Nate Lawson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Wed, 11 Dec 2002, Mike Barcroft wrote:
> > Nate Lawson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > What's the proper way to get a typedef for u_int?  Is there a doc
> > > somewhere on what we expect in terms of #defines for 3rd party application
> > > authors?
> > 
> > <sys/types.h> will give you a typedef, provided you aren't writing a
> > POSIX or X/Open application.  If you're writing a POSIX or X/Open
> > application (the only time __BSD_VISIBLE is false) you'll have to do
> > the typedef manually in your application.
> 
> Hmm, which of these defines claims posix src? -D_ANSI_SOURCE ?

_ANSI_SOURCE means a strictly conforming C89 application.  Everything
in sys is off limits for such a program.

> cc -O -c -O -pipe -mcpu=pentiumpro -mcpu=pentiumpro -I./../include
> -I./.. -DDIRENT=1 -DDIRENT=1 -DSTDC_HEADERS=1 -DHAVE_UNISTD_H=1
> -DHAVE_FCNTL_H=1 -DHAVE_ST_RDEV=1 -DHAVE_TM_ZONE=1
> -DHAVE_LONG_FILE_NAMES=1 -DHAVE_RESTARTABLE_SYSCALLS=1 -D_ANSI_SOURCE
> -DHAVE_DEV_CONSOLE=1 os.c
> In file included from os.c:25:
> /usr/include/sys/file.h:130: syntax error before "u_int"
> 
> > u_int is undocumented and unportable, so it probably shouldn't be
> > used.  It's only 3 characters shorter than `unsigned' anyway.
> 
> It's for ports.

I fixed a port like this recently.  _ANSI_SOURCE was actually added by
the port, not the application vendor, in that case.

Best regards,
Mike Barcroft

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