This release has hardened handling of invalid arguments & allocation
failures, adds support for using arc4random in key generation, and adds
some unit tests to help developers prevent regressions in the future.
Alan Coopersmith (11):
Remove unused TLI ("STREAMSCONN") code from libXdmcp
Ensure ARRAY* structs are zero'ed out when allocation fails
Make XdmcpCopyARRAY8 call XdmcpAllocARRAY8 instead of replicating it
Add unit tests for Array allocation functions
Ensure ARRAY* structs are zero'ed out when oversize values are passed
Ensure ARRAYofARRAY8 pointers are initialized to NULL
Also reject requests to allocate negative sized amounts of memory
configure: Drop AM_MAINTAINER_MODE
autogen.sh: Honor NOCONFIGURE=1
Add AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS to expose arc4random() interfaces in headers
libXdmcp 1.1.2
Matthieu Herrb (1):
Use arc4random when available to produce the XDM-AUTHENTICATION1 key
1.1.1:
This release builds on the DocBook/XML conversion of the XDMCP spec
included in the 1.1.0 release with cleanups & improvements to make
the documentation more useful and usable.
1.1.0:
This release features a major refactoring and cleanup of the code base,
and conversion of the XDMCP specification from troff to DocBook/XML,
along with the usual recent set of build configuration improvements and
janitorial cleanups.
Add README with pointers to mailing list, bugzilla & git repos
Mark Xalloc, Xrealloc, and Xfree as weak symbols.
Ansification and compile warning fixes.
Require macros 1.3 for XORG_DEFAULT_OPTIONS.
libXdmcp 1.0.3
This changes the buildlink3.mk files to use an include guard for the
recursive include. The use of BUILDLINK_DEPTH, BUILDLINK_DEPENDS,
BUILDLINK_PACKAGES and BUILDLINK_ORDER is handled by a single new
variable BUILDLINK_TREE. Each buildlink3.mk file adds a pair of
enter/exit marker, which can be used to reconstruct the tree and
to determine first level includes. Avoiding := for large variables
(BUILDLINK_ORDER) speeds up parse time as += has linear complexity.
The include guard reduces system time by avoiding reading files over and
over again. For complex packages this reduces both %user and %sys time to
half of the former time.
X.Org found in NetBSD-current.
Thanks a lot to all who helped, especially Matthias Scheler who did
repeated tests on Mac OS X and older versions of NetBSD to make sure the
support for those platforms wouldn't be broken (or at least, not fatally,
as I would still expect a few hiccups here and there, because there is
only so much one can test in such limited time).
On the infrastructure side, this branch brings pkgconfig-builtin.mk, in
order to write very easily new builtin.mk files. It can actually handle
more than just pkgconfig files, but it will provide a version if it finds
such a file. x11.builtin.mk has also been made more useful and now all
existing (and future!) native-X11-related builtin.mk files should include
it.