xref: /dragonfly/usr.sbin/cron/doc/CHANGES (revision 9348a738)
1Vixie Cron		Changes from V2 to V3
2Paul Vixie
329-Dec-1993
4
5The crontab command now conforms to POSIX 1003.2.  This means that when you
6install it, if you have any "crontab" command lines floating around in shell
7scripts (such as /etc/rc or /etc/rc.local), you will need to change them.
8
9I have integrated several changes made by BSDi for their BSD/386 operating
10system; these were offerred to me before I started consulting for them, so
11it is safe to say that they were intended for publication.  Most notably,
12the name of the cron daemon has changed from "crond" to "cron".  This was
13done for compatibility with 4.3BSD.  Another change made for the same reason
14is the ability to read in an /etc/crontab file which has an extra field in
15each entry, between the time fields and the command.  This field is a user
16name, and it permits the /etc/crontab command to contain commands which are
17to be run by any user on the system.  /etc/crontab is not "installed" via
18the crontab(1) command; it is automatically read at startup time and it will
19be reread whenever it changes.
20
21I also added a "-e" option to crontab(1).  Nine people also sent me diffs
22to add this option, but I had already implemented it on my own.  I actually
23released an interrim version (V2.2, I think) for limited testing, and got a
24chance to fix a bad security bug in the "-e" option thanks to XXX.
25
26The daemon used to be extraordinarily sloppy in its use of file descriptors.
27A heck of a lot of them were left open in spawned jobs, which caused problems
28for the daemon and also caused problems with the spawned jobs if they were
29shell scripts since "sh" and "csh" have traditionally used hidden file
30descriptors to pass information to subshells, and cron was causing them to
31think they were subshells.  If you had trouble with "sh" or "csh" scripts in
32V2, chances are good that V3 will fix your problems.
33
34About a dozen people have reminded me that I forgot to initialize
35"crontab_fd" in database.c.  Keith Cantrell was the first, so he gets the
36point.
37
38Steve Simmons reminded me that once an account has been deleted from the
39system, "crontab -u USER -d" will not work.  My solution is to suggest to
40all of you that before you delete a user's account, you first delete that
41user's crontab file if any.  From cron's point of view, usernames can never
42be treated as arbitrary strings.  Either they are valid user names, or they
43are not.  I will not make an exception for the "-d" case, for security
44reasons that I consider reasonable.  It is trivial for a root user to delete
45the entry by hand if necessary.
46
47Dan O'Neil reminded me that I forgot to reset "log_fd" in misc.c.  A lot of
48others also reminded me of this, but Dan gets the point.  I didn't fix it
49there, since the real bug was that it should have been open in the parent.
50
51Peter Kabal reminded me that I forgot to "#ifdef DEBUGGING" some code in
52misc.c.  Hans Trompert actually told me first, but Peter sent the patch so
53he gets the point.
54
55Russell Nelson told me that I'd forgotten to "#include <syslog.h>" in misc.c,
56which explains why a lot of other people complained that it wasn't using
57syslog even when they configured it that way :-).  Steve Simmons told me
58first, though, so he gets the point.
59
60An interrim version of the daemon tried to "stat" every file before
61executing it; this turned out to be a horribly bad idea since finding the
62name of a file from a shell command is a hard job (that's why we have
63shells, right?)  I removed this bogus code.  Dave Burgess gets the point.
64
65Dennis R. Conley sent a suggestion for MMDF systems, which I've added to the
66comments in cron.h.
67
68Mike Heisler noted that I use comments in the CONVERSION file which are
69documented as illegal in the man pages.  Thanks, Mike.
70
71Irving Wolfe sent me some very cheerful changes for a NeXT system, but I
72consider the system itself broken and I can't bring myself to #ifdef for
73something as screwed up as this system seems to be.  However, various others
74did send me smaller patches which appear to have cause cron to build and run
75correctly on (the latest) NeXT machines, with or without the "-posix" CFLAG.
76Irving also asked for a per-job MAILTO, and this was finally added later when
77I integrated the BSD/386 changes contributed by BSDi, and generalized some of
78the parsing.
79
80Lots of folks complained that the autogenerated "Date:" header wasn't in
81ARPA format.  I didn't understand this -- either folks will use Sendmail and
82not generate a Date:  at all (since Sendmail will do it), or folks will use
83something other than Sendmail which won't care about Date: formats.  But
84I've "fixed" it anyway...
85
86Several people suggested that "*" should be able to take a "/step".  One person
87suggested that "N/step" ought to mean "N-last/step", but that's stretching things
88a bit far.  "*/step" seems quite intuitive to me, so I've added it.  Colin Plumb
89sent in the first and most polite request for this feature.
90
91As with every release of Cron, BIND, and seemingly everything else I do, one
92user stands out with the most critical but also the most useful analysis.
93Cron V3's high score belongs to Peter Holzer, who sent in the nicest looking
94patch for the "%" interpretation problem and also helped me understand a
95tricky bit of badness in the "log_fd" problem.
96
97agulbra@flode.nvg.unit.no wins the honors for being the first to point out the
98nasty security hole in "crontab -r".  'Nuff said.
99
100Several folks pointed out that log_it() needed to exist even if logging was
101disabled.  Some day I will create a tool that will compile a subsystem with
102every possible combination and permutation of #ifdef options, but meanwhile
103thanks to everybody.
104
105job_runqueue() was using storage after freeing it, since Jordan told me back
106in 1983 that C let you do that, and I believed him in 1986 when I wrote all
107this junk.  Linux was the first to die from this error, and the Linux people
108sent me the most amazing, um, collection of patches for this problem.  Thanks
109for all the fish.
110
111Jeremy Bettis reminded me that popen() isn't safe.  I grabbed Ken Arnold's
112version of popen/pclose from the ftpd and hacked it to taste.  We're safe now,
113from this at least.
114
115Branko Lankester sent me a very timely and helpful fix for a looming security
116problem in my "crontab -e" implementation.
117
118--------
119
120Vixie Cron		Changes from V1 to V2
121Paul Vixie
1228-Feb-1988
123
124Many changes were made in a rash of activity about six months ago, the exact
125list of which is no longer clear in my memory.  I know that V1 used a file
126called POKECRON in /usr/spool/cron to tell it that it was time to re-read
127all the crontab files; V2 uses the modtime the crontab directory as a flag to
128check out the crontab files; those whose modtime has changed will be re-read,
129and the others left alone.  Note that the crontab(1) command will do a utimes
130call to make sure the mtime of the dir changes, since the filename/inode will
131often remain the same after a replacement and the mtime wouldn't change in
132that case.
133
1348-Feb-88: made it possible to use much larger environment variable strings.
135	V1 allowed 100 characters; V2 allows 1000.  This was needed for PATH
136	variables on some systems.  Thanks to Toerless Eckert for this idea.
137	E-mail: UUCP: ...pyramid!fauern!faui10!eckert
138
13916-Feb-88: added allow/deny, moved /usr/spool/cron/crontabs to
140	/usr/lib/cron/tabs.  allow and deny are /usr/lib/cron/{allow,deny},
141	since the sysv naming for this depends on 'at' using the same
142	dir, which would be stupid (hint: use /usr/{lib,spool}/at).
143
14422-Feb-88: made it read the spool directory for crontabs and look each one
145	up using getpwnam() rather than reading all passwds with getpwent()
146	and trying to open each crontab.
147
1489-Dec-88: made it sync to :00 after the minute, makes cron predictable.
149	added logging to /var/cron/log.
150
15114-Apr-90: (actually, changes since December 1989)
152	fixed a number of bugs reported from the net and from John Gilmore.
153	added syslog per Keith Bostic.  security features including not
154	being willing to run a command owned or writable by other than
155	the owner of the crontab 9not working well yet)
156