******* * soon * * $Id: TO.DO,v 1.8 1998/10/31 19:14:49 gdr-ftp Exp $ * ******* When building the binary release, include all the system stuff like GNOSnooper, et al. We need a namespace(5) manual page. Here is a "bugs" entry for it: Apropos of building a bootable system, I've also encountered another bug. One cannot use a "partition" defined in /etc/namespace as the home directory for any user. For example, one cannot use "/root" as root's home directory unless it is a real volume. The symptoms of this are: 1. You will get a error about "Device not found" 2. The user's gshrc file will not have been sourced. Make the source *.shk archive on trenco use proper file types. The header files , , and have conflicting definitions for FLUSHO. newuser, newuserv: - update to use /home vice /user or maybe a conf file - check out behavior of 'adduser', see if there's anything missing vfscanf.c: After a reasonable time, disable the assert calls. Finish index in kernel reference manual. in stack(3) man page, the user shouldn't have to allow for extra bytes for _assertStack(3). Determine what is necessary. If the number of bytes left is less than this value, then print out an abbreviated error message rather than calling errx. Add implementations for Tilghman: strftime(3) Create a src/gno/build.tools/mklink script for duplicating binary files at user install time. Current packages that need this: compress/zcat sum/cksum As a group: Update utmp.5, libutil (logout, logwtmp), last(1), login(1), who(1), w(1), init(8), _PATH_UTMP ( and FAQ), rwho(1), users(1) Add to relevent util man pages: .SH ATTRIBUTIONS This command was ported from FreeBSD source code for distribution with GNO/ME 2.0.6. stdio: - add %b modifier to fprintf implementation (ORCA/C compatibility) stdlib/cvt.c: - handle modes 0 and 1 correctly. Use result of _setModeEmulation(3) in appropriate calls. These include chmod - fchmod - creat - done open - done stat - unnecessary fstat - unnecessary lstat - unnecessary check up on the type of nlink_t, used in stat(2) Write a test that handles: - negative process numbers - process numbers exceeding INT_MAX and UINT_MAX the easiest way to do this is to repeatedly exec a program that prints it's process number. Keep doing so until either the number wraps or the machine crashes. libc/sys/exec.c: buildCmd should single-quote strings containing whitespace. If the string already has single quotes, then backspace them. buildPath should only return files of type S16, EXEC, or EXE. buildPath should use the mapPath facility. These functions should operate closer to GS/OS when possible. Also need to reduce stack requirements. For the exec* functions, there should be a test for whether or not the file is of type SRC and auxtype EXEC. If that is the case, and if the first two characters of the file are '#!', then the shell should be exec'd instead. (currently, shell scripts cannot be exec'd) NEED TO WRITE OR DUPLICATE MAN PAGES FOR ---------------------------------------- login libc(3) login_tty regexp libc(3) termcap libc(3) queue 3 tty 4 grp 5 passwd 5 termcap 5 ms 7 man 7 cron 8 runover 8 (obsolete?) No, needed for single user mode. dialup 8 ******* * defer ******* investigate using dynamic libraries (RTLs) libc/sys/syscall.c: for unlink, if file is open, then register a call to unlink (non-recursive) the file via atexit(3) [not practical?] libc/gen/environ.c: Review routines. Force them to use GSString routines, reduce stack usage (depend on dynamic allocation for parm blocks). libc/gen/err.c: Use syslogd if not on a tty. libc/gen/tty.c: review these routines do intro man pages: 1 done 2 review DEFINITIONS section 3 done 4 done 5 done 6 done 7 done 8 done Add locale implementation to libc. various man pages: add note under COMPATIBILITY as to whether the routines are thread-safe. If they write any globals or static variables, they are not. Verify that the setdebug(2) macros in gno/gno.h are correct. Add implementations for execle; the final envp can't appear in the prototype, but it can be found since it is the last argument after the first NULL pointer.