Allow dumping the VTY XML reference (for generating manuals) to a normal FILE*
stream instead of a vty output buffer.
We currently generate the VTY reference by starting the client program,
connecting to the VTY telnet and dumping the reference. That is weirdly
convoluted, especially since there has to be a valid config file that
successfully starts up a minimal set of external links before the reference can
be generated. IMO we should have dumped the XML reference to stdout from the
start, and never to a VTY session.
With this patch, it is trivial to generate the XML VTY reference by a
commandline switch. The client program will set up the entire VTY, and
immediately after parsing the cmdline options but before parsing a config file,
just dumps the reference and doesn't even start establishing local ports. That
would allow generating the XML reference on the fly during the build process of
the manuals, without the need of a docker container or somesuch.
A first implementation of such a commandline switch is `osmo-bsc -X`, added in
I316efedb2c1652791434ecf14a1e261367cd2fb7
This patch jumps through a bit of a hoop to still allow dumping to a VTY buffer
without code dup, to still allow dumping the XML reference through telnet VTY,
until all our programs have implemented an -X switch (TM).
Change-Id: Ic74bbdb6dc5ea05f03c791cc70184861e39cd492
Keep track of parent nodes and go back hierarchically, not only for .cfg file
reading, but also for telnet VTY sessions.
A long time ago cfg file parsing was made strictly hierarchical: node exits go
back to parent nodes exactly as they were entered. However, live telnet VTY
sessions still lacked this and depended on the go_parent_cb().
From this commit on, implementing a go_parent_cb() is completely optional. The
go_parent_cb() no longer has the task to determine the correct parent node,
neither for cfg files (as already the case before this patch) nor for telnet
VTY sessions (added by this patch). Instead, a go_parent_cb() implementation
can merely take actions it requires on node exits, for example applying some
config when leaving a specific node.
The node value that is returned by the go_parent_cb() and the vty->node and
vty->index values that might be set are completely ignored; instead the
implicit parent node tracking determines the parent and node object.
As a side effect, the is_config_node() callback is no longer needed, since the
VTY now always implicitly knows when to exit back to the CONFIG_NODE.
For example, osmo_ss7_is_config_node() could now be dropped, and the
osmo_ss7_vty_go_parent() could be shortened by five switch cases, does no
longer need to set vty->node nor vty->index and could thus be shortened to:
int osmo_ss7_vty_go_parent(struct vty *vty)
{
struct osmo_ss7_asp *asp;
struct osmo_xua_server *oxs;
switch (vty->node) {
case L_CS7_ASP_NODE:
asp = vty->index;
/* If no local addr was set */
if (!asp->cfg.local.host_cnt) {
asp->cfg.local.host[0] = NULL;
asp->cfg.local.host_cnt = 1;
}
osmo_ss7_asp_restart(asp);
break;
case L_CS7_XUA_NODE:
oxs = vty->index;
/* If no local addr was set, or erased after _create(): */
if (!oxs->cfg.local.host_cnt)
osmo_ss7_xua_server_set_local_host(oxs, NULL);
if (osmo_ss7_xua_server_bind(oxs) < 0)
vty_out(vty, "%% Unable to bind xUA server to IP(s)%s", VTY_NEWLINE);
break;
}
return 0;
}
Before parent tracking, every program was required to write a go_parent_cb()
which has to return every node's parent node, basically a switch() statement
that manually traces the way back out of child nodes. If the go_parent_cb() has
errors, we may wildly jump around the node tree: a common error is to jump
right out to the top config node with one exit, even though we were N levels
deep. This kind of error has been eliminated for cfg files long ago, but still
exists for telnet VTY sessions, which this patch fixes.
This came up when I was adding multi-level config nodes to osmo-hlr to support
Distributed GSM / remote MS lookup: the config file worked fine, while vty node
tests failed to exit to the correct nodes.
Change-Id: I2b32b4fe20732728db6e9cdac7e484d96ab86dc5
Without this patch, for instance in this cfg file below, go_parent_cb is
not called for nodes such as "listen" and "cs7":
"""
line vty
no login
cs7 instance 0
xua rkm routing-key-allocation dynamic-permitted
listen m3ua 2905
accept-asp-connections dynamic-permitted
local-ip 127.0.0.1
"""
Related: OS#3608
Change-Id: Ia6d88c0e63d94ba99e950da6efbc4c1871070012
This way if the process is started with no file associated (eg. no -c
param and default cfg path doesn't exist), config can be later saved
into a file by passing the parameter. Otherwise, until now this message
was displayed:
Can't save to configuration file, using vtysh.
Related: OS#4024
Change-Id: I38edcf902a08b6bd0ebb9aa6fc1a7041421af525
For instance, take command "single0 [one]":
If user executes "single0 on", VTY func will receive argv[0]="one"
instead of argv[0]="on".
Related: OS#4045
Change-Id: I5f4e2d16c62a2d22717989c6acc77450957168cb
For instance, take command "multi0 (one|two|three)":
If user executes "multi0 tw", VTY func will receive argv[0]="two"
instead of argv[0]="tw".
Fixes: OS#4045
Change-Id: I91b6621ac3d87fda5412a9b415e7bfb4736c8a9a
Check against MAX argc is changed to == since it cannot be incremented
twice without passing the check.
Change-Id: Ia330e475989fda863bedcc3cbf94deaf8dd83037
Huge conditional block inside for loop is negated in this patch
together with a "continue" keyword, similar to what was already done
recently in 4742526645.
Change-Id: I803c4ed38e9ab09bf929528c75a60e6f65da3928
inner block defined variable "enum match_type ret" was being masking
outter block variable "int ret = 0". The ret variable was being given
non zero values only inside the inner block, so that change was done on
the inner variable and not the outer one, which is returned.
Fixes: 5314c513f2
Change-Id: Iec87d7db49a096d07e38ff8a060b923a52bfd6ba
Huge conditional block inside foor loop is negated in this patch
together with a "continue" keyword.
Change-Id: I9715734ed276f002fdc8c3b9742531ad36b2ef9e
In cmd_complete_command_real(), detect and strip square braces from
multi-choice arguments, to enable tab-completion for commands like
> list
cmd [(alpha|beta)]
> cmd <TAB>
alpha beta
> cmd be<TAB>
> cmd beta
Change-Id: I8c304300b3633bb6e9b3457fcfa42121c8272ac0
Since very recently we sensibly handle commands like
cmd ([one]|[two]|[three])
as optional multi-choice arguments. In addition, support the more obvious
syntax of
cmd [(one|two|three)]
Internally, the tokens are mangled to [one] [two] and [three], which is how the
rest of the code detects optional args, and makes sense in terms of UI:
> cmd ?
[one]
[two]
[three]
(i.e. optional arguments are always shown in braces in '?' listings)
Before this patch, commands defined with a syntax like [(one|two)], would lead
to an assertion (shows as "multiple") during program startup.
Change-Id: I952b3c00f97e2447f2308b0ec6f5f1714692b5b2
Add basic optional multi-choice argument support.
The VTY detects optional arguments by square braces.
> cmd ?
[optional-arg]
> cmd optional-arg
ok
> cmd
ok
However, within multi-choice args, these braces were so far not treated as
optional:
> list
cmd2 ([one]|[two]|[three])
> cmd2
% Command incomplete
In preparation for I952b3c00f97e2447f2308b0ec6f5f1714692b5b2 which will enable
the more obvious syntax of
cmd [(one|two)]
for reasons of internal implementation, first support a syntax of
cmd ([one]|[two])
The internal vty implementation always needs square braces around each option.
There is currently no good way to prevent developers from defining braces
inside multi-arguments, so it is easiest to allow and handle them:
> list
cmd2 ([one]|[two]|[three])
> cmd2
ok
The VTY doesn't guard against a mix like
cmd (one|[two])
With this patch, a multi-choice command is treated as optional iff the first
element is in square brackets. The remaining elements' square brackets have no
effect besides confusing the user. This is not explicitly checked against.
In general, I would prefer to check all of these details, but the current VTY
code with its endless code duplication and obscure string mangling just doesn't
provide that luxury. There are numerous worse errors hidden in there.
Change-Id: I9a8474bd89ddc2155c58bfca7bd038d586aaa60a
During 'show online help', the XML vty node dump, omit all commands marked
HIDDEN.
These commands were already hidden from the VTY reference prior to commit
I1f18e0e41da4772d092d71261b9e489dc1598923, because of broken/confusing bit and
boolean logic mixup. After that commit, HIDDEN commands end up in the doc. So
practically, this patch here brings back the status quo of before above commit,
even though the previous code clearly "intended" to list HIDDEN commands in the
reference but failed to have that effect.
AFAICT the complete list of commands currently hidden is:
* osmo-bsc: bts/"training_sequence_code <0-7>",
* osmo-bsc: ts/"phys_chan_config PCHAN" for uppercase pchans;
* osmo-bts: bts/"rtp bind-ip A.B.C.D" which actually says
vty_out(vty, "%% rtp bind-ip is now deprecated%s", VTY_NEWLINE);
* osmo-sgsn: 'reset sgsn state' used for SGSN testing.
Note that the osmo-sgsn build was broken by including hidden commands in the
vty reference, since one of its hidden commands had missing doc strings and
made osmotestconfig.py signal failure. This would fix that from the
hide-hidden-commands angle, and so would osmo-sgsn commit
I8b6e8615e409266910f2f76a10ced9ab33e4de91 from the fix-the-doc-strings angle.
Change-Id: I92c3c66ff69c186234276c64478d6342e061d25e
If a command is both hidden and deprecated, still don't show it for the 'list'
command.
We currently have no such nodes, as it seems, though.
Related: OS#3584
Change-Id: I07ec15cab057a3e09064e0420a69121ee8eb4253
In vty_dump_nodes(), make sure the bitwise & is evaluated first.
For the deprecation flag (0x1), the practical effect is most likely identical,
assuming that the boolean ! operator flips the first bit, so I expect no
visible functional difference. It still was confusing and wrong to look at.
Related: OS#3584
Change-Id: I1f18e0e41da4772d092d71261b9e489dc1598923
vty_test: add test against ambiguous cmd causing use-after-free and memory
leaks. Add this test along with the fix, because the new test triggers the
memory use-after-free and leaks, causing build failures.
Add cmd_deopt_with_ctx() to allow passing a specific talloc ctx.
is_cmd_ambiguous(): keep all cmd_deopt() allocations until the function exits.
Add a comment explaining why. Before this, if a command matched an optional
"[arg]" with square brackets, we would keep it in local var 'matched', but we
would free the string it points to at the end of that loop iteration; upon
encountering another match, we would attempt to strcmp against the freed
'matched'. Instead of adding hard-to-read and -verify free/alloc dances to keep
the 'matched' accurately freed/non-freed/..., just keep all cmd_deopt() string
allocated until done.
Needless to say that this should have been implemented on a lower level upon
inventing optional args, but at least this is fixing a program crash.
Related: OS#33903390
Change-Id: Ia71ba742108b5ff020997bfb612ad5eb30d04fcd
Fix GCC version 7.3.0 (Debian 7.3.0-12) compiler warning:
../../../../src/libosmocore/src/vty/command.c: In function ‘write_config_file’:
../../../../src/libosmocore/src/vty/command.c:2741:2: error: null destination pointer [-Werror=format-overflow=]
sprintf(config_file_tmp, "%s.XXXXXX", config_file);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Check agains NULL after each _talloc_zero() in write_config_file().
While at it, add a comment explaining why we don't use talloc_asprintf() instead.
Change-Id: I7bdc52afe724c1d21f419fe49a6e2ebca9420969
In 'show online-help' output, add the node names (currently all derived from
the prompt) as <node><name> entry, so that in the osmo-gsm-manuals, each
section of node commands gets a title. So far, each section of commands has no
name at all, and it is entirely up for guessing which part of the VTY the
commands are about.
Node section names, e.g. for OsmoHLR, will be like
1 VTY reference
1.4 config
1.5 config-log
1.6 config-line
1.7 config-ctrl
1.8 config-hlr
1.9 config-hlr-gsup
Before this patch, all but '1 VTY reference' were plain empty.
A better solution would be to list the actual command name that enters the
node, and to nest the commands identically to VTY node nesting, but since this
information is currently hidden in node command implementations, it is
impossible to derive it. So we should actually make the VTY reflect the node
nesting structure in its data model, which would resolve both the accurate node
name problem as well as produce well-structured output to generate the VTY
references from. This patch is a workaround for lack of a more profound fix of
the VTY data model. At least it makes the VTY references' sections even
remotely useful.
Change-Id: Iaf745b2ab3d9b02fc47025a0eba3beb711068bfe
We use 'show online-help' to generate VTY reference manuals. It is not helpful
to include the common node commands on each and every node level, it clutters
the actual useful help.
Have a separate first section called 'Common Commands', but omit them
elsewhere.
Change-Id: Ie802eccad80887968b10269ff9c0e9797268e0d4
Let's fix some erroneous/accidential references to wrong license,
update copyright information where applicable and introduce a
SPDX-License-Identifier to all files.
Change-Id: I39af26c6aaaf5c926966391f6565fc5936be21af
Commit in e9e9e427b7 attempted to fix a
compilation warning but introduced a regression documented in OS#2613.
The commit was reverted in 4aa0258269296f078e685e21fb08b115567e814.
After closer lookup and testing, it seems vector_slot(vline, index) is
expected to be NULL in this case as set by vty_complete_command:
/* In case of 'help \t'. */
if (isspace((int)vty->buf[vty->length - 1]))
vector_set(vline, NULL);
As a result, the correct fix for the compilation warning is to test
against NULL instead of testing for empty string.
Change-Id: Id9e02bbf89e0a94e1766b1efd236538712415c8a
The patch seemed sensible, but introduces a segfault when hitting tab
on the interactive VTY. Reproduction example:
osmo-msc
telnet 127.0.0.1 4254
OsmoMSC> enable <TAB>
So we need to understand what that line of code actually intends to do.
Until then, revert this to avoid the segfault.
The segfault happens at:
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x00007ffff7bc0894 in cmd_complete_command_real (vline=0x5555558d59e0, vty=0x5555558d57b0, status=0x7fffffffe024) at ../../../../src/libosmocore/src/vty/command.c:1953
1953 if (*(char *)vector_slot(vline, index) == '\0')
This reverts commit e9e9e427b7.
Change-Id: I3fe213bdfb96de9469aae64e67000dafee59302e
Fixes the compilation warning below:
git/libosmocore/src/vty/command.c: In function ‘cmd_complete_command_real’:
git/libosmocore/src/vty/command.c:1953:33: warning: comparison between pointer and zero character const
ant [-Wpointer-compare]
if (vector_slot(vline, index) == '\0')
^~
git/libosmocore/src/vty/command.c:37:0:
git/libosmocore/include/osmocom/vty/vector.h:39:27: note: did you mean to dereference the pointer?
#define vector_slot(V,I) ((V)->index[(I)])
^
git/libosmocore/src/vty/command.c:1953:7: note: in expansion of macro ‘vector_slot’
if (vector_slot(vline, index) == '\0')
^~~~~~~~~~~
Change-Id: Iaba9e3450d68c51e16a7bda2fc0fc370992ca866
In many callers of the VTY API, we are lacking the vty_install_default() step
at certain node levels. This creates nodes that lack the 'exit' command, and
hence the only way to exit such a node is to restart the telnet session.
Historically, the VTY looked for missing commands on the immediate parent node,
and hence possibly found the parent's 'exit' command when the local node was
missing it. That is why we so far did not notice the missing default commands.
Furthermore, some callers call install_default() instead of
vty_install_default(). Only vty_install_default() also includes the 'exit' and
'end' commands. There is no reason why there are two sets of default commands.
To end this confusion, to catch all missing 'exit' commands and to prevent this
from re-appearing in the future, simply *always* install all default commands
implicitly when calling install_node().
In cmd_init(), there are some top-level nodes that apparently do not want the
default commands installed. Keep those the way they are, by changing the
invocation to new install_node_bare() ({VIEW,AUTH,AUTH_ENABLE}_NODE).
Make both install_default() and vty_install_default() no-ops so that users of
the API may still call them without harm. Do not yet deprecate yet, which
follows in Icf5d83f641e838cebcccc635a043e94ba352abff.
Drop all invocations to these two functions found in libosmocore.
Change-Id: I5021c64a787b63314e0f2f1cba0b8fc7bff4f09b
The 'show online-help' produces XML output with <node id="..."> ids. We
reference those from the osmo-gsm-manuals.
Instead of numeric IDs coming from internal code, rather use a human-readable
node ID -- referencing id='config-msc' is much easier than referencing id='23'.
Add a char name[] to struct cmd_node, to hold this name. This may be provided
upon struct definition.
Since callers of the VTY API so far don't have a name yet, we would need to add
names everywhere to get meaningful node IDs. There is a way to get node ID
names without touching dependent code:
My first idea was to find out which command entered the node, i.e. command
'msc' enters the MSC_NODE. But it is impossible to derive which command entered
which node from data structs, it's hidden in the vty command definition.
But in fact all (TM) known API callers indeed provide a prompt string that
contains a logical and human readable string name. Thus, if the name is unset
in the struct, parse the prompt string and strip all "weird" characters to
obtain a node name from that. We can still set names later on, but for now will
have meaningful node IDs (e.g. 'config-msc' from '%s(config-msc)# ') without
touching any dependent code.
When VTY nodes get identical node names, which is quite possible, the XML
export de-dups these by appending _2, _3,... suffixes. The first occurence is
called e.g. 'name', the second 'name_2', then 'name_3', and so forth.
If a node has no name (even after parsing the prompt), it will be named merely
by the suffix. The first empty node will become id='_1', then '_2', '_3', and
so forth. This happens for nodes like VIEW_NODE or AUTH_NODE.
If this is merged, we need to adjust the references in osmo-gsm-manuals.git.
This can happen in our own time though, because we manually create the vty
reference xml and copy it to the osmo-gsm-manuals.git and then update the
references from the vty_additions.xml. This anyway has to happen because
currently the references tend to be hopelessly out of sync anyway, placing
comments at wildly unrelated VTY commands.
Change-Id: I8fa555570268b231c5e01727c661da92fad265de
The 'show online-help' produces XML output with <node id="..."> ids. We
reference those from the osmo-gsm-manuals, but until now, these ids fall out of
sync when the amount of VTY nodes changes.
Change these ids to use the internal node ID constant (as in enum bsc_vty_node)
instead of a simple counter.
If this is merged, we need to adjust the references in osmo-gsm-manuals.git.
Change-Id: Ib07fb9d9106e19f5be6539493e82b5d5991f8bc2
The recent exit-by-indent patch breaks a VTY case where a node is entered but
directly followed by a sibling or ancestor without listing any child nodes.
Regression introduced by I24cbb3f6de111f2d31110c3c484c066f1153aac9.
An example is a common usage in osmo-bts, where 'phy N' / 'instance N' is a
parent node that is commonly left empty:
phy 0
instance 0
bts 0
band 1800
Before this patch, this case produces the error:
There is no such command.
Error occurred during reading the below line:
bts 0
Fix indentation parsing logic in command.c to accomodate this case.
Add a unit test for empty parent node.
Change-Id: Ia0880a17ae55accb092ae8585cc3a1bec9986891
Note: This will break users' config files if they do not use consistent
indenting. (see below for a definition of "consistent".)
When reading VTY commands from a file, use indenting as means to implicitly
exit child nodes. Do not look for commands in the parent node implicitly.
The VTY so far implies 'exit' commands if a VTY line cannot be parsed on the
current node, but succeeds on the parent node. That is the mechanism by which
our VTY config files do not need 'exit' at the end of each child node.
We've hit problems with this in the following scenarios, which will show
improved user experience after this patch:
*) When both a parent and its child node have commands with identical names:
cs7 instace 0
point-code 1.2.3
sccp-address osmo-msc
point-code 0.0.1
If I put the parent's command below the child, it is still interpreted in the
context of the child node:
cs7 instace 0
sccp-address osmo-msc
point-code 0.0.1
point-code 1.2.3
Though the indenting lets me assume I am setting the cs7 instance's global PC
to 1.2.3, I'm actually overwriting osmo-msc's PC with 1.2.3 and discarding the
0.0.1.
*) When a software change moves a VTY command from a child to a parent. Say
'timezone' moved from 'bts' to 'network' level:
network
timezone 1 2
Say a user still has an old config file with 'timezone' on the child level:
network
bts 0
timezone 1 2
trx 0
The user would expect an error message that 'timezone' is invalid on the 'bts'
level. Instead, the VTY finds the parent node's 'timezone', steps out of 'bts'
to the 'network' level, and instead says that the 'trx' command does not exist.
Format:
Consistent means that two adjacent indenting lines have the exact
same indenting characters for the common length:
Weird mix if you ask me, but correct and consistent:
ROOT
<space>PARENT
<space><tab><space>CHILD
<space><tab><space><tab><tab>GRANDCHILD
<space><tab><space><tab><tab>GRANDCHILD2
<space>SIBLING
Inconsistent:
ROOT
<space>PARENT
<tab><space>CHILD
<space><space><tab>GRANDCHILD
<space><tab><tab>GRANDCHILD2
<tab>SIBLING
Also, when going back to a parent level, the exact same indenting must be used
as before in that node:
Incorrect:
ROOT
<tab>PARENT
<tab><tab><tab>CHILD
<tab><tab>SIBLING
As not really intended side effect, it is also permitted to indent the entire
file starting from the root level. We could guard against it but there's no
harm:
Correct and consistent:
<tab>ROOT
<tab><tab>PARENT
<tab><tab><tab><tab>CHILD
<tab><tab>SIBLING
Implementation:
Track parent nodes state: whenever a command enters a child node, push a parent
node onto an llist to remember the exact indentation characters used for that
level.
As soon as the first line on a child node is parsed, remember this new
indentation (which must have a longer strlen() than its parent level) to apply
to all remaining child siblings and grandchildren.
If the amount of spaces that indent a following VTY command are less than this
expected indentation, call vty_go_parent() until it matches up.
At any level, if the common length of indentation characters mismatch, abort
parsing in error.
Transitions to child node are spread across VTY implementations and are hard to
change. But transitions to the parent node are all handled by vty_go_parent().
By popping a parent from the list of parents in vty_go_parent(), we can also
detect that a command has changed the node without changing the parent, hence
it must have stepped into a child node, and we can push a parent frame.
The behavior on the interactive telnet VTY remains unchanged.
Change-Id: I24cbb3f6de111f2d31110c3c484c066f1153aac9
For interactive telnet VTY, remove the implicit move up to the parent node when
a command did not succeed on the current node level.
When reading config files, this behavior was useful to allow skipping explicit
'exit' commands. (A different patch deals with that.)
In the telnet VTY, this behavior was never necessary. Explicit 'exit' commands
can move to the parent node, and typically uninformed users expect to require
that.
On a telnet VTY, counting indents like for reading config files is not an
option: a user will always type from the first column or may paste some leading
spaces without intended meaning.
After this patch, it is thus no longer possible to paste a complete config
across several node levels directly to a telnet session, unless it contains
'exit' commands.
Change-Id: Id73cba2dd34676bad8a130e9c45e67a272f19588
Considering the various styles and implications found in the sources, edit
scores of files to follow the same API doc guidelines around the doxygen
grouping and the \file tag.
Many files now show a short description in the generated API doc that was so
far only available as C comment.
The guidelines and reasoning behind it is documented at
https://osmocom.org/projects/cellular-infrastructure/wiki/Guidelines_for_API_documentation
In some instances, remove file comments and add to the corresponding group
instead, to be shared among several files (e.g. bitvec).
Change-Id: Ifa70e77e90462b5eb2b0457c70fd25275910c72b
Especially for short descriptions, it is annoying to have to type \brief for
every single API doc.
Drop all \brief and enable the AUTOBRIEF feature of doxygen, which always takes
the first sentence of an API doc as the brief description.
Change-Id: I11a8a821b065a128108641a2a63fb5a2b1916e87
It's a pity that even with this patch we still are fare away from having
the whole API documented. However, at least we have a more solid
foundation. Updates not only extend the documentation, but also make
sure it is rendered properly in the doxygen HTML.
Change-Id: I1344bd1a6869fb00de7c1899a8db93bba9bafce3
When the caller installs two identical commands at a given VTY node, the
result is that neither of the two commands can ever be executed: The VTY
would always complain about "Ambiguous command.". Let's fail fast at
program start when two identical commands are intalled.
Change-Id: I85ff4640ebb3d8b75a6a9ab5d2f668edb5b7189e
For each counter group a ascii doc table is generated
containing all single counter with a reference to a section to
add additional information to the counter
Change-Id: Ia8af883167e5ee631059299b107ea83c8bbffdfb
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.osmocom.org/70
Reviewed-by: Harald Welte <laforge@gnumonks.org>
Tested-by: Harald Welte <laforge@gnumonks.org>