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    <title>Changes in SECURITY</title>
    <description></description>
    <language>en</language>
    <copyright>Copyright 2015</copyright>
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        <title>1b58480149d5fc503578a6ef5ed0abc09050cbed - Change to code and documentation from 2021a -&gt; 2021e</title>
        <link>http://src.rcs.uwaterloo.ca:8080/source/history/netbsd-src/lib/libc/time/SECURITY#1b58480149d5fc503578a6ef5ed0abc09050cbed</link>
        <description>Change to code and documentation from 2021a -&gt; 2021eRelease 2021e - 2021-10-21 18:41:00 -0700  Changes to code    noneRelease 2021d - 2021-10-15 13:48:18 -0700  Changes to code    &apos;zic -r&apos; now uses &quot;-00&quot; time zone abbreviations for intervals    with UT offsets that are unspecified due to -r truncation.    This implements a change in draft Internet RFC 8536bis.Release 2021c - 2021-10-01 14:21:49 -0700  Changes to code    Fix a bug in &apos;zic -b fat&apos; that caused old timestamps to be    mishandled in 32-bit-only readers (problem reported by Daniel    Fischer).  Changes to documentation    Distribute the SECURITY file (problem reported by Andreas Radke).Release 2021b - 2021-09-24 16:23:00 -0700  Changes to maintenance procedure    The new file SECURITY covers how to report security-related bugs.    Several backward-compatibility links have been moved to the    &apos;backward&apos; file.  These links, which range from Africa/Addis_Ababa    to Pacific/Saipan, are only for compatibility with now-obsolete    guidelines suggesting an entry for every ISO 3166 code.    The intercontinental convenience links Asia/Istanbul and    Europe/Nicosia have also been moved to &apos;backward&apos;.  Changes to code    zic now creates each output file or link atomically,    possibly by creating a temporary file and then renaming it.    This avoids races where a TZ setting would temporarily stop    working while zic was installing a replacement file or link.    zic -L no longer omits the POSIX TZ string in its output.    Starting with 2020a, zic -L truncated its output according to the    &quot;Expires&quot; directive or &quot;#expires&quot; comment in the leapseconds file.    The resulting TZif files omitted daylight saving transitions after    the leap second table expired, which led to far less-accurate    predictions of times after the expiry.  Although future timestamps    cannot be converted accurately in the presence of leap seconds, it    is more accurate to convert near-future timestamps with a few    seconds error than with an hour error, so zic -L no longer    truncates output in this way.    Instead, when zic -L is given the &quot;Expires&quot; directive, it now    outputs the expiration by appending a no-change entry to the leap    second table.  Although this should work well with most TZif    readers, it does not conform to Internet RFC 8536 and some pickier    clients (including tzdb 2017c through 2021a) reject it, so    &quot;Expires&quot; directives are currently disabled by default.  To enable    them, set the EXPIRES_LINE Makefile variable.  If a TZif file uses    this new feature it is marked with a new TZif version number 4,    a format intended to be documented in a successor to RFC 8536.    zic -L LEAPFILE -r @LO no longer generates an invalid TZif file    that omits leap second information for the range LO..B when LO    falls between two leap seconds A and B.  Instead, it generates a    TZif version 4 file that represents the previously-missing    information.    The TZif reader now allows the leap second table to begin with a    correction other than -1 or +1, and to contain adjacent    transitions with equal corrections.  This supports TZif version 4.    The TZif reader now lets leap seconds occur less than 28 days    apart.  This supports possible future TZif extensions.    Fix bug that caused &apos;localtime&apos; etc. to crash when TZ was    set to a all-year DST string like &quot;EST5EDT4,0/0,J365/25&quot; that does    not conform to POSIX but does conform to Internet RFC 8536.    Fix another bug that caused &apos;localtime&apos; etc. to crash when TZ was    set to a POSIX-conforming but unusual TZ string like    &quot;EST5EDT4,0/0,J365/0&quot;, where almost all the year is DST.    Fix yet another bug that caused &apos;localtime&apos; etc. to mishandle slim    TZif files containing leap seconds after the last explicit    transition in the table, or when handling far-future timestamps    in slim TZif files lacking leap seconds.    Fix localtime misbehavior involving positive leap seconds.    This change affects only behavior for &quot;right&quot; system time,    which contains leap seconds, and only if the UT offset is    not a multiple of 60 seconds when a positive leap second occurs.    (No such timezone exists in tzdb, luckily.)  Without the fix,    the timestamp was ambiguous during a positive leap second.    With the fix, any seconds occurring after a positive leap second    and within the same localtime minute are counted through 60, not    through 59; their UT offset (tm_gmtoff) is the same as before.    Here is how the fix affects timestamps in a timezone with UT    offset +01:23:45 (5025 seconds) and with a positive leap second at    1972-06-30 23:59:60 UTC (78796800):	time_t    without the fix      with the fix	78796800  1972-07-01 01:23:45  1972-07-01 01:23:45 (leap second)	78796801  1972-07-01 01:23:45  1972-07-01 01:23:46	...	78796815  1972-07-01 01:23:59  1972-07-01 01:23:60	78796816  1972-07-01 01:24:00  1972-07-01 01:24:00    Fix an unlikely bug that caused &apos;localtime&apos; etc. to misbehave if    civil time changes a few seconds before time_t wraps around, when    leap seconds are enabled.    Fix bug in zic -r; in some cases, the dummy time type after the    last time transition disagreed with the TZ string, contrary to    Internet RFC 8563 section 3.3.    Fix a bug with &apos;zic -r @X&apos; when X is a negative leap second that    has a nonnegative correction.  Without the fix, the output file    was truncated so that X appeared to be a positive leap second.    Fix a similar, even-less-likely bug when truncating at a positive    leap second that has a nonpositive correction.    zic -r now reports an error if given rolling leap seconds, as this    usage has never generally worked and is evidently unused.    zic now generates a POSIX-conforming TZ string for TZif files    where all-year DST is predicted for the indefinite future.    For example, for all-year Eastern Daylight Time, zic now generates    &quot;XXX3EDT4,0/0,J365/23&quot; where it previously generated    &quot;EST5EDT,0/0,J365/25&quot; or &quot;&quot;.  (Thanks to Michael Deckers for    noting the possibility of POSIX conformance.)    zic.c no longer requires sys/wait.h (thanks to spazmodius for    noting it wasn&apos;t needed).    When reading slim TZif files, zdump no longer mishandles leap    seconds on the rare platforms where time_t counts leap seconds,    fixing a bug introduced in 2014g.    zdump -v now outputs timestamps at boundaries of what localtime    and gmtime can represent, instead of the less-useful timestamps    one day after the minimum and one day before the maximum.    (Thanks to Arthur David Olson for prototype code, and to Manuela    Friedrich for debugging help.)    zdump&apos;s -c and -t options are now consistently inclusive for the    lower time bound and exclusive for the upper.  Formerly they were    inconsistent.  (Confusion noted by Martin Burnicki.)  Changes to build procedure    You can now compile with -DHAVE_MALLOC_ERRNO=0 to port to    non-POSIX hosts where malloc doesn&apos;t set errno.    (Problem reported by Jan Engelhardt.)  Changes to documentation    tzfile.5 better matches a draft successor to RFC 8536    &lt;https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-murchison-rfc8536bis/01/&gt;.

            List of files:
            /netbsd-src/lib/libc/time/SECURITY</description>
        <pubDate>Fri, 22 Oct 2021 14:26:04 +0000</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>christos &lt;christos@NetBSD.org&gt;</dc:creator>
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