/* * Copyright (c) 1995-1999 by Internet Software Consortium. * * Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any * purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above * copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. * * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND INTERNET SOFTWARE CONSORTIUM DISCLAIMS * ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES * OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL INTERNET SOFTWARE * CONSORTIUM BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL * DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR * PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS * ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS * SOFTWARE. */ /* Define some functions that go int libc.so. */ #if defined(LIBC_SCCS) && !defined(lint) static const char rcsid[] = "$Id$"; #endif /* LIBC_SCCS and not lint */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include /* This is the old res_init function. It has been moved from res_data.c to this file since res_init should go into libc.so but the rest of res_data not. */ int res_init(void) { extern int __res_vinit(res_state, int); /* * These three fields used to be statically initialized. This made * it hard to use this code in a shared library. It is necessary, * now that we're doing dynamic initialization here, that we preserve * the old semantics: if an application modifies one of these three * fields of _res before res_init() is called, res_init() will not * alter them. Of course, if an application is setting them to * _zero_ before calling res_init(), hoping to override what used * to be the static default, we can't detect it and unexpected results * will follow. Zero for any of these fields would make no sense, * so one can safely assume that the applications were already getting * unexpected results. * * _res.options is tricky since some apps were known to diddle the bits * before res_init() was first called. We can't replicate that semantic * with dynamic initialization (they may have turned bits off that are * set in RES_DEFAULT). Our solution is to declare such applications * "broken". They could fool us by setting RES_INIT but none do (yet). */ if (!_res.retrans) _res.retrans = RES_TIMEOUT; if (!_res.retry) _res.retry = 4; if (!(_res.options & RES_INIT)) _res.options = RES_DEFAULT; /* * This one used to initialize implicitly to zero, so unless the app * has set it to something in particular, we can randomize it now. */ if (!_res.id) _res.id = res_randomid(); return (__res_vinit(&_res, 1)); } /* We need a resolver context - in unthreaded apps, this weak function provides it. */ #undef _res struct __res_state _res = { _sock : -1 }; struct __res_state * weak_const_function __res_state(void) { return &_res; }