depend on new devname_r(3) as heart. Add /dev/pts magic directly to
devname(3). While it can lead to returning non-existing paths, the
behavior is more consistent that way. Drop caching layer in devname(3),
it doesn't buy anything for the common case of having access to the
database. Teach devname(3) proper fallback behavior of scanning /dev.
Create both old-style and new-style database for now in /etc/rc.d/sysdb.
copying the passed string (which is not ToG compliant), instead of using
it directly in the environment arrat as it should. Needs to be pulled up
to NetBSd-6.
having a system definition for alloca is counter productive as it seems
fairly common to use
#ifdef __GNUC__
#define alloca ..
#endif
in user-headers (eg see usr.sbin/gspa/gspa/gspa_ass.h)
So, defang this definition as we don't otherwise provide alloca on NetBSD
The algorithm used is the Jenkins hash. The name (mi_vector_hash)
reflects the nature of the hash function.
Add glue for libc ATF tests and include a test case to make sure that
(mis)alignment and endianess are handled correctly.
Bump libc minor to 169.
-since getdevmajor(3) is now binary compatible again with <=5.0
there is no need to rename, I've just left a __getdevmajor50 symbol
temporarily for those who track -current
-update manpage
devmajor_t/devminor_t, as proposed on tech-kern.
This avoids 64-bit arithmetics and 64-bit printf formats in parts
of the kernel where it is not really useful, and helps clarity.
so make it marginally less broken so that it works with other compilers
than gcc.
Probably the check can be removed, I doubt anyone will try to use gcc1
anymore.
have been checked, so that the linker does not warn us. There are valid
uses for mktemp() such as for creating filenames that are going to be
targets of the rename system call. Discussed with lukem.
It tells you the major device number for whatever character or block
device you ask it. This is sort of the inverse of devname(3) but not
quite, since it's backed by the kernel (sysctl's kern.drivers
information) and not a database cobbled together from the contents of
the filesystem.
by the application, all NetBSD interfaces are made visible, even
if some other feature-test macro (like _POSIX_C_SOURCE) is defined.
<sys/featuretest.h> defined _NETBSD_SOURCE if none of _ANSI_SOURCE,
_POSIX_C_SOURCE and _XOPEN_SOURCE is defined, so as to preserve
existing behaviour.
This has two major advantages:
+ Programs that require non-POSIX facilities but define _POSIX_C_SOURCE
can trivially be overruled by putting -D_NETBSD_SOURCE in their CFLAGS.
+ It makes most of the #ifs simpler, in that they're all now ORs of the
various macros, rather than having checks for (!defined(_ANSI_SOURCE) ||
!defined(_POSIX_C_SOURCE) || !defined(_XOPEN_SOURCE)) all over the place.
I've tried not to change the semantics of the headers in any case where
_NETBSD_SOURCE wasn't defined, but there were some places where the
current semantics were clearly mad, and retaining them was harder than
correcting them. In particular, I've mostly normalised things so that
_ANSI_SOURCE gets you the smallest set of stuff, then _POSIX_C_SOURCE,
_XOPEN_SOURCE and _NETBSD_SOURCE in that order.
Tested by building for vax, encouraged by thorpej, and uncontested in
tech-userlevel for a week.
implementation in not permitting a "name=value" argument.
* Add a conforming __unsetenv13() and do function renaming for
unsetenv(); preserve old symbol with old behavior.
* Make visible setenv() and unsetenv() for 1003.1-2001 feature selection
macros; resolves PR standards/20479.