(as recommended in Weiste Venema's portmap5_beta distribution)
* deprecate register
* use memmove instead of bcopy
* KNF includes
* use err/warn() instead of perror/fprintf(stderr,)
* fix some typos
* use int32_t, size_t, in_port_t instead of long, u_int, u_short as appropriate
* use uid_t and gid_t instead of int
* KNF, fix typos and spellos
* use const as appropriate
* deprecate register
* use memmove instead of bcopy
* use err/warn()
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>.
types. add xdr_{,u_}int{16,32}_t() functions to convert them.
This is necessary, because things like BPF use the RPC headers to look
at the on-the-wire data, so the headers must accurately represent
what's on the wire, too.
gcc generates slightly better code on all of the architectures I checked.
Also changed xdr_wrapstring to return the return value of xdr_string
directly.
they only take two arguments. Presumably this was done to prevent
problems when users passed xdr_string instead of xdr_wrapstring.
Function prototypes are a better way to fix this "problem".