Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Juli Mallett
2c4acd2f49 Kill extraneous whitespace. 2002-07-15 02:15:12 +00:00
Juli Mallett
d1fea89cae Functions declared as <type> <identifier>(<nil>) should be declared as
<type> <identifier>(<void-type>) in ANSI C.
2002-07-14 02:03:23 +00:00
Juli Mallett
bd2bfb5846 Merge local changes again, against ANSIfied m4(1). 2002-05-01 21:37:29 +00:00
Juli Mallett
82130df48c Use %zu to print a size_t, not %u and definitely not %d.
Remove WARNS?=2, as GCC will usually throw a fit right now, and I'm not going
to mix WARNS and NO_WERROR.

Submitted by:	fenner
2002-04-20 21:37:26 +00:00
Juli Mallett
815bee2f7b Print a size_t as %u not %d.
Pointed out by:	mike, des's tinderbox
2002-04-20 21:13:00 +00:00
Juli Mallett
ccc5b4e6f4 Crank WARNS.
Cast sizeof() to (int), as it's being compared against an int, not a size_t.
If i is changed to a size_t, it means the logic must be slightly changed later
in the flow, where --i is checked to be >= 0.  I am not sure I want to make a
logic change to account for clearing up a warning, when an aesthetic one will
keep from modifying the logic.

Other harmless casts, that I think I've made in the right directions.

Make gpbc() an inline function, rather than an obfuscated macro, make its
scratch space local, rather than global.  The previous macro used a dirty
hack (logical AND in place of a conditional) which would lead GCC to throw
a fit (rightly so) as the logical check, as well as the incrementation of
a variable, were not used for anything.

const'ify a few places where gcc3 yells. xstrdup() some global consts in
places where we xstrdup() when not using consts, but tried to assign them
to non-consts before.

Don't use execv(2) if we don't have the kind of arguments it wants.

Reviewed by:    asmodai obrien tjr
Submitted by:   tjr (a gcc3 build log)
2002-04-20 01:49:10 +00:00
Juli Mallett
56ca2b35a4 Add __FBSDID, this file was unmodified so it was missed in the initial sweep. 2002-04-19 17:33:12 +00:00
Juli Mallett
e3d8671772 Import OpenBSD m4 as of today. 2002-02-16 21:27:48 +00:00