7db2616c44
GCC 11 treats [1] as a fixed-length array and not a flexible-length array, and so some things that used direct strcmp("..", ent->d_name), for instance, would be optimized out as being always unequal, which was the cause of #17389. Using a real FLA informs GCC that there is going to be more than one byte of data, and thus this fixes that bug. BeOS used [1] and not [0], possibly because it had to deal with compilers (MetroWerks? Early GCC2?) that did not support FLAs. GCC 2.95 does, using [0], and GCC 4 does, using [], so we can go with that here. (I did try using [0] for both, which seems to be OK with GCC 11, but GCC 8 throws errors when d_name is dereferenced directly as being-out-of-bounds. So, we have to use the #if here and give newer GCC the [] syntax and not [0] to avoid that problem.) The real question probably is whether or not we should backport some variant of these changes to R1/beta3, as software at HaikuPorts very well may run in to the same issue. (The alternative workaround is to compile with -O1 and not -O2 for any affected software.) But maybe this is an argument for keeping with the beta4 schedule of this coming January... |
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