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authorUlrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com>1998-03-25 15:21:09 +0000
committerUlrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com>1998-03-25 15:21:09 +0000
commit68b506045507245594280b53e1ccdd425bc0a6a5 (patch)
tree3522b722dd47ae4016b2e43b3349e1e45a288439 /manual/maint.texi
parent0669867278c8e633bf5c3e52ded6ea3a2e0034f9 (diff)
Update.
1998-03-25 Ulrich Drepper <drepper@cygnus.com> * glibcbug.in: Create files safely when mktemp is not available. * sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/adjtime.c: Make weak alias appear again. Patch by a sun <asun@saul1.u.washington.edu>. 1998-03-25 Thorsten Kukuk <kukuk@vt.uni-paderborn.de> * libc.map: Rename getname to getnetname. 1998-03-25 13:35 Ulrich Drepper <drepper@cygnus.com> * manual/maint.texi: Use supported platform in examples. * manual/install.texi: Document some installation tips. 1998-03-25 10:56 Ulrich Drepper <drepper@cygnus.com> * posix/wordexp.c: Fix some memory leaks and makes $* more efficient. Fix a bug so that it returns an error if a numeric parameter is unset and WRDE_UNDEF is set. Patch by Andreas Schwab and Tim Waugh. * posix/wordexp-test.c: Add new new test. 1998-03-25 Ulrich Drepper <drepper@cygnus.com> * posix/regex.c (regex_compile): Last patch wasn't entirely correct. Patch by Alain Magloire <alainm@rcsm.ece.mcgill.ca>. 1998-03-24 Andreas Schwab <schwab@issan.informatik.uni-dortmund.de> * manual/filesys.texi (Scanning Directory Content): Fix typo. 1998-03-25 09:24 Bernd Schmidt <crux@Pool.Informatik.RWTH-Aachen.DE> * sysdeps/i386/bits/string.h: Fix all assembler statements so that clobbered registers don't appear as operands.
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/maint.texi')
-rw-r--r--manual/maint.texi105
1 files changed, 50 insertions, 55 deletions
diff --git a/manual/maint.texi b/manual/maint.texi
index b8ae488c2f..a7e0cc4b0a 100644
--- a/manual/maint.texi
+++ b/manual/maint.texi
@@ -296,74 +296,57 @@ these to pick the list of system-dependent directories to look for. If
the @samp{--nfp} option is @emph{not} passed to @file{configure}, the
directory @file{@var{machine}/fpu} is also used. The operating system
often has a @dfn{base operating system}; for example, if the operating
-system is @samp{sunos4.1}, the base operating system is @samp{unix/bsd}.
+system is @samp{Linux}, the base operating system is @samp{unix/sysv}.
The algorithm used to pick the list of directories is simple:
@file{configure} makes a list of the base operating system,
manufacturer, CPU type, and operating system, in that order. It then
concatenates all these together with slashes in between, to produce a
-directory name; for example, the configuration @w{@samp{sparc-sun-sunos4.1}}
-results in @file{unix/bsd/sun/sparc/sunos4.1}. @file{configure} then
+directory name; for example, the configuration @w{@samp{i686-linux-gnu}}
+results in @file{unix/sysv/linux/i386/i686}. @file{configure} then
tries removing each element of the list in turn, so
-@file{unix/bsd/sparc} and @file{sun/sparc} are also tried, among others.
+@file{unix/sysv/linux} and @file{unix/sysv} are also tried, among others.
Since the precise version number of the operating system is often not
important, and it would be very inconvenient, for example, to have
-identical @file{sunos4.1.1} and @file{sunos4.1.2} directories,
+identical @file{irix6.2} and @file{irix6.3} directories,
@file{configure} tries successively less specific operating system names
by removing trailing suffixes starting with a period.
As an example, here is the complete list of directories that would be
-tried for the configuration @w{@samp{sparc-sun-sunos4.1}} (without the
-@w{@samp{--nfp}} option):
+tried for the configuration @w{@samp{i686-linux-gnu}} (with the
+@file{crypt} and @file{linuxthreads} add-on):
@smallexample
-sparc/fpu
-unix/bsd/sun/sunos4.1/sparc
-unix/bsd/sun/sunos4.1
-unix/bsd/sun/sunos4/sparc
-unix/bsd/sun/sunos4
-unix/bsd/sun/sunos/sparc
-unix/bsd/sun/sunos
-unix/bsd/sun/sparc
-unix/bsd/sun
-unix/bsd/sunos4.1/sparc
-unix/bsd/sunos4.1
-unix/bsd/sunos4/sparc
-unix/bsd/sunos4
-unix/bsd/sunos/sparc
-unix/bsd/sunos
-unix/bsd/sparc
-unix/bsd
-unix/sun/sunos4.1/sparc
-unix/sun/sunos4.1
-unix/sun/sunos4/sparc
-unix/sun/sunos4
-unix/sun/sunos/sparc
-unix/sun/sunos
-unix/sun/sparc
-unix/sun
-unix/sunos4.1/sparc
-unix/sunos4.1
-unix/sunos4/sparc
-unix/sunos4
-unix/sunos/sparc
-unix/sunos
-unix/sparc
-unix
-sun/sunos4.1/sparc
-sun/sunos4.1
-sun/sunos4/sparc
-sun/sunos4
-sun/sunos/sparc
-sun/sunos
-sun/sparc
-sun
-sunos4.1/sparc
-sunos4.1
-sunos4/sparc
-sunos4
-sunos/sparc
-sunos
-sparc
+sysdeps/i386/elf
+crypt/sysdeps/unix
+linuxthreads/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux
+linuxthreads/sysdeps/pthread
+linuxthreads/sysdeps/unix/sysv
+linuxthreads/sysdeps/unix
+linuxthreads/sysdeps/i386/i686
+linuxthreads/sysdeps/i386
+linuxthreads/sysdeps/pthread/no-cmpxchg
+sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386
+sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux
+sysdeps/gnu
+sysdeps/unix/common
+sysdeps/unix/mman
+sysdeps/unix/inet
+sysdeps/unix/sysv/i386/i686
+sysdeps/unix/sysv/i386
+sysdeps/unix/sysv
+sysdeps/unix/i386
+sysdeps/unix
+sysdeps/posix
+sysdeps/i386/i686
+sysdeps/i386/i486
+sysdeps/libm-i387/i686
+sysdeps/i386/fpu
+sysdeps/libm-i387
+sysdeps/i386
+sysdeps/wordsize-32
+sysdeps/ieee754
+sysdeps/libm-ieee754
+sysdeps/generic
@end smallexample
Different machine architectures are conventionally subdirectories at the
@@ -391,6 +374,15 @@ where the C type @code{float} is IEEE 754 single-precision format, and
directory is referred to in the @file{Implies} file in a machine
architecture-specific directory, such as @file{m68k/Implies}.
+@item libm-ieee754
+This directory contains an implementation of a mathematical library
+usable on platforms which use @w{IEEE 754} conformant floating-point
+arithmetic.
+
+@item libm-i387
+This is a special case. Ideally the code should be in
+@file{sysdeps/i386/fpu} but for various reasons it is kept aside.
+
@item posix
This directory contains implementations of things in the library in
terms of @sc{POSIX.1} functions. This includes some of the @sc{POSIX.1}
@@ -466,6 +458,9 @@ generated are @file{ioctls.h}, @file{errnos.h}, @file{sys/param.h}, and
@c ??? This section is really short now. Want to keep it? --roland
+@c It's not anymore true. glibc 2.1 cannot be used with K&R compilers.
+@c --drepper
+
Although the GNU C library implements the @w{ISO C} library facilities, you
@emph{can} use the GNU C library with traditional, ``pre-ISO'' C
compilers. However, you need to be careful because the content and