.
id.
- Alias id -Gn to groups applet
1) a non NULL terminated buffer that can mess up output, spotted by Ian
Latter
2) in miscutils/strings.c: get rid of useless pointer dereference in
third part of for(;;), spotted by Larry Doolittle
3) bug when reading from a pipe and being invoked as strings
"cat Readme | strings" is broken
"cat Readme | busybox strings" works
spotted by Ian Latter and fixed by Tito.
Hi,
the following output is from BusyBox 1.0.0-pre10:
~ # ip link help
ip: Command "help" is unknown, try "ip link help".
tk
This patch fixes it by removing the advertisements for
the "ip blah help" stuff that is not implemented.