-Wstrict-prototypes options. This will make it a lot easier to keep
warnings under control in the first place in the future.
There is one known warning at this time, caught by the -Wstrict-prototypes
option. In Modules/main.c, the declaration of getopt() without parameters
gets a complaint (rightly) that it is not a proper prototype. The lack of
a complete prototype information should be corrected when the right
portability conditions have been identified.
Approved by the Guido.
Tony Lownds: [ Patch #101816 ] Fixes shared modules on Mac OS X
1. Mac OS X is recognized by the Next-ish host recognition code as
"Darwin/1.2"
2. When specifying just --with-dyld, modules can compile as shared
3. --with-dyld and --with-next-framework, modules can compile as
shared
4. --with-suffix=.exe, and Lib/plat-darwin1.2 is being made, the regen
script invokes python as python.exe
[I had to reformat this patch a bit to make it work. Please test!]
Dan Wolfe: [ Patch #101823 ] Fix Darwin POSIX Thread redefinition
The patch below fixes the redefinition problem in Darwin with
_POSIX_THREADS. I'm not sure if this is the correct long term fix but
for now it fixes the problem and the fix is specific to Darwin.
Dan Wolfe: [ Patch #101824 ] On Darwin, remove unrecognized option
`-OPT:Olimit=0'
After many, many, many compiles, I finally got itchy of this warning
cluttering up the output... so I scratched (Darwin configs only) and
it's gone! :-)
test -d "$directory"
to
test ! -z "directory" -a -d "directory"
Apparently, on SunOS 4.1.4_JL (and other?) OSes, -d on an empty string
always returns true. This closes SF bug #115392.
-D_HPUX_SOURCE and also turns on long long support.
Suggestion by stnor@sweden.hp.com (Stefan Norberg).
Please test this if you have access to HP-UX!!!
I can't test this, so I'm just checking it in with blind faith in Andy.
I've tested that it doesn't broeak a non-Pth build on Linux.
Changes include:
- There's a --with-pth configure option.
- Instead of _GNU_PTH, we test for HAVE_PTH.
- Better signal handling.
- (The config.h.in file is regenerated in a slightly different order.)
This allows dbmmodule.c to use either without having to add additional
options to the Modules/Setup file or make source changes.
(At least some Linux systems use gdbm to emulate ndbm, but only install
the ndbm.h header as /usr/include/gdbm/ndbm.h.)
enable it), but db.h was not found, the WITH_LIBDB macros was still being
defined, resulting in compilation errors. Also added a short explain when
bsddb support wasn't enabled (because db.h wasn't found) when the user
explicitly used --with-libdb on the configure command line.
Update the build structures to automatically detect the presence of BSD db,
including the proper name of the header file to include. Has all the
expected niceties associated with yet-more-configure-options. ;)
This checkin includes changes for non-generated files only; subsequent
checkin will catch those.
This is part of SourceForge patch #101272.
- Fix bug in thread_pthread.h::PyThread_get_thread_ident() where
sizeof(pthread) < sizeof(long).
- Add 'configure' for:
- SIZEOF_PTHREAD is pthread_t can be included via <pthread.h>
- setting Monterey system name
- appropriate CC,LINKCC,LDSHARED,OPT, and CCSHARED for Monterey
- Add section in README for Monterey build
which I can cast void* to and back again without losing information".
In pyport.h, we typedef Py_uintptr_t to mean this thing, which if the
platform supports, will be uintptr_t (otherwise, other accomodations
are made).
- Don't call both AC_CHECK_FUNCS and AC_REPLACE_FUNC for 'hypot', as the
latter already does everything the former does (because it's implemented as
a call to the former.)
- Don't call AC_CHECK_FUNC() without any 'action' clauses or with an action
clause that just defines HAVE_<function>. Instead, call AC_CHECK_FUNCS,
which defines 'HAVE_<function>' of itself, possibly with aditional 'action'
clauses.
No checks are removed by this patch, only moved around, and some duplicates
are removed.
Patch by Thomas Wouters <thomas@xs4all.net> with small changes of mine
(in main(), use return instead of exit).
Closes patch #100832
(but I can't assign it to myself, nor close it -- sorry)
disables it. The gc test is moved to just after the thread test, as
is the wctype-functions test.
Modules/Setup.config is generated instead of Modules/Setup.thread.
Applied SF patch #100684 (loewis) to fix help alignment bug.
64-bit readiness (the config values are needed for patches that I will
be submitting later today. The changes are as follows:
- add SIZEOF_OFF_T #define's to PC/config.h (it was already in configure.in)
- add SIZEOF_TIME_T #define to PC/config.h and configure
Needed for some buffer overflow checking because sizeof(time_t) is
different on Win64.
- add SIZEOF_FPOS_T #define
Needed for the Win64 large file support implementation.
- add SIZEOF_HKEY in PC/config.h only
Needed for proper Win32 vs. Win64 handling in PC/winreg.c
- #define HAVE_LARGEFILE_SUPPORT for Win64
- typedef long intptr_t; for all Windows except Win64 (which defines it
itself)
This is a new ANSI (I think) type that is useful (and used by me) for
proper handling in msvcrtmodule.c and posixmodule.c
- indent the nested #ifdef's and #defines in PC/config.h
This is *so* much more readable. There cannot be a compiler
compatibilty issue here can there? Perl uses indented #defines and it
compiles with everything.
threads use --without-threads. No extra tests of thread/compiler
combinations have been added.
--with(out)-thread and --with(out)-threads are completely
interchangeable.
--with-threads still supports the =DIRECTORY option for specifying
where to find thread libraries.
This patch adds the openpty() and forkpty() library calls to posixmodule.c,
when they are available on the target
system. (glibc-2.1-based Linux systems, FreeBSD and BSDI at least, probably
the other BSD-based systems as well.)
Lib/pty.py is also rewritten to use openpty when available, but falls
back to the old SGI method or the "manual" BSD open-a-pty
code. Openpty() is necessary to use the Unix98 ptys under Linux 2.2,
or when using non-standard tty names under (at least) BSDI, which is
why I needed it, myself ;-) forkpty() is included for symmetry.
create shared extensions rather than 'ld -G'. This ensures that shared
extensions link against libgcc.a, in case there are any functions in the
GCC runtime not already in the Python core.