(exec_command) [WINDOWS32]: Use pid2str instead of non-portable
%Id.
main.c (handle_runtime_exceptions): Use %p to print addresses,
to DTRT on both 32-bit and 64-bit hosts. Savannah bug #27809.
job.c (w32_kill, start_job_command, create_batch_file): Use
pid_t for process IDs and intptr_t for the 1st arg of
_open_osfhandle.
function.c (windows32_openpipe): Use pid_t for process IDs and
intptr_t for the 1st arg of _open_osfhandle.
(func_shell): Use pid_t for process IDs.
main.c (main) [WINDOWS32]: Pacify the compiler.
config.h.W32.template (pid_t): Add a definition for 64-bit
Windows builds that don't use GCC.
Savannah bug #27809. Patch by Ozkan Sezer <sezeroz@gmail.com>
backward-incompatible change in the 2008 POSIX specification.
- Add the .SHELLFLAGS variable so people can choose their own shell flags.
- Add tests for this.
- Add documentation for this.
HAVE_DECL_SYS_SIGLIST.
job.c (child_execute_job): Remove __MSDOS__ because MSDOS/DJGPP build does
not use child_execute_job.
variable.c (define_automatic_variables) [__MSDOS__]: Always export the SHELL
environment variable to the child.
Allows the user to reset the prefix character for introducing recipe lines
from the default (tab) to any other single character, and back again.
Also, reworked the manual to consistently use the word "recipe" to describe
the set of commands we use to update a target, instead of the various
phrases used in the past: "commands", "command lines", "command scripts",
etc.
Fix an uninitialized variable.
Add builtin rules for Objective C.
Add a new debug line that shows where the commands that are about to be run
were defined.
comparison functions to always use POSIX strcasecmp(). For non-POSIX
systems that use other functions (strcmpi or stricmp) use a macro to alias
strcasecmp to those. If we can't find any of them (VMS, plus whatever
UNIX doesn't have them) then define our own version in misc.c.
string into the strcache. As a side-effect, many more structure members and
function arguments can/should be declared const.
As mentioned in the changelog, unfortunately measurement shows that this
change does not yet reduce memory. The problem is with secondary expansion:
because of this we store all the prerequisites in the string cache twice.
First we store the prerequisite string after initial expansion but before
secondary expansion, then we store each individual file after secondary
expansion and expand_deps(). I plan to change expand_deps() to be callable
in either context (eval or snap_deps) then have non-second-expansion
targets call expand_deps() during eval, so that we only need to store that
dependency list once.
A few changes from char* to void* where appropriate, and removing of
unnecessary casts.
Much more work on const-ifying the codebase. This round involves some code
changes to make it correct. NOTE!! There will almost certainly be problems
on the non-POSIX ports that will need to be addressed after the const changes
are finished: they will need to be const-ified properly and there may need to
be some changes to allocate memory, etc. as well.
The next (last?) big push for this, still to come, is const-ifying the
filenames in struct file, struct dep, etc. This will allow us to store file
names in the string cache and finally resolve Savannah bug #15182 (make uses
too much memory), among other advantages.
16304, 16468, 16577, 17701, 17880, 16051, 16652, 16698
Plus some from the mailing list.
Imported a patch from Eli to allow Cygwin builds to support DOS-style
pathnames.
- Add more warnings.
- Rename variables that mask out-scope vars with the same name.
- Remove all casts of return values from xmalloc, xrealloc, and alloca.
- Remove casts of the first argument to xrealloc.
- Convert all bcopy/bzero/bcmp invocations to use memcp/memmove/memset/memcmp.
Revert a fix for $? including non-existent files as it shows a bug
in the Linux kernel build. Give them a release to fix this.
Add some changes from Eli Z. for Windows changes.
- Fix handling of special targets like .SUFFIX for VMS insensitive targets.
- Don't make temporary batch files for -n. Make sure batch files are created
in text mode.