(as originally declared in System V) to "char * const []", as was done in
1003.2 and subsequently propagated into XPG4.
From Andrew Cagney in PR lib/8930.
descriptors against -1 (as appropriate).
* add actual checks which to detect stuff that would trigger_DIAGASSERT(),
and attempt to return a sane error condition.
* knf some code
* remove some `register' decls.
the first two items result in the addition of code similar to the
following in various functions:
_DIAGASSERT(path != NULL)
#ifdef _DIAGNOSTIC
if (path == NULL) {
errno = EFAULT;
return (-1);
}
#endif
units of storage and returning a null pointer in System V mode; this was
broken by the `fix' in rev. 1.24. Also, as it is stated in ISO C that
such operation does not constitute an allocation failure, do not abort()
even if the `X' option is set.
Amusingly enough the SVID, Fourth Edition, specifies the `unique pointer'
return behaviour for this kind of allocation, so this is kind of mis-named.
(also from freebsd). comment out references to reallocf with .\"XXX"
for now. i also fixed some roff misuse as well.
replace calloc(3), free(3) and realloc(3) with links to malloc(3)
Make code ANSI/ISO C conformant. Formerly undefined constructs were used
making load/store architectures (like mips&alpha) fail whn compiled with
gcc -O2.
Tested on mips and i386 ok. Can someone with an alpha test this please?
* still needs an implementation-independent ("reentrant.h") method for
disabling cancellation,
* break a leg to leave realloc() `storage compaction' as was for non-reentrant
code,
* use of stdio in assertion code is unsafe.
delimiter as opposed to any string merely beginning with '-''-'; change to
match the standard. From Simon J. Gerraty <sjg@quick.com.au> in PR lib/6762.
installed using atexit() to be executed which is supposed to happen on
`normal termination' of the process only, whereas abort() is specifically
defined to cause `abnormal termination'.
random_mutex is locked, because
* a cancellation point may occur during fprintf(), and no cancellation handler
had been installed, and
* the XSH5 specifcation of these functions does not permit output to stderr.
Therefore, in initstate() and setstate(), return a null pointer if the supplied
state is not valid. This also fixes a bug in setstate() which caused corrupt
state information being used despite printing an error message.
an assembly version of a function, add the right lint stub to the Makefile.inc
which specifies the source to build the function (see the
arch/i386/*/Makefile.inc). Can't just lint the normal C versions of these
functions, because some of them don't _have_ normal C versions and if
that were done dependencies would get messed up.
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).
identifier namespace by renaming non standard functions and variables
such that they have a leading underscore. The library will use those
names internally. Weak aliases are used to provide the original names
to the API.
This is only the first part of this change. It is most of the functions
which are implemented in C for all NetBSD ports. Subsequent changes are
to add the same support to the remaining C files, to assembly files, and
to the automagically generated assembly source used for system calls.
When all of the above is done, ports with weak alias support should add
a definition for __weak_alias to <sys/cdefs.h>.