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.
get{addr,name} info are implemented to have as little impact to existing
resolver code as possible, so they are NOT the optimal implementation.
They are at this moment not very thread safe (as they call
gethostby{name,addr}).
(shlib minor version)++, as new interfaces are added.
TODO: getipnodeby{name,addr} - which needs total reimplementation of
gethostby{name,addr}.
upgrade rcmd.c for multiple af support (needed for IPv6-ready rsh/rlogin)
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.
to the stat(2) family and msync(2). This uses a primitive function
versioning scheme.
This reverts the libc shared library major version from 13 to 12, and
adds a few new interfaces to bring us to libc version 12.20.
From Frank van der Linden <fvdl@NetBSD.ORG>.
1. msync() will take a third argument.
2. remove obsolete xdr_{domainname,mapname,peername} from xdryp.c
3. make __ps_strings extern on setproctitle.c and don't set it to
a default when it is NULL.
4. make unvis() argument to an int from a char.
5. move timezone() to libcompat
6. move swapon() to libcompat
7. move getdirentries() to libcompat
8. type sanity:
mode_t: u_int16_t -> u_int32_t
nlinks_t: int16_t -> u_int32_t
dev_t: int32_t -> u_int32_t
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>.