a mirtoconf check, would’ve been a real problem on an LP64 platform
• sh.h: work around a bad interaction between -Wformat on gcc and manual
string pooling for T_synerr, which is used in place of a format string
in some places
– possible integer overflows in memory allocation, mostly
‣ multiplication: all are checked now
‣ addition: reviewed them, most were “proven” or guessed to be
“almost” impossible to run over (e.g. when we have a string
whose length is taken it is assumed that the length will be
more than only a few bytes below SIZE_MAX, since code and
stack have to fit); some are checked now (e.g. when one of
the summands is an off_t); most of the unchecked ones are
annotated now
⇒ cost (MirBSD/i386 static): +76 .text
⇒ cost (Debian sid/i386): +779 .text -4 .data
– on Linux targets, setuid() setresuid() setresgid() can fail
with EAGAIN; check for that and, if so, warn once and retry
infinitely (other targets to be added later once we know that
they are “insane”)
⇒ cost (Debian sid/i386): +192 .text (includes .rodata)
• setmode.c: Do overflow checking for realloc() too; switch back
from calloc() to a checked malloc() for simplification while there
• define -DIN_MKSH and let setmode.c look a tad nicer while here
│Don't alias 'stop' to 'kill -STOP'
│
│Android has already has a stop command used
│to stop the main runtime and the alias
│interferes with testing tools that expect
│stop to kill the runtime.
│
│Change-Id: I02b7efb9203dc39e97f63eb702a54ff79935b316
Although, this is closer to his first patchset and only takes
care of the alias, not the testsuite (which doesn’t run, at
least not out-of-the-box, nicely anyway) using #ifdef ANDROID.
We certainly want a more flexible testsuite…
we don’t get SIGWINCH when the window size changes during the runtime of
that, so, the signal is only usable reliably during editing in the shell
and we re-check the window size before each interactive edit line again
a string buffer whose window size is currently 32 (initial), your data
is 96 bytes, this routine used to resize the buffer to 64, append your
first 64 bytes to it (no matter if there's already something in it)
and then writes the remaining bytes to stdio fd instead of the string…
if it doesn’t SIGABRT before
discovered by wbx@ – thanks – bug inherited from pdksh 5.2.14 (AD 1999)