Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Pedro F. Giffuni
d915a14ef0 libc: further adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 2-Clause license, however the tool I
was using mis-identified many licenses so this was mostly a manual - error
prone - task.

The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.
2017-11-25 17:12:48 +00:00
Tijl Coosemans
1243a98e38 Remove the const qualifier from iconv(3) to comply with POSIX:
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/iconv.html

Adjust all code that calls iconv.

PR:		199099
Exp-run by:	antoine
MFC after:	2 weeks
2015-04-15 09:09:20 +00:00
Peter Wemm
091b8336ae Attempt to move the POSIX iconv* symbols out of runtime linker space.
FreeBSD systems usually implemented this as a third party module and
our implementation hasn't played as nicely with the old way as it could
have.

To that end:
* Rename the iconv* symbols in libc.so.7 to have a __bsd_ prefix.
* Provide .symver compatability with existing 10.x+ binaries that
  referenced the iconv symbols. All existing binaries should work.
* Like on Linux/glibc systems, add a libc_nonshared.a to the ldscript
  at /usr/lib/libc.so.
* Move the "iconv*" wrapper symbols to libc_nonshared.a

This should solve the runtime ambiguity about which symbols resolve
to where.  If you compile against the iconv in libc, your runtime
dependencies will be unambiguous.

Old 9.x libraries and binaries will always resolve against their
libiconv.so.3 like they did on 9.x.  They won't resolve against libc.

Old 10.x binaries will be satisified by the .symver helpers.

This should allow ports to selectively compile against the libiconv
port if needed and it should behave without ambiguity now.

Discussed with:	 kib
2013-11-17 22:52:17 +00:00