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OpenVMS VAXACRT09_071 VAX V7.1 DEC C RTL ECO Summary

TITLE: OpenVMS VAXACRT09_071 VAX V7.1 DEC C RTL ECO Summary Modification Date: 19-OCT-1999 Modification Type: Documentation Note Added. Please see Kit Dependencies section. 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) Compaq Computer Corporation 1997, 1999. All rights reserved. PRODUCT: OpenVMS VAX COMPONENT: DEC C RTL - DECC$SHR.EXE CRTLMSGDEF.OBJ (Updates STARLET.OLB) CRTL.OBJ (Updates STARLET.OLB) ACRT$ECO_DROP.COM (If desired, this command file may be used to remove the ECO and restore the original files and libraries.) SOURCE: Compaq Computer Corporation ECO INFORMATION: ECO Kit Name: VAXACRT09_071 ECO Kits Superseded by This ECO Kit: VAXACRT08_071 VAXACRT07_071 VAXACRT06_071 VAXCRTL05_071 VAXACRT04_071 VAXACRT03_071 VAXACRT02_071 VAXACRT01_071 ECO Kit Approximate Size: 4086 Blocks Kit Applies To: OpenVMS VAX V7.1 System/Cluster Reboot Necessary: Yes Rolling Reboot Supported: Yes Installation Rating: INSTALL_3 3 - To be installed on all systems running the listed versions of OpenVMS which are experiencing the problems described. Kit Dependencies: The following remedial kit(s) must be installed BEFORE installation of this kit: VAXY2K01_071 NOTE: If the VAXY2K01_071 ECO kit is installed after the installation of this kit, VAXACRT09_071, the DEC C Run Time Library will be regressed. If this occurs, this VAXACRT09_071 kit will have to be installed again. To ensure that the most recent OpenVMS DEC C RTL ECO kit is installed on the system, use $ANALYZE/IMAGE to check the image id for DECC$SHR.EXE. For DECC$SHR.EXE in VAXACRT09_071, the image id is X7.1-2. In order to receive all the corrections listed in this kit, the following remedial kits should also be installed: None ECO KIT SUMMARY: An ECO kit exists for DEC C Run-Time Library on OpenVMS VAX V7.1. This kit addresses the following problems: PROBLEMS ADDRESSED IN VAXACRT09_071 KIT o getenv() function looks for CLI symbol only in user mode The getenv() function has been corrected to check for a Command Line Interpreter (CLI) symbol only when called in user access mode. While DEC C RTL is a user-mode run time library, a decision was made to correct getenv() in order to make the library more robust. The reason for this change is because calling the CLI from within exec or kernel mode may result in an access violation. With this fix, when called from inner access mode, the getenv() function will search only the C environment list and OpenVMS logical names. This fix does not mean, however, that the user-mode only restriction was lifted. It is still unsupported to call the DEC C RTL functions, including getenv(), in any access mode other than in user-mode. o strptime() function made XPG5-compliant The strptime() function has been modified to comply with X/Open CAE Specification System Interfaces and Headers Issue 5 (commonly known as XPG5). In XPG5, how the strptime() function processes the "%y" directive was changed for a two-digit year within the century, if no century is specified. According to XPG5, for the "%y" directive, when a century is not otherwise specified, values in the range 69-99 refer to years in the twentieth century (1969 to 1999 inclusive), while values in the range 00-68 refer to years in the twenty-first century (2000 to 2068 inclusive). Essentially, for the "%y" directive, strptime() became a "pivoting" function with 69 being a pivoting year. Before this change, the strptime() function was always interpreting a two-digit year with no century as a year within the twentieth century. With the current ECO kit, XPG5-compliant strptime() becomes a default strptime() function in the DEC C RTL. However, for compatibility reasons, the previous "non-pivoting" XPG4-compliant strptime() function was retained. The "pivoting" is controlled by the DECC$XPG4_STRPTIME logical name. Defining this logical name prior to invoking the application (any equivalence string) will cause the DEC C RTL to use the "non-pivoting" flavor of strptime(). Also, "non-pivoting" strptime() can be called directly as the decc$strptime_xpg4() function. While there is an easy way to disable "pivoting" by just defining a logical name, you should be aware that if the application ceases to work correctly due to the change in the strptime() function, it almost certainly means that there is a Y2K problem in the application. Y2K-safe applications should not be affected by the change in strptime(). o stat() function processes top-level directory of concealed device The stat() function has been corrected to process file specifications such as "foo:[000000]", where foo is defined as a concealed device like the following: $ define/trans=(conc) foo device:[bar.] Prior to this fix, the stat() function would fail for such a file specification with errno set to ENOENT (No such file or directory). o system() function always returns correct status Both flavors of the system() function were corrected to ensure that the function always returns the correct status. The POSIX-compliant system() function has been corrected to always return a status corresponding to the signal, which terminated the child process if the child process was terminated due to receiving a signal. Prior to this fix, there was a small timing window when the function could return the status corresponding to the child process completion code, even in the case when the child process was terminated by a signal. The Non-POSIX system() function has been corrected to always return the OpenVMS completion code of the child process. Prior to this fix, there was a small timing window when the function could return the status from LIB$SPAWN(), instead of the completion code of the child process. None of these problems were ever reported by a customer. o opendir() and readdir() functions process remote directory The opendir() and readdir() functions have been corrected to process directories on a remote node specified using the following DECnet file specification: nodename"username password"::device:[directory] Prior to this fix, opendir() could fail with errno set to ENOTDIR (Not a directory). In the case when opendir() could successfully open the directory, the readdir() function could return incorrect file names. o times() and clock() functions were made AST-reentrant The times() and clock() functions have been modified to be both thread-safe and AST-reentrant. Prior to this change, these functions belonged to the class of functions which are thread safe, but not AST-reentrant (see section 1.7.2 Multithread Restrictions in the DEC C RTL Reference Manual). The change in the reentrancy status of the times() and clock() functions will be reflected in the next release of the Manual. o stat() function no longer fails due to failure of mktime() function The stat() function no longer fails due to the failure of the mktime() function. It was reported that the stat() function fails for a file created on April 4th 1999 at 2:04 a.m. EST, which is the "missing hour" in the transition from standard to daylight saving time in the Eastern time zone. The problem was due to the failure of the mktime() function to process the "missing hour" (stat() calls mktime() to fill st_?time members of the stat structure with the UTC time). While the mktime() function was not fixed, the stat() function was corrected to handle the failure of mktime() and set st_?time fields correctly, even if mktime() fails. Note, that, strictly speaking, "missing hour" is an invalid input for mktime(): there is no such time as "April 4th 1999 2:04 a.m.", for example, in the Eastern time zone. Given the possibility of calling mktime() with an invalid time, the stat() function probably should not have used mktime() in the first place or at least should have been prepared for a mktime() failure. o select() function was made standard compliant The select() function has been corrected to return a failure status if either an invalid file descriptor or file descriptor not associated with a socket is found in one of the specified file descriptor sets. In the case of an invalid file descriptor, the select() function sets errno to EBADF. In case of a file descriptor not associated with a socket, the function sets errno to ENOTSOCK. Failure with errno set to EBADF is the standard requirement for the select() function. Failure with errno set to ENOTSOCK occurs because the select() function can currently operate only on sockets. Prior to this fix, the function was setting errno as described above, but otherwise was ignoring invalid file descriptors and file descriptors not associated with sockets. The old behavior can be requested by defining the logical name DECC$SELECT_IGNORES_INVALID_FD prior to invoking the application (any equivalence string). o "Y2038 bug" fixed The problem commonly known as the "Y2038 bug" has been fixed. The C run-time library time functions, which access the current time using the OpenVMS time functions, have been corrected to handle times after 19-Jan-2038 3:14:07. Data type time_t is defined on OpenVMS as an unsigned 32-bit integer. However, some of the functions which retrieve current time from the system and convert it to time_t format were using signed arithmetic. This fix affects the functions: o decc$fix_time() o time() o ftime() o gettimeofday() o getclock() With this fix, DEC C RTL time functions will handle times successfully until 07-Feb-2106 06:28:15. o Improved handling of low memory condition by printf() The printf() family of functions have been enhanced to perform better when the calling application has exhausted available memory. o Fixed access to files on UNIX over DECnet The file access functions have been corrected to process file names on UNIX systems over DECnet. The file name for a file on a UNIX system accessed over DECnet was being converted to uppercase, even when the name was enclosed in double quotes. This problem was introduced on OpenVMS V7.2 and also affects OpenVMS V7.1-2 and OpenVMS V7.2-1. File names of the form node::"dir/name" are now processed correctly. Problems addressed in VAXACRT08_071: o For DEC C Run-Time Library (RTL) functions, a call with a too long filename argument could result in an access violation. o After installing the VAXY2K01_071 kit, for an existing file, the open() function failed with errno EEXIST, when called with the O_EXEC flag, but without the O_CREAT flag. Prior to the VAXACRT02_071 ECO kit, the behavior was as if the open function was replacing the O_EXCL flag with the O_CREAT flag, if the former was specified alone so that the function was successfully opening an existing file when called with a single O_EXCL flag. The current kit restores this behavior. o One could possibly specify none, one or both options for MAP_SHARED/MAP_PRIVATE and MAP_FIXED/MAP_VARIABLE. However, the documentation (in both cases) states that you must specify only one of each of these options and also just one of MAP_FILE/MAP_ANONYMOUS (defaults to MAP_FILE if not specified at all as it is represented by a single bit in the flags parameter). Furthermore, a call to the munmap() function to unmap a PRIVATE section modifies errno, even though success is returned by the function. o The functions from the exec family of functions no longer forced activation on-disk images. The regression was introduced in the VAXACRT03_071 kit and occurred regardless of how the image file was specified in the call to the exec function. The problem prevented activation of installed images, because the explicit file version in the file spec prevented image activator from known-file lookups. As the result of this problem, the child process was always running an on-disk version of the image. If the image that was supposed to be executed by the child process was installed with privileges, the child process would not get expected privileges and would fail while attempting to perform an operation which required privileges provided by the installed image. o The Chown function changed the owner of a file to [-1,-1], when passed with owner and group arguments of -1. o The DCL Pn (P1, P2, etc.) parameters passed to a DCL child were uppercased. o A performance problem with the %d, %o, %x, %u and %c printf format specifiers occurred. Consequently, after installing several ECO kits, a regular job was taking about twice the normal time to complete. o After installing the VAXACRT06_071 ECO kit, a performance problem in UTC-based time functions was introduced. An application detected roughly an order of magnitude increase in elapsed time due to the decc$__utc_mktime CRTL function. This slowdown was attributed to the change done in thread local storage macros when these macros were made AST-safe. o EXEC functions failed with the errno set to ENOEXEC (exec format error) when requested to activate a shareable image. The regression was introduced in VAXACRT03_071 and the problem happened on OpenVMS V7.1 or higher, when using the DEC C RTL backport object library. o The mmap function was enhanced to accept an optional integer argument specifying additional flags to be passed to the SYS$CRMPSC system service for a MAP_SHARED request. Applications making use of an additional argument must be compiled with DEC C Version 6.0 or higher. The new signature of the mmap function is as follows: void mmap (void *addr, size_t len, int prot, int flags, int filedes, off_t off); (X/OPEN, POSIX) void mmap (void *addr, size_t len, int prot, int flags, int filedes, off_t off ...); (DEC C EXTENSION) Using the optional argument, the caller can create, for example, a system global section (SEC$M_SYSGBL bit) or permanent global section (SEC$M_PERM bit). Here, to create a system permanent global section, the caller can specify (SEC$M_SYSGBL | SEC$M_PERM) in the optional argument. The mmap function does not check or set any privileges. The caller's responsibility is to set appropriate privileges, such as the SYSGBL privilege for SEC$M_SYSGBL and PRMGBL for SEC$M_PERM, before calling mmap with the optional argument. o The DECC$FIX_TIME function could return a meaningless value and the caller had no way to check whether the function succeeded or not. The DEC C RTL Manual shipped with the DEC C V6.0 compiler indicates that the DECC$FIX_TIME function may fail as follows: Return Values x A longword containing the number of seconds since 00:00 January 1, 1970. (unsigned int)(-1) Indicates an error. Be aware, that a return value of (unsigned int)(-1) can also represent a valid date of Sun Feb 7 06:28:15 2106. Problems addressed in VAXACRT07_071: o Installation of the VAXACRT06_071 remedial kit failed due to a global symbol error. Problems addressed in VAXACRT06_071: o Internal testing revealed that on DIGITAL UNIX, the en_US.ISO8859-1 locale classifies the character (codepoint xff) as a print and graph character as it should be, while on OpenVMS this character does not belong to any character class. o Two new fcntl requests defined by X/Open and POSIX were implemented: #include #include #include int fcntl(int fildes, F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC); int fcntl(int fildes, F_GETFD); fcntl(fildes, F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC) sets the FD_CLOEXEC flag for a specified file descriptor. If the FD_CLOEXEC flag is set, the file descriptor is not passed to a child process spawned by one of the exec functions. In other words, the FD_CLOEXEC flag prevents normal inheritance of the open file descriptor by the child process. Fcntl(fildes, F_GETFD) returns flags associated with a specified file descriptor. If the FD_CLOEXEC flag was set, fcntl will return FD_CLOEXEC. o The ioctl fails with a "can't assign requested address" status when called with FIONREAD request code for a socket device. The cause of the failure is that the FIONREAD macro is defined differently in the header and in the header. The underlying UCX routine expects the value from the header. The ioctl function was fixed to call the UCX routine with the value of FIONREAD presented in the header. o The child process spawned by one of the functions from the exec family didn't inherit the file offset and file append mode from the parent as required by the X/Open specifications and the POSIX standard. To have this correction not break existing applications, the correct behavior of inheritance of the file offset and append mode by the child process must be enabled. This enabling is done by defining the logical name DECC$EXEC_FILEATTR_INHERITANCE (any equivalence string) prior to the first call to any function from the exec family. o With the retirement of the OpenVMS POSIX product, providing capabilities and interfaces defined by the POSIX standard becomes extremely important. Hence, the DEC C RTL is often perceived by customers as a "natural" replacement of the POSIX run-time environment on the OpenVMS system. This checkin adds to the DEC C RTL shm_open() and shm_unlink() shared memory functions. They are defined by the POSIX Realtime Extension (1003.1b-1993/1003.1i-1995) and X/Open CAE Specification, Issue 5. Both functions exist on OpenVMS POSIX and DIGITAL UNIX. With the new DEC C V5.7 compiler, an OpenVMS build of the CRTL facility fails on compilation of CRTL mapping tables: RTLENTRIES.C module. The failure is: $ CC/NOLIST/NOPREFIX/OBJECT=OBJ$:RTLENTRIES.OBJ - SRC$:RTLENTRIES.C CXXENTRY("__nw__xui", ANSI, ____, ____, ____, ____, ____, ____, ____, ____, ____), ^ %CC-W-TOOMANY, In the initializer for routine_names, there are 855 elements, which is 854 too many. The extra initializers will be ignored. o The system default (DEFMBXMXMSG SYSGEN parameter) was used for the mailbox maximum message size (maxmsg), while creating a mailbox associated with the pipe. Before this change, the maxmsg was set to 512, the value documented in the description of the pipe function in the DEC C Run-Time Library Reference Manual for OpenVMS. Since the read function transfers not more than maxmsg bytes from a pipe, this change broke applications relying on the 512-byte limit. o Functions lseek and fseek were fixed to position a fixed-length records file to the last written byte when SEEK_END is specified. Previously, the functions were positioning such a file to the end of the last fixed-length record, regardless of whether the last record contains a full amount of data or not. To have this correction not break existing applications, the new behavior must be enabled by defining the logical name DECC$FIXED_LENGTH_SEEK_TO_EOF (any equivalence string). o For an upgrade from OpenVMS V6.2 to V7.x, when writing a file with FORTRAN carriage control that was used with "ctx=nocvt" and "mrs=132", the C Run-Time Library (RTL) no longer generated a record on each call to the output CRTL function. Instead, the RTL accumulated the data until the maximum record size (132 bytes) was reached and then wrote everything as a single record. o A new function facilitating validation of a wide character was implemented, which has the following interface: int decc$validate_wchar(wchar_t wc); The decc$validate_wchar function returns 1 (one) if specified wide character is a valid wide character in the current program's locale and zero otherwise. Problems addressed in VAXCRTL05_071: o The cache of values introduced in the getenv function caused regressions to occur in numerous applications. The default has been changed from using the cache to only using the cache when a specific logical is set. This new logical, DECC$ENABLE_GETENV_CACHE, should be set prior to invoking an application whose performance depends on using the getenv cache. The logical DECC$DISABLE_GETENV_CACHE is no longer used. o Attempts to open a network mailbox fail. o A correction was made to the rewind function which now works correctly for a file opened using the append access mode. o The fread function no longer access violates when passed stdin. This error only occurred when the stdin file descriptor was a socket descriptor inherited from a parent C process. o The dup2 function would access violate when called with the second file descriptor larger than 256. o An ISV porting software to OpenVMS sought assistance in handling parameters being passed to the image when invoked as a foreign command. A new function has been added which gives an application control over how arguments to the image are obtained. The new function is specified as: int decc$$set_get_foreign(const char* image_name, const char* image_location, const char* routine_name) If this function is called prior to the C main program, the DEC C RTL will call this routine instead of LIB$GET_FOREIGN to obtain the parameters. o Performance improvements previously applied to only the sprintf function being called with a "%s" format specifier have now been made in all functions which use thread specific data. Applications which use DECthreads and the DEC C RTL may see significant performance improvements when calling functions which use thread specific data, such as those listed in section 1.7.1 of the reference manual. o Data inconsistencies occurred when the sprintf function was called by both an AST routine and the main program. o It was reported that the functions strtol, strtoul, wcstol, wcstoul, and the OpenVMS Alpha specific functions strtoq and strtouq do not consume the trailing digits after an overflow condition. This behavior is required by the ANSI standard. To have this correction not break existing applications, the correct behavior of consuming these characters must be enabled by defining the logical name DECC$STRTOL_ERANGE prior to the first call to any of these functions. Problems addressed in VAXACRT04_071: o The mmap function no longer fails if a file is opened with read access and the calling program has specified both the PROT_WRITE and MAP_PRIVATE flags. The correct behavior of using the MAP_PRIVATE flag is to disregard the access mode of the opened file. o The opendir function no longer fails if a file having the same name, but no extension, exists in the same directory as the directory being opened. Prior to this change, having an extensionless file in the same directory as the directory being opened would fail, even if the full name and extension was used in the opendir call. o Changes made in OpenVMS V7.0 have affected the processing of files having "FORTRAN Carriage Control" record attributes. The following changes were introduced in OpenVMS V7.0 and are repaired in this ECO kit: + The DEC C RTL now prepends (instead of appends) linefeed characters to records with the single-space carriage control. This was the behavior prior to OpenVMS V7.0. Prefixing this type of record with linefeeds is what RMS requires and allows overprinting to work better than when the linefeed was appended. The only known problem with the new version is that the carriage-control character is not generated after the last file record. This problem will be fixed in the next release of CRTL." o A regression was introduced in the VAXACRT03_071 ECO kit such that calls to the stat function which use the "DNA=STRING" parameter access violate. Calls to fopen may also access violate when the fopen function calls stat to determine if the file exists. Problems addressed in VAXACRT03_071: o Users have requested that kill support the POSIX semantics of "if the process id is negative but not -1, the signal will be sent to all processes whose group ID is equal to the absolute value of the process id, and for which the process has permission to send a signal." This has been added with the restrictions that the process is executing on the same node and does not have a SYSTEM UIC. The errno value is set to ESRCH if no processes are found which match the condition specified. o The performance of DEC C sprintf was three times slower than VAX C. An analysis of the printf engine resulted in changes which brings DEC C within 10% of VAX C. o The functions fopen and freopen were mapping invalid access modes to read mode. Invalid modes now cause errno to be set to EINVAL and the open call to fail. o The times function was changed in OpenVMS V7.0 to return the number of clock ticks since boot time. Performing year 2000 testing by setting the system time forward causes this return value to overflow. The times function has been changed to return the number of clock ticks since login time, which is less likely to overflow. o The lseek function may position incorrectly with repeated calls to seek in a file containing fixed length records of odd length. This problem does not occur with even length or variable length records. o Mailbox devices are record-oriented devices, except when created by the pipe function where they are opened as stream devices. Applications which use mailboxes can now force the library to treat all mailboxes as stream devices by creating an environment variable named DECC$MAILBOX_CTX_STM. o The runtime library has been corrected to treat UNIX directory specifications identically in each of the routines which accept a directory specification as a parameter. These runtime library functions are access, opendir, mkdir, and rmdir. Prior to this change, one could call opendir with "/dev/dir", but was forced to append ".dir" to this when calling the access function. o This ECO kit includes major performance improvements when using time-related functions along with Universal Coordinated Time. A cache of values has been added to the getenv function to avoid the library making repeated calls to translate a logical name, or to obtain a symbol value for environment variables which are not set. If your application makes direct calls to set logical names, this caching can be disabled by defining DECC$DISABLE_GETENV_CACHE prior to calling any runtime library functions. o The ANSI standard states that streams opened in update mode may read and write to the stream. It further states that reads must be followed by file positioning prior to writing to the stream. The problem corrected was that positioning functions would fail when the file was a terminal. Applications may now position such streams back to the beginning using either rewind or seek. o It was reported that opendir overflowed the stack when running in a threaded application. While correcting this problem, the opendir successful return value was changed from one to zero to align with with the X/Open Specifications. o A problem introduced in OpenVMS V7.1 causes the first record of a file to be overwritten when the file is opened in append mode. The correct behavior is that all write operations are done at the end of the file. o Porting code to OpenVMS is hampered by the difference between command procedures and executable images and the mechanisms necessary to invoke them. When passed the string "TEST", the exec functions now search for "TEST.", "TEST.EXE", and "TEST.COM". If found, it is executed as either an image or a command procedure, depending on information in the file header. o Several new universals have been added to the DECC$SHR image shipped with this ECO kit. The presence of these universals may affect application developers who compile using this image. If a developer begins to get errors of the form %LINK-W-MULDEF, symbol DECC$XXX multiply defined in module DECC$SHR file SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]DECC$SHR.EXE;1 while linking the application, the compile command should be modified to include "/PREFIX=EXCEPT=XXX". This instructs the compiler to exclude this function when doing name prefixing, which is equivalent to the behavior prior to this ECO kit. o The printf function was enhanced to print "(null)" when passed a null pointer to be used with the "%S" format specifier. Prior to this, the DEC C RTL would issue an access violation error. o Several functions were found to not accept the angle bracket form of directory specifications. These functions include decc$translate_vms and stat, which now accept either square brackets or angle brackets in the directory portion of file specifications. o The exec functions use a mailbox to coordinate open file information between the parent and child processes. A user reported their system hung after 1000 successful invocations of the same child process. This hang was caused by the parent process failing to release an exclusive mode lock being used to coordinate access to the mailbox. The hang would occur when a mailbox was assigned to the parent process for a second time. o A user reports calling ioctl sets errno to ENOSYS (Function not implemented). Beginning with OpenVMS V7.0, the library looks for support in the underlying TCPIP stack and sets this error if the support is not found. The function has been enhanced to execute UCX$EXAMPLES:UCX$IOCTL_ROUTINES under these conditions. o The decc$to_vms function has been enhanced to recognize names found on other systems, converting "/dev/null" to "NLA0:", "/tmp" to "SYS$SCRATCH:", and "/bin" to "SYS$SYSTEM:". o The getpwnam function now uppercases the username parameter if it is not found in its original form. Prior to this change, the function would fail. Problems addressed in VAXACRT02_071: o Those functions, such as printf, which have thread specific data incorrectly use the threads interface to release that memory when a thread is being destroyed. The result is that all thread specific memory is lost. o The read, fread, write, and fwrite DEC C RTL functions now return unsuccessful status with errno set to EINVAL if one of the arguments of size_t type or total number of bytes to be transmitted is not in the range 0 to INT_MAX. The total number of bytes is the product of the size_of_item and number_items arguments for fread and fwrite functions. The value of INT_MAX is defined in the header file. o The interval timer function, setitimer, fails to reset itself when used in a multithreaded application. The result is a single firing of the timer as opposed to repeated firing of the timer at fixed intervals. o A change made in OpenVMS V7.1 and remedial kits to other versions cause calls to the mktemp function using templates of the form "dumpXXXXXX.txt" to no longer substitute the pattern with the process id. While a change is necessary to prohibit substituting the directory portion in a template such as "[XX]dumpXXXXXX", the change that was made was overly harsh, forcing all substitution to the end of the pattern. o The strstr function accesses memory beyond the ends of the strings passed. In cases where the next page is not accessible, the result is an access violation. The problem was reported against the ADA compiler, which uses the strstr function in this way. o Although files in general are correctly inherited after a fork/exec function call, files which are opened in any sort of sharing mode are not. o The ECO kits ALPACRT01_071 and VAXACRT01_071 made changes to the return value of the puts and fputs routines. While these changes were in line with the documentation, which states that they return non-negative numbers on success, specific applications were coded to expect zero as success. Since this zero return value was documented with the VAXC product, we have restored the original behavior. o When accessing files in stream mode, closing the file may result in an extra byte being written to the file. While this byte is not seen using the type command, it may be seen when using the dump utility. Problems addressed in VAXACRT01_071: o The stat function now uses a thread specific buffer to store data. Prior to this correction, stat called from two separate threads would interfere with one another. o An ISV reports that extra characters are seen on occasion when using a subprocess that sends data back to the parent process using a mailbox. o A case was found where the fseek function fails. It correctly returns a -1 value, but fails to set errno properly. o One of the arguments to the decc$to_vms function is "allow_wild" which is documented to accept the values zero and one. If wildcards are used in the file specification, they are either rejected or expanded into the resultant file specifications. Passing a value of -1 for the allow_wild parameter now returns the file specifications with the wildcards intact, but after having prepared to the point of doing a sys$search. o Unlike Digital UNIX, the fsync(socket_id) call results in an access violation instead of returning an EINVAL status. o Opening and closing sockets does not properly release mutexes. This problem which was introduced in OpenVMS V7.0 eventually causes the mutex resources to be exhausted. o Applications which call opendir and readdir recursively to traverse subdirectories may end up in an infinite loop when reading the directory that includes returning [000000]000000.DIR. The readdir function no longer returns an entry which is equivalent to the directory being read. o OpenVMS V7.1 changed the behavior of the readdir function so that it no longer retains the ".dir" extension when returning a directory using the UNIX file syntax. Applications which rely on this extension can now define a DECC$READDIR_KEEPDOTDIR logical to restore this behavior. o Beginning with OpenVMS V7.1, the DEC C Runtime Library does not read the first record while opening the file if such preloading will cause RMS to lock the record. Several users have reported that images which used to work fine now fail. The record preloading code has been modified to take these user programs into account.



This patch can be found at any of these sites:

Colorado Site
Georgia Site



Files on this server are as follows:

vaxacrt09_071.README
vaxacrt09_071.CHKSUM
vaxacrt09_071.CVRLET_TXT
vaxacrt09_071.a-dcx_vaxexe
vaxacrt09_071.CVRLET_TXT

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