at the end of each write for writes of more than 1K.
Fixed handling of residual count for early returns in writes to pty masters.
It was only adjusted in 2 out of 6 cases.
Added prototypes.
TTYHOG = 1024 bytes, 10 cblocks were reserved. This was thought to
provide 10 * CBSIZE = 1080 bytes of buffering, but if the head pointer
is at the end of a cblock, then it only provides 1 + 9 * CBSIZE = 973
bytes of buffering. This caused serious data loss for ptys because the
flow control is deterministic and requires at least TTYHOG bytes of
buffering. For ttys, if input flow control is used then there is
usually enough slop in the high watermark to avoid problems, and if
input flow control isn't used then a limit of 973 is not much different
from a limit of 1024.
Add prototypes.
Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
Implemented symbol memorizing to reduce the number of calls to lookup(),
making relocation go faster. While relocating a given shared object,
the dynamic linker maintains a memorizing vector that is directly
indexed by the symbol number in the relocation entry. The first time a
given symbol is looked up, the memorizing vector is filled in with a
pointer to the symbol table entry, and a pointer to the so_map of the
shared object in which the symbol was defined. On subsequent uses of
the same symbol, that information is retrieved directly from the
memorizing vector, without calling lookup() again.
A symbol that is referenced in a relocation entry is typically
referenced in many relocation entries, so this memorizing reduces the
number of calls to lookup() dramatically. The overall improvement in
the speed of dynamic linking is also dramatic -- as much as a factor of
three for programs that use many shared libaries.
Submitted by: jdp@polstra.com "John Polstra"
optional ${CLEANDIR} and ${OBJDIR} targets to those missng them.
Also, check for the existance of all library targets before building
them to follow convention.