c77eed5304
This one is strange and goes against my rusty compiler knowledge. The global declaration struct sockaddr whereto; produces for both i386 && alpha: .comm whereto,16,1 which means common storage, byte aligned. Ahem. I though structs were supposed to be ALDOUBLE always? I mean, w/o pragma packed? Later on, this address is coerced to: to = (struct sockaddr_in *)&whereto; Up until now, we've been fine on alpha because the address just ended up aligned to a 4 byte boundary. Lately, though, it end up as: 0000000120027b0f B whereto And, tra la, you get unaligned access faults. The solution I picked, in lieu of understanding what the compiler was doing, is to put whereto as a union of a sockaddr and sockaddr_in. That's more formally correct if somewhat awkward looking. |
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Makefile | ||
ping.8 | ||
ping.c |