Per CMAKE docs, CMAKE_HOST_SYSTEM_VERSION is the result of `uname -r`:
https://cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.4/variable/CMAKE_HOST_SYSTEM_VERSION.html?highlight=uname
A numeric version string for the system. On systems that support
uname, this variable is set to the output of uname -r. On other
systems this is set to major-minor version numbers.
On Windows it is something like "6.1", so it won't match ".*-Microsoft".
Closes#7329
Allowing this to be controlled externally improves reproducibility, as
well as provides a more useful address to report for "Compiled by". For
example, I intend to set it to the packaging list when building the
Debian package.
Signed-off-by: James McCoy <jamessan@jamessan.com>
Moves low-level functions handling to os/fs.c. Adds file.c with a proxy
interface.
Target: while leaving syscalls handling is os.c (partially handled by libuv),
add buffering for reading and writing to file.c.
This was noticed due to a user issue (#4750) when building Neovim 0.1.4
via ports. The crux of the issue is that we did not detect the
be64toh() macro, because there is no endian.h on FreeBSD (along with
several other BSDs). So we were defaulting to our builtin version of
be64toh(). However, it appears that sys/endian.h was being picked up by
an include (likely msgpack.h) and so be64toh() was actually defined and
corrupting our definition of it.
So the answer here was to use the correct include file in our check, and
export that information in the config.h. Then we use that information
to include the right header in shada.c.
This fixes#4750.
Unix systems must have this header but Windows does not have it at all.
Since src/nvim/os/unix_defs.h includes <unistd.h> without the guard
in order to avoid including this in the numerous places we would
need <unistd.h> on Unix we just include src/nvim/os/os.h which will pull
in <unistd.h> for us.
In Vim, at least the constant `I_PUSH` is used from <stropts.h>, but
Neovim doesn't seem to use anything from said header.
Besides that, POSIX.1-2008[1] marks this header as obsolescent, and
there don't seem to be many platforms that even have it.
[1]: http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/stropts.h.html#tag_13_52_11
Windows does not have setenv(), instead the _putenv_s() function is used - added
a function check and fatal errors. Implemented os_setenv() for Windows.
Vim supports the original putenv() function if no alternative is available.
Neovim only supports systems where safer alternatives exist, so the check for
putenv() was removed from config/CMakeLists.txt.
Removed unneeded platform checks from config/config.h.in and
config/CMakeLists.txt
- HAVE_OSPEED and HAVE_UP_BC_PC were used by the old UI, and are
no longer needed.
- sigvec() was used as part of the signal handling code in os_unix.c, but it is
no longer used in Neovim.
- The function lstat() is no longer used, replaced with libuv.
* Set JEMALLOC_NO_DEMANGLE to be able to use `je_*` functions,
regardless of how jemalloc was compiled (--with-jemalloc-prefix)
* Show jemalloc information in Neovim's version output.
Resolve#2449.
- In UNIX systems where unsetenv() is available, it is used. Otherwise
the variables are set with the empty string.
- New check HAVE_UNSETENV for unsetenv()
- Added unit test to env_spec.lua
- Remove abstract_ui global, now it is always active
- Remove some terminal handling code
- Remove unused functions
- Remove HAVE_TGETENT/TERMINFO/TERMIOS/IOCTL #ifdefs
- Remove tgetent/terminfo from version.c
- Remove curses/terminfo dependencies
- Only start/stop termcap when starting/exiting the program
- msg_use_printf will return true if there are no attached UIs(
messages will be written to stdout)
- Remove `ex_winpos`(implement `:winpos` with `ex_ni`)
Problem : Argument cannot be negative @ 1165.
Diagnostic : Real issue.
Rationale : len can be assigned a negative value @ 1162;
len is passed as an unsigned argument @ 1165.
Resolution : Refactor variable's types:
- Use ftello instead of ftell to avoid using long.
- Assert ftello result is safely convertible to size_t.
- Introduce variable read_size to avoid using i (int).
Problem : Operands don't affect results (CONSTANT_EXPRESSION_RESULT).
Diagnostic : Harmless issue.
Rationale : n >= LONG_MIN, n being intmax_t, is always true for
architectures where sizeof(intmax_t) == sizeof(long).
Resolution : Add sizes check.
put_time() had a complicated implementation, because of having to shift
an 8-byte value in a portable way with old means.
That can be greatly simplified now, using a C99 fixed-size type.
- Defined CMake checks for all headers in config.h.in
- Removed headers checks that are not used anymore:
sgtty.h sys/statfs.h libintl.h poll.h
- Added UNIX check
- Add some fatal checks
+ Check for setenv() and fail if it does not exist
since our os layer just assumes it does
+ lstat is required by os_unix.c
+ sys/wait.h is required in UNIX
- Removed entries for functions that are not being used: getcwd,
getrlimit, getwd, nanosleep, sigaltstack, getwd, sigstack, fseeko
- Replaced nearly all defines in config.h.in for functions with
compile time checks
- Add check for symbol FD_CLOEXEC
- Add check for langinfo CODESET
- HAVE_ICONV_H and HAVE_ICONV hold the expected checks but Neovim uses
USE_ICONV define to actually decide whether to enable it
- Removed checks that are no longer needed
+ USEMEMMOVE
+ _FILE_OFFSET_BITS
+ HAVE_ST_BLKSIZE
+ dlfcn.h
There are some systems that have usernames of the form DOMAIN\username,
which causes an invalid escape character to be inserted. I was going to
add some escaping, but decided it would be best to just outright set the
value, since I don't want the DOMAIN portion in there anyways.
This is mostly a revert of 477031c03b.
Now that we are not setting `CMAKE_C_FLAGS`, the check can work
correctly and it helps `pcc` (portable c compiler) make it further
along--though it still doesn't produce usable results (see #427 for the
details).
This avoids a compiler generated warning which result in failing to find
the function with -Werror active. You could argue this is a bug in
CMake: http://public.kitware.com/Bug/view.php?id=13208
When building nvim as a shared library for testing, environ is not
exposed. In order to gain access to the environment variables, you must
get a pointer to them from _NSGetEnviron().
It appears that this may affect the FreeBSD platform too.
- remove SELinux dependency for now
- OSX: find libintl.h
- OSX: fix compile errors
- OSX: use hack around gettext nonsense
- fix gettext on ubuntu
- work around Arch's lack of -ltermcap
- add README.md
- Cleanup source tree, leaving only files necessary for compilation/testing
- Process files through unifdef to remove tons of FEAT_* macros
- Process files through uncrustify to normalize source code formatting.
- Port the build system to cmake