Actually specify whether the certificate is not yet valid or has expired,
and log the actual time values to hopefully save some head scratching.
ok deraadt@ tb@
Given that we're getting a constraint so that we can validate time, if our
own time is out we can fail the automatic validity checking since it is
based on the wallclock. Instead, disable the automatic validity checking
and perform manual checks based on the time reported from the server via
the HTTP header.
Discussed at length with and ok deraadt@
sure pexp matches the process (i.e. doesn't include the quotes).
It's a bit hackish but it allows things like these in rc.conf.local:
relayd_flags=-D IPS="1.2.3.4 2.3.4.5"
And we properly end up with...
$ grep ^pexp /var/run/rc.d/relayd
pexp=/usr/sbin/relayd -D IPS=1.2.3.4 1.2.3.5
... which matches what is in the process list:
root 14217 <snip> 0:00.01 /usr/sbin/relayd -D IPS=1.2.3.4 1.2.3.5
There's always the possibility that we have introduced a regressions with hand
crafted functions in rc.d scripts (mostly from packags), so watch out.
reported by and debugged with claudio@
* mention LC_COLLATE;
* clarify that all these functions are infested, including the *_l() versions;
* avoid ENVIRONMENT, these functions don't inspect it;
* and point to the C library functions that change the locale.
OK millert@
clearly stating which arguments have to be avoided, and mention the
header files defining the constants required for the checks.
Feedback and OK guenther@, OK bluhm@.
CAVEATS pointing to the new CAVEATS section in setlocale(3).
Make those in wprintf(3) and wscanf(3) more concise
since duplicate information is a bad idea.
Incompleteness of information originally pointed out by millert@.
OK millert@
Many arm64 systems use device trees instead of ACPI and acpidump is
expectected to fail on those systems. And vmm(4) doesn't provide ACPI
information either.
ok deraadt@
making the number of pools variable. Do not document the malloc
conf settings atm, don't know yet if they will stay. Thanks to all
the testers. ok deraadt@
prefix" address instead - there are so many available with varying
policies that this isn't a good place to list them (and might imply
some kind of recommendation which is not intended).
Particularly prompted by several on the previous list (he.net and opendns)
strip RRSIG from results which cause DNSSEC failures now that validation
is enabled in the example config as noticed by solene@.
While there, shrink qname-minimisation comment to match other nearby
comments, and drop dns64 example which is quite a specialist use case
and not really needed in this basic example.
libs have it, it is a function that is considered harmful, so:
Delete malloc_usable_size(). It is a function that blurs the line
between malloc managed memory and application managed memory and
exposes some of the internal workings of malloc. If an application
relies on that, it is likely to break using another implementation
of malloc. If you want usable size x, just allocate x bytes. ok
deraadt@ and other devs
here could creates non-uniformity since very short fetches of 0 would
be excluded. blocks of 0 are just as random as any other data, including
blocks of 4 4 4.. This is a misguided attempt to identify errors from the
entropy churn/gather code doesn't make sense, errors don't happen.
ok bcook