syscall here as well - while the manual page advises applications to clear
errno themselves their actual behaviour may be questionable, especially in
light of the other ports' implementations.
in their respective header files). Add PSEUDO stubs for the old versions
of these system calls.
Note that __semctl13() doesn't require the extra stub that the old
semctl()/__semctl() did, as the SUSv2 version takes variable arguments,
and thus does not require the extra indirection.
minor of libc and the major of libutil). For little-endian architectures
merge the bnswap() assembly versions with nto* and hton* using symbols
aliasing. Use symbol renaming for the bswap function in this case to avoid
namespace pollution.
Declare bswap* in machine/bswap.h, not machine/endian.h. For little-endian
machines, common code for inline macros go in machine/byte_swap.h
Sync libkern with libc.
Adjust #include in kernel sources for machine/bswap.h.
_ASM_LABEL(cerror) and _ASM_LABEL(curbrk) to _C_LABEL(__cerror) and
_C_LABEL(__curbrk) (or their respective architecture-specific equivalents) to
avoid possible name clashes with identifiers used in user applications.
* Do the same for minbrk on all architectures to avoid a GCC-specific (and
on ELF architectures effectively useless) symbol reference renaming in MI code.
the 4.4BSD non-shared-address-space semantics), and direct the user to
include <unistd.h> to generate the correct reference.
This warning isn't about an ABI compatibility issue, but the new vfork() is
considerably faster.
with the syscall numbers changed.
Since 4.4BSD vfork(2) did not share address space, Ovfork.S could be changed
to be identical to fork.S (modulo syscall numbers). __vfork14.S, however,
needs to remain separate since with a shared address space, the stub needs to
pre-decrement the stack and do an indirect jump to the return address, so that
the shared stackframe is still there when the parent returns. (Obviously,
this does not apply to systems which to not build stackframes on leaf calls.)
specified by including a Makefile.inc from the appropriate MD directory.
stdlib doesn't do that, but there's no reason that it shouldn't (and
it'd be nice to eliminate the 'if's from the MI stdlib Makefile.inc).