DEC TCP/IP UCXALP7_E5040 TCP/IP V4.0 for OpenVMS Alpha V7.0-V7.1 ECO Summary
NOTE: An OpenVMS saveset or PCSI installation file is stored
on the Internet in a self-expanding compressed file.
The name of the compressed file will be kit_name-dcx_vaxexe
for OpenVMS VAX or kit_name-dcx_axpexe for OpenVMS Alpha.
Once the file is copied to your system, it can be expanded
by typing RUN compressed_file. The resultant file will
be the OpenVMS saveset or PCSI installation file which
can be used to install the ECO.
Copyright (c) Digital Equipment Corporation 1997. All rights reserved.
PRODUCT: DIGITAL TCP/IP Services V4.0 for OpenVMS Alpha
OP/SYS: OpenVMS Alpha
SOURCE: Digital Equipment Corporation
ECO INFORMATION:
ECO Kit Name: UCXALP7_E5040 (DEC-AXPVMS-UCXECO_A_40_5-V0500--4)
ECO Kits Superseded by This ECO Kit: None
ECO Kit Approximate Size: 19,904 Blocks
Kit Applies To: Digital TCP/IP Services for OpenVMS Alpha V4.0
System/Cluster Reboot Necessary: Yes
Installation Rating: None
NOTE: In order to receive the full fixes listed in this kit,
the following remedial kits also need to be installed:
None
ECO KIT SUMMARY:
An ECO kit exists for Digital TCP/IP Services for OpenVMS Alpha
on V7.0 through V7.1. This kit addresses the following
problems:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 INSTALL Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
SPECIAL NOTE for NFS Server users:
Problem:
Sites using the manual startup for the NFS server may experience
the server process hanging in LEF state.
Solution:
There is ***no ECO correction*** for this. Sites using manual
NFS server startup should do one or both of the following:
1. Use automatic startup; and/or
2. Edit SYS$MANAGER:UCX$NFS_SERVER_STARTUP.COM as follows:
Find the RUN command following the MANUAL_STARTUP: label.
The last two continuation lines of the RUN command,
/UIC=[1,4] -
/NORESOURCE
are changed to
/UIC=[1,4]
so that the /NORESOURCE_WAIT qualifier is eliminated.
Reference:
CFS.34717
NOTE:
THE FOLLOWING FILES ARE SPECIFIC TO THE PLAT_A.VMS_V70 BUILD
OF BL10 *
AXP_UCX040.RELEASE_NOTES;1
INSTALL.COM;1
UCX$AXP_MISC.PDF;1
UCX$PCSI_MODULE.COM;1
UCX$PCSI_RESULT.COM;1
UCX$PCSI_TAIL.COM;1
UCX$VAX_MISC.PDF;1
UCX040_RELEASE_NOTES.PS;1
UCX_AXP.PCSI$TEXT;1
UCX_AXP.PDF;1
UCX_THETA.PCSI$TEXT;1
UCX_THETA.PDF;1
UCX_VAX.PCSI$TEXT;1
UCX_VAX.PDF;1
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 02-Nov-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
None.
Problem:
The UCP startup command procedure, UCX$UCP_STARTUP.COM,
installs the SYS$SYSTEM:UCX$UCP.EXE image with unnecessary
privileges.
Solution:
Remove the /PRIVILEGES qualifier from the INSTALL command line.
Reference:
Per V4 review
ECO B 10-Jan-1996
Images:
None.
Problem:
Applications, such as the PATHWORKS mail server, that turn
off the CCL bit when started through RSH or REXEC, prevent
the NULL byte, which is part of the RSH and REXEC protocols,
from being sent to confirm a successful login.
Solution:
Add an extra line ($ WRITE SYS$OUTPUT "") before executing
the specified command. This solution will give the kernel
an opportunity to send the NULL.
Note:
To be effective, these new .COM procedures must be copied
to their respective target directories, which will exist
only if the relevant service has been enabled via UCX$CONFIG.
The modules should always be copied to SYS$COMMON:[SYSMGR],
but should also be copied to SYS$SYSDEVICE:[UCX$RSH] and
SYS$SYSDEVICE:[UCX$REXEC], if they exist.
ECO B of these files is designed to work with ECO E or later
of the NET component. Using these new .COM files with older
kernel code will result in an extra blank line appearing at
the beginning of each RSH or REXEC session.
ECO C 23-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BIND_VALIDATE_SETUP.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problem and solution:
Name server setup scripts and the metric view command
have been added.
Reference:
To set up the name server, execute the main module,
@sys$manager:ucx$bind_shell.com. This module performs
the preliminary set ups and invokes the server menus.
It also validates for the BIND logicals and creates the
local loopback and root cache files in the UCX$BIND
directory if they do not already exist.
o UCX$BIND_SERVER_DOC.COM
Complete documentation and reference for setting up the name
server.
o UCX$BIND_PRIM_SETUP.COM
Primary name server setup procedure. The module is invoked
from the UCX$BIND_SHELL procedure.
o UCX$BIND_SEC_SETUP.COM
Secondary name server setup procedure. The module is invoked
from UCX$BIND_SHELL procedure.
Image: SYS$COMMON:[SYSEXE]UCX$BIND_VALIDATE_SETUP.EXE
This backend module to the name server configuration and
setup procedures searches for the domain records in the
BIND config database. If the records exist for a particular
domain, an error is returned. The module also prevents the
same name server from being configured both as a primary and
a secondary server for the same domain. It also performs
other simple record manipulation.
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO D 10-May-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
None.
Modules:
UCX$BIND_SHUTDOWN.COM
Problem:
ECO installation failed because UCX$BIND_SERVER.EXE image was
installed. That happened because the bind shutdown procedure
did not delete installed images.
Solution:
Add "install delete" commands to the bind shutdown procedure.
Reference:
CFS.40790
ECO E 05-Aug-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
None
Modules:
UCX$CONFIG.COM
Problem:
The LPD Client fails to start when configured to allow
non-privileged users to delete entries from queues.
Solution:
Modify UCX$DIS_PRV and UCX$ENA_PRV to correctly use the
cluster and pseudo options when updating a service.
Reference:
CFS.35589
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 Kernel Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 14-Nov-1995 Alpha and VAX
NOTE:
The correction to INETACP_TTSUP.MAR is already applied in
the BL10 (SSB) kits for PLAT_V.VMS_V55 and PLAT_A.VMS_V70.
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problems:
1. A system may crash during shutdown due to deleting an
interface that has contradictory data in its IF structure.
The IF is for a SLIP device (i.e., SLx) but the IF$B_IFTYPE
field indicates an Ethernet device.
2. An inadequate ARP table causes too many ARP messages
to be broadcasted. ARP message counting does not
properly account for which messages are broadcasts
and which ones are not (INET_IF_VCI.MAR).
3. On logout from TELNET, the TELNET connection hangs.
This is included here for completeness to explain the
presence of INETACP_TTSUP.MAR in the SRC_PAT stream.
This is an OpenVMS V7.0 only problem.
4. A READ operation with the LOCKBUF set could, upon
receipt of out-of-order TCP segments, leave the low
water mark set in the socket. Subsequent READ
operations without LOCKBUF, or using a smaller buffer
size, will hang awaiting additional data.
5. A system crash may occur in the security driver when
the local interface is used.
6. A synchronization crash may occur in PWIP.
7. A crash may occur on an Alpha system after the deallocation
of the SLIP structure to the INETCB free list, where it is
re-allocated and corrupted.
8. System pool fills up with VCRPs. This exhausts pool and
causes a cluexit bugcheck.
Solutions:
1. The problem is a flaw in the logic that creates pseudo
interfaces. Creating a pseudo interface on an existing
SLIP interface produces the inconsistent data structures
that lead to the crash. This has been corrected so that
the crash will not occur and is a forward retrofit of
ECO N of V3.3.
2. Allow for dynamic allocation of the ARP table at UCX
startup. This is an interim correction that will
require UCP support in a future release and is a
forward retrofit of ECO P of V3.3.
3. The offset of REQCB$L_AXP_CHAN to match IRP$L_CHAN for
OpenVMS Alpha V7.0 has been corrected.
4. Clear the low water mark upon returning from any READ where
the LOCKBUF modifier was used.
5. In INET_IPINTR (INET_IN_OUT.MAR), in the security driver
conditional code, check for a zero pointer to IF_UCB and,
if it is present, use the local interface.
6. Along with the PWIP changes made in PWIP ECO A for V4.0,
the UCB$L_BG_TEL_UCB field is cleared when a BG channel
is deassigned.
7. Dispatching for the REQCB$C_DEACTIVATE_SLIP function was
inexplicably left out of the Alpha specific dispatch table.
The solution is to add dispatching to the table for this
function.
8. This problem arises when a large number of receive
duplicate TCP packets, each containing a FIN only and
a sequence number that is one higher than the expected
number is received. As a result, PWIP queues these
redundant packets until all pool is consumed with them.
The problem is that PWIP does not recognize them as
redundant.
The solution is the addition of some simple logic into
the tcp_reass routine, in TCP_INPUT_VMS.C, which takes
into account that a packet containing a FIN consumes one
unit of the sequence number. With the addition of this
logic, PWIP will recognize the redundant packets and
deallocate them immediately.
Enhancements:
1. Change the interface for the call to INET_COMPRESS_PACKET
to prepare the way for eventual PPP support.
2. Align the start of data in a VCRP on OpenVMS Alpha V7.0.
References:
1. CFS.33896
2. CFS.33563, CFS.38218
3. None
4. CFS.33932
5. None
6. None
7. CFS.35206
8. CFS.34368
ECO B 18-Dec-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
IGMP group membership queries are not being answered. This
prevents local routers with IP multicasting capability from
learning of a UCX host's group memberships.
Solution:
Update internal tables so that IGMP messages will be
received and processed appropriately.
Reference:
CFS.35580
ECO C 28-Dec-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problems:
An INVEXCEPTN system crash may occur due to the
VCRP$L_DEALLOC_RTN field being zero. The problem arises
because of attempts to deallocate an already deallocated
VCRP. The method of deallocating a VCRP is to call the
routine pointed at by the VCRP$L_DEALLOC_RTN field. This
routine then deallocates the VCRP and zeros out this field.
An attempt to deallocate it again results in a crash.
After urgent TCP data (OOB data) arrives and is read, the
socket is still considered to be in OOB state until non-OOB
data arrives. The select() call in this case is returning
immediately due to the OOB state, even when no OOB data
is available.
Solutions:
This problem occurs when the ip_dooptions routine is called
from inet_ipintr in INET_IN_OUT.MAR, and ip_dooptions returns
an error. In this case, ip_dooptions has already deallocated
the VCRP and then branched to deallocate it again. The solution
is to test for the error and then skip the deallocation in
this case.
If the receive buffer is empty, do not return from select()
with an exception flag.
References:
CFS.36199
CFS.36143
ECO D 4-Jan-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
Problem:
If 2 processes share a socket and process A calls $DASSGN
on that shared BG device, I/O queued to the device by
process B is canceled.
Solution:
In INET$CANCEL, initialize two new fields in the UCB so
that future determinations can be made that this is NOT the
last deassign of this device. In this case, selectively
cancel only the I/Os that belong to the process doing the
$DASSGN.
References:
CFS.33352, CFS.26480
ECO E 11-Jan-1996 - 29-Jan-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
Problems:
1. Applications such as the PATHWORKS mail server, which
disable carriage control (CCL) after being invoked
through RSH or REXEC, prevent the initial NULL byte
from ever being sent.
2. An INVEXCEPTN system crash in TNDRIVER occurs due to
continuing sporadic synchronization problems.
3. The system enters a high IPL loop, repeatedly calling
COM$FLUSHATTNS from INET_FLUSH_ALL_AST.
4. A system crash occurs in EXE_STD$PRIMITIVE_FORK attempting
to deliver what is supposed to be an Attention AST but
is actually a pointer to the PWIPDRIVER receive socket
call back routine.
5. When the UCX TELNET server accepts a connection from a
host with a 12-digit IP address, that host's name is
not correctly resolved. Instead, the IP address is shown.
6. Automatically configuring SLIP interfaces through "UCX
SET CONFIG INTERFACE" fails while hand configuration of
the same interface succeeds.
7. A system crash occurs in the data link driver when
the code returns to the data link driver after it
calls back from an AYNCH_JSB invocation. At that
time, it returns to the data link an R4 that contains
a zero and a deallocated VCIB.
Solutions:
1. Allow the DCL procedure, which starts RSH and REXEC
connections, to perform the first output thereby
assuring inclusion of the NULL.
2. The main part of this correction is to introduce more
extensive validation code in the TNDRIVER. However, some
of the data to be validated comes from the BGDRIVER and is
conveniently passed to the TNDRIVER in the INETCB structure.
A new field, INETCB$L_BG_UCB_SIZE_TYPE_FLCK , is created
in the INETCB and is initialized in the INETACP_INIT_INETCB
routine INETACP_INIT.MAR. The data is referred to in the
TNDRIVER in module UCX$TN_SERVER_MAIN.MAR, in routines
TN$START_COMMON and TN_UCB_TO_BG_UCB.
3. This problem was introduced by ECO V. The problem arises
in a loop where COM$FLUSHATTNS is called. The solution is
to only traverse the loop once when doing selective cancel
I/O.
4. This problem is a synchronization problem between PWIP and
the BGDRIVER (or UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES for VAX). At the
time of the crash, a SOCKET structure points to a UCB but
the corresponding UCB does not point back to the SOCKET.
This apparently occurs when connection in PWIP is being
dismantled and some data comes into the SOCKET. The
correction for this problem requires changes in NET and
PWIP. In NET, two new bits are defined: UCB$X_BG_PWIP
in the UCB$W_BG_FLAGS word and SOCKBUF$X_PWIP in the
SOCKBUF$L_FLAGS field. In INET, these bits are only looked
at in INET_MAIN.MAR. Both of these bits are set and
cleared in PWIP. Also, previously PWIP only set the
UCB$x_BG_SELECT bit in the UCB$W_BG_FLAGS word instead
of the first of these new bits. This led to some
confusion in INET_MAIN.MAR. Now PWIP devices are labeled
unambiguously. Note that the SOCKBUF$L_FLAGS field
is declared in INET_NPGD.SDL for macro code and a
corresponding sb_flags field is declared in SOCKETVAR.H
for the C code. To be consistent, a new bit, SB_PWIP, is
declared to correspond to SOCKBUF$x_PWIP even though it
is not referred to in the C code.
5. Do not add a trailing space character to the ASCII form
of the IP address. In the case of a 12-digit address,
this extra character causes the address to exceed the
legal length and prevents translation.
6. When the configuration database contains an automatic
SET INTERFACE for a SLIP interface, the UCP implicitly
performs a UCX SET INTERFACE command that includes the
/BROADCAST mask parameter. Since SLIP interfaces do not
support broadcasting, this causes the interface to be
rejected. The solution is to introduce code in the
CREATE_P5_BUFFER routine in INETACP_SLIP to explicitly
ignore the command to set a broadcast address on the
interface.
7. The normal flow on VCI port management calls to the data
link is that an ASYNCH_JSB be issued (which returns to the
caller); VCI calls back when the port management function
is initiated; VCI calls back again after the port management
event associated with the completion of the function occurs.
The problem is that if the VCI callback indicates an error,
the assumption is that the second callback would not be
made and that cleanup would be performed at the time of the
first callback. The result is that portions that the data
link still needed were cleaned up.
The correction is to always assume that the second callback
will occur and to use a timeout mechanism for cleanup if
the second call back is not made. In this way, the cleanup
is not performed prematurely.
References:
1. None
2. CFS.36056
3. None
4. CFS.33756
5. CFS.27194
6. None
7. CFS.37081
Notes:
1. To be effective, this update must be installed along
with a new SYS$SYSDEVICE:[UCX$REXEC]UCX$REXECD_STARTUP.COM
and SYS$SYSDEVICE:[UCX$RSH]UCX$RSHD_STARTUP.COM file,
containing an extra $ WRITE SYS$OUTPUT "" line.
These .COM files can be found in ECO B of the INSTALL
component.
2. The INETACP code additions are benign and can co-exist with
previous TNDRIVER versions. However, the new TNDRIVER
requires the new INETACP.
4. These code additions require the corresponding new PWIPDRIVER
if the system is running PWIP.
ECO F 15-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10F (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10F
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10F
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10F
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10F
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10F
Problem:
1. Upon shutting down UCX on a node which participates in
a cluster alias but is not the current impersonator, a
misleading ARP broadcast is sent announcing the node as
an impersonator.
2. On VAX systems, when SLIP is enabled on a terminal line,
the UCB for the terminal has an unrelocated value for its
FDT. This situation might result in a crash.
Solution:
1. Check the status value returned in the LKSB (lock status
block) to determine whether the cluster lock has been
granted or the LOCK_GRANTED_AST routine has been called
as a result of a $DEQ operation during normal shutdown.
2. In INET_SLIP_OPEN in INET_SLIP.MAR, the class driver vector
table was relocated. At the same time, relocate the
DDT$L_FDT field.
References:
1. CFS.34714
2. None
ECO G 27-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10G (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10G
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10G
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10G
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10G
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10G
Problem:
Problems exist with shared sockets. First, the selective
cancel I/O functionality introduced in ECO D and refined
in ECO E still does not properly select I/Os to be canceled.
Second, when I/Os are selectively canceled, if the active
IRP on a queue is canceled, the queue is left in limbo with
no mechanism for restarting. Third, an original design flaw
was found in the code that implements the basic mechanism
that manages the read, write, and miscellaneous queues on a
BG device. This flaw effectively precludes true shared
sockets and manifests itself in the following way: when a
queued operation completes, the next operation on the queue
is handled in the context of the process that handled the
first operation, even when the new operation does not belong
to this process. The result is corruption of the address
space of the process within whose context the erroneous I/O
is handled.
Solution:
The first problem was solved by tightening the selection
criteria in the INET_SHUTDOWN_FLUSH_* (INET_ACCESS.MAR) family
of routines so as to properly select the I/Os to be canceled and
to then reconstruct the queues. The second problem, restarting
stalled queues, was solved by introducing a new routine,
QUEUE_INET_KAST, in INET_MAIN.MAR, which is a simplified version
of INET_IRP_UP_1 for the purpose of restarting queues in the
context of particular process. The third problem, where I/O
requests were being serviced in the wrong context, was solved
by introducing a test for the proper context into the main queue
dispatching routine, NET_ENQ_IO_RESTART in INET_RCV_XMT.MAR.
When a mismatch is found, the queue is left dormant but a call
is made to the new routine, QUEUE_INET_KAST, to restart the
queue in the proper process context.
ECO H 29-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10H (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10H
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10H
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10H
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10H
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10H
Problem:
Code review of the ECO G fix turned up a very subtle and
unlikely to occur problem in the code that should be corrected
for shared sockets. The problem has to do with the INET_KAST
mechanism that delivers an AST to the process that owns an IRP
that needs to be "resumed". In the unlikely event that two
IRPs on the same UCB, belonging to different processes, need
to be "resumed" simultaneously, then the second of these IRPs
will be processed in the context of the wrong process. The
reason that this appears to be so unlikely is that for this to
happen, there would have to be ongoing I/O on at least two of
the queues of one UCB, with the active IRPs belonging to
different processes, and the I/Os would need "resumption"
within a very small window.
Solution:
The solution to this is to add a test to the INET_KAST routine,
in INET_MAIN.MAR just before an IRP is resumed. At that point,
test that execution is occurring in the context of the process
that owns the IRP. If it is, proceed. If not, queue the ACB
to the process that owns the IRP, and exit from the current AST
running in the context of the wrong process. This will in effect
cause reentry into the routine that is currently executing,
INET_KAST, but in the context of the correct process.
ECO I 1-Apr-1996 Alpha and VAX
Image:
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10I
Problem:
With the CASE_INSENSITIVE flag enabled, proxies are not
correctly found in the communication proxy cache.
Solution:
Correct and simplify the sequential proxy lookup routine.
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO K 23-APR-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10K (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10K
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10K
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10K
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10K
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10K
Problems:
A system crash occurs at UCX shutdown in INET_SOACCEPT
because INET$GL_PTR_INETCB contains the value zero.
Solutions:
After picking up the contents of INET$GL_PTR_INETCB,
validate the contents by making sure that it is a system
address. If it is invalid, terminate the I/O request with
the SS$_DEVNOTMOUNT status.
Reference:
CFS.39581
ECO L 1-MAY-1996 Alpha and VAX
Image:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10L (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10L
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10L
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10L
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10L
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10L
Problems:
A system crash may occur in INET_SELECT_UNBUILD_LIST due to
a corrupt select list.
Solutions:
Apparently in correcting the problems associated with shared
sockets (ECOs G and H above), the behavior changed slightly
so that a UCB was not always removed from a select list before
deassigning and deallocating the UCB. As a result, it was
possible to have a deallocated UCB remaining on a select list.
In INET$CANCEL_COMMON, the new routine INET_SELECT_REMOVE_UCB
unconditionally removes a UCB that is about to be deallocated
from any select list that might include it.
ECO M 2-MAY-1996 Alpha and VAX
Image:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10M (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10M
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10M
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10M
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10M
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10M
Problems:
A system crash occurs at TNDRIVER+2C6 due to corruption
at TNDRIVER+2CC.
Solutions:
The problem arises because of the overlaying of UCB$L_PDT
by the UCX defined field UCB$L_ACP_LINK in both BG and TN
UCBs. At UCX shutdown, under certain conditions, the
TTDRIVER misinterprets the UCB$L_PDT field and uses it as
a pointer into what it thinks is another UCB. The TTDRIVER
then clears a longword at an offset from the pointer. Since
there is a pointer into the TNDRIVER at UCB$L_PDT, TTDRIVER
clears a longword of code in the TNDRIVER, leading to a
subsequent crash when UCX is re-started.
ECO N 14-MAY-1996 Alpha and VAX
Image:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10N (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10N
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10N
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10N
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10N
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10N
Problem:
If an interface such as an FDDI is down or physically
disconnected at the time that the system attempts to bring
up UCX, UCX fails to configure it. A more user friendly
approach would be to create a persistent thread that would
continue to retry to configure the interface until success
was achieved.
Solution:
The above approach was implemented. Essentially, if the
initial attempt to create the VCI port fails, it still
returns "success" to the INETACP, but creates a thread that
attempts to "restart" the port.
References:
CFS.38927
ECO O 15-MAY-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10O (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10O
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10O
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10O
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10O
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10O
Problem:
A system crash may occur at IP_FORWARD+1F8, after UCX is
stopped and restarted.
Solution:
Initialize the IPFORWARD_RT cache to eliminate the possibility
that the packet might be forwarded using a stale IF pointer.
Reference:
CFS.40260
ECO P 23-MAY-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10P (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10P
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10P
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10P
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10P
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10P
Problem:
UCX$INETACP goes into a compute bound loop in user mode
and much of UCX becomes unusable. For example, no new
inbound TELNET connections can get started, UCX cannot
be shut down, UCP commands may cause the process to hang,
etc. Often this problem appears on systems running
MailWorks.
Solution:
What triggers this problem is that MailWorks apparently
asks the UCX$INETACP to perform a 'GETHOSTBYNAME' function,
passing a zero length string to define the host. The
UCX$INETACP, in the process of performing this request,
experiences an access violation, which throws the process
into an infinite loop. Ideally, the UCX code would check
for the zero length string and reject the request; however,
it did not, and it proceeded to use the string incorrectly.
The reason that this only occurs in V4.0 of UCX on Alpha
only, and not in V3.3, is that V4.0 was built using a newer
version of the DEC C compiler, and the compiler-produced code
for V3.3 allowed a graceful exit from the problem, whereas
the V4.0 compiled code resulted in the access violation error.
To resolve the problem, the condition handler LIB$SIG_TO_RET
has been introduced to protect the entire code sequence from
this type of error.
References:
CFS.40887, CFS.39875, CFS.41234
ECO Q 26-JUN-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10Q
Problem:
When the originating and target user names match in an
incoming request but do not match in the proxy database,
the proxy is not properly located.
Solution:
Change the way matching user names are handled during
proxy lookup.
Reference:
CFS.42195
ECO R 9-July-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
1. UCX$INET_ROUTING.EXE UCX V4.0-10R
2. UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10R (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10R
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10R
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10R
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10R
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10R
Problems:
1. The UCX$INET_ROUTED process goes into hibernation and never
returns. The problem turns out to be that the process runs
out of event flags. In the ioctl routine in ROUTED_IOCTL.C,
an event flag is allocated by calling LIB$GET_EF, but under
certain error conditions, it is never deallocated by calling
LIB$FREE_EF. After a while, the entire set of event flags
becomes exhausted. Combined with a change to UCX$IPC.MAR
that allocates (and then deallocates) an event flag for each
I/O, such as the one implicit in a call to routine, recvfrom,
this proves fatal. After the event flags are all depleted,
calls to recvfrom always fail.
2. The routing table becomes filled with entries that all have
the RTF_UP flag bit cleared, but have a non-zero reference
count.
Solutions:
1. The solution is to ensure that a call to LIB$FREE_EF always
follows a successful call to LIB$GET_EF in routine ioctl, in
ROUTED_IOCTL.C.
2. In routine rtalloc, in ROUTE_VMS.C, prevent overwriting of
the ro->ro_rt field before calling rtfree for this rtentry.
This prevents the orphaning of old entries with an
outstanding refcount.
References:
1. CFS.41946, CFS.41745, CFS.41898, CFS.42418
2. None
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO S 8-AUG-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10S (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10S
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10S
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10S
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10S
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10S
Problems:
1. The routing table becomes filled with entries that all
have the RTF_UP flag bit cleared, but have a non-zero
reference count.
2. A system crash may occur in the routine ip_output due
to inp_route.ro_rt pointing to a deallocated rtentry.
3. A system crash may occur on OpenVMS V7.0 Alpha, when a
reference is made to unallocated memory that appears to be
part of the MBSTAT_DATA cluster of large buffers.
Solutions:
1. In the ip_output routine in IP_OUTPUT_VMS.C, the static
global route structure, 'iproute' was being overwritten
without first performing an RTFREE of the rtentry
associated with the route. The result is an rtentry
whose refcnt is permanently increased by 1 and, therefore,
will never go away. The solution is to do the RTFREE.
2. In the INETACP_MOUNT routine in INETACP_INIT.MAR, the
largest number of large buffers that will fit in a maximum
sized cluster (i.e., a cluster at least one byte less than
64KB) is calculated. This number is put into the new
INETCB$B_MAX_NR_DATA_CLST field.
3. In INET_MBUF.MAR, where clusters of large buffers are
allocated, the number of buffers to configure in a
cluster is minimized using the number of buffers to
configure in a cluster using the number specified by
the user and the value contained in
INETCB$B_MAX_NR_DATA_CLST.
4. In INET_SETMODE, some cleanup in routines, SET_MIN_LARGE,
SET_MIN_SMALL, and INET_SET_SIZES_MIN.
References:
2. CFS.43319
3. CFS.43704
ECO T 06-Sep-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10T (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10T
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10T
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10T
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10T
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10T
Problem:
At setup, select() should properly sense and return if the
socket has OOB data pending. While reception of OOB data
does cause an active select() to terminate, active OOB data
does not cause a new select() to terminate.
Solution:
OOB data does not appear as data queued to the socket's MBUFs.
Also, the read() code fails to clear the RCVATMARK condition
when the OOB data is returned to the user. Hence, the check
added in ECO C is not correct and the previous code, while it
will cause the select() to return, there may be no OOB present.
The change will actually check the TCP context to see if an OOB
is present instead of trusting RCVATMARK. This is a correction
at one place in the driver, and the correction to the read()
code will be made for V4.1 and beyond.
Reference:
CFS.44644
ECO U 10-Sep-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10U (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10U
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10U
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10U
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10U
Problem:
When receiving a persistent window probe message, UCX TCP
does not reply with an (acknowledgment) ACK message. Although
there is no explicit requirement to send such ACKs, certain
other implementations expect them. The lack of a response
prompts other TCP's to abort connections with full receive
windows, even though the connection is in fact still active.
Solutions:
Send back an ACK, indicating the same sequence number that
was just received. In other words, do not acknowledge the
single byte which was beyond the end of the allowable receive
window; simply repeat the ACK for all prior data.
Reference:
CFS.43983
ECO V 10-Sept-1996 Alpha and VAX
Retrofit forward from ECO AI V3.3.
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10V (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10V
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10V
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10V
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10V
Problem:
The system pool fills up with VCRPs. This exhausts pool and
causes a CLUEXIT bugcheck. This problem was initially reported
in ECO M (V3.3).
Solution:
This problem is really not a UCX problem, but rather a
datalink driver problem. However, a small amount of code
can be added to UCX to prevent the problem from crashing the
system. The problem is triggered by a broadcast storm from
an errant Windows NT node, that produces thousands and
thousands of broadcast datagrams so quickly that all pool is
overrun even before initial notification of the existence of
the datagrams occurs. Normally UCX accepts a datagram from
the datalink driver and forks on it (i.e., queues it for
later processing) so that control can be immediately passed
back to the datalink driver. When the datalink finishes its
tasks, the processing of the datagrams in the queue begins.
In the case here, the datalink receives so many datagrams
that it does not finish with its tasks until the queued
datagrams occupy all of pool. The included fix artificially
limits the number of such datagrams that will be queued back
to the datalink. When the number of unprocessed queued
datagrams passes a threshold value (1000 for now)
deallocation of all the datagrams above this threshold
occurs. This, in effect, prevents the datalink from
overrunning pool since each new received datagram can use
the deallocated space.
References:
CFS.44630, CFS.31492
ECO W 17-Sept-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10W (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10W
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10W
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10W
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10W
Problem:
An application waiting for a given broadcast address, incorrectly
gets broadcast messages addressed to the network address of its
second interface.
Solution:
Tighten up the address comparison and selection criteria in
INET_IN_OUT.MAR so as to be able to recognize when a datalink
level broadcast has been received over an interface whose
IP broadcast address does not coincide with the IP broadcast
destination of the received datagram. In this case, discard the
received datagram.
Reference:
CFS.34509
ECO X 4-OCT-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10X (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10X
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10X
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10X
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10X
Problem:
The UCX SHOW DEVICE command sometimes hangs. As a result,
the user shuts down UCX and brings it up again. Upon doing
this once, the system crashed.
Solution:
The cause of the hang is probably that the UCX$BGDRIVER, in
responding to the UCX SHOW DEVICE command, is perusing the
I/O database without holding the I/O database MUTEX. As a
result, there is a remote possibility that the I/O database
might change while it is being searched. This could have
unpredictable results. The way to resolve this problem is
to simply request this MUTEX before the operation begins,
and then to release it when the search is finished. This
should relieve the user's need to shutdown UCX in similar
circumstances.
The crash that occurred after bringing up UCX was the result
of a resource problem in OpenVMS that left UCX in an
inconsistent state. A fix for this problem requires a major
rework of UCX initialization and is planned for a future
release. For the present, it is recommended that frequent
stopping and starting of UCX be avoided.
Reference:
CFS.43985
ECO Y 22-Oct-1996 Alpha and VAX
Retrofit forward from ECO AJ V3.3.
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10Y (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10Y
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10Y
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10Y
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10Y
Problem:
A crash can occur in the IN_CKSUM routine with an access
violation. This problem is triggered by the receipt of a
technically illegal, highly fragmented ping request
datagram, probably from a Windows NT or a Windows 95 system.
The problem with the datagram is that when it is reassembled
with its IP header, it is longer than 65535 bytes which is
the longest length expressable in the 16 bits of the length
field of the IP header.
Solution:
In the ip_reass routine, fragmented packets are reassembled,
without looking at the total length of the datagram. To
resolve the problem, if this length exceeds 65535, the
datagram will be discarded after incrementing the
ips_fragdropped counter by the number of fragments in the
datagram.
ECO 4 updates:
--------------
ECO Z 25-Oct-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10Z (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10Z
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10Z
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10Z
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10Z
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10Z
Problems:
1. Incoming RSH connections sometimes hang.
2. A system crash can occur in INET_GET_IRP with the INETCB
pointer as zero.
3. The UCX$INET_ACP process slowly loses AST count as time
goes on.
Solutions:
1. In the INETACP_GET_USER_INFO routine, the data from the
incoming RSH connection is parsed for information as to
the error port, the user name, command to execute, etc.
If enough data has not yet arrived, a READATTN AST is
set to send a wake-up notification when new data arrives
and then causes the process to go into sleep. An error
in setting up the AST request created a timing window
wherein the process might go to sleep forever.
2. This is a synchronization problem in that UCX is being
brought down and residual PWIP activity results in a call
to INET_GET_IRP. The solution is to put a test for the
existence of the INETCB before using a pointer to it, and
having the routine return an error if the test fails.
3. The cause of problem is that if an incoming RSH
connection specifies an error connection, and during
the processing of the specified RSH command data is
written over the error connection, the ACP loses track
of a READ ATTN AST that it had requested on the error
connection. The solution is to provide cleanup in
the INET_SELECT_REMOVE_UCB routine. This routine looks
at every UCB that is about to disappear. If it sees a
dangling READATTN AST on the socket associated with the UCB,
the routine removes it and returns the AST quota to its owner.
References:
1. Internal reports
2. CFS.44492
3. CFS.46398
ECO AA 14-Nov-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10AA (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10AA
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10AA
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10AA
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10AA
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10AA
Problems:
1. A system crash (VAX only) may occur with a Reserved
Operand Fault during the execution of a CMPD
(Compare D_Floating) instruction.
2. A system crash may occur in the arpioctl routine
during reference to the variable arpoint, which is zero.
Solutions:
1. In INET_IN_OUT.MAR there are two CMPD instructions
that, depending on the data they are comparing, might
cause a system crash. Simply substitute 2 CMPL instructions
for the offending instruction to resolve the problem.
2. The arptable is allocated and the variable arpoint is
set to point to the arptable when the first external
interface is configured. If UCX is started and the
configuration database has no interfaces defined, it
may enter code that just assumes that arpoint has a
valid value in it. To resolve this dilemma, it explicitly
tests for the possibility of a zero arpoint wherever that
is possible, and exits gracefully in that case.
References:
1. CFS.46437
2. CFS.46434
ECO AB 27-Nov-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10AB (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10AB
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10AB
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10AB
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10AB
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10AB
Problem:
IP datagrams fragments that have the the DF bit set are
being ignored. Apparently, some SUN systems running
SOLARIUS generate such datagrams.
Solutions:
An IP datagram that has the DF bit set is incorrectly
assumed to NOT be a fragment. Instead, it was dropped
because no attempt was made to reassemble it and its
associated fragments into a complete datagram. The
assumption that the DF bit implies that a datagram is
not a fragment is no longer made.
Reference:
Internal report
ECO AC 16-DEC-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BGDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10AC (Alpha)
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES.EXE UCX V4.0-10AC
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10AC
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC.EXE UCX V4.0-10AC
UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES_SEC_V6.EXE UCX V4.0-10AC
UCX$INETACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10AC
Problem:
Invoking TRACEROUTE.EXE from UCX$EXAMPLES may lead
to a crash.
Solutions:
In the raw_detach routine, m_freem is called to deallocate
rp->rcb_options. In this call there was an incorrect
dtom_s(rp->rcb_options) rather than a naked rp->rcb_options.
Since this field is already a pointer to an mbuf, the extra
reference was incorrect.
Reference:
CFS.46521
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 Telnet Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 01-NOV-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TELNET.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
Most terminal settings appear to be lost when TELNET sets up
an interactive session with the remote host.
Solution:
TELNET honors the terminal's settings but sets the terminal
PASTHRU characteristic, which causes the client's terminal
driver to ignore those settings.
The correction involves recoding the client's terminal driver
interface to use the appropriate set of QIOs and library calls
so the PASTHRU setting is not required.
Reference:
CFS.32095
Problem:
The terminal type is not properly established.
Solution:
Correct previous changes by passing the pointer of the
/TERMINAL_TYPE qualifier value from MAIN to SESSIONStart().
Sense the pointer and, if it is not set, determine the
terminal type.
Reference:
CFS.33818
Problem:
There are problems with security break-in for TELNET and
RLOGIN attempts. Until now, the remote user name was not
reported for any login failures. As a result, all users
would be locked out from a given source after a certain
number of incorrect login attempts. In addition, beginning
with OpenVMS VAX V6.0, the intrusion database was changed and
as a result, the behavior for TELNET/RLOGIN was rendered
different for the two platforms and also depended on the
OpenVMS version.
Solution:
The SHOW INTRUSION display now appears as shown here for
all versions of OpenVMS V6.2 and beyond:
nodename:remote-username. In addition, the remote node
address/name/id is still reported in accounting. For any
OpenVMS version prior to V6.2, the behavior is the same as
it was previously so that the code is not conditionalized
to behave differently for different OpenVMS versions.
References:
CFS.23114, CFS.23543, CFS.25308
ECO C 27-December-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TELNET.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problem:
When virtual terminals are disabled, outbound TN devices
are still reported as mounted.
Solution:
Force all outbound devices to be marked non-mounted, regardless
of the virtual terminal setting.
Reference:
CFS.36076
ECO D 11-Jan-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TNDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
Problem:
Continuing system crashes occur due to synchronization
errors where the TN UCB is pointing to an old BG UCB.
Solution:
Expand the validity tests introduced in ECO H above and make
them more extensive. In addition, add a new test to
validate the link between a supposed BG UCB and a SOCKET.
In expanding the validity tests, the software uses data
passed from the BGDRIVER (in the INETCB). This means that
this ECO of the TNDRIVER requires at least ECO W of the NET
facility.
In addition, as a build note, to properly link the TNDRIVER
with the reference to a new INETCB field, it is necessary to
temporarily copy the INET.MLB from the OBJ_PAT directories
to the relevant OBJ directories.
Reference:
CFS.36056
ECO E 17-Jan-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TELNET.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
Problem:
On an OpenVMS Alpha system, the Tn3270 emulator does not
load the customized EBCDIC/DMCS Translation table and fails
with the error message %UCX-E-TRALOAFAI, failed to load
translation tables from SYS$SYSROOT:[SYSLIB]TN3270DEF.TBL.
Solution:
The image header format has changed. A new alias code has
been defined for OpenVMS Alpha and the location of the
number of header disk blocks has been moved. These changes
required that a new LOAD_xxx routine be developed. This
routine is named LOAD_AXP.
Reference:
CFS.33698
ECO F 6-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TNDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10F
Problem:
A system crash may occur due to corrupted memory.
Specifically, the area in a TN UCB beyond the
UCB$T_TEL_TTY_NAME, for a large number of bytes (close to
64KB), may have been trashed.
Solution:
The problem is an ineffective length calculation for a MOVC3
instruction. Apparently, a negative length is calculated in
some circumstances, and then a comparison (that was NOT
unsigned) permitted a very large effective length to be
used. The solution is to ensure that it is within bounds.
Reference:
CFS.37455
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO G 25-Mar-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TELNET.EXE
Problem:
Entering an escape sequence while in character mode results
in the transmission of multiple segments to the server.
This causes problems when poorly-coded servers expect escape
sequences to appear in a single input segment.
This correction is a courtesy.
Solution:
Enable escape sequence recognition and, when in character
mode, remove the limitation of one character for the input
buffer.
Reference:
CFS.38533
ECO H 4-May-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TNDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10H
Problem:
A system crash may occur at TNDRIVER+2C6 due to corruption
at TNDRIVER+2CC.
Solution:
The problem arises because of the overlaying of UCB$L_PDT by
the UCX defined field UCB$L_ACP_LINK in both BG and TN UCBs.
The solution is part of a coordinated change that also has
KERNEL component changes. See the ECO L description in the
KERNEL part for ECO 2 updates.
ECO I 19-Jun-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TELNET.EXE UCX V4.0-10I
UCX$TNDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10I
Problem:
When creating an outbound session, the TNDRIVER
automatically sends WILL-DO-ECHO and WILL-DO-SGA in the
output stream. This creates problems from some TELNET
clients/devices on the remote host.
Solution:
In TELNET client, add the /OPTIONS qualifier to accept ECHO,
SGA and others as options keywords which will be passed to
the INETACP at session creation.
In TNDRIVER, add code to sense that this is an outbound
session and to negotiate ECHO and SGA if the user has
selected the options from the TELNET client.
Reference:
CFS.41867
Problem:
The TELNET CREATE_SESSION command does not accept more than
four digits for the port number parameter.
Solution:
Increase the size of the buffer used to read the port number
from DCL. This correction was also applied to
CREATE_INCOMING_SESSION and ATTACH.
Reference:
CFS.42159
ECO K 8-July-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TNDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10K
Problem:
Incoming TELNET sessions hang.
Solution:
This problem is caused by previous fix. An incorrect branch
destination caused part of the normal negotiation for
inbound sessions to be skipped. The branch destination of a
newly introduced instruction was modified so that previous
behavior for inbound sessions is retained.
Reference:
CFS.40895
ECO L 15-July-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TELNET.EXE UCX V4.0-10L
Problem:
The TELNET DELETE_SESSION command returns a false error message.
Solution:
Correct the status check on the $ASSIGN() to the network device.
Reference:
Local testing
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO M 16-Aug-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TNDRIVER.EXE ! UCX V4.0-10M
Problem:
The outbound TELNET device stops working if unsolicited
input is received from the network.
Solution:
Set UCB$M_TT_NOLOGINS in UCB$W_DEVSTS to dismiss unsolicited
terminal input, leaving the device in a useful state.
Reference:
CFS.42083
ECO N 19-Aug-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TELNET.EXE UCX V4.0-10N
Problem:
Multiple escape sequences could possibly overflow the terminal
buffer.
Solution:
Do not allow the number of untransmitted characters in the
buffer to exceed half the size of the buffer's allocation.
Reference:
CFS.43895
ECO O 26-SEP-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TNDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10O
Problem:
Applications performing I/O against an outbound TELNET UCB
do not know that the connection is lost.
Solution:
After connection loss, outbound TELNET sessions are still
capable of processing I/O operations even though nothing
happens. When the connection is broken, the application is
notified with SS$_HANGUP *if and only if* there are IRPs
pending against the UCB. If no IRPs are queued, the
application is not notified. In addition, any applications
which begin I/O after the connection is broken do not get
any errors even though their data goes unprocessed.
To solve this problem, the device is turned OFFLINE after
the class driver is notified of a disconnection from the
network. This will reject any I/O operations which occur
after the connection has been broken.
Reference:
CFS.42083
Images:
UCX$TELNET.EXE UCX V4.0-10O
Problem:
After installing ECO M or ECO N of UCX$TELNET, line
mode does not work properly; the sessions appear to hang.
Solution:
The optimization applied in ECO M (and N) has been
conditionalized so it will be used only in character
mode.
References:
CFS.43831, CFS.44575, CFS.45061
ECO 4 updates:
--------------
ECO P 26-Dec-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TELNET.EXE UCX V4.0-10P
UCX$TNDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10P
Problem:
In character mode, certain escape character sequences
are not passed through the connection unless in PASTHRU
(old style) mode.
Solution:
Clearing the terminal characteristic TT2$M_EDITING when in
character input mode allows the various special escape
sequences to be read instead of being translated into their
character equivalent.
Reference:
CFS.45350
Problems:
1. TN devices remain because of ECO A.
2. F6 and F10 keys are not passed through TELNET client.
3. Problems with the client's keystrokes and line mode.
4. Problem restoring appropriate settings after spawning.
5. Problem resuming *busy* sessions after escaping TELNET
client.
Solutions:
1. Clear ONLINE only for OUTBOUND connections. This is not
a problem because the only option available at that time
is to DELETE the session.
2. Turn off TT2$M_EDITING in the terminal settings.
3. Turn off ESCAPE mode and remove the multi-char optimization.
4. Limit the changes through SMG to only those settings which
are changed by the client.
5. If the pending output buffer exceeds the saved prompt buffer
size, then do not save the output.
References:
1. CFS.46472, CFS.46478, CFS.46574, CFS.46666, CFS.46930
2. CFS.45350, CFS.45574
3. CFS.45329, CFS.45662
4. CFS.45372
5. CFS.45372
Problem:
A proxy login can be circumvented by sending unsolicited
data through the socket before LOGINOUT has a chance to
run. All logins are expected to be under the control of
the TNDRIVER but do not appear to be.
Solution:
When creating the TN device, set UCB$M_JOB in UCB$x_DEVSTS.
This makes the terminal driver believe that a login is in
progress, so it discards the data and echoes a BELL. When
RLOGIN PROXY succeeds in the INETACP, the appropriate
automatic login occurs as expected. Should the proxy check
fail (i.e., there is no valid proxy for this connection), then
the normal login mechanism clears UCB$M_JOB before telling the
terminal driver to start the login.
Reference:
CFS.46504
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 IPC Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 02-NOV-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$IPC_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
Registers R1 and R8 are confused causing SELECT to return
incorrect results. This usually affects those users who
expect SS$_NORMAL as opposed to an odd successful return
value, such as SMTP.
Solution:
Correct the register usage.
Reference:
Per V4 review
ECO B 23-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$IPC_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
In UCX$CLOSE, UCX performs an IO$_DEACCESS operation. When
sockets are shared between multiple processes, one process
closing a socket will prevent other processes from
continuing to use it.
Solution:
If the reference count on the affected device_socket is
greater than 1, skip the IO$_DEACCESS.
ECO C 26-FEB-1996 Alpha and VAX
Image:
UCX$IPC_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problem:
The inet_addr does not resolve hexidecimal and octal
prefixes correctly. A hex address must have an "0x"
prefix and an octal address must have a prefix of "0."
The routine should return "-1" for all unresolved
addresses.
Solution:
The routine now checks for "0" as the first character and
the following "x". The routine also checks for trailing
characters at the end.
Reference:
CFS.37910
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 Management Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 01-Nov-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$UCP.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
UCP crashes with the SET CONFIGURATION INTERFACE command when
an invalid broadcast mask is specified.
Solution:
Validate the broadcast mask string.
Reference:
CFS.32916
ECO B 29-JAN-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
PING.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
PING always returns $STATUS=1 when it is used with
qualifiers.
Solution:
The finish() was corrected to return UCX$_LOOP[IN]ACT status
codes.
Reference:
CFS.37154
ECO C 8-JUN-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
SYS$SYSTEM:UCX$UCP.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problem:
Probe and drop timer are not propagated upon UCX startup if
drop timer is lower than the default probe timer (75 seconds).
Solution:
Reverse order of probe and drop timer settings upon startup
so that the new (lower) probe timer value is already set by
the time of setting drop timer value.
Reference:
CFS.40000
Problem:
In a SHOW PROXY display, if the last record is both NFS and
communication, only its NFS part is displayed.
Solution:
Make proper "end of file" situation handling.
Reference:
CFS.41660
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO D 16-OCT-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$UCP.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
Problem:
If the user does not have SYSLCK privilege and tries to
UCX REMOVE PROXY, an error message indicates that the user
does not have the privilege but does not indicate that this
affects only the dynamic proxy database.
Solution:
Use another error message "Error processing dynamic NFS proxy..."
instead of a generic "Error processing UCX$PROXY database."
Reference:
CFS.42016
ECO 4 updates:
--------------
ECO E 24-OCT-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$UCP.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
Problem:
If it is issued twice from the same session of UCX, SET
NAME/INIT fails the second and all subsequent times with
the message
%UCX-E-NAMEERROR, Error processing name service request
-SYSTEM-F-LINKDISCON, network partner disconnected
logical link
Solution:
Since the BIND server disconnects the link upon receiving an
initialize request, disconnect the socket to the BIND server
process every time after SET NAME/INIT is issued in order to
make reconnect the next time.
Reference:
CFS.45033
ECO F 12-JAN-1997 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$UCP.EXE UCX V4.0-10F
Problem:
The /REJECT and /ACCEPT lists from communication
configuration are not taken upon startup.
Solution:
In the START COMM/INIT action routine, set dynamic
communication options after the communication
has been started. Previously, they were being set before.
Reference:
Internal report
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 PWIP Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 4-DEC-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$PWIPACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
UCX$PWIPDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problems:
1. A system crash may occur due to pool corruption. A
typical pattern is:
00000000 00000000 xxxxxxxx yyyy0002
where xxxxxxxx is one of the IP addresses of the crashing
system, overwriting valid data in pool.
2. Various crashes occur in PWIP due to synchronization
problems. For example, one of the problems is due to
the arrival of a downstream write after an upstream
disconnect has arrived.
Solutions:
1. The problem was found in the Build_ADDR_ACK routine in
the PWIPDRIVER_ACK.C, where UCX allocates and fills in an
MBLK with data. The last part of the data is an array of
sockaddr_in structures, which are filled with the IP
address(es) of the local system. When the local system
is multi-homed (i.e., it has more than one IP address),
this array has more than one entry. The problem was
found in the calculation for the address of the second
and subsequent entries in this array. The calculation
in error used the following DEC C instruction:
sockaddr = sockaddr+sizeof(struct sockaddr_in);
Since sockaddr was declared:
struct sockaddr_in *sockaddr;
the result of the calculation was to add the SQUARE of
the length of an entry to sockaddr, rather than the
length of one entry. This result is because DEC C
considers each unit to be an entry structure length.
The correct calculation is to replace the offending line
with:
sockaddr = sockaddr + 1;
The crash resulted from the calculation giving an
address well beyond the end of the structure, falling
into some other structure in pool. When pool checking
is NOT enabled, this error may go unnoticed for long
periods of time because it is likely that the corrupted
memory is currently unallocated.
2. One of the sources of the lack of synchronization was that
in several places, the code deassigned a BG device
without having first done a QIO IO$_DEACCESS on the
device. For normal UCX devices this is allowed, but for
kernel interface access devices, as are all PWIP BG
devices, this is not allowed. Therefore, the solution
was to add explicit IO$_DEACCESS|IO$M_SHUTDOWN QIO
requests prior to deassigning the BG devices. These
changes were placed into several routines in the
PWIPACP_UCX.C module.
Another source of the problem was the failure to verify
that a connection was in the midst of being torn down.
To solve this, two specific verification steps were
introduced: one in the pwip_rast routine in
PWIPDRIVER_READ.C, and the other in the pwip_write
routine in PWIPDRIVER_WRITE.C. Specifically, the code
verifies in each case whether the PDCB and the BG UCB
mutually point to each other. If not, the connection is
in the process of being torn down and acts accordingly.
References:
1. CFS.34737
2. None
ECO B 16-Jan-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$PWIPDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
A system crash may occur in EXE_STD$PRIMITIVE_FORK, during
an attempt to deliver what is supposed to be an Attention
AST but is actually a pointer to a PWIPDRIVER receive socket
call back routine.
Solution:
This problem is a synchronization problem between PWIP and
the BGDRIVER (or UCX$INTERNET_SERVICES for VAX). At the
time of the crash, a SOCKET structure points to a UCB but
the corresponding UCB does not point back to the SOCKET.
This apparently occurs when a connection is being torn down
in PWIP and some data comes into the SOCKET. The correction
for this problem requires making changes in NET and in
PWIP. In PWIP, eliminate the BG_KERNEL_AST_HOOK bit
(defined in PWIPDRIVER_UCX.H as equivalent to
UCB$x_BG_SELECT) and define the new BG_PWIP (equivalent to
the new NET bit UCB$x_BG_PWIP) and use it instead of
BG_KERNEL_AST_HOOK. In a small change in the
pwip_handrelease_transport routine, this bit is no longer
always cleared. Now, the bit is cleared only if the UCB
points to a SOCKET. This change corresponds to a change in
INET_MAIN.MAR (in INET_DELIVER_ATTNAST) that eliminates the
cause of the crash.
The new SOCKBUF$x_PWIP bit in the RCV and XMT socket buffers
is set in routine pwip_handshake_transport and cleared in
routine pwip_handrelease_transport.
Note that for the ECO stream, PWIPDRIVER_UCX.H explicitly
defines SOCKBUF$M_PWIP as 0x20. For the normal stream, this
definition will be picked up from NET.
Reference:
CFS.33756
ECO C 15-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$PWIPDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problem:
A system crash may occur in PWIP_HANDRELEASE_TRANSPORT which
is called from CLOSE_DEV, with the alleged BG UCB argument
not actually a BG UCB.
Solution:
This problem is apparently another PWIP synchronization error
caused by a PDCB from upstream that had the UCB pointer
removed. To alleviate the problem, the code now verifies
that the purported UCB is still pointing back to the PDCB
before writing into the UCB.
Reference:
CFS.33756
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO D 14-June-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$PWIPDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
Problem:
Improper deallocation of multi MBUF UDP datagrams.
Solution:
Create a new, simple deallocation routine,
adjUDPaccounting_single, and pass its address on the call to
allocate the MBLK/DBLK for EACH mbuf in a UDP datagram, not
only the first. This routine detaches the given MBUF from
the possible chain and deallocates it by calling the older
adjUDPaccounting. This latter routine deallocates an entire
chain, but since we are only passing it a single detached
MBUF, it will deallocate only that.
Reference:
CFS.40812
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 INETDRIVER Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 01-Dec-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$INETDRIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
A multiprocessor system crashes with a CPUSPINWAIT bugcheck.
Solution:
The I/O completion inserts the IRP into the CPU-specific I/O
completion queue and posts an interrupt to the CPU's I/O
completion routine. This code executed at IPL 0 and, if the
process was rescheduled onto another processor, it is
possible that the INSQUE instruction was attempting to
insert the IRP onto the last processor's I/O completion
queue. This situation could cause corruption in the IRP/ACB
because INSQUE is not interlocked between multiple
processors.
The correction elevates IPL to IPL$_SCHED to prevent the
rescheduling of the process during this critical set of
instructions.
Reference:
CFS.34601
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 BIND Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 08-Nov-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
All UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
IPC's select() do not work correctly. This component is
linked against the IPC object library, thereby requiring a
relink to pick up the correction.
Solution:
Relinked.
NOTE:
The above image(s) are included in the second pass UCX
V4.0-10 SSB kit.
ECO B 23-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$NSLOOKUP.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
While trying to list all/or WKS records in a domain, using
ls -d and ls -s commands of nslookup result in an access
violation.
Solution:
The getprotobynumber searches the protocol database until
the matching port number is found (or until EOF is
encountered). Getprotobynumber makes a call to "getprotoent"
and "endprotoent" for opening/closing the protocol database,
which is not supported by the UCX kernel. The call did not
check for the error status but continued to print the
broken-out fields of the protoent structure, which resulted
in an access violation. A work around routine was added to
perform the equivalent function.
Problem:
An access violation occurs during use of the "set
[no]ignoretc" (ignore truncation errors) and "set vc" (set
virtual circuit connection) for larger response length.
Solution:
Corrected the buffer overflow. Added a loop to take care of
the truncated response.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 UCX$ACCESS_SHR.EXE Image
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO B 23-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$ACCESS_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
On the localhost, issuing "UCX SHOW MX localhost" returns
the local record but filters all the remaining MX records.
Solution:
An invalid filter routine filters MX records for the localhost,
which affects SMTP mail.
Reference:
CFS.33206
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO D 27-SEP-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$ACCESS_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problem:
If UCX was upgraded to a newer version then any UCX SET
SERVICE command will fail with a "UCX-E-INVRECORD, Invalid
information" message.
Solution:
The incorrect record validity check (reverse condition)
was fixed.
Reference:
CFS.43237
ECO 4 updates:
--------------
ECO E 7-NOV-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$ACCESS_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
Problem:
Invalid debugging statements were incorporated into the ECO
D images, above. These statements caused unusual anomalies
and compilation warnings, such as:
3 3016 $SETDSC (CTRL_DESC, 10, CTRL_ASCII);
................................1
%BLS32-W-TEXT, (1) Reference outside of local data segment
CTRL_DESC, unpredictable results
Solution:
Remove the improper .OBJ file for the GET_MX module, and
rebuild the shareable image with the original object file.
ECO F 27-NOV-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$ACCESS_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10F
Problem:
If one of the records that a given MX record points to
cannot be resolved, a UCX$ACCESS_GET_MX call fails to
return the rest of the list of records.
Solution:
The UCX$GET_MX code that insists on trying to resolve a
record has been changed. If ucx$get_hostbyname() returns
SS$_TIMEOUT, skip that record and continue on.
References:
CFS.33206, CFS.41627
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 BIND SERVER Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 08-NOV-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
ALL UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
IPC's select() does not work correctly. This component is
linked against the IPC object library, thereby requiring a
relink to pick up the correction.
Solution:
Relinked.
NOTE:
The above image(s) are included in the second pass UCX V4.0-10
SSB kit.
ECO B 14-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BIND_SERVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
The DNS name server, when configured as a secondary, will
report that its database (db files) has expired records
based on the preset expiration time, and would therefore not
perform "zone transfer" for updating its records from the
primary. The UCX SHO HOST command will still display the old
records in the secondary.
In addition, the log file will display a repetitive annoying
message to the DNS admin/user indicating the expiration of
the "db files," with every request for "zone transfer" or
via "UCX SHO HOST." The log file will tend to grow over a
period of time.
The workaround available to the customer was to either
delete the backup copies of the database files relevant to
the secondary name server and restart the name server (only
to see it happening again after the expiration time) or to
increase the "serial #" of the SOA record in the primary
server. Both these workarounds call for repeated user
intervention.
Solution:
With the expiration of the time (as set in the SOA record),
momentarily lower the "serial number" in the "SOA" record
that has been read via the db_load routine to "zero" causing
the secondary name server to have a lower serial number
compared to the "serial number" in the SOA record of the
"primary." This situation would force the "zone transfer"
to take place. The correction is in sync with the DNS
community (4.9.3 beta 32 BSD).
A validating routine was added in NS_FORW.C to display the
error/warning message related to the expired zone (display
just once and remove duplicate messages).
Reference:
CFS.35882
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO C 10-May-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BIND_SERVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problems:
1. UCX$BIND_ROUND_ROBIN_OFF does not disable round robin
scheduling if BIND is not configured as caching server.
2. The value of the UCX$BIND_ROUND_ROBIN_OFF logical is
treated as a numeral which is confusing.
Solutions:
1. The logical was not checked if DNS did not have cache
enabled. The logical is now checked immediately before
doing round robin scheduling.
2. Fixed, so now merely defining it is enough.
Reference:
CFS.40717
ECO D 25-Jun-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BIND_SERVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
Problem:
Load balancing code crashes with an access violation when
the cluster record contains entries for hosts that do not
run metric.
Solution:
The load balancing code was restructured so that there is
now only one outstanding receive. The code was improved to
run faster, because it only pauses to wait for metric
responses that have been outdated.
Reference:
CFS.40722
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 BOOTP and TFTP Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 22-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BOOTP.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
BOOTP ignores requests from clients that have no file
in the BOOTP database.
Solution:
Original code did not handle the case since the BOOTP load
file was required by UCP.
Images:
UCX$TFTP.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
TFTP loops when the client NAKs a DATA packet on an RRQ
transfer.
Solution:
The server could not handle incoming NAKs and responded
with its own NAK, then insisted on looping, which sent
billions of NAKs.
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO B 11-Sep-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TFTP.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problems:
TFTP server loops when a client times out.
TFTP server terminates an RRQ transfer after only a
few packets.
TFTP server corrupts data in octet transfers.
There is possibly an error in handling multiple simultaneous
transfers, due to a multi-threading bug.
Solution:
Update TimeOfDay more often.
Check for end-of-file correctly.
Check for ASCII vs. OCTET mode correctly.
References:
CFS.38689, CFS.40018, CFS.40343
ECO C 10-Sept-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$BOOTP.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problem:
BOOTP responds with the wrong IP address in the case of
more than one Ethernet system.
Solution:
The get_iproute() function has been modified to pass the
network mask of the iptarget to get_iproute(). The subnet
of the iptarget is isolated by anding iptarget with its
network mask. Scan the routing table for a routing record
that matches subnet. Check for the default route. If it is
not a default route, check to see if it is a host route. If
it is not a host route, check to see if it is a network
route.
Reference:
CFS.42642
ECO 4 updates:
--------------
ECO D 23-OCT-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TFTP.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
Problem:
TFTP Server pads the last 512 byte record with nulls on
octet-mode transfers when the source file has a short (<512
bytes) last record.
Solution:
When the file is opened, read the file size in bytes and
calculate the EOF byte. Check for EOF when reading the
file, and only ask for partial last block.
Reference:
CFS.44865
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 NTP Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 23-FEB-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$NTPD.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
A memory leak occurs when the request packet in respond() is
not freed. This occurs for client requests (e.g., "ntp
" from Ultrix).
Solution:
Free() the request packet before transmitting the response PDU.
Reference:
CFS.37655
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 NFS Server Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO A 15-May-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$SERVER_NFS.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
A customer written application can cause an NFS server to
fail with an access violation by sending a bogus message to
the NFS port.
Solution:
Validation checks on string elements were moved to earlier
points in the routine. The RPC protocol version check was
moved to be the first check.
Reference:
CFS.38816
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 BFS Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 29-Nov-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$CFS_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
All files with a .DIR extension are listed without the
extension whether they are directories or not if the
TYPELESS_DIR option is specified for an export entry.
Solution:
A check was added for FCH$V_DIRECTORY to ensure that the
file that ends in .DIR is a directory before removing its
type.
Reference:
CFS.35040
Problem:
With the UCX client, after a file has been renamed when a
new version is created, both files are deleted by mistake.
The new version is deleted because the client attempts to
rename NAME.EXT to NAME.EXT;1 as the first step in creating
the new version, and on a rename the server deletes the
target name if it already exists. Another change is needed
to prevent deleting the old version.
Solution:
The rename routine skips checking for a pre-existing target
name if the operation is in OpenVMS-to-OpenVMS mode.
Reference:
CFS.33538
Problem:
The server returns a null in the $ADF$ file for an unknown
or missing version limit. It should be %X7FFF. This
confuses the client into purging when it should not.
Solution:
Substitute %X7FFF for null in the VMS_VERLIMIT field of the
RDCB eXtension.
Reference:
CFS.33528
Problem:
ACLs and device, volume, and file protections are not
supported properly.
Solution:
For versions 6.0 and higher of OpenVMS, support was added
for the volume ORB and the new protection mask formats.
Support was also added for ACLs using VM variable
allocations.
Reference:
CFS.22201
ECO B 16-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$CFS_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
Renaming directory files on file systems that are exported
with the TYPELESS_DIRECTORIES option requires that the file
type .DIR be specified on the from and to file names.
Solution:
The file type .DIR should be enforced (if provided) and
defaulted to .DIR;1 if absent.
Reference:
CFS.37981
ECO C 20-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$CFS_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problem:
When the export option NODATA_CONVERSION is selected for a
file system, STREAMCR files are converted to STREAMLF
format.
Solution:
Change the file system code to return the data in its raw
state when NODATA_CONVERSION is set, and convert from
STREAMCR to STREAMLF in other cases.
Reference:
CFS.38128
ECO D 24-Mar-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$CFS_SHR.EXE V4.0-10D
Problem:
When installing ECO A onto a non-V5 system, a protection
error (NOPRIV) is generated during the device protection
check.
Solution:
Change the system version check condition from an AND to
an OR in the NEQL check.
Reference:
CFS.38128
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO E 09-May-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$CFS_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
Problem:
The ECO A code can attempt to move a larger ACL area into
a smaller area, causing an ACCVIO or corruption.
Solution:
Change the size of the move to the exact ACL size, not the
size of the initially allocated ACL area.
ECO F 15-May-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$CFS_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10F
Problem:
ECO E does not take into consideration when the preallocated
ACL buffer (512) is smaller than the actual ACL (> 512).
Solution:
Use the MIN(.RDCB_PTR[RDCB$L_ACL_SIZE],.ACL_LENGTH) when
moving the ACL.
Reference:
Encountered in V4.0 ECO 1 installations
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO G 2-Jul-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$CFS_SHR.EXE
Problem:
If NODATA_CONVERSION is in effect, the server uses ;
instead of . as the version number delimiter.
Solution:
Add a pair of parentheses to the test for name conversion.
Reference:
CFS.42549
ECO H 9-Sep-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$CFS_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10H
Problem:
When the server does data conversion, the apparent size of
the file changes. Some clients, including Digital UNIX,
use their cached unconverted size instead of the more
recently supplied converted size. This makes the file
appear to be missing its tail or have extra bytes at the
end.
Solution:
If enabled by the modus_operandi bit ppda$v_fake_mtime,
deduct a micro-second from mtime of unconverted files. This
provokes clients sensitive to unstable file size (such as
DUNIX) to invalidate the data cache on a subsequent getattr.
The unconverted size is then replaced with the converted
size on the reread.
Reference:
CFS.37489
ECO 4 updates:
--------------
ECO I 30-OCT-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$CFS_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10I
Problem:
Memory is misallocated on Alpha systems, causing a reduction
in performance and the possibility of an allocation
failure.
Solution:
When allocating RDCBs, be sure to use the RETADR
array to determine how many RDCBs to place onto the
lookaside list.
Reference:
CFS.45010
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 PCNFS Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO A 20-MAR-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$PCNFSD.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
Incorrect brackets prevent authentication from ever
working with V1 protocol.
Solution:
Move misplaced bracket.
Reference:
CFS.38231
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 NFS Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 22-Dec-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$DNFSACP*.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
An uninitialized variable can cause a system crash on a
certain sequence of operations. The crash is consistently
reproducable on a VAX running UCX V3.3, but does not happen
with the same sequence of operations on UCX V4.0. The
uninitialized variable is incorrect on both versions, even
though it is symptomless on V4.0.
Solution:
Initialize the variable.
Reference:
CFS.33538
Problem:
An untranslatable hostname in a proxy record causes a
premature halt to the loading of the proxy database.
Solution:
Test the return status from the hostname translation without
loading the status variable.
Reference:
CFS.34570
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO B 25-Apr-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$DNFSACP*.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
An access violation in the access_file routine can happen
with BACKUP/REPLACE if there are enough files to force
garbage_collect to take away fifo structures when recovering
memory.
Solution:
In File_Create_Version, when superseding a file, the code
must perform check_access on the file before zeroing the
file length and overwriting the file. The
CHECKED_SUPERSEDE_STATE was added. PSC added some
additional tracing with this update.
Reference:
CFS.38084
ECO D 12-JUN-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$DNFSACP*.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
Problem:
A PGFIPLHI system crash can happen in UCX$DNFSACP when
accessing the argument stack.
Solution:
Preload the addresses of arguments into registers before
raising IPL.
Reference:
CFS.41981
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO E 24-SEP-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$DNFSACP.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
Problem:
UCX V4.0/4.1 clients cannot operate with TCPware server.
Solution:
The code which prevented interoperation was deleted.
References:
CFS.40279, CFS.42359
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 RSH Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 16-Nov-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RSH.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
Output from RSH is not correct both in leading and ending
newlines. The output logfile is missing blank lines and the
output is prematurely truncated (is not being flushed).
Solution:
Sense the device type of SYS$OUTPUT and modify the
write_output() routine to generate the proper output.
Ensure that the buffer is flushed.
Problem:
There is a problem using /SYSERROR in the RSH command.
Solution:
Alter the order for create/bind/connect sockets in
setup_network_environment(). When diagnostics/error
messages need to be sent to a device other than stdout, the
code needs to execute so that sock_1 gets
created/bound/connected first. No new code was added, but
the order of execution was changed.
Reference:
CFS.31263
ECO B 24-Jan-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RSH.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
Command lines not enclosed in quotes are converted to lower
case.
Solution:
Parse the command line appropriately.
Problem:
Fragments of the output stream are lost if it contains NULL
character(s).
Solution:
Corrected.
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO C 17-Jun-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RSH.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problems:
1. Requests have been made for the ability to enable TCP
KEEPALIVE similar to FTP and TELNET clients.
2. Interactive mode does not work properly.
3. The output of RSH/REXEC is slow (300 baud).
4. The output of RSH/REXEC generates lines of single
characters when output is directed to a non-terminal.
Solutions:
Corrected.
References:
CFS.33696
CFS.38608
CFS.40055
CFS.40513
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 FTP Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 05-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problems:
1. An FTP 'get' from an IBM host hangs after the file
is copied.
2. FTP defaults to FILE.TXT and cannot use mixed-case.
3. Using the /INPUT qualifier causes FTP to hang without
executing the commands in the specified file.
4. UCX$FTP_RAW_BINARY, UCX$FTP_KEEPALIVE, and UCX$FTP_STREAMLF
logicals are not being translated correctly.
5. The port number cannot be specified when using FTP in
ULTRIX mode ( ftp :== $ucx$ftp/ultrix).
6. /USER and /INPUT do not work together.
7. The put command fails to the HP3000.
8. Wild-card processing does not appropriately return
RMS errors.
9. %SYSTEM-F-ACCVIO occurs due to an invalid command (type).
10. Files and directories created are always owned by the
FTP user instead of the owner of the parent directory.
11. The FTP server always expects to work on port 21.
12. Protection problems occur when starting up anonymous
FTP. The read/write log file cannot be accessed once it
gets created.
13. Inconsistent results occur when using search lists and/or
rooted logical names with various FTP commands (list,
dir, get, put, cd, pwd, lcd, show default, set default,
set default/local, and show default/local).
14. A file will not accept an APPEND when its filename
contains mixed-case characters.
15. It is inconvenient to set up FTP as a foreign command
with /ULTRIX simply to be able to specify mixed-case
filenames without quotes.
16. Performing a PUT/GET results in the output file being
created without the maximum record size (longest record)
field being set.
17. Window size cannot be set beyond 32K.
18. There are miscellaneous problems associated with ANONYMOUS
access.
19. Support has been added for record mode transfer. When
record structure is specified (STRU RECORD), the code
issues EOR markings between records instead of the normal
NVT characters for file structure.
Solutions:
Corrected.
ECO B 04-Mar-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
An RMS error occurs on doing a 'get', when a window
size of 64K is specified.
Solution:
Fixed.
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO C 21-Mar-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE
Problem:
The PUT command fails when a source directory other than the
one the user is defaulted to is specified. A workaround is
to do a 'cd' first to that directory.
Solution:
The parsing mechanism for remote and local file specs was
fixed.
ECO D 16-Apr-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE
Problem:
Files sometimes become corrupted when a large window size
is used in VMS-PLUS mode.
Solution:
Setting 'xfr_len' to a multiple of 512 was insured.
Problem:
A case problem exists with 'get/fdl' and 'put/fdl' commands.
Solution:
A new function 'AllUpperCase' was added to routines
'send_data' and 'recv_fdl'. Code that forced lowercase
conversion ('conv_to_locase()') in routine 'send_data' was
removed.
References:
CFS.39422, CFS.39450
ECO E 01-May-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE
Problem:
The FTP client 'sunique' command no longer works.
Solution:
The 'version' check in the 'send_data' routine which
was inadvertantly left out has been restored.
Reference:
CFS.40617
ECO F 10-May-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE
Problem:
The FTP command procedure quits with an error after
copying just a few files
Solution:
A problem in 'send_normal_bin' was fixed, so that a normal
%RMS-E-EOF does not cause an error, as was the case in doing
multiple image-mode 'puts' to a non-VMS system.
Reference:
CFS.40744
ECO G 13-May-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE UCX V4.0-10G
Problem:
Record mode transfer does not work correctly.
Solution:
A problem in 'send_ascii' has been fixed.
Reference:
CFS.29927
ECO H 16-May-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE
Problem:
COPY/FTP does not work correctly.
Solution:
The 'DCL_Copy_Command' was modified so that it no longer
nullifies the remote filename if it is quoted; also if no
remote filename is specified, the local filename is used.
Reference:
CFS.39938
ECO I 19-Jun-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE
Problem:
The put command fails to an HP3000. This is an old problem
that is occurring again.
Solution:
A problem was fixed in 'send_data' '&&' was used instead
of '||' when checking for valid character that might indicate
a version number. ( *(v+1) >= '0') && ( *(v+1) <= '9')
ECO J 24-Jun-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE UCX V4.0-10J
Problem:
A %SYSTEM-F-BADPARAM error message appear during an attempt to
connect to heavily used system.
Solution:
'Hookup()' was fixed so that a %SYSTEM-F-BADPARAM error no
longer occurs as a result of having a hostname with multiple
addresses.
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO K 28-Jun-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE
Problem:
COPY/FTP and DIR/FTP do not work correctly.
Solution:
Fixes were added to 'wldcrd_put_process', 'wldcrd_get_process',
'getreply', 'recv_data', 'send_data', and 'DCL_Copy_Command'.
References:
CFS.39938, CFS.42372
ECO L 03-Jul-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE
Problem:
A 'SET DEFAULT/LOCAL' or 'lcd' when using '..' does not work.
Solution:
A check for '..' was added to 'SetLocalDefault'.
Reference:
Local testing.
Problem:
A client ACCVIO occurs when an 'mdelete' command is done.
Solution:
A check for the NULL 'file_fab' pointer was added to
'wldcrd_get_process'.
Reference:
Local testing
Problem:
There is no way to stop a 'view' command if the /PAGE qualifier
is not used.
Solution:
Code was added to trap ^C and ^Y to stop output.
Reference:
Local testing
ECO M 30-Jul-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE
Problem:
The local default directory spec gets set to an invalid
directory spec when doing an 'lcd' to an invalid directory
or device.
Solution:
Before the default directory and device are changed, the
current values are saved; if an invalid device or directory
is specified, the saved values are restored.
Reference:
CFS.42163
ECO N 8-AUG-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTP.EXE
Problem:
FTP/INPUT does not work when it is called from a command
file.
Solution:
The batch flag has to be disabled when /INPUT is used.
Reference:
CFS.42969
ECO O 23-Aug-1996 Alpha and VAX
Image:
UCX$FTP.EXE
Problem:
The 'Put' command does not work when a remote filename is
not specified and the local name is a logical.
Solution:
The FTP$PUT routine was modified to use information from the
RMS 'nam' block when the remote filename is omitted.
Reference:
CFS.43837
ECO P 23-Aug-1996 Alpha and VAX
Image:
UCX$FTP.EXE UCX V4.0-10P
Problem:
Performing a wildcard 'mget' on files with non-VMS filenames
fails with an RMS syntax error.
Solution:
'Wldcrd_get_process' was modified to use 'ConvertFilenameToVMS'
on the initial error.
Reference:
CFS.43919
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 FTPD Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 15-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problems:
An FTP 'get' from an IBM host hangs after file the is
copied.
FTP defaults to FILE.TXT and cannot use mixed-case characters.
Using the /INPUT qualifier causes FTP to hang without
executing the commands in the specified file.
UCX$FTP_RAW_BINARY, UCX$FTP_KEEPALIVE, and UCX$FTP_STREAMLF
logicals are not being translated correctly.
The port number can not be specified when FTP is used in
ULTRIX mode ( ftp :== $ucx$ftp/ultrix).
The /USER and /INPUT qualifiers do not work together.
The 'put' command fails when it is issued to an HP3000.
Wild-card processing does not return RMS errors when
it should.
A %SYSTEM-F-ACCVIO occurs due to use of an invalid command
(type).
Files and directories created are always owned by the
FTP user instead of the owner of the parent directory.
The FTP server always expects to work on port 21.
Protection problems occur when Anonymous FTP is started.
The log file cannot be read from or written to once it
gets created.
Inconsistent results occur when search lists and/or rooted
logical names are used with various FTP commands (e.g.,
list, dir, get, put, cd, pwd, lcd, show default, set
default, set default/local, and show default/local).
An APPEND cannot be performed on a file when its filename
contains mixed-case characters.
It is inconvenient to set up FTP as a foreign command with
/ULTRIX simply to be able to specify mixed-case filenames
without quotes.
Performing a PUT/GET results in the output file being
created without the maximum record size (longest record)
field being set.
Window Size cannot be set beyond 32K.
There are miscellaneous problems associated with ANONYMOUS
access.
Solutions:
Corrected.
References:
CFS.36835, CFS.38094, CFS.37556
Problem:
The UCX$FTPC process hangs in an RWAST state.
Solution:
When a system-wide logical is defined
("UCX$FTP_SERVER_DBG"), Resource Wait mode is disabled,
allowing system services to report any error status in its
log file.
Reference:
CFS.29480
Problem:
When an invalid username is specified, FTP issues an
'Invalid username' message without prompting for
a password. If an account is specified that has been
set with a secondary password, this message is also
passed on.
Solution:
Security corrections have been made in 'user()' and 'pass()'
so that no useful information is given regarding a rejected
login (such as XXX is unknown' or 'Usernames with two
passwords not allowed FTP access').
Problem:
STRU RECORD (record structure) does not appear to
work.
Solution:
Issue EOR markings in between records instead of the
normal NVT characters for file structure.
References:
CFS.29927, CFS.33514
Problem:
The 'cd' command is restricted to using brackets as
opposed to '..', '<>' or no brackets at all.
Solution:
Fixed.
Reference:
CFS.38258
ECO B 04-Mar-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$FTPD.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
An RMS error occurs on doing a 'get', when specifying a
window size of 64K.
Solution:
Fixed.
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO C 21-Mar-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE
Problem:
Anonymous FTP may cause an ACCVIO or cause a server to loop
under certain conditions. An anonymous account may be
allowed to access directories beyond what is defined by the
UCX$FTP_ANONYMOUS_DIRECTORY, and may, sometimes, not be
allowed to use those already defined.
Solution:
Error checks in CheckAnonymousAccess have been fixed. A new
scheme for keeping track of logical name translation has
been devised and added.
Reference:
CFS.38258
ECO D 22-Mar-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE
Problem:
Anonymous FTP appears to hang when the
UCX$FTP_ANONYMOUS_DIRECTORY system logical is defined to
contain a full directory listing of a CD drive ( [*...] ).
Solution:
The caching algorithm has been corrected so that the code
no longer scans through all the directories and subdirectories
on a connect, but simply parses the directory spec when
needed. SetUpAnonymousDirectories and CheckAnonymousAccess
have also been modified.
Problem:
Anonymous FTP users are allowed to access 'World' readable
directories outside of SYS$LOGIN when the system logical
UCX$FTP_ANONYMOUS_DIRECTORY is defined.
Solution:
Made sure that SYS$LOGIN and its "...]" are added to the
access list regardless of whether or not the system logical
is defined.
ECO E 29-Mar-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE
Problem:
The FTP client will hang after the FTP server child process
ACCVIOs during a long listing.
Solution:
In 'SendData', an error message is not being retrieved
correctly which causes a pointer to be NULL.
Problem:
The maximum record size for files is not always being set
correctly on 'get' operations.
Solution:
'Fdlgenerate_in_mem' has been modified to ignore the RMS xab
field.
Problem:
The FTP server child process UCX$FTPC_xx aborts prematurely
because process quota is exceeded.
Solution:
The system logical UCX$FTP_SERVER_DBG is left defined.
This causes the process to abort instead of going
into a resource wait, as it normally would have temporarily
until the resource became available. Removing the check
for this logical allows for the default action of going
into RWAST state as needed.
ECO F 05-Apr-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE
Problem:
The server becomes out of sync with a client when a 'put'
operation results in an RMS-W-RTB error. This causes the
client to hang.
Solution:
The hang occurs because the server is waiting for the RMS
operation to finish. The 'rms_posted' flag in the
'resc_ascii' routine needs to be reset.
Reference:
CFS.39833
ECO G 12-Apr-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE
Problem:
Files sometimes become corrupted when a large window size
is used in VMS-PLUS mode.
Solution:
Insure that 'xfr_len' is being set to a multiple of 512.
ECO H 29-Apr-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE
Problem:
The 'mget' operations from a V3.3/4.0 server will result in
a client's getting filenames which include a full VMS
directory path.
Solution:
The 'nlist' code has been fixed so that it prefaces the
full directory path when the default working directory is a
rooted logical (like SYS$HELP).
Reference:
CFS.40440
ECO I 01-May-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE
Problem:
FTP server no longer recognizes the UCX$FTP_NO_VERSION
system logical.
Solution:
Restore the 'noversion' check in the 'nlist' routine which
was inadvertantly omitted when that routine was re-written.
Reference:
CFS.40617
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO J 15-Jul-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE
Problem:
The FTP 'dir' command fails to display any files if there
happens to be a protected file in the same directory.
Solution:
The 'list()' function has been modified to check the iosb
for a SS$_NOPRIV error when QIO done to the file.
Reference:
CFS.42791, CFS.42838, CFS.42230
Problem:
SYS$DISK gets redefined in the wrong table when doing
a 'cd' or 'SET DEF' command.
Solution:
'Cwd' has been modified so that the SYS$DISK redefinition
happens in the LNM$PROCESS table instead of LNM$DCL_LOGICAL.
Reference:
CFS.43063
ECO K 24-Jul-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPD.EXE
Problem:
Many channels to an anonymous logfile remain open even
after all of the server child processes go away.
Solution:
Make sure that the logfile only gets opened the first
time around.
Reference:
CFS.43581
ECO L 24-Aug-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE UCX V4.0-10L
Problem:
When setting the logical UCX$FTP_RAW_BINARY, a 'get' results
in a corrupted file with what appears to be FDL information
at the beginning of the file.
Solution:
An editing error in 'send_vms_plus_bin' has been fixed.
Reference:
CFS.43850
Problem:
A 'dir' command fails when a remote node is specified using
DECnet syntax (FTP> dir node::[dir]).
Solution:
The 'list' routine has been modified to use RMS fields for
the nodename and for setting the 'RemoteDecnetNode' flag.
Reference:
CFS.43772
ECO M 04-OCT-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$FTPC.EXE UCX V4.0-10M
Problem:
Memory creep occurs when ls and dir commands are issued.
Repeated FTP ls and dir commands use virtual memory and
do not return it until the FTP connection is broken and
the server child process exits.
Solution:
Insure that LIB$FREE_VM is called with the same memory
address as LIB$GET_VM and remove some calls to malloc() and
alloc() that lead to large memory creep. The following
memory creep problems have also been fixed.
1. In the CleanUp() routine, LIB$FREE_VM() is being invoked
with the address of the address of the buffer and not
the address of the buffer. This causes LIB$FREE_VM() to
fail because LIB$FREE_VM() status is never checked.
2. ConvertToSpaces() is allocating 80 bytes every time it
is called, and when a user issues a "dir" command it is
called a lot. ConvertToSpaces() has been updated to use
static memory and the logic has been updated to be more
straight forward and efficient. GetProtection() has
also been modified because it allocates 50 bytes each
time it is invoked. Memory cleanup in is also done in
the GetLocalDefault() routine.
NOTE:
In the future all calls to malloc() and calloc() should be
removed. There is still memory creep in this demon child
program but this kit only includes fixes for the biggest
problems and the ones a user could see the most.
Reference:
CFS.45158
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 LPD Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 15-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$LPD_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$LPD_SMB.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$LPD_RCV.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$LPQ.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$LPRM.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$LPRSETUP.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$TELNETSYM.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
When running on a system with Word Perfect queues that have
not been de-integrated, the symbiont has problems.
Solution:
Spot the problem and signal in the log and on the OPCOM that
Word Perfect queues must be de-integrated for UCX LPD to
run.
Reference:
CFS.33189
Problem:
With inbound LPD jobs, the /DELETE that the LPD symbiont
uses when it submits the job to the target print queue
causes problems if that print queue expects the file not to
be printed with the /DELETE qualifier. For example, one
system had a custom symbiont running in the target queue
that passed the file on to another queue.
Solution:
A new "nd" flag field has been added to printcap. If the
"nd" field is present for a printcap entry, UCX$LPD_QUEUE
will submit the job without the /DELETE qualifier. The "nd"
field is a boolean field (like the "pa" field) in that it
has no value. If inbound jobs for a particular printcap
entry should be submitted as /NODELETE, use the "nd" field
as in this example:
BOGUS_P_ND|bogus_p_nd:\
:lf=/SYS$SPECIFIC/UCX_LPD/BOGUS_P_ND.LOG:\
:lp=SOME_PRINTER:\
:nd:\
:sd=/SYS$SPECIFIC/UCX_LPD/BOGUS_P_ND:
If inbound jobs for a particular printcap entry should be
submitted the "normal" way (i.e., /DELETE), there should be
no "nd" field in the printcap entry. For example:
BOGUS_P_ND|bogus_p_nd:\
:lf=/SYS$SPECIFIC/UCX_LPD/BOGUS_P_ND.LOG:\
:lp=SOME_PRINTER:\
:sd=/SYS$SPECIFIC/UCX_LPD/BOGUS_P_ND:
LPRSETUP will create by default a printcap entry with no
"nd" field. (The default is /DELETE.)
Problem:
No support exists for inbound LPD jobs with 'v' (Raster
file) control card.
Solution:
Handle it like an 'x' (i.e., binary file).
Reference:
CFS.35679
Problem:
One PC LPD client implementation "probes" the LPD server
when the PC user configures an LPD client printer to validate
the remote printer. When the printer is configured, the LPD
client connects to the LPD server and issues a "print a
job" command to the server for the LPD queue.
If the server replies successfully, the LPD client sends an
"abort job" command and waits for the ACK before releasing
the link. The UCX LPD server is not ACKing the "abort job"
command. It is simply disconnecting the link. This is
causing the PC LPD client to fail the LPD configuration for
the user.
Solution:
Handle the abort job like a NOOP. ACK it, but keep the link
up and wait for other side to disconnect or send another
command.
Reference:
CFS.36109
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO B 01-APR-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TELNETSYM.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
The temporary file created by UCX$TELNETSYM.EXE is not
deleted after it is used to relay a job to an LPD queue.
Solution:
Create the relay Q temp file with the file owner UIC
matching the UIC of the user who started the print job.
References:
CFS.36887, CFS.39480
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO C 10-AUG-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TELNETSYM.EXE
Problems:
1. When creating a temporary relay file with a NULL byte
somewhere in one of the data records, every thing after
the NULL byte in the record is being ignored. The NULL
byte is being interpreted by fprintf as EOR. By
changing from fprintf to fwrite a specific buffer length
can be written to the temporary file.
2. A problem has been encountered where all threads being
handled by TNS will hang when one thread is waiting
for a connection to a remote printer. When an attempt
is made to connect to the remote printer and the
connection cannot be established (e.g., the printer is
turned off), all the queues being handled by that TNS
process hang. The connection that was previously made
with a sync QIOW is now made with an async QIO with an
AST.
Solution:
1. Use fwrite() in place of fprintf() when writing to the
relay temporary file.
2. In open_socket issue non-blocking QIO specifying AST
open_socket_ast().
References:
1. CFS.41468
2. CFS.42955
ECO D 15-AUG-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$LPD_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
Problem:
If the spool area on remote host gets filled up (even
temporarily) and the remote host disconnects the link, LPD
fails to delete and close properly the temporary files in
the outgoing queue spool directory thus causing "disk space
leak".
Solution:
Include a short pause between file closure and retry initiation
in order to synchronize the process.
Reference:
CFS.43361
ECO E 24-SEP-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$LPD_SHR.EXE UCX 4.0-10E
Problem:
A general problem with LPD client printing of large jobs
exists. It consumes a lot of time in case of large files.
Solution:
Change the order of handling. First read the file and then
connect to the LPD server (when file size is available).
Reference:
CFS.44328
Images:
UCX$LPD_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
Problem:
When printing to a remote LPD queue with the /SETUP
qualifier, multiple line setup is all sent as a single line
with no line separators.
Solution:
After every setup module line read from the device
control library and add LF to the stream.
Reference:
CFS.36714
ECO 4 updates:
--------------
ECO F 23-OCT-1996
Images:
UCX$LPD_SMB.EXE
Problem:
The "unexpected symbiont termination" message is
displayed when a symbiont exits before the queue
manager has processed the stop/queue acknowledgment
for every queue managed by the symbiont.
Solution:
Include a pause before the exit from the symbiont.
Reference:
CFS.43436
ECO G 29-OCT-1996
Images:
UCX$LPD_SHR.EXE
Problem:
When a 0 block job is submitted in an outbound
bound LPD queue (ACCHPL5S), the above error occurs
and the LPD retry mechanism requeues the job.
Solution:
Show the error but do not retry the job.
Reference:
CFS.45415
Images:
UCX$LPD_SHR.EXE
Problem:
LPD printing causes leftover and reused DFA and CFA files.
Solution:
Always create a new version of the DFA/CFA file.
Reference:
CFS.44820
Image:
UCX$LPD_SHR.EXE
Problem:
A job stays forever in the "processing" state in the
UCX$LPD_QUEUE, so successive jobs for other printers can
not be printed.
Solution:
An approximated simulation shows that the symbiont
is trying to read data from the socket using recv(),
but if no data is available at the socket, the receive
call waits for data to arrive (may wait forever).
To solve the problem a select() is used to check if the
socket is ready to be read. The timeout value is taken
from the logical UCX$LPD_RETRY_INTERVAL.
Reference:
CFS.43801
ECO H 21-NOV-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$LPD_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10H
Problem:
A print job sent from a UNIX machine through an OpenVMS
machine to another a UNIX machine will not print.
Solution:
The receive job subcommand 'receive data file' is
constructed by using the file name that is the result of
FIND_FILE on the spool directory. The file name is thus a
valid OpenVMS name which does not match the file name that is
specified in the control file. The solution is to open the
control file, extract the parameter of the 'H' card and use
it to construct the file name.
Reference:
CFS.40779
Problem:
Requests have been made for the ability to print PCL
files without adding the "LF" after the setup module.
Solution:
Support has been added for the use of the qualifier /PASSALL
with the PRINT command to suppress the addition of "LF" to
the setup module.
Reference:
CFS.45573
ECO I 8-JAN-1997 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$LPD_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10I
Problem:
Unexpected timeouts occur on queues assigned to regular
printers. The timeouts cause the current job to be aborted
and put on holding for retry later.
Solution:
The function noresponse() has been modified so that
select() (and thus the timeouts) will be applied only when
the queue is UCX$LPD_QUEUE.
References:
CFS.43801, CFS 45791
ECO J 24-JAN-1997 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$TELNETSYM.EXE UCX V4.0-10J
Problem:
The first job goes through fine but the second one hangs
(The queue stalls and stays that way). This only happens if
the UCX$TELNETSYM_IDLE_TIMEOUT logical is defined. (It was
introduced in ECO 3.)
Solution:
Fixed.
References:
CFS.47807, CFS.47987
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 SMTP Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 08-Nov-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$SMTP_MAILSHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
UCX$SMTP_RECEIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
UCX$SMTP_SYMBIONT.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
UCX$SMTP_PARSESHR_TV.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
UCX$UUENCODE.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
UCX$UUDECODE.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
IPC's select() does not work correctly. This component is
linked against the IPC object library thereby requiring a
relink to pick up the correction.
Solution:
Relink.
*** NOTE: THE ABOVE IMAGE(S) ARE INCLUDED IN THE SECOND PASS
UCX V4.0-10 SSB KIT ***
ECO B 14-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$SMTP_MAILSHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$SMTP_RECEIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$SMTP_SYMBIONT.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$SMTP_PARSESHR_TV.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$UUENCODE.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
UCX$UUDECODE.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
ANAL MAIL will not find the files for any of the queue
entries and will delete the queue entries one by one.
Later, on the pass where it is looking for orphaned control
files, it would find all the files that belonged to the
queue entries that were just deleted and submit them. If it
had not deleted the jobs, it would not need to requeue them.
The problem happened only where user disks were defined as
concealed logical names.
Solution:
Corrected.
References:
CFS.34311, CFS.33772
Problem:
Incorrect data appears in one particular message in the log.
Solution:
Corrected.
References:
CFS.34311, CFS.33772
Problem:
ANAL MAIL/DELETE will select some files to delete and some
not to delete, regardless of the value of the BEFORE=time.
In some cases, files created almost at the same time are
processed while one is deleted and another is not deleted.
The creation dates on the files are both well after the
time in the /BEFORE.
Solution:
The OpenVMS date comparison routine has been corrected.
References:
CFS.34311, CFS.33772
Problem:
Sometimes ANAL MAIL will submit a new entry for every entry
that is already in the queue resulting in two entries for
each file.
Solution:
Clean up the GETQUIW system service context at the beginning
of each ANAL MAIL command with a call to GETQUIW with a
CANCEL_OPERATION function code.
Problem:
When ANAL MAIL runs on a system with much SMTP activity, it
often incorrectly performs files/queue entries created when
the ANAL MAIL command is processing. Sometimes it will
mistakenly think that it has an orphaned control file (for
example, a control file with no matching queue entry) and
will submit the control file to the queue resulting in the
same control file being submitted to the queue twice. Other
times it will think it found a queue entry with no
corresponding control file and will delete the queue entry
when, in fact, a corresponding control file actually exists.
This results in an orphaned control file.
Solution:
Corrected.
Reference:
CFS.34311
Problem:
When ANAL MAIL deletes a control file, the corresponding
_TEXT file (if any) is not deleted.
Solution:
Corrected.
Reference:
CFS.34311
Problem:
If a file with the extension .UCX_nodename (where "nodename"
is the system's SCSNODENAME) appears in a users mail
directory, ANAL MAIL takes it be a control file even if it
is not.
Solution:
A search string that uses trap for
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%_*.UCX_nodename rather than just
*.UCX_nodename has been created.
Reference:
CFS.34311
Problem:
Double spacing of lines in SMTP logs occurs.
Solution:
Corrected.
Problem:
When running on a system with Word Perfect queues that have
not been de-integrated, the symbiont has problems.
Solution:
Spot the problem and signal in the log and on the OPCOM that
Word Perfect queues must be de-integrated for UCX SMTP to run.
Reference:
CFS.34311
Problem:
When bouncing a mail because a mail loop is detected (for
example, maximum hop count is exceeded), the symbiont leaves
the control file for the mail being bounced as a stray.
Solution:
Corrected.
Reference:
CFS.32922
Problem:
A bounced mail message coming into a UCX SMTP system (for
example, a local user sends mail to a remote system that
cannot deliver it and bounces it back) is sometimes
undeliverable because the SMTP symbiont thinks it has too
many RFC Received: headers. The symbiont signals that the
maximum number of hops is exceeded. A routine in receiver
to parse out headers of the incoming mail sometimes mistakes
the Received: RFC headers from the "Text of unsent message"
section of the incoming bounced mail for RFC headers of the
bounced mail itself. The problem occurs if the sum of the
headers for the incoming bounced mail and those that appear
in the text of the bounced mail exceed the maximum hop
count.
Solution:
Corrected The receiver has been corrected so that it will
not miss the blank line at the end of the RFC headers of the
mail and start looking into the text of the mail for
Received headers.
Reference:
CFS.32922
Problem:
Diagnosing receiver and symbiont problems that occur
periodically but are not reproducable at will requires that
full diagnostics are turned off for the component being
looked at (receiver or symbiont). This causes the log
file(s) to grow large and slows down everything with all the
extra time spent writing to the log files.
Solution:
The new "snapshot" logging capability for the receiver and
symbiont allows the system to run with full diagnostics
turned on but only write the diagnostics to the log file if
an error is signaled. This saves disk space and allows the
receiver and/or symbiont to run at a normal speed. As each
line of diagnostic text is generated, it is saved in an
internal "snapshot" buffer of a size specified by a snapshot
logical rather than to the disk. The buffer is "circular"
in that once it fills up, new lines of text simply start to
overwrite the old data already there. This provides an
up-to-date snapshot of the last lines of diagnostic text.
There are two logicals for turning this feature on. One for
the receiver, UCX$SMTP_SYMB_SNAPSHOT_BLOCKS, and one for the
symbiont, UCX$SMTP_RECV_SNAPSHOT_BLOCKS. The value of these
logicals is the size of the snapshot buffer in OpenVMS
blocks (1 block being 512 bytes). When turning this feature
on, definition of the other SMTP diagnostic logicals that
tell UCX SMTP what types of logging are necessary are
required. (For example, for the symbiont, it is still
necessary to define the UCX$SMTP_LOG_LEVEL to 5.) Two
examples of setting up symbiont and receiver snapshot
logicals follow.
This example sets the log level to 5 and turns on snapshot
logging for the SMTP symbiont with a snapshot buffer of 200
blocks.
$ DEFINE/SYSTEM UCX$SMTP_LOG_LEVEL 5
$ DEFINE/SYSTEM UCX$SMTP_SYMB_SNAPSHOT_BLOCKS 200
This example sets all the receiver diagnostics on and turns
on snapshot logging for the receiver with a snapshot buffer
of 200 blocks:
$ DEFINE/SYSTEM UCX$SMTP_RECV_DEBUG 1
$ DEFINE/SYSTEM UCX$SMTP_RECV_TRACE 1
$ DEFINE/SYSTEM UCX$SMTP_RECV_SNAPSHOT_BLOCKS 200
Problem:
If bounced mail comes into the system and cannot be
delivered, it is left as a stray control file.
Solution:
Send the bounced mail to the local postmaster account,
UCX_SMTP.
Reference:
CFS.32922
Problem:
Bounced mail generated by the UCX SMTP symbiont does not
have a To: RFC header.
Solution:
Corrected.
Problem:
If the symbiont cannot deliver a mail and cannot bounce it, it
leaves the bounced mail control file as a stray control file.
Solution:
If the software can neither deliver nor bounce mail, then
deliver the mail to the local postmaster account -
UCX_SMTP. Only if the mail cannot be delivered to the local
postmaster account is a stray control file left.
Reference:
CFS.32922
Problem:
When bouncing mail because the software has not been able to
send it and has requeued it repeatedly and can no longer
requeue it because the SMTP configuration maximum interval
for the mail has expired, the symbiont leaves the control
file for the mail being bounced as a stray.
Solution:
Corrected.
Reference:
CFS.32922
Problem:
If the symbiont encounters a network error sending an
outbound mail after it sends the MAIL FROM: command but
before it sends the RCPT TO: command, all remaining outbound
mail will cause an access violation in the symbiont and will
fail.
Solution:
Corrected.
Reference:
CFS.32922
Problem:
The UCX SMTP queue watcher program, UCX$RESTART_SMTPQ.COM,
does not support multiple execution queue setups.
Solution:
UCX$RESTART_SMTPQ.COM now supports multiple execution queue
setups up to nine execution queues (i.e., UCX SET CONFIG
/QUEUE=9.).
Reference:
CFS.34311
Problem:
The symbiont code has mechanisms to find memory leaks but no
mechanism to find event flag leaks.
Solution:
The symbiont has diagnostics to dump the number of spare
event flags (as returned by LIB$GET_EF) at certain key
points in the code to help find event flag leaks. To turn
them on, enter the following:
$ DEFINE/SYSTEM UCX$SMTP_LOG_EFS 1
$ UCX STOP MAIL
$ UCX START MAIL
Note: Numerous users were reporting an insufficient event
flags (INSEF) error being signaled in their symbiont logs
after which no inbound mail could be delivered. This was
the reason for creating the new event flag leak diagnostics.
The problem was caused because the users on these systems
had their mail forwarded to PCSA% addresses and there is an
event flag leak in the PCSA MAIL$PROTOCOL code. The problem
is *NOT* a UCX problem. The problem has been reported to
the engineering team responsible for the PCSA MAIL$PROTOCOL
code.
Problem:
Users with 8-bit ASCII characters in their username see the
characters changed by UCX SMTP before they get sent out to
their final destination. The UCX SMTP code sets the high
order bit to 0 even if the SMTP CONFIG /OPTION=EIGHT is set.
Solution:
UCX SMTP will not truncate 8-bit ASCII characters in the personal
name if the SMTP CONFIG/OPTION=EIGHT is set.
Problem:
UCX SMTP does not work correctly on multi-homed hosts.
Solution:
This problem has been corrected. Bind to INADDR_ANY rather
than to a particular one of the local addresses that gets
into the hostent structure for the local host.
Reference:
Numerous reports of problems
ECO 2 updates:
--------------
ECO C 19-Jun-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$SMTP_MAILSHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
UCX$SMTP_RECEIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
UCX$SMTP_SYMBIONT.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
UCX$SMTP_PARSESHR_TV.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
UCX$UUENCODE.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
UCX$UUDECODE.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problem:
Sometimes local addresses in SMTP distribution files are not
recognized as such.
Solution:
Corrected.
Problem:
On clusters, SMTP distribution files must be duplicated in each
SYS$SPECIFIC:[UCX_SMTP] directory.
Solution:
UCX SMTP now supports a new system logical for cluster
common storage - UCX$SMTP_COMMON. This logical may be
defined by the system manager before UCX SMTP startup to
point to a single directory or a directory search list. If
it is defined, UCX SMTP looks for its .DIS files in the
directory or directories to which it points. To get all of
the UCX SMTP cluster nodes to look in the same place, define
the logical to point to a directory visible to all the
nodes. It is the system manager's responsibility to define
this logical and to create the directory and move the .DIS
files there.
The UCX$SMTP_COMMON logical replaces the
UCX$SMTP_DIS_DIRECTORY logical.
If UCX$SMTP_COMMON is not defined, UCX SMTP looks for .DIS
files in SYS$SPECIFIC:[UCX_SMTP].
This logical may be a search list. The UCX SMTP should check
the the clusterwide directory first and
SYS$SPECIFIC:[UCX_SMTP] second. For example:
$ DEFINE/SYSTEM UCX$SMTP_COMMON WORKDISK:[SMTP_DIS], -
SYS$SPECIFIC:[UCX_SMTP]
Remember, UCX SMTP .DIS files must be world readable or owned by
UCX_SMTP.
Reference:
CFS.37284
Problem:
The conventional exclamation point to start a comment is not
supported in SMTP distribution files.
Solution:
An exclamation point (!) can now be used for a comment in an SMTP
distribution file with the restriction that it must be the first
character of the line. No leading white space is allowed.
Problem:
UCX SMTP has a rigid method of deciding that a domain is
local. There is no way to configure UCX SMTP to recognize as
local any domain from a list of domains specified by the
system manager.
Solution:
The new local alias feature allows the system manager to
define a list of domains that UCX SMTP interprets as local.
If it sees mail to any one of the domains specified as local
aliases, it delivers the mail on the local system via
callable OpenVMS mail rather than forwarding it on to
another system via the SMTP protocol.
To define the local aliases, simply create a file called
UCX$SMTP_LOCAL_ALIASES.TXT. The file can either be placed
in the UCX$SMTP_COMMON directory or, if UCX$SMTP_COMMON is
not defined, the file can be placed in
SYS$SPECIFIC:[UCX_SMTP]. Each line in the file is one
domain that UCX SMTP should recognize as local. For
example:
$ SET DEF UCX$SMTP_COMMON
$ CREATE UCX$SMTP_LOCAL_ALIASES.TXT
!
! This is a comment.
alias1.mydomain.edu
alias2.mydomain.edu
alias3.mydomain.edu
$ @SYS$MANAGER:UCX$SMTP_SHUTDOWN.COM
$ @SYS$MANAGER:UCX$SMTP_STARTUP.COM
The above example tells UCX SMTP to recognize
"alias1.mydomain.com", "alias2.mydomain.com" and
"alias3.mydomain.com" as local.
The entries in the local alias file must adhere to the
following syntax rules:
- There may be only one alias entry per line.
- Comments follow the same rules of SMTP .DIS files. The
comment character (1) must appear in the first column.
- UCX SMTP does not append the local domain name to an
entry that it reads without a period (.) in it. For
example, if your local domain is "mydomain.com" and
you want "alias1.mydomain.com" to be recognized as
local, "alias1.mydomain.com" must be entered into the
local alias file. Entering "alias1" is not
sufficient.
Other miscellaneous notes:
- When UCX SMTP compares entries in the local alias file
with the domain of an address, it does so case
insensitively. For example, if the local alias file
contains "alias1.mydomain.edu" and mail is sent to
"ALIAS1.MYDOMAIN.EDU", a match occurs and the mail is
considered local.
- The file protection must be W:RE.
- There is a maximum of 255 aliases each of which can be
a maximum of 64 characters long.
- After changing the local alias file, UCX SMTP must be
stopped and restarted for the changes to take effect.
References:
Numerous complaints
Problem:
Mail with a Return-Path with a quoted local part that needs
to be rejected is sometimes sent to the local postmaster
when it should be sent to the original sender.
Solution:
Corrected.
Problem:
If a user forwards mail via SMTP to themselves on the local
host, the symbiont loops, crashes, and creates a corrupt
control file.
Solution:
Detect this situation as a mail loop and reject the mail.
Problem:
If the MX lookup for the alternate gateway is not resolvable
when the SMTP symbiont process is started (i.e., when UCX
START MAIL is done) one must wait until it is resolvable and
stop and restart the symbiont to send mail through the
alternate gateway.
Solution:
If an alternate gateway has been configured and the MX
lookup for the gateway is not resolvable at symbiont startup
time, the symbiont tries the MX lookup for the alternate
gateway every time it sends outbound mail.
Problem:
If the MX records for the alternate gateway change, the
symbiont process must be stopped and restarted for the
changes to take effect.
Solution:
The symbiont refreshes the MX records for the alternate
gateway every 24 hours.
Problem:
The SMTP receiver sometimes leaves stray control files of 0
blocks in the SMTP spooler directory if the SMTP dialog is
aborted at certain points.
Solution:
Corrected.
ECO 4 updates:
--------------
ECO D 27-Nov-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$SMTP_MAILSHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
UCX$SMTP_RECEIVER.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
UCX$SMTP_SYMBIONT.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
UCX$SMTP_PARSESHR.EXE (VAX) UCX V4.0-10D
UCX$SMTP_PARSESHR_TV.EXE (AXP) UCX V4.0-10D
UCX$UUENCODE.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
UCX$UUDECODE.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
Problem:
Symbiont processes sometimes leaves stray BG devices
Solution:
Fixed.
Reference:
CFS.42659
Problem:
The SMTP receiver ACCVIOs if mail comes from a host that
has more than 20 IP addresses.
Solution:
Increase the size of the buffer and add bounds checking.
Problem:
Inbound mail from SMTP that is being delivered to users with
their mail forwarded to another foreign transport (e.g.,
xyz%) will get bounced.
Solution:
Fixed.
Reference:
Internal report
Problem:
An ACCVIO occurs during delivery of local mail on certain
later versions of OpenVMS.
Solution:
Fixed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 RCP Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A 19-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RCP.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Problem:
Occasionally (or consistently from some hosts), RCP copies
files incompletely. In most of these instances, the
'NONAME-E-MESSAGE' error message is displayed.
Solution:
Perform 'blocked' reads on the server side so that the
receive does not complete prematurely. Also, enhance
performance by increasing the buffer size from 512 to 16384.
As a result, the speed of the copy increased greatly.
Reference:
CFS.37432
ECO B 26-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RCP.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Problem:
When a remote user runs out of diskquota, invocation of RCP
to copy a file to that remote host causes the system to hang
or give ambiguous messages.
Solution:
Delay sending an acknowledgment until the server can
create/open the file for write operations. In cases where
failures occur because of disk quota limitations, unusual
errors can occur, especially when a request comes from
non-UCX clients. If a fatal error occurs under those
conditions, exit without continuing with execution.
Reference:
CFS.37432
ECO C 29-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RCP.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Problem:
More problems are created when a remote user runs out of
diskquota and the RCP connection is not terminated.
Solution:
When there is enough disk quota to open/create the file but
not enough quota to complete all the writes, the software
must exit after sending an error message.
Reference:
CFS.37432
ECO 4 updates:
--------------
ECO D 27-AUG-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RCP.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
Problem:
PATHWORKS RCP will not work with UCX RCP. In the first
message received on the RSH port from PATHWORKS, instead of
sending a NULL terminated string containing "\0" (HEX 0 ==
ASCII NULL), PATHWORKS sends a NULL terminated string
containing "0" (HEX 30 == ASCII 0).
Solution:
Read read-and-throw-away the "0" (HEX 30 == ASCII 0).
Reference:
CFS.38780
ECO E 27-SEP-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RCP.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
Problem:
RCP does not handle user names 12 bytes in length.
Solution:
Get_userinfo() has been modified to treat the first
encountered blank (hex 20) or null byte (HEX 0) as the
username delimiter as returned by SYS$GETJPIW().
Reference:
CFS.45129
ECO F 30-OCT-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RCP.EXE UCX V4.0-10F
Problem:
Concurrent RCP commands return the wrong file content.
With two get operations, the first copy gets the second
file and the second copy gets the first file.
Solution:
The first RCP converts the file to stream, file RCP_CVT.pid#1.
The second RCP converts its file to stream, file RCP_CVT.pid#2.
If the two PIDs are the same, the stack local variable is
removed and the global one is used.
Reference:
CFS.43410
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corrections for Digital TCP/IP Services V4.0 RPC Images
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ECO 1 updates:
--------------
ECO A Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RPCXDR_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10A
Libraries:
UCX$RPCXDR.OLB
Problem:
The xdr_double_T() routine [IEEE double precision floating]
inadvertently uses a call to XDR_GETLONG() and XDR_PUTLONG()
when fetching the double floating value. It should be using
two XDR_GETLONG()s.
Solution:
Change the code accordingly.
Reference:
CFS.34466
Problem:
DigitalC V5.2 includes support for the FD_SET macros.
Solution:
Change rpc/types.h to sense and set the appropriate symbol
to prevent the conflict.
ECO B 28-Dec-1995 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RPCXDR_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10B
Libraries:
UCX$RPCXDR.OLB
Problem:
Direct and indirect calls to pmap_unset() fail to remove
registrations.
Solution:
The call to get the process ID fails to initialize the
PID to zero. The result is an invalid PID in the call
to the portmapper, thereby failing to remove the entry.
Reference:
CFS.36309
Problem:
G Floating is not properly supported.
Solution:
The invalid exponent bias defined for the G_Floating
data type has been corrected.
Reference:
CFS.35946
ECO C 19-Feb-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RPCXDR_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10C
Libraries:
None.
Problem:
More contemporary versions of the DECC header library include
the typedef of u_int while older versions do not. This causes
compilation problems with DECC versions after V5.0.
Solution:
Work with the DECC header file by sensing and defining
__U_INT and u_int in rpc/types.h as appropriate.
Reference:
CFS.38074
ECO 3 updates:
--------------
ECO D 26-Apr-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RPCXDR_SHR.EXE UCX V4.0-10D
Problem:
Errors in the XDR routines `xdr_double_D()' and `xdr_double_G()'
result in decoding problems from IEEE `double_T()' format as
exchanged on the network.
Solution:
Encode and decode have been debugged to ensure that the
appropriate bits are being reformatted correctly.
Reference:
CFS.40529
ECO E 15-Aug-1996 Alpha and VAX
Images:
UCX$RPCGEN.EXE UCX V4.0-10E
Problem:
The RPCGEN /DEFINE qualifier causes an ACCVIO.
Solution:
Parseargs() has been modified so that it will not uppercase
the /DEFINE string (which is the wrong buffer and causes the
ACCVIO). CLI_GET_VALUE() has been changed to require
starting and ending quotes for quoted string status. If
quoted string status exists, the stripped quotes are
restored in the define string.
Reference:
CFS.43990
INSTALLATION NOTES:
In order for the corrections in this kit to take effect, the system
must be rebooted. If the system is a member of a VMScluster, the
entire cluster should be rebooted.
REFERENCES:
IBM is a registered trademark of International Business Machines.
WordPerfect is a trademark of WordPerfect Corp.
This patch can be found at any of these sites:
Colorado Site
Georgia Site
Files on this server are as follows:
dec-axpvms-ucxeco_a_40_5-v0500--4.README
dec-axpvms-ucxeco_a_40_5-v0500--4.CHKSUM
dec-axpvms-ucxeco_a_40_5-v0500--4.pcsi-dcx_axpexe
dec-axpvms-ucxeco_a_40_5-v0500--4_cvr.txt
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