these files use __weak_alias causes build failures under OpenBSD,
because the OpenBSD __weak_alias macro expects the caller to supply a
semicolon, but the NetBSD __weak_alias macro supplies its own semicolon.
Attempt to fix this by avoiding the use of __weak_alias during a tools
build.
when the strings get expanded we gain an _ from namespace.h. So define a
macro to point to the appropriate include file for the hash function, and
include the hash function later, from the .c file we always include. This
allows us to eliminate the hack of including namespace.h twice as well as
nbtool_config.h.
* Rename "config.h" to "nbtool_config.h" and
HAVE_CONFIG_H to HAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H.
This makes in more obvious in the source when we're using
tools/compat/config.h versus "standard autoconf" config.h
* Consistently move the inclusion of nbtool_config.h to before
<sys/cdefs.h> so that the former can provide __RCSID() (et al),
and there's no need to protect those macros any more.
These changes should make it easier to "tool-ify" a program by adding:
#if HAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H
#include "nbtool_config.h"
#endif
to the top of the source files (for the general case).
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
check _STANDALONE as well as _KERNEL. _KERNEL is incorrect for use when
building boot blocks, and it looks like the rest of the code is already
using _STANDALONE for this purpose.