take everything after -- as either a macro assignment or a target.
Note that make still reorders arguments before --: anything starting
with a dash is considered an option, anything which contains an equal
sign is considered a macro assignment and everything else a target.
This still is not POSIX with regard to the options, but it will probably
not change because it has been make's behaviour for ages.
Add a new function Var_Match() that correctly skips a macro call by just
doing the same as Var_Subst() but without producing output. This will help
making the parser more robust.
Patches: 7.190,7.191
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
only one variable and Var_Subst() which substitutes all. Split out the
test whether a variable should not be expanded into match_var().
Make access to the input string consistently using str[]. Remove two
unused functions: Var_GetTail() and Var_GetHead().
Patches: 7.184-7.189
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
of swi. This allows us to use the taskqueue_thread_* functions instead of
rolling our own. It also avoids a double trip through the queue.
Submitted by: njl
Reviewed by: sam
the same time.
Fix if_ndis_pccard.c so that it sets sc->ndis_dobj and sc->ndis_regvals.
Correct IMPORT_SFUNC() macros for the READ_PORT_BUFFER_xxx() routines,
which take 3 arguments, not 2.
This fixes it so that the Windows driver for my Cisco Aironet 340 PCMCIA
card works again. (Yes, I know the an(4) driver supports this card natively,
but it's the only PCMCIA device I have with a Windows XP driver.)
The core console code checks this field when a console is added and
emits a warning if it's empty. In practice the warning is harmless for
uart(4), because the cn_name is filled in as soon as the device name is
known; which is when the device is enumerated.
To avoid the warning, to avoid possible complications caused by emitting
the warning without there (possibly) being a console selected yet and to
avoid complications when the UART isn't found during bus enumeration, we
just preset the cn_name field here to the name of the driver.
(symlink or hardlink) is already set. Instead, it was always setting
the hardlink field. In particular, this caused GNU tar format long
symlinks to be interpreted as hardlinks.
Thanks to: Brooks Davis
MFC after: 7 days
routines (_alldiv(), _allmul(), _alludiv(), _aullmul(), etc...)
that use the _stdcall calling convention.
These routines all take two arguments, but the arguments are 64 bits wide.
On the i386 this means they each consume two 32-bit slots on the stack.
Consequently, when we specify the argument count in the IMPORT_SFUNC()
macro, we have to lie and claim there are 4 arguments instead of two.
This will cause the resulting i386 assembly wrapper to push the right
number of longwords onto the stack.
This fixes a crash I discovered with the RealTek 8180 driver, which
uses these routines a lot during initialization.
make macro into the environment of programs executed by make. This
has approximately the same function as gmake's export directive.
The form of a pseudo target was deliberately choosen to minimize work
for POSIX compatibility (Makefiles are not allowed to use any targets
starting with a dot and consisting only of uppercase letters except those
specified in the standard when they want POSIX compatible behaviour, so
such a Makefile can never contain .EXPORTVAR.)
Change the handling of macros coming from the environment: instead
of asking the environment for each variable we could not find otherwise
put all the environment variables in a special variable environment just
at start up.
This has been tested on the ports cluster by kris.
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>