Most complex function implementations are from the "c9x-complex" library,
originating from the "cephes" math library, see
http://www.netlib.org/cephes/, from Stephen L. Moshier, incorporated and
redistributed with the NetBSD license by permission of the author.
Error behaviour and other boundary conditions (branch cuts)
need to be looked at.
For namespace sanity, I've done the rename/weak alias procedure to
most of the exported functions which are also used internally.
Didn't do so for sin/cos(f) yet because assembler implementations use
them directly, and renaming functions shared between the main libm
and the machine specific "overlay" might raise binary compatibility
issues.
accessors for:
* struct mount & VFS ops
* struct uio
* struct vnode
* struct vattr
and some namespace games for:
* namei flags
* VOPs
* enum vtype
Also, split rump services into two categories: library private and public
(rump_private.h and rump.h, respectively).
As a result, it is now possible to compile and use the NetBSD kernel
file systems on Linux (and probably other systems too with very
little work), although the makefiles need a bit of work to make it
a pleasureable experience.
p2k, but rather make the calls go through librump. This avoids
having to include NetBSD kernel headers in userspace programs.
Stay tuned for some more mods of the same sort ...
the eeprom on common types of memory modules. The specifications are
displayed during boot and can later be queried in the hw.spdmemN sysctl
subtree. Stub driver written by Nicolas Joly and greatly improved upon by
Paul Goyette. From PR 36745, with additional improvements by Paul and me.
+ mark two functions as static
+ remove case '?' in switch() before default
+ use return instead of exit() in main() function
+ use constants EXIT_SUCCESS/EXIT_FAILURE instead of 0/1
- In man sleep(1):
+ cleanup example
Patch submitted by Slava Semushin <php-coder@altlinux.ru> in private email.