Subject: Re: Sendmail breakage with ELF? Postfix to the rescue!
To: Tom Ivar Helbekkmo <tih@Norway.EU.net>
From: David Brownlee <abs@anim.dreamworks.com>
List: port-sparc
Date: 07/18/1999 22:25:20
Its not ELF related. After the IPv6 integration it appears that
hp->h_addr_list is no longer suitably aligned for 32bit
access.
Of course on most architectures it doesn't cause the same bus
errors as on sparc. I noticed rarpd was broken in the same way
on the 4th of July and have a patch to work around it.
Given its breaking sendmail as shipped I would think the correct
fix should be in libc somewhere. Will submit a PR.
David/absolute
-=- "Old Red he died, and every single landlord in the district cried" -=-
On 16 Jul 1999, Tom Ivar Helbekkmo wrote:
> After upgrading my SS2 from a -current from three or four months back
> using the ELF snapshot (quick and easy; a smooth upgrade; thanks!),
> the only problem I experienced was that the sendmail binary included
> didn't work -- it just got a "Bus error", and terminated. I didn't
> worry too much, since I was planning to move to a current -current
> using source code anyway. However, after building the world from the
> July 11th source tar balls, sendmail still behaves the same way. The
> point where it crashes is the snprintf() on line 515 of main.c:
>
> snprintf(ipbuf, sizeof ipbuf, "[%.100s]",
> inet_ntoa(*((struct in_addr *) hp->h_addr_list[i])));
>
> Anyone else seeing this?
>
> Incidentally, I took the opportunity to change from sendmail to
> Postfix, and that was a really positive experience. I fetched the
> June 1st version of Postfix, unpacked it, ran 'make', copied the
> binaries and configuration files into place, spent about 5 minutes
> configuring it for my SMTP plus UUCP setup, and that was all -- it
> just works. The 'mailwrapper' feature of NetBSD helps, of course.
>
> I notice that Wietse Venema has gotten IBM to change the licensing
> recently -- maybe it's time to integrate Postfix in NetBSD again?
> Quoting from the release notes from his June 27th snapshot:
>
> Postfix is now distributed under IBM Public License Version
> 1.0 (June 14, 1999), which does not carry the controversial
> termination clause. The new license does have a requirement
> that contributors make source code available.
>
> While I'm quoting Wietse, here's a gem from the documentation:
>
> Postfix takes the usual precautions to avoid loss of
> information: flush and fsync() all data before acknowledging
> receipt, and check all system call results for error
> conditions. This style of programming may be new to some
> people, but I can assure you that it has been standard
> practice for years in many places.
>
> -tih
> --
> Popularity is the hallmark of mediocrity. --Niles Crane, "Frasier"
>