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authorSimo Sorce <ssorce@redhat.com>2009-02-25 16:43:57 -0500
committerSimo Sorce <ssorce@redhat.com>2009-02-26 09:13:32 -0500
commit77454c07ba109a3ea6af0da86ba954b28b1fd02f (patch)
tree5e5be00f9b77c42e697617acb9fd695f7c6a0e58 /talloc
parentc9f6d2795fde2f9bf80277d425df2b44bc860226 (diff)
downloadsssd-77454c07ba109a3ea6af0da86ba954b28b1fd02f.tar.gz
sssd-77454c07ba109a3ea6af0da86ba954b28b1fd02f.tar.bz2
sssd-77454c07ba109a3ea6af0da86ba954b28b1fd02f.zip
Remove our copies of the samba libraries.
Packages are already available in debian unstable and will soon land in Fedora. See BUILD.TXT for details. We still keep libreplace as we still use its configure macros, until we find time to extract only waht we need and have our own macros.
Diffstat (limited to 'talloc')
-rw-r--r--talloc/Makefile.in55
-rw-r--r--talloc/NEWS13
-rw-r--r--talloc/aclocal.m41
-rwxr-xr-xtalloc/autogen.sh14
-rw-r--r--talloc/build_macros.m414
-rwxr-xr-xtalloc/config.guess1464
-rw-r--r--talloc/config.mk7
-rwxr-xr-xtalloc/config.sub1577
-rw-r--r--talloc/configure.ac27
-rwxr-xr-xtalloc/install-sh238
-rw-r--r--talloc/libtalloc.m433
-rw-r--r--talloc/pytalloc.c52
-rw-r--r--talloc/pytalloc.h53
-rw-r--r--talloc/rules.mk18
-rw-r--r--talloc/talloc.3.xml738
-rw-r--r--talloc/talloc.c1732
-rw-r--r--talloc/talloc.h183
-rw-r--r--talloc/talloc.i31
-rw-r--r--talloc/talloc.mk37
-rw-r--r--talloc/talloc.pc.in11
-rw-r--r--talloc/talloc_guide.txt694
-rw-r--r--talloc/testsuite.c1142
-rw-r--r--talloc/testsuite_main.c37
-rw-r--r--talloc/web/index.html46
24 files changed, 0 insertions, 8217 deletions
diff --git a/talloc/Makefile.in b/talloc/Makefile.in
deleted file mode 100644
index 6fb39917..00000000
--- a/talloc/Makefile.in
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,55 +0,0 @@
-#!gmake
-#
-prefix = @prefix@
-datarootdir = @datarootdir@
-exec_prefix = @exec_prefix@
-includedir = @includedir@
-libdir = @libdir@
-mandir = @mandir@
-VPATH = @srcdir@:@libreplacedir@
-srcdir = @srcdir@
-builddir = @builddir@
-sharedbuilddir = @sharedbuilddir@
-XSLTPROC = @XSLTPROC@
-INSTALLCMD = @INSTALL@
-CC = @CC@
-CFLAGS += @CFLAGS@ -DHAVE_CONFIG_H= -I. -I@srcdir@
-EXTRA_TARGETS = @DOC_TARGET@
-PICFLAG = @PICFLAG@
-PACKAGE_VERSION = @PACKAGE_VERSION@
-SHLIBEXT = @SHLIBEXT@
-SHLD = @SHLD@
-SHLD_FLAGS = @SHLD_FLAGS@
-tallocdir = @tallocdir@
-
-LIBOBJ = $(TALLOC_OBJ) @LIBREPLACEOBJ@
-
-all:: showflags $(EXTRA_TARGETS)
-
-include $(tallocdir)/rules.mk
-include $(tallocdir)/talloc.mk
-
-$(TALLOC_SOLIB): $(LIBOBJ)
- $(SHLD) $(SHLD_FLAGS) -o $@ $(LIBOBJ) @SONAMEFLAG@$(TALLOC_SONAME)
-
-shared-build: all
- ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(sharedbuilddir)/lib
- ${INSTALLCMD} -m 644 libtalloc.a $(sharedbuilddir)/lib
- ${INSTALLCMD} -m 755 $(TALLOC_SOLIB) $(sharedbuilddir)/lib
- ln -sf $(TALLOC_SOLIB) $(sharedbuilddir)/lib/$(TALLOC_SONAME)
- ln -sf $(TALLOC_SOLIB) $(sharedbuilddir)/lib/libtalloc.so
- ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(sharedbuilddir)/include
- ${INSTALLCMD} -m 644 $(srcdir)/talloc.h $(sharedbuilddir)/include
- ${INSTALLCMD} -m 644 $(srcdir)/pytalloc.h $(sharedbuilddir)/include
-
-check: test
-
-installcheck:: test install
-
-distclean:: clean
- rm -f Makefile
- rm -f talloc.pc
- rm -f config.log config.status config.h config.cache
-
-realdistclean:: distclean
- rm -f configure config.h.in
diff --git a/talloc/NEWS b/talloc/NEWS
deleted file mode 100644
index e5b3aa07..00000000
--- a/talloc/NEWS
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
-1.0.1 26 May 2007
-
- BUGS
-
- * Set name of correctly when using talloc_append_string() (metze)
-
- LICENSE
-
- * Change license of files in lib/replace to LGPL (was GPL). (jelmer)
-
-1.0.0 30 April 2007
-
- Initial release.
diff --git a/talloc/aclocal.m4 b/talloc/aclocal.m4
deleted file mode 100644
index 5605e476..00000000
--- a/talloc/aclocal.m4
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-m4_include(libreplace.m4)
diff --git a/talloc/autogen.sh b/talloc/autogen.sh
deleted file mode 100755
index bf84eeee..00000000
--- a/talloc/autogen.sh
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
-#!/bin/sh
-
-rm -rf autom4te.cache
-rm -f configure config.h.in
-
-IPATHS="-I libreplace -I lib/replace -I ../libreplace -I ../replace"
-autoconf $IPATHS || exit 1
-autoheader $IPATHS || exit 1
-
-rm -rf autom4te.cache
-
-echo "Now run ./configure and then make."
-exit 0
-
diff --git a/talloc/build_macros.m4 b/talloc/build_macros.m4
deleted file mode 100644
index c036668c..00000000
--- a/talloc/build_macros.m4
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
-AC_DEFUN(BUILD_WITH_SHARED_BUILD_DIR,
- [ AC_ARG_WITH([shared-build-dir],
- [AC_HELP_STRING([--with-shared-build-dir=DIR],
- [temporary build directory where libraries are installed [$srcdir/sharedbuild]])])
-
- sharedbuilddir="$srcdir/sharedbuild"
- if test x"$with_shared_build_dir" != x; then
- sharedbuilddir=$with_shared_build_dir
- CFLAGS="$CFLAGS -I$with_shared_build_dir/include"
- LDFLAGS="$LDFLAGS -L$with_shared_build_dir/lib"
- fi
- AC_SUBST(sharedbuilddir)
- ])
-
diff --git a/talloc/config.guess b/talloc/config.guess
deleted file mode 100755
index 354dbe17..00000000
--- a/talloc/config.guess
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1464 +0,0 @@
-#! /bin/sh
-# Attempt to guess a canonical system name.
-# Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999,
-# 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-timestamp='2005-08-03'
-
-# This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
-# under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
-# the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
-# (at your option) any later version.
-#
-# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
-# WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
-# General Public License for more details.
-#
-# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
-# along with this program; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-#
-# As a special exception to the GNU General Public License, if you
-# distribute this file as part of a program that contains a
-# configuration script generated by Autoconf, you may include it under
-# the same distribution terms that you use for the rest of that program.
-
-
-# Originally written by Per Bothner <per@bothner.com>.
-# Please send patches to <config-patches@gnu.org>. Submit a context
-# diff and a properly formatted ChangeLog entry.
-#
-# This script attempts to guess a canonical system name similar to
-# config.sub. If it succeeds, it prints the system name on stdout, and
-# exits with 0. Otherwise, it exits with 1.
-#
-# The plan is that this can be called by configure scripts if you
-# don't specify an explicit build system type.
-
-me=`echo "$0" | sed -e 's,.*/,,'`
-
-usage="\
-Usage: $0 [OPTION]
-
-Output the configuration name of the system \`$me' is run on.
-
-Operation modes:
- -h, --help print this help, then exit
- -t, --time-stamp print date of last modification, then exit
- -v, --version print version number, then exit
-
-Report bugs and patches to <config-patches@gnu.org>."
-
-version="\
-GNU config.guess ($timestamp)
-
-Originally written by Per Bothner.
-Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005
-Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
-warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE."
-
-help="
-Try \`$me --help' for more information."
-
-# Parse command line
-while test $# -gt 0 ; do
- case $1 in
- --time-stamp | --time* | -t )
- echo "$timestamp" ; exit ;;
- --version | -v )
- echo "$version" ; exit ;;
- --help | --h* | -h )
- echo "$usage"; exit ;;
- -- ) # Stop option processing
- shift; break ;;
- - ) # Use stdin as input.
- break ;;
- -* )
- echo "$me: invalid option $1$help" >&2
- exit 1 ;;
- * )
- break ;;
- esac
-done
-
-if test $# != 0; then
- echo "$me: too many arguments$help" >&2
- exit 1
-fi
-
-trap 'exit 1' 1 2 15
-
-# CC_FOR_BUILD -- compiler used by this script. Note that the use of a
-# compiler to aid in system detection is discouraged as it requires
-# temporary files to be created and, as you can see below, it is a
-# headache to deal with in a portable fashion.
-
-# Historically, `CC_FOR_BUILD' used to be named `HOST_CC'. We still
-# use `HOST_CC' if defined, but it is deprecated.
-
-# Portable tmp directory creation inspired by the Autoconf team.
-
-set_cc_for_build='
-trap "exitcode=\$?; (rm -f \$tmpfiles 2>/dev/null; rmdir \$tmp 2>/dev/null) && exit \$exitcode" 0 ;
-trap "rm -f \$tmpfiles 2>/dev/null; rmdir \$tmp 2>/dev/null; exit 1" 1 2 13 15 ;
-: ${TMPDIR=/tmp} ;
- { tmp=`(umask 077 && mktemp -d -q "$TMPDIR/cgXXXXXX") 2>/dev/null` && test -n "$tmp" && test -d "$tmp" ; } ||
- { test -n "$RANDOM" && tmp=$TMPDIR/cg$$-$RANDOM && (umask 077 && mkdir $tmp) ; } ||
- { tmp=$TMPDIR/cg-$$ && (umask 077 && mkdir $tmp) && echo "Warning: creating insecure temp directory" >&2 ; } ||
- { echo "$me: cannot create a temporary directory in $TMPDIR" >&2 ; exit 1 ; } ;
-dummy=$tmp/dummy ;
-tmpfiles="$dummy.c $dummy.o $dummy.rel $dummy" ;
-case $CC_FOR_BUILD,$HOST_CC,$CC in
- ,,) echo "int x;" > $dummy.c ;
- for c in cc gcc c89 c99 ; do
- if ($c -c -o $dummy.o $dummy.c) >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
- CC_FOR_BUILD="$c"; break ;
- fi ;
- done ;
- if test x"$CC_FOR_BUILD" = x ; then
- CC_FOR_BUILD=no_compiler_found ;
- fi
- ;;
- ,,*) CC_FOR_BUILD=$CC ;;
- ,*,*) CC_FOR_BUILD=$HOST_CC ;;
-esac ; set_cc_for_build= ;'
-
-# This is needed to find uname on a Pyramid OSx when run in the BSD universe.
-# (ghazi@noc.rutgers.edu 1994-08-24)
-if (test -f /.attbin/uname) >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
- PATH=$PATH:/.attbin ; export PATH
-fi
-
-UNAME_MACHINE=`(uname -m) 2>/dev/null` || UNAME_MACHINE=unknown
-UNAME_RELEASE=`(uname -r) 2>/dev/null` || UNAME_RELEASE=unknown
-UNAME_SYSTEM=`(uname -s) 2>/dev/null` || UNAME_SYSTEM=unknown
-UNAME_VERSION=`(uname -v) 2>/dev/null` || UNAME_VERSION=unknown
-
-# Note: order is significant - the case branches are not exclusive.
-
-case "${UNAME_MACHINE}:${UNAME_SYSTEM}:${UNAME_RELEASE}:${UNAME_VERSION}" in
- *:NetBSD:*:*)
- # NetBSD (nbsd) targets should (where applicable) match one or
- # more of the tupples: *-*-netbsdelf*, *-*-netbsdaout*,
- # *-*-netbsdecoff* and *-*-netbsd*. For targets that recently
- # switched to ELF, *-*-netbsd* would select the old
- # object file format. This provides both forward
- # compatibility and a consistent mechanism for selecting the
- # object file format.
- #
- # Note: NetBSD doesn't particularly care about the vendor
- # portion of the name. We always set it to "unknown".
- sysctl="sysctl -n hw.machine_arch"
- UNAME_MACHINE_ARCH=`(/sbin/$sysctl 2>/dev/null || \
- /usr/sbin/$sysctl 2>/dev/null || echo unknown)`
- case "${UNAME_MACHINE_ARCH}" in
- armeb) machine=armeb-unknown ;;
- arm*) machine=arm-unknown ;;
- sh3el) machine=shl-unknown ;;
- sh3eb) machine=sh-unknown ;;
- *) machine=${UNAME_MACHINE_ARCH}-unknown ;;
- esac
- # The Operating System including object format, if it has switched
- # to ELF recently, or will in the future.
- case "${UNAME_MACHINE_ARCH}" in
- arm*|i386|m68k|ns32k|sh3*|sparc|vax)
- eval $set_cc_for_build
- if echo __ELF__ | $CC_FOR_BUILD -E - 2>/dev/null \
- | grep __ELF__ >/dev/null
- then
- # Once all utilities can be ECOFF (netbsdecoff) or a.out (netbsdaout).
- # Return netbsd for either. FIX?
- os=netbsd
- else
- os=netbsdelf
- fi
- ;;
- *)
- os=netbsd
- ;;
- esac
- # The OS release
- # Debian GNU/NetBSD machines have a different userland, and
- # thus, need a distinct triplet. However, they do not need
- # kernel version information, so it can be replaced with a
- # suitable tag, in the style of linux-gnu.
- case "${UNAME_VERSION}" in
- Debian*)
- release='-gnu'
- ;;
- *)
- release=`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[-_].*/\./'`
- ;;
- esac
- # Since CPU_TYPE-MANUFACTURER-KERNEL-OPERATING_SYSTEM:
- # contains redundant information, the shorter form:
- # CPU_TYPE-MANUFACTURER-OPERATING_SYSTEM is used.
- echo "${machine}-${os}${release}"
- exit ;;
- *:OpenBSD:*:*)
- UNAME_MACHINE_ARCH=`arch | sed 's/OpenBSD.//'`
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE_ARCH}-unknown-openbsd${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:ekkoBSD:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-ekkobsd${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- macppc:MirBSD:*:*)
- echo powerppc-unknown-mirbsd${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:MirBSD:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-mirbsd${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- alpha:OSF1:*:*)
- case $UNAME_RELEASE in
- *4.0)
- UNAME_RELEASE=`/usr/sbin/sizer -v | awk '{print $3}'`
- ;;
- *5.*)
- UNAME_RELEASE=`/usr/sbin/sizer -v | awk '{print $4}'`
- ;;
- esac
- # According to Compaq, /usr/sbin/psrinfo has been available on
- # OSF/1 and Tru64 systems produced since 1995. I hope that
- # covers most systems running today. This code pipes the CPU
- # types through head -n 1, so we only detect the type of CPU 0.
- ALPHA_CPU_TYPE=`/usr/sbin/psrinfo -v | sed -n -e 's/^ The alpha \(.*\) processor.*$/\1/p' | head -n 1`
- case "$ALPHA_CPU_TYPE" in
- "EV4 (21064)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alpha" ;;
- "EV4.5 (21064)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alpha" ;;
- "LCA4 (21066/21068)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alpha" ;;
- "EV5 (21164)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphaev5" ;;
- "EV5.6 (21164A)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphaev56" ;;
- "EV5.6 (21164PC)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphapca56" ;;
- "EV5.7 (21164PC)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphapca57" ;;
- "EV6 (21264)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphaev6" ;;
- "EV6.7 (21264A)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphaev67" ;;
- "EV6.8CB (21264C)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphaev68" ;;
- "EV6.8AL (21264B)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphaev68" ;;
- "EV6.8CX (21264D)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphaev68" ;;
- "EV6.9A (21264/EV69A)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphaev69" ;;
- "EV7 (21364)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphaev7" ;;
- "EV7.9 (21364A)")
- UNAME_MACHINE="alphaev79" ;;
- esac
- # A Pn.n version is a patched version.
- # A Vn.n version is a released version.
- # A Tn.n version is a released field test version.
- # A Xn.n version is an unreleased experimental baselevel.
- # 1.2 uses "1.2" for uname -r.
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-dec-osf`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/^[PVTX]//' | tr 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ' 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'`
- exit ;;
- Alpha\ *:Windows_NT*:*)
- # How do we know it's Interix rather than the generic POSIX subsystem?
- # Should we change UNAME_MACHINE based on the output of uname instead
- # of the specific Alpha model?
- echo alpha-pc-interix
- exit ;;
- 21064:Windows_NT:50:3)
- echo alpha-dec-winnt3.5
- exit ;;
- Amiga*:UNIX_System_V:4.0:*)
- echo m68k-unknown-sysv4
- exit ;;
- *:[Aa]miga[Oo][Ss]:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-amigaos
- exit ;;
- *:[Mm]orph[Oo][Ss]:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-morphos
- exit ;;
- *:OS/390:*:*)
- echo i370-ibm-openedition
- exit ;;
- *:z/VM:*:*)
- echo s390-ibm-zvmoe
- exit ;;
- *:OS400:*:*)
- echo powerpc-ibm-os400
- exit ;;
- arm:RISC*:1.[012]*:*|arm:riscix:1.[012]*:*)
- echo arm-acorn-riscix${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- arm:riscos:*:*|arm:RISCOS:*:*)
- echo arm-unknown-riscos
- exit ;;
- SR2?01:HI-UX/MPP:*:* | SR8000:HI-UX/MPP:*:*)
- echo hppa1.1-hitachi-hiuxmpp
- exit ;;
- Pyramid*:OSx*:*:* | MIS*:OSx*:*:* | MIS*:SMP_DC-OSx*:*:*)
- # akee@wpdis03.wpafb.af.mil (Earle F. Ake) contributed MIS and NILE.
- if test "`(/bin/universe) 2>/dev/null`" = att ; then
- echo pyramid-pyramid-sysv3
- else
- echo pyramid-pyramid-bsd
- fi
- exit ;;
- NILE*:*:*:dcosx)
- echo pyramid-pyramid-svr4
- exit ;;
- DRS?6000:unix:4.0:6*)
- echo sparc-icl-nx6
- exit ;;
- DRS?6000:UNIX_SV:4.2*:7* | DRS?6000:isis:4.2*:7*)
- case `/usr/bin/uname -p` in
- sparc) echo sparc-icl-nx7; exit ;;
- esac ;;
- sun4H:SunOS:5.*:*)
- echo sparc-hal-solaris2`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[^.]*//'`
- exit ;;
- sun4*:SunOS:5.*:* | tadpole*:SunOS:5.*:*)
- echo sparc-sun-solaris2`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[^.]*//'`
- exit ;;
- i86pc:SunOS:5.*:*)
- echo i386-pc-solaris2`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[^.]*//'`
- exit ;;
- sun4*:SunOS:6*:*)
- # According to config.sub, this is the proper way to canonicalize
- # SunOS6. Hard to guess exactly what SunOS6 will be like, but
- # it's likely to be more like Solaris than SunOS4.
- echo sparc-sun-solaris3`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[^.]*//'`
- exit ;;
- sun4*:SunOS:*:*)
- case "`/usr/bin/arch -k`" in
- Series*|S4*)
- UNAME_RELEASE=`uname -v`
- ;;
- esac
- # Japanese Language versions have a version number like `4.1.3-JL'.
- echo sparc-sun-sunos`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/-/_/'`
- exit ;;
- sun3*:SunOS:*:*)
- echo m68k-sun-sunos${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- sun*:*:4.2BSD:*)
- UNAME_RELEASE=`(sed 1q /etc/motd | awk '{print substr($5,1,3)}') 2>/dev/null`
- test "x${UNAME_RELEASE}" = "x" && UNAME_RELEASE=3
- case "`/bin/arch`" in
- sun3)
- echo m68k-sun-sunos${UNAME_RELEASE}
- ;;
- sun4)
- echo sparc-sun-sunos${UNAME_RELEASE}
- ;;
- esac
- exit ;;
- aushp:SunOS:*:*)
- echo sparc-auspex-sunos${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- # The situation for MiNT is a little confusing. The machine name
- # can be virtually everything (everything which is not
- # "atarist" or "atariste" at least should have a processor
- # > m68000). The system name ranges from "MiNT" over "FreeMiNT"
- # to the lowercase version "mint" (or "freemint"). Finally
- # the system name "TOS" denotes a system which is actually not
- # MiNT. But MiNT is downward compatible to TOS, so this should
- # be no problem.
- atarist[e]:*MiNT:*:* | atarist[e]:*mint:*:* | atarist[e]:*TOS:*:*)
- echo m68k-atari-mint${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- atari*:*MiNT:*:* | atari*:*mint:*:* | atarist[e]:*TOS:*:*)
- echo m68k-atari-mint${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *falcon*:*MiNT:*:* | *falcon*:*mint:*:* | *falcon*:*TOS:*:*)
- echo m68k-atari-mint${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- milan*:*MiNT:*:* | milan*:*mint:*:* | *milan*:*TOS:*:*)
- echo m68k-milan-mint${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- hades*:*MiNT:*:* | hades*:*mint:*:* | *hades*:*TOS:*:*)
- echo m68k-hades-mint${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:*MiNT:*:* | *:*mint:*:* | *:*TOS:*:*)
- echo m68k-unknown-mint${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- m68k:machten:*:*)
- echo m68k-apple-machten${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- powerpc:machten:*:*)
- echo powerpc-apple-machten${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- RISC*:Mach:*:*)
- echo mips-dec-mach_bsd4.3
- exit ;;
- RISC*:ULTRIX:*:*)
- echo mips-dec-ultrix${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- VAX*:ULTRIX*:*:*)
- echo vax-dec-ultrix${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- 2020:CLIX:*:* | 2430:CLIX:*:*)
- echo clipper-intergraph-clix${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- mips:*:*:UMIPS | mips:*:*:RISCos)
- eval $set_cc_for_build
- sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c
-#ifdef __cplusplus
-#include <stdio.h> /* for printf() prototype */
- int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
-#else
- int main (argc, argv) int argc; char *argv[]; {
-#endif
- #if defined (host_mips) && defined (MIPSEB)
- #if defined (SYSTYPE_SYSV)
- printf ("mips-mips-riscos%ssysv\n", argv[1]); exit (0);
- #endif
- #if defined (SYSTYPE_SVR4)
- printf ("mips-mips-riscos%ssvr4\n", argv[1]); exit (0);
- #endif
- #if defined (SYSTYPE_BSD43) || defined(SYSTYPE_BSD)
- printf ("mips-mips-riscos%sbsd\n", argv[1]); exit (0);
- #endif
- #endif
- exit (-1);
- }
-EOF
- $CC_FOR_BUILD -o $dummy $dummy.c &&
- dummyarg=`echo "${UNAME_RELEASE}" | sed -n 's/\([0-9]*\).*/\1/p'` &&
- SYSTEM_NAME=`$dummy $dummyarg` &&
- { echo "$SYSTEM_NAME"; exit; }
- echo mips-mips-riscos${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- Motorola:PowerMAX_OS:*:*)
- echo powerpc-motorola-powermax
- exit ;;
- Motorola:*:4.3:PL8-*)
- echo powerpc-harris-powermax
- exit ;;
- Night_Hawk:*:*:PowerMAX_OS | Synergy:PowerMAX_OS:*:*)
- echo powerpc-harris-powermax
- exit ;;
- Night_Hawk:Power_UNIX:*:*)
- echo powerpc-harris-powerunix
- exit ;;
- m88k:CX/UX:7*:*)
- echo m88k-harris-cxux7
- exit ;;
- m88k:*:4*:R4*)
- echo m88k-motorola-sysv4
- exit ;;
- m88k:*:3*:R3*)
- echo m88k-motorola-sysv3
- exit ;;
- AViiON:dgux:*:*)
- # DG/UX returns AViiON for all architectures
- UNAME_PROCESSOR=`/usr/bin/uname -p`
- if [ $UNAME_PROCESSOR = mc88100 ] || [ $UNAME_PROCESSOR = mc88110 ]
- then
- if [ ${TARGET_BINARY_INTERFACE}x = m88kdguxelfx ] || \
- [ ${TARGET_BINARY_INTERFACE}x = x ]
- then
- echo m88k-dg-dgux${UNAME_RELEASE}
- else
- echo m88k-dg-dguxbcs${UNAME_RELEASE}
- fi
- else
- echo i586-dg-dgux${UNAME_RELEASE}
- fi
- exit ;;
- M88*:DolphinOS:*:*) # DolphinOS (SVR3)
- echo m88k-dolphin-sysv3
- exit ;;
- M88*:*:R3*:*)
- # Delta 88k system running SVR3
- echo m88k-motorola-sysv3
- exit ;;
- XD88*:*:*:*) # Tektronix XD88 system running UTekV (SVR3)
- echo m88k-tektronix-sysv3
- exit ;;
- Tek43[0-9][0-9]:UTek:*:*) # Tektronix 4300 system running UTek (BSD)
- echo m68k-tektronix-bsd
- exit ;;
- *:IRIX*:*:*)
- echo mips-sgi-irix`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/-/_/g'`
- exit ;;
- ????????:AIX?:[12].1:2) # AIX 2.2.1 or AIX 2.1.1 is RT/PC AIX.
- echo romp-ibm-aix # uname -m gives an 8 hex-code CPU id
- exit ;; # Note that: echo "'`uname -s`'" gives 'AIX '
- i*86:AIX:*:*)
- echo i386-ibm-aix
- exit ;;
- ia64:AIX:*:*)
- if [ -x /usr/bin/oslevel ] ; then
- IBM_REV=`/usr/bin/oslevel`
- else
- IBM_REV=${UNAME_VERSION}.${UNAME_RELEASE}
- fi
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-ibm-aix${IBM_REV}
- exit ;;
- *:AIX:2:3)
- if grep bos325 /usr/include/stdio.h >/dev/null 2>&1; then
- eval $set_cc_for_build
- sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c
- #include <sys/systemcfg.h>
-
- main()
- {
- if (!__power_pc())
- exit(1);
- puts("powerpc-ibm-aix3.2.5");
- exit(0);
- }
-EOF
- if $CC_FOR_BUILD -o $dummy $dummy.c && SYSTEM_NAME=`$dummy`
- then
- echo "$SYSTEM_NAME"
- else
- echo rs6000-ibm-aix3.2.5
- fi
- elif grep bos324 /usr/include/stdio.h >/dev/null 2>&1; then
- echo rs6000-ibm-aix3.2.4
- else
- echo rs6000-ibm-aix3.2
- fi
- exit ;;
- *:AIX:*:[45])
- IBM_CPU_ID=`/usr/sbin/lsdev -C -c processor -S available | sed 1q | awk '{ print $1 }'`
- if /usr/sbin/lsattr -El ${IBM_CPU_ID} | grep ' POWER' >/dev/null 2>&1; then
- IBM_ARCH=rs6000
- else
- IBM_ARCH=powerpc
- fi
- if [ -x /usr/bin/oslevel ] ; then
- IBM_REV=`/usr/bin/oslevel`
- else
- IBM_REV=${UNAME_VERSION}.${UNAME_RELEASE}
- fi
- echo ${IBM_ARCH}-ibm-aix${IBM_REV}
- exit ;;
- *:AIX:*:*)
- echo rs6000-ibm-aix
- exit ;;
- ibmrt:4.4BSD:*|romp-ibm:BSD:*)
- echo romp-ibm-bsd4.4
- exit ;;
- ibmrt:*BSD:*|romp-ibm:BSD:*) # covers RT/PC BSD and
- echo romp-ibm-bsd${UNAME_RELEASE} # 4.3 with uname added to
- exit ;; # report: romp-ibm BSD 4.3
- *:BOSX:*:*)
- echo rs6000-bull-bosx
- exit ;;
- DPX/2?00:B.O.S.:*:*)
- echo m68k-bull-sysv3
- exit ;;
- 9000/[34]??:4.3bsd:1.*:*)
- echo m68k-hp-bsd
- exit ;;
- hp300:4.4BSD:*:* | 9000/[34]??:4.3bsd:2.*:*)
- echo m68k-hp-bsd4.4
- exit ;;
- 9000/[34678]??:HP-UX:*:*)
- HPUX_REV=`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[^.]*.[0B]*//'`
- case "${UNAME_MACHINE}" in
- 9000/31? ) HP_ARCH=m68000 ;;
- 9000/[34]?? ) HP_ARCH=m68k ;;
- 9000/[678][0-9][0-9])
- if [ -x /usr/bin/getconf ]; then
- sc_cpu_version=`/usr/bin/getconf SC_CPU_VERSION 2>/dev/null`
- sc_kernel_bits=`/usr/bin/getconf SC_KERNEL_BITS 2>/dev/null`
- case "${sc_cpu_version}" in
- 523) HP_ARCH="hppa1.0" ;; # CPU_PA_RISC1_0
- 528) HP_ARCH="hppa1.1" ;; # CPU_PA_RISC1_1
- 532) # CPU_PA_RISC2_0
- case "${sc_kernel_bits}" in
- 32) HP_ARCH="hppa2.0n" ;;
- 64) HP_ARCH="hppa2.0w" ;;
- '') HP_ARCH="hppa2.0" ;; # HP-UX 10.20
- esac ;;
- esac
- fi
- if [ "${HP_ARCH}" = "" ]; then
- eval $set_cc_for_build
- sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c
-
- #define _HPUX_SOURCE
- #include <stdlib.h>
- #include <unistd.h>
-
- int main ()
- {
- #if defined(_SC_KERNEL_BITS)
- long bits = sysconf(_SC_KERNEL_BITS);
- #endif
- long cpu = sysconf (_SC_CPU_VERSION);
-
- switch (cpu)
- {
- case CPU_PA_RISC1_0: puts ("hppa1.0"); break;
- case CPU_PA_RISC1_1: puts ("hppa1.1"); break;
- case CPU_PA_RISC2_0:
- #if defined(_SC_KERNEL_BITS)
- switch (bits)
- {
- case 64: puts ("hppa2.0w"); break;
- case 32: puts ("hppa2.0n"); break;
- default: puts ("hppa2.0"); break;
- } break;
- #else /* !defined(_SC_KERNEL_BITS) */
- puts ("hppa2.0"); break;
- #endif
- default: puts ("hppa1.0"); break;
- }
- exit (0);
- }
-EOF
- (CCOPTS= $CC_FOR_BUILD -o $dummy $dummy.c 2>/dev/null) && HP_ARCH=`$dummy`
- test -z "$HP_ARCH" && HP_ARCH=hppa
- fi ;;
- esac
- if [ ${HP_ARCH} = "hppa2.0w" ]
- then
- eval $set_cc_for_build
-
- # hppa2.0w-hp-hpux* has a 64-bit kernel and a compiler generating
- # 32-bit code. hppa64-hp-hpux* has the same kernel and a compiler
- # generating 64-bit code. GNU and HP use different nomenclature:
- #
- # $ CC_FOR_BUILD=cc ./config.guess
- # => hppa2.0w-hp-hpux11.23
- # $ CC_FOR_BUILD="cc +DA2.0w" ./config.guess
- # => hppa64-hp-hpux11.23
-
- if echo __LP64__ | (CCOPTS= $CC_FOR_BUILD -E - 2>/dev/null) |
- grep __LP64__ >/dev/null
- then
- HP_ARCH="hppa2.0w"
- else
- HP_ARCH="hppa64"
- fi
- fi
- echo ${HP_ARCH}-hp-hpux${HPUX_REV}
- exit ;;
- ia64:HP-UX:*:*)
- HPUX_REV=`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[^.]*.[0B]*//'`
- echo ia64-hp-hpux${HPUX_REV}
- exit ;;
- 3050*:HI-UX:*:*)
- eval $set_cc_for_build
- sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c
- #include <unistd.h>
- int
- main ()
- {
- long cpu = sysconf (_SC_CPU_VERSION);
- /* The order matters, because CPU_IS_HP_MC68K erroneously returns
- true for CPU_PA_RISC1_0. CPU_IS_PA_RISC returns correct
- results, however. */
- if (CPU_IS_PA_RISC (cpu))
- {
- switch (cpu)
- {
- case CPU_PA_RISC1_0: puts ("hppa1.0-hitachi-hiuxwe2"); break;
- case CPU_PA_RISC1_1: puts ("hppa1.1-hitachi-hiuxwe2"); break;
- case CPU_PA_RISC2_0: puts ("hppa2.0-hitachi-hiuxwe2"); break;
- default: puts ("hppa-hitachi-hiuxwe2"); break;
- }
- }
- else if (CPU_IS_HP_MC68K (cpu))
- puts ("m68k-hitachi-hiuxwe2");
- else puts ("unknown-hitachi-hiuxwe2");
- exit (0);
- }
-EOF
- $CC_FOR_BUILD -o $dummy $dummy.c && SYSTEM_NAME=`$dummy` &&
- { echo "$SYSTEM_NAME"; exit; }
- echo unknown-hitachi-hiuxwe2
- exit ;;
- 9000/7??:4.3bsd:*:* | 9000/8?[79]:4.3bsd:*:* )
- echo hppa1.1-hp-bsd
- exit ;;
- 9000/8??:4.3bsd:*:*)
- echo hppa1.0-hp-bsd
- exit ;;
- *9??*:MPE/iX:*:* | *3000*:MPE/iX:*:*)
- echo hppa1.0-hp-mpeix
- exit ;;
- hp7??:OSF1:*:* | hp8?[79]:OSF1:*:* )
- echo hppa1.1-hp-osf
- exit ;;
- hp8??:OSF1:*:*)
- echo hppa1.0-hp-osf
- exit ;;
- i*86:OSF1:*:*)
- if [ -x /usr/sbin/sysversion ] ; then
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-osf1mk
- else
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-osf1
- fi
- exit ;;
- parisc*:Lites*:*:*)
- echo hppa1.1-hp-lites
- exit ;;
- C1*:ConvexOS:*:* | convex:ConvexOS:C1*:*)
- echo c1-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- C2*:ConvexOS:*:* | convex:ConvexOS:C2*:*)
- if getsysinfo -f scalar_acc
- then echo c32-convex-bsd
- else echo c2-convex-bsd
- fi
- exit ;;
- C34*:ConvexOS:*:* | convex:ConvexOS:C34*:*)
- echo c34-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- C38*:ConvexOS:*:* | convex:ConvexOS:C38*:*)
- echo c38-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- C4*:ConvexOS:*:* | convex:ConvexOS:C4*:*)
- echo c4-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- CRAY*Y-MP:*:*:*)
- echo ymp-cray-unicos${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/'
- exit ;;
- CRAY*[A-Z]90:*:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-cray-unicos${UNAME_RELEASE} \
- | sed -e 's/CRAY.*\([A-Z]90\)/\1/' \
- -e y/ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ/abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz/ \
- -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/'
- exit ;;
- CRAY*TS:*:*:*)
- echo t90-cray-unicos${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/'
- exit ;;
- CRAY*T3E:*:*:*)
- echo alphaev5-cray-unicosmk${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/'
- exit ;;
- CRAY*SV1:*:*:*)
- echo sv1-cray-unicos${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/'
- exit ;;
- *:UNICOS/mp:*:*)
- echo craynv-cray-unicosmp${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/'
- exit ;;
- F30[01]:UNIX_System_V:*:* | F700:UNIX_System_V:*:*)
- FUJITSU_PROC=`uname -m | tr 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ' 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'`
- FUJITSU_SYS=`uname -p | tr 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ' 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz' | sed -e 's/\///'`
- FUJITSU_REL=`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/ /_/'`
- echo "${FUJITSU_PROC}-fujitsu-${FUJITSU_SYS}${FUJITSU_REL}"
- exit ;;
- 5000:UNIX_System_V:4.*:*)
- FUJITSU_SYS=`uname -p | tr 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ' 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz' | sed -e 's/\///'`
- FUJITSU_REL=`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE} | tr 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ' 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz' | sed -e 's/ /_/'`
- echo "sparc-fujitsu-${FUJITSU_SYS}${FUJITSU_REL}"
- exit ;;
- i*86:BSD/386:*:* | i*86:BSD/OS:*:* | *:Ascend\ Embedded/OS:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-bsdi${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- sparc*:BSD/OS:*:*)
- echo sparc-unknown-bsdi${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:BSD/OS:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-bsdi${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:FreeBSD:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-freebsd`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[-(].*//'`
- exit ;;
- i*:CYGWIN*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-cygwin
- exit ;;
- i*:MINGW*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-mingw32
- exit ;;
- i*:windows32*:*)
- # uname -m includes "-pc" on this system.
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-mingw32
- exit ;;
- i*:PW*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-pw32
- exit ;;
- x86:Interix*:[34]*)
- echo i586-pc-interix${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/\..*//'
- exit ;;
- [345]86:Windows_95:* | [345]86:Windows_98:* | [345]86:Windows_NT:*)
- echo i${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-mks
- exit ;;
- i*:Windows_NT*:* | Pentium*:Windows_NT*:*)
- # How do we know it's Interix rather than the generic POSIX subsystem?
- # It also conflicts with pre-2.0 versions of AT&T UWIN. Should we
- # UNAME_MACHINE based on the output of uname instead of i386?
- echo i586-pc-interix
- exit ;;
- i*:UWIN*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-uwin
- exit ;;
- amd64:CYGWIN*:*:* | x86_64:CYGWIN*:*:*)
- echo x86_64-unknown-cygwin
- exit ;;
- p*:CYGWIN*:*)
- echo powerpcle-unknown-cygwin
- exit ;;
- prep*:SunOS:5.*:*)
- echo powerpcle-unknown-solaris2`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[^.]*//'`
- exit ;;
- *:GNU:*:*)
- # the GNU system
- echo `echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}|sed -e 's,[-/].*$,,'`-unknown-gnu`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's,/.*$,,'`
- exit ;;
- *:GNU/*:*:*)
- # other systems with GNU libc and userland
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-`echo ${UNAME_SYSTEM} | sed 's,^[^/]*/,,' | tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]'``echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[-(].*//'`-gnu
- exit ;;
- i*86:Minix:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-minix
- exit ;;
- arm*:Linux:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- cris:Linux:*:*)
- echo cris-axis-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- crisv32:Linux:*:*)
- echo crisv32-axis-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- frv:Linux:*:*)
- echo frv-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- ia64:Linux:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- m32r*:Linux:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- m68*:Linux:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- mips:Linux:*:*)
- eval $set_cc_for_build
- sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c
- #undef CPU
- #undef mips
- #undef mipsel
- #if defined(__MIPSEL__) || defined(__MIPSEL) || defined(_MIPSEL) || defined(MIPSEL)
- CPU=mipsel
- #else
- #if defined(__MIPSEB__) || defined(__MIPSEB) || defined(_MIPSEB) || defined(MIPSEB)
- CPU=mips
- #else
- CPU=
- #endif
- #endif
-EOF
- eval `$CC_FOR_BUILD -E $dummy.c 2>/dev/null | grep ^CPU=`
- test x"${CPU}" != x && { echo "${CPU}-unknown-linux-gnu"; exit; }
- ;;
- mips64:Linux:*:*)
- eval $set_cc_for_build
- sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c
- #undef CPU
- #undef mips64
- #undef mips64el
- #if defined(__MIPSEL__) || defined(__MIPSEL) || defined(_MIPSEL) || defined(MIPSEL)
- CPU=mips64el
- #else
- #if defined(__MIPSEB__) || defined(__MIPSEB) || defined(_MIPSEB) || defined(MIPSEB)
- CPU=mips64
- #else
- CPU=
- #endif
- #endif
-EOF
- eval `$CC_FOR_BUILD -E $dummy.c 2>/dev/null | grep ^CPU=`
- test x"${CPU}" != x && { echo "${CPU}-unknown-linux-gnu"; exit; }
- ;;
- or32:Linux:*:*)
- echo or32-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- ppc:Linux:*:*)
- echo powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- ppc64:Linux:*:*)
- echo powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- alpha:Linux:*:*)
- case `sed -n '/^cpu model/s/^.*: \(.*\)/\1/p' < /proc/cpuinfo` in
- EV5) UNAME_MACHINE=alphaev5 ;;
- EV56) UNAME_MACHINE=alphaev56 ;;
- PCA56) UNAME_MACHINE=alphapca56 ;;
- PCA57) UNAME_MACHINE=alphapca56 ;;
- EV6) UNAME_MACHINE=alphaev6 ;;
- EV67) UNAME_MACHINE=alphaev67 ;;
- EV68*) UNAME_MACHINE=alphaev68 ;;
- esac
- objdump --private-headers /bin/sh | grep ld.so.1 >/dev/null
- if test "$?" = 0 ; then LIBC="libc1" ; else LIBC="" ; fi
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu${LIBC}
- exit ;;
- parisc:Linux:*:* | hppa:Linux:*:*)
- # Look for CPU level
- case `grep '^cpu[^a-z]*:' /proc/cpuinfo 2>/dev/null | cut -d' ' -f2` in
- PA7*) echo hppa1.1-unknown-linux-gnu ;;
- PA8*) echo hppa2.0-unknown-linux-gnu ;;
- *) echo hppa-unknown-linux-gnu ;;
- esac
- exit ;;
- parisc64:Linux:*:* | hppa64:Linux:*:*)
- echo hppa64-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- s390:Linux:*:* | s390x:Linux:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-ibm-linux
- exit ;;
- sh64*:Linux:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- sh*:Linux:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- sparc:Linux:*:* | sparc64:Linux:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- x86_64:Linux:*:*)
- echo x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
- exit ;;
- i*86:Linux:*:*)
- # The BFD linker knows what the default object file format is, so
- # first see if it will tell us. cd to the root directory to prevent
- # problems with other programs or directories called `ld' in the path.
- # Set LC_ALL=C to ensure ld outputs messages in English.
- ld_supported_targets=`cd /; LC_ALL=C ld --help 2>&1 \
- | sed -ne '/supported targets:/!d
- s/[ ][ ]*/ /g
- s/.*supported targets: *//
- s/ .*//
- p'`
- case "$ld_supported_targets" in
- elf32-i386)
- TENTATIVE="${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-linux-gnu"
- ;;
- a.out-i386-linux)
- echo "${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-linux-gnuaout"
- exit ;;
- coff-i386)
- echo "${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-linux-gnucoff"
- exit ;;
- "")
- # Either a pre-BFD a.out linker (linux-gnuoldld) or
- # one that does not give us useful --help.
- echo "${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-linux-gnuoldld"
- exit ;;
- esac
- # Determine whether the default compiler is a.out or elf
- eval $set_cc_for_build
- sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c
- #include <features.h>
- #ifdef __ELF__
- # ifdef __GLIBC__
- # if __GLIBC__ >= 2
- LIBC=gnu
- # else
- LIBC=gnulibc1
- # endif
- # else
- LIBC=gnulibc1
- # endif
- #else
- #ifdef __INTEL_COMPILER
- LIBC=gnu
- #else
- LIBC=gnuaout
- #endif
- #endif
- #ifdef __dietlibc__
- LIBC=dietlibc
- #endif
-EOF
- eval `$CC_FOR_BUILD -E $dummy.c 2>/dev/null | grep ^LIBC=`
- test x"${LIBC}" != x && {
- echo "${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-linux-${LIBC}"
- exit
- }
- test x"${TENTATIVE}" != x && { echo "${TENTATIVE}"; exit; }
- ;;
- i*86:DYNIX/ptx:4*:*)
- # ptx 4.0 does uname -s correctly, with DYNIX/ptx in there.
- # earlier versions are messed up and put the nodename in both
- # sysname and nodename.
- echo i386-sequent-sysv4
- exit ;;
- i*86:UNIX_SV:4.2MP:2.*)
- # Unixware is an offshoot of SVR4, but it has its own version
- # number series starting with 2...
- # I am not positive that other SVR4 systems won't match this,
- # I just have to hope. -- rms.
- # Use sysv4.2uw... so that sysv4* matches it.
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-sysv4.2uw${UNAME_VERSION}
- exit ;;
- i*86:OS/2:*:*)
- # If we were able to find `uname', then EMX Unix compatibility
- # is probably installed.
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-os2-emx
- exit ;;
- i*86:XTS-300:*:STOP)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-stop
- exit ;;
- i*86:atheos:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-atheos
- exit ;;
- i*86:syllable:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-syllable
- exit ;;
- i*86:LynxOS:2.*:* | i*86:LynxOS:3.[01]*:* | i*86:LynxOS:4.0*:*)
- echo i386-unknown-lynxos${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- i*86:*DOS:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-msdosdjgpp
- exit ;;
- i*86:*:4.*:* | i*86:SYSTEM_V:4.*:*)
- UNAME_REL=`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed 's/\/MP$//'`
- if grep Novell /usr/include/link.h >/dev/null 2>/dev/null; then
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-univel-sysv${UNAME_REL}
- else
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-sysv${UNAME_REL}
- fi
- exit ;;
- i*86:*:5:[678]*)
- # UnixWare 7.x, OpenUNIX and OpenServer 6.
- case `/bin/uname -X | grep "^Machine"` in
- *486*) UNAME_MACHINE=i486 ;;
- *Pentium) UNAME_MACHINE=i586 ;;
- *Pent*|*Celeron) UNAME_MACHINE=i686 ;;
- esac
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-sysv${UNAME_RELEASE}${UNAME_SYSTEM}${UNAME_VERSION}
- exit ;;
- i*86:*:3.2:*)
- if test -f /usr/options/cb.name; then
- UNAME_REL=`sed -n 's/.*Version //p' </usr/options/cb.name`
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-isc$UNAME_REL
- elif /bin/uname -X 2>/dev/null >/dev/null ; then
- UNAME_REL=`(/bin/uname -X|grep Release|sed -e 's/.*= //')`
- (/bin/uname -X|grep i80486 >/dev/null) && UNAME_MACHINE=i486
- (/bin/uname -X|grep '^Machine.*Pentium' >/dev/null) \
- && UNAME_MACHINE=i586
- (/bin/uname -X|grep '^Machine.*Pent *II' >/dev/null) \
- && UNAME_MACHINE=i686
- (/bin/uname -X|grep '^Machine.*Pentium Pro' >/dev/null) \
- && UNAME_MACHINE=i686
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-sco$UNAME_REL
- else
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-sysv32
- fi
- exit ;;
- pc:*:*:*)
- # Left here for compatibility:
- # uname -m prints for DJGPP always 'pc', but it prints nothing about
- # the processor, so we play safe by assuming i386.
- echo i386-pc-msdosdjgpp
- exit ;;
- Intel:Mach:3*:*)
- echo i386-pc-mach3
- exit ;;
- paragon:*:*:*)
- echo i860-intel-osf1
- exit ;;
- i860:*:4.*:*) # i860-SVR4
- if grep Stardent /usr/include/sys/uadmin.h >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
- echo i860-stardent-sysv${UNAME_RELEASE} # Stardent Vistra i860-SVR4
- else # Add other i860-SVR4 vendors below as they are discovered.
- echo i860-unknown-sysv${UNAME_RELEASE} # Unknown i860-SVR4
- fi
- exit ;;
- mini*:CTIX:SYS*5:*)
- # "miniframe"
- echo m68010-convergent-sysv
- exit ;;
- mc68k:UNIX:SYSTEM5:3.51m)
- echo m68k-convergent-sysv
- exit ;;
- M680?0:D-NIX:5.3:*)
- echo m68k-diab-dnix
- exit ;;
- M68*:*:R3V[5678]*:*)
- test -r /sysV68 && { echo 'm68k-motorola-sysv'; exit; } ;;
- 3[345]??:*:4.0:3.0 | 3[34]??A:*:4.0:3.0 | 3[34]??,*:*:4.0:3.0 | 3[34]??/*:*:4.0:3.0 | 4400:*:4.0:3.0 | 4850:*:4.0:3.0 | SKA40:*:4.0:3.0 | SDS2:*:4.0:3.0 | SHG2:*:4.0:3.0 | S7501*:*:4.0:3.0)
- OS_REL=''
- test -r /etc/.relid \
- && OS_REL=.`sed -n 's/[^ ]* [^ ]* \([0-9][0-9]\).*/\1/p' < /etc/.relid`
- /bin/uname -p 2>/dev/null | grep 86 >/dev/null \
- && { echo i486-ncr-sysv4.3${OS_REL}; exit; }
- /bin/uname -p 2>/dev/null | /bin/grep entium >/dev/null \
- && { echo i586-ncr-sysv4.3${OS_REL}; exit; } ;;
- 3[34]??:*:4.0:* | 3[34]??,*:*:4.0:*)
- /bin/uname -p 2>/dev/null | grep 86 >/dev/null \
- && { echo i486-ncr-sysv4; exit; } ;;
- m68*:LynxOS:2.*:* | m68*:LynxOS:3.0*:*)
- echo m68k-unknown-lynxos${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- mc68030:UNIX_System_V:4.*:*)
- echo m68k-atari-sysv4
- exit ;;
- TSUNAMI:LynxOS:2.*:*)
- echo sparc-unknown-lynxos${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- rs6000:LynxOS:2.*:*)
- echo rs6000-unknown-lynxos${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- PowerPC:LynxOS:2.*:* | PowerPC:LynxOS:3.[01]*:* | PowerPC:LynxOS:4.0*:*)
- echo powerpc-unknown-lynxos${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- SM[BE]S:UNIX_SV:*:*)
- echo mips-dde-sysv${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- RM*:ReliantUNIX-*:*:*)
- echo mips-sni-sysv4
- exit ;;
- RM*:SINIX-*:*:*)
- echo mips-sni-sysv4
- exit ;;
- *:SINIX-*:*:*)
- if uname -p 2>/dev/null >/dev/null ; then
- UNAME_MACHINE=`(uname -p) 2>/dev/null`
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-sni-sysv4
- else
- echo ns32k-sni-sysv
- fi
- exit ;;
- PENTIUM:*:4.0*:*) # Unisys `ClearPath HMP IX 4000' SVR4/MP effort
- # says <Richard.M.Bartel@ccMail.Census.GOV>
- echo i586-unisys-sysv4
- exit ;;
- *:UNIX_System_V:4*:FTX*)
- # From Gerald Hewes <hewes@openmarket.com>.
- # How about differentiating between stratus architectures? -djm
- echo hppa1.1-stratus-sysv4
- exit ;;
- *:*:*:FTX*)
- # From seanf@swdc.stratus.com.
- echo i860-stratus-sysv4
- exit ;;
- i*86:VOS:*:*)
- # From Paul.Green@stratus.com.
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-stratus-vos
- exit ;;
- *:VOS:*:*)
- # From Paul.Green@stratus.com.
- echo hppa1.1-stratus-vos
- exit ;;
- mc68*:A/UX:*:*)
- echo m68k-apple-aux${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- news*:NEWS-OS:6*:*)
- echo mips-sony-newsos6
- exit ;;
- R[34]000:*System_V*:*:* | R4000:UNIX_SYSV:*:* | R*000:UNIX_SV:*:*)
- if [ -d /usr/nec ]; then
- echo mips-nec-sysv${UNAME_RELEASE}
- else
- echo mips-unknown-sysv${UNAME_RELEASE}
- fi
- exit ;;
- BeBox:BeOS:*:*) # BeOS running on hardware made by Be, PPC only.
- echo powerpc-be-beos
- exit ;;
- BeMac:BeOS:*:*) # BeOS running on Mac or Mac clone, PPC only.
- echo powerpc-apple-beos
- exit ;;
- BePC:BeOS:*:*) # BeOS running on Intel PC compatible.
- echo i586-pc-beos
- exit ;;
- SX-4:SUPER-UX:*:*)
- echo sx4-nec-superux${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- SX-5:SUPER-UX:*:*)
- echo sx5-nec-superux${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- SX-6:SUPER-UX:*:*)
- echo sx6-nec-superux${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- Power*:Rhapsody:*:*)
- echo powerpc-apple-rhapsody${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:Rhapsody:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-apple-rhapsody${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:Darwin:*:*)
- UNAME_PROCESSOR=`uname -p` || UNAME_PROCESSOR=unknown
- case $UNAME_PROCESSOR in
- *86) UNAME_PROCESSOR=i686 ;;
- unknown) UNAME_PROCESSOR=powerpc ;;
- esac
- echo ${UNAME_PROCESSOR}-apple-darwin${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:procnto*:*:* | *:QNX:[0123456789]*:*)
- UNAME_PROCESSOR=`uname -p`
- if test "$UNAME_PROCESSOR" = "x86"; then
- UNAME_PROCESSOR=i386
- UNAME_MACHINE=pc
- fi
- echo ${UNAME_PROCESSOR}-${UNAME_MACHINE}-nto-qnx${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:QNX:*:4*)
- echo i386-pc-qnx
- exit ;;
- NSE-?:NONSTOP_KERNEL:*:*)
- echo nse-tandem-nsk${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- NSR-?:NONSTOP_KERNEL:*:*)
- echo nsr-tandem-nsk${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:NonStop-UX:*:*)
- echo mips-compaq-nonstopux
- exit ;;
- BS2000:POSIX*:*:*)
- echo bs2000-siemens-sysv
- exit ;;
- DS/*:UNIX_System_V:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-${UNAME_SYSTEM}-${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:Plan9:*:*)
- # "uname -m" is not consistent, so use $cputype instead. 386
- # is converted to i386 for consistency with other x86
- # operating systems.
- if test "$cputype" = "386"; then
- UNAME_MACHINE=i386
- else
- UNAME_MACHINE="$cputype"
- fi
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-plan9
- exit ;;
- *:TOPS-10:*:*)
- echo pdp10-unknown-tops10
- exit ;;
- *:TENEX:*:*)
- echo pdp10-unknown-tenex
- exit ;;
- KS10:TOPS-20:*:* | KL10:TOPS-20:*:* | TYPE4:TOPS-20:*:*)
- echo pdp10-dec-tops20
- exit ;;
- XKL-1:TOPS-20:*:* | TYPE5:TOPS-20:*:*)
- echo pdp10-xkl-tops20
- exit ;;
- *:TOPS-20:*:*)
- echo pdp10-unknown-tops20
- exit ;;
- *:ITS:*:*)
- echo pdp10-unknown-its
- exit ;;
- SEI:*:*:SEIUX)
- echo mips-sei-seiux${UNAME_RELEASE}
- exit ;;
- *:DragonFly:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-dragonfly`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[-(].*//'`
- exit ;;
- *:*VMS:*:*)
- UNAME_MACHINE=`(uname -p) 2>/dev/null`
- case "${UNAME_MACHINE}" in
- A*) echo alpha-dec-vms ; exit ;;
- I*) echo ia64-dec-vms ; exit ;;
- V*) echo vax-dec-vms ; exit ;;
- esac ;;
- *:XENIX:*:SysV)
- echo i386-pc-xenix
- exit ;;
- i*86:skyos:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-skyos`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}` | sed -e 's/ .*$//'
- exit ;;
-esac
-
-#echo '(No uname command or uname output not recognized.)' 1>&2
-#echo "${UNAME_MACHINE}:${UNAME_SYSTEM}:${UNAME_RELEASE}:${UNAME_VERSION}" 1>&2
-
-eval $set_cc_for_build
-cat >$dummy.c <<EOF
-#ifdef _SEQUENT_
-# include <sys/types.h>
-# include <sys/utsname.h>
-#endif
-main ()
-{
-#if defined (sony)
-#if defined (MIPSEB)
- /* BFD wants "bsd" instead of "newsos". Perhaps BFD should be changed,
- I don't know.... */
- printf ("mips-sony-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-#else
-#include <sys/param.h>
- printf ("m68k-sony-newsos%s\n",
-#ifdef NEWSOS4
- "4"
-#else
- ""
-#endif
- ); exit (0);
-#endif
-#endif
-
-#if defined (__arm) && defined (__acorn) && defined (__unix)
- printf ("arm-acorn-riscix\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-
-#if defined (hp300) && !defined (hpux)
- printf ("m68k-hp-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-
-#if defined (NeXT)
-#if !defined (__ARCHITECTURE__)
-#define __ARCHITECTURE__ "m68k"
-#endif
- int version;
- version=`(hostinfo | sed -n 's/.*NeXT Mach \([0-9]*\).*/\1/p') 2>/dev/null`;
- if (version < 4)
- printf ("%s-next-nextstep%d\n", __ARCHITECTURE__, version);
- else
- printf ("%s-next-openstep%d\n", __ARCHITECTURE__, version);
- exit (0);
-#endif
-
-#if defined (MULTIMAX) || defined (n16)
-#if defined (UMAXV)
- printf ("ns32k-encore-sysv\n"); exit (0);
-#else
-#if defined (CMU)
- printf ("ns32k-encore-mach\n"); exit (0);
-#else
- printf ("ns32k-encore-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-#endif
-#endif
-
-#if defined (__386BSD__)
- printf ("i386-pc-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-
-#if defined (sequent)
-#if defined (i386)
- printf ("i386-sequent-dynix\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-#if defined (ns32000)
- printf ("ns32k-sequent-dynix\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-#endif
-
-#if defined (_SEQUENT_)
- struct utsname un;
-
- uname(&un);
-
- if (strncmp(un.version, "V2", 2) == 0) {
- printf ("i386-sequent-ptx2\n"); exit (0);
- }
- if (strncmp(un.version, "V1", 2) == 0) { /* XXX is V1 correct? */
- printf ("i386-sequent-ptx1\n"); exit (0);
- }
- printf ("i386-sequent-ptx\n"); exit (0);
-
-#endif
-
-#if defined (vax)
-# if !defined (ultrix)
-# include <sys/param.h>
-# if defined (BSD)
-# if BSD == 43
- printf ("vax-dec-bsd4.3\n"); exit (0);
-# else
-# if BSD == 199006
- printf ("vax-dec-bsd4.3reno\n"); exit (0);
-# else
- printf ("vax-dec-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-# endif
-# endif
-# else
- printf ("vax-dec-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-# endif
-# else
- printf ("vax-dec-ultrix\n"); exit (0);
-# endif
-#endif
-
-#if defined (alliant) && defined (i860)
- printf ("i860-alliant-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-
- exit (1);
-}
-EOF
-
-$CC_FOR_BUILD -o $dummy $dummy.c 2>/dev/null && SYSTEM_NAME=`$dummy` &&
- { echo "$SYSTEM_NAME"; exit; }
-
-# Apollos put the system type in the environment.
-
-test -d /usr/apollo && { echo ${ISP}-apollo-${SYSTYPE}; exit; }
-
-# Convex versions that predate uname can use getsysinfo(1)
-
-if [ -x /usr/convex/getsysinfo ]
-then
- case `getsysinfo -f cpu_type` in
- c1*)
- echo c1-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- c2*)
- if getsysinfo -f scalar_acc
- then echo c32-convex-bsd
- else echo c2-convex-bsd
- fi
- exit ;;
- c34*)
- echo c34-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- c38*)
- echo c38-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- c4*)
- echo c4-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- esac
-fi
-
-cat >&2 <<EOF
-$0: unable to guess system type
-
-This script, last modified $timestamp, has failed to recognize
-the operating system you are using. It is advised that you
-download the most up to date version of the config scripts from
-
- http://savannah.gnu.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs/*checkout*/config/config/config.guess
-and
- http://savannah.gnu.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs/*checkout*/config/config/config.sub
-
-If the version you run ($0) is already up to date, please
-send the following data and any information you think might be
-pertinent to <config-patches@gnu.org> in order to provide the needed
-information to handle your system.
-
-config.guess timestamp = $timestamp
-
-uname -m = `(uname -m) 2>/dev/null || echo unknown`
-uname -r = `(uname -r) 2>/dev/null || echo unknown`
-uname -s = `(uname -s) 2>/dev/null || echo unknown`
-uname -v = `(uname -v) 2>/dev/null || echo unknown`
-
-/usr/bin/uname -p = `(/usr/bin/uname -p) 2>/dev/null`
-/bin/uname -X = `(/bin/uname -X) 2>/dev/null`
-
-hostinfo = `(hostinfo) 2>/dev/null`
-/bin/universe = `(/bin/universe) 2>/dev/null`
-/usr/bin/arch -k = `(/usr/bin/arch -k) 2>/dev/null`
-/bin/arch = `(/bin/arch) 2>/dev/null`
-/usr/bin/oslevel = `(/usr/bin/oslevel) 2>/dev/null`
-/usr/convex/getsysinfo = `(/usr/convex/getsysinfo) 2>/dev/null`
-
-UNAME_MACHINE = ${UNAME_MACHINE}
-UNAME_RELEASE = ${UNAME_RELEASE}
-UNAME_SYSTEM = ${UNAME_SYSTEM}
-UNAME_VERSION = ${UNAME_VERSION}
-EOF
-
-exit 1
-
-# Local variables:
-# eval: (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp)
-# time-stamp-start: "timestamp='"
-# time-stamp-format: "%:y-%02m-%02d"
-# time-stamp-end: "'"
-# End:
diff --git a/talloc/config.mk b/talloc/config.mk
deleted file mode 100644
index 5cdf3a1a..00000000
--- a/talloc/config.mk
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
-[LIBRARY::LIBTALLOC]
-OUTPUT_TYPE = MERGED_OBJ
-CFLAGS = -I$(tallocsrcdir)
-
-LIBTALLOC_OBJ_FILES = $(tallocsrcdir)/talloc.o
-
-MANPAGES += $(tallocdir)/talloc.3
diff --git a/talloc/config.sub b/talloc/config.sub
deleted file mode 100755
index 23cd6fd7..00000000
--- a/talloc/config.sub
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1577 +0,0 @@
-#! /bin/sh
-# Configuration validation subroutine script.
-# Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999,
-# 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-timestamp='2005-07-08'
-
-# This file is (in principle) common to ALL GNU software.
-# The presence of a machine in this file suggests that SOME GNU software
-# can handle that machine. It does not imply ALL GNU software can.
-#
-# This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
-# the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
-# (at your option) any later version.
-#
-# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
-# GNU General Public License for more details.
-#
-# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
-# along with this program; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-#
-# As a special exception to the GNU General Public License, if you
-# distribute this file as part of a program that contains a
-# configuration script generated by Autoconf, you may include it under
-# the same distribution terms that you use for the rest of that program.
-
-
-# Please send patches to <config-patches@gnu.org>. Submit a context
-# diff and a properly formatted ChangeLog entry.
-#
-# Configuration subroutine to validate and canonicalize a configuration type.
-# Supply the specified configuration type as an argument.
-# If it is invalid, we print an error message on stderr and exit with code 1.
-# Otherwise, we print the canonical config type on stdout and succeed.
-
-# This file is supposed to be the same for all GNU packages
-# and recognize all the CPU types, system types and aliases
-# that are meaningful with *any* GNU software.
-# Each package is responsible for reporting which valid configurations
-# it does not support. The user should be able to distinguish
-# a failure to support a valid configuration from a meaningless
-# configuration.
-
-# The goal of this file is to map all the various variations of a given
-# machine specification into a single specification in the form:
-# CPU_TYPE-MANUFACTURER-OPERATING_SYSTEM
-# or in some cases, the newer four-part form:
-# CPU_TYPE-MANUFACTURER-KERNEL-OPERATING_SYSTEM
-# It is wrong to echo any other type of specification.
-
-me=`echo "$0" | sed -e 's,.*/,,'`
-
-usage="\
-Usage: $0 [OPTION] CPU-MFR-OPSYS
- $0 [OPTION] ALIAS
-
-Canonicalize a configuration name.
-
-Operation modes:
- -h, --help print this help, then exit
- -t, --time-stamp print date of last modification, then exit
- -v, --version print version number, then exit
-
-Report bugs and patches to <config-patches@gnu.org>."
-
-version="\
-GNU config.sub ($timestamp)
-
-Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005
-Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
-warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE."
-
-help="
-Try \`$me --help' for more information."
-
-# Parse command line
-while test $# -gt 0 ; do
- case $1 in
- --time-stamp | --time* | -t )
- echo "$timestamp" ; exit ;;
- --version | -v )
- echo "$version" ; exit ;;
- --help | --h* | -h )
- echo "$usage"; exit ;;
- -- ) # Stop option processing
- shift; break ;;
- - ) # Use stdin as input.
- break ;;
- -* )
- echo "$me: invalid option $1$help"
- exit 1 ;;
-
- *local*)
- # First pass through any local machine types.
- echo $1
- exit ;;
-
- * )
- break ;;
- esac
-done
-
-case $# in
- 0) echo "$me: missing argument$help" >&2
- exit 1;;
- 1) ;;
- *) echo "$me: too many arguments$help" >&2
- exit 1;;
-esac
-
-# Separate what the user gave into CPU-COMPANY and OS or KERNEL-OS (if any).
-# Here we must recognize all the valid KERNEL-OS combinations.
-maybe_os=`echo $1 | sed 's/^\(.*\)-\([^-]*-[^-]*\)$/\2/'`
-case $maybe_os in
- nto-qnx* | linux-gnu* | linux-dietlibc | linux-uclibc* | uclinux-uclibc* | uclinux-gnu* | \
- kfreebsd*-gnu* | knetbsd*-gnu* | netbsd*-gnu* | storm-chaos* | os2-emx* | rtmk-nova*)
- os=-$maybe_os
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed 's/^\(.*\)-\([^-]*-[^-]*\)$/\1/'`
- ;;
- *)
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed 's/-[^-]*$//'`
- if [ $basic_machine != $1 ]
- then os=`echo $1 | sed 's/.*-/-/'`
- else os=; fi
- ;;
-esac
-
-### Let's recognize common machines as not being operating systems so
-### that things like config.sub decstation-3100 work. We also
-### recognize some manufacturers as not being operating systems, so we
-### can provide default operating systems below.
-case $os in
- -sun*os*)
- # Prevent following clause from handling this invalid input.
- ;;
- -dec* | -mips* | -sequent* | -encore* | -pc532* | -sgi* | -sony* | \
- -att* | -7300* | -3300* | -delta* | -motorola* | -sun[234]* | \
- -unicom* | -ibm* | -next | -hp | -isi* | -apollo | -altos* | \
- -convergent* | -ncr* | -news | -32* | -3600* | -3100* | -hitachi* |\
- -c[123]* | -convex* | -sun | -crds | -omron* | -dg | -ultra | -tti* | \
- -harris | -dolphin | -highlevel | -gould | -cbm | -ns | -masscomp | \
- -apple | -axis | -knuth | -cray)
- os=
- basic_machine=$1
- ;;
- -sim | -cisco | -oki | -wec | -winbond)
- os=
- basic_machine=$1
- ;;
- -scout)
- ;;
- -wrs)
- os=-vxworks
- basic_machine=$1
- ;;
- -chorusos*)
- os=-chorusos
- basic_machine=$1
- ;;
- -chorusrdb)
- os=-chorusrdb
- basic_machine=$1
- ;;
- -hiux*)
- os=-hiuxwe2
- ;;
- -sco5)
- os=-sco3.2v5
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86-.*/86-pc/'`
- ;;
- -sco4)
- os=-sco3.2v4
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86-.*/86-pc/'`
- ;;
- -sco3.2.[4-9]*)
- os=`echo $os | sed -e 's/sco3.2./sco3.2v/'`
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86-.*/86-pc/'`
- ;;
- -sco3.2v[4-9]*)
- # Don't forget version if it is 3.2v4 or newer.
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86-.*/86-pc/'`
- ;;
- -sco*)
- os=-sco3.2v2
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86-.*/86-pc/'`
- ;;
- -udk*)
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86-.*/86-pc/'`
- ;;
- -isc)
- os=-isc2.2
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86-.*/86-pc/'`
- ;;
- -clix*)
- basic_machine=clipper-intergraph
- ;;
- -isc*)
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86-.*/86-pc/'`
- ;;
- -lynx*)
- os=-lynxos
- ;;
- -ptx*)
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86-.*/86-sequent/'`
- ;;
- -windowsnt*)
- os=`echo $os | sed -e 's/windowsnt/winnt/'`
- ;;
- -psos*)
- os=-psos
- ;;
- -mint | -mint[0-9]*)
- basic_machine=m68k-atari
- os=-mint
- ;;
-esac
-
-# Decode aliases for certain CPU-COMPANY combinations.
-case $basic_machine in
- # Recognize the basic CPU types without company name.
- # Some are omitted here because they have special meanings below.
- 1750a | 580 \
- | a29k \
- | alpha | alphaev[4-8] | alphaev56 | alphaev6[78] | alphapca5[67] \
- | alpha64 | alpha64ev[4-8] | alpha64ev56 | alpha64ev6[78] | alpha64pca5[67] \
- | am33_2.0 \
- | arc | arm | arm[bl]e | arme[lb] | armv[2345] | armv[345][lb] | avr \
- | bfin \
- | c4x | clipper \
- | d10v | d30v | dlx | dsp16xx \
- | fr30 | frv \
- | h8300 | h8500 | hppa | hppa1.[01] | hppa2.0 | hppa2.0[nw] | hppa64 \
- | i370 | i860 | i960 | ia64 \
- | ip2k | iq2000 \
- | m32r | m32rle | m68000 | m68k | m88k | maxq | mcore \
- | mips | mipsbe | mipseb | mipsel | mipsle \
- | mips16 \
- | mips64 | mips64el \
- | mips64vr | mips64vrel \
- | mips64orion | mips64orionel \
- | mips64vr4100 | mips64vr4100el \
- | mips64vr4300 | mips64vr4300el \
- | mips64vr5000 | mips64vr5000el \
- | mips64vr5900 | mips64vr5900el \
- | mipsisa32 | mipsisa32el \
- | mipsisa32r2 | mipsisa32r2el \
- | mipsisa64 | mipsisa64el \
- | mipsisa64r2 | mipsisa64r2el \
- | mipsisa64sb1 | mipsisa64sb1el \
- | mipsisa64sr71k | mipsisa64sr71kel \
- | mipstx39 | mipstx39el \
- | mn10200 | mn10300 \
- | ms1 \
- | msp430 \
- | ns16k | ns32k \
- | or32 \
- | pdp10 | pdp11 | pj | pjl \
- | powerpc | powerpc64 | powerpc64le | powerpcle | ppcbe \
- | pyramid \
- | sh | sh[1234] | sh[24]a | sh[23]e | sh[34]eb | shbe | shle | sh[1234]le | sh3ele \
- | sh64 | sh64le \
- | sparc | sparc64 | sparc64b | sparc86x | sparclet | sparclite \
- | sparcv8 | sparcv9 | sparcv9b \
- | strongarm \
- | tahoe | thumb | tic4x | tic80 | tron \
- | v850 | v850e \
- | we32k \
- | x86 | xscale | xscalee[bl] | xstormy16 | xtensa \
- | z8k)
- basic_machine=$basic_machine-unknown
- ;;
- m32c)
- basic_machine=$basic_machine-unknown
- ;;
- m6811 | m68hc11 | m6812 | m68hc12)
- # Motorola 68HC11/12.
- basic_machine=$basic_machine-unknown
- os=-none
- ;;
- m88110 | m680[12346]0 | m683?2 | m68360 | m5200 | v70 | w65 | z8k)
- ;;
-
- # We use `pc' rather than `unknown'
- # because (1) that's what they normally are, and
- # (2) the word "unknown" tends to confuse beginning users.
- i*86 | x86_64)
- basic_machine=$basic_machine-pc
- ;;
- # Object if more than one company name word.
- *-*-*)
- echo Invalid configuration \`$1\': machine \`$basic_machine\' not recognized 1>&2
- exit 1
- ;;
- # Recognize the basic CPU types with company name.
- 580-* \
- | a29k-* \
- | alpha-* | alphaev[4-8]-* | alphaev56-* | alphaev6[78]-* \
- | alpha64-* | alpha64ev[4-8]-* | alpha64ev56-* | alpha64ev6[78]-* \
- | alphapca5[67]-* | alpha64pca5[67]-* | arc-* \
- | arm-* | armbe-* | armle-* | armeb-* | armv*-* \
- | avr-* \
- | bfin-* | bs2000-* \
- | c[123]* | c30-* | [cjt]90-* | c4x-* | c54x-* | c55x-* | c6x-* \
- | clipper-* | craynv-* | cydra-* \
- | d10v-* | d30v-* | dlx-* \
- | elxsi-* \
- | f30[01]-* | f700-* | fr30-* | frv-* | fx80-* \
- | h8300-* | h8500-* \
- | hppa-* | hppa1.[01]-* | hppa2.0-* | hppa2.0[nw]-* | hppa64-* \
- | i*86-* | i860-* | i960-* | ia64-* \
- | ip2k-* | iq2000-* \
- | m32r-* | m32rle-* \
- | m68000-* | m680[012346]0-* | m68360-* | m683?2-* | m68k-* \
- | m88110-* | m88k-* | maxq-* | mcore-* \
- | mips-* | mipsbe-* | mipseb-* | mipsel-* | mipsle-* \
- | mips16-* \
- | mips64-* | mips64el-* \
- | mips64vr-* | mips64vrel-* \
- | mips64orion-* | mips64orionel-* \
- | mips64vr4100-* | mips64vr4100el-* \
- | mips64vr4300-* | mips64vr4300el-* \
- | mips64vr5000-* | mips64vr5000el-* \
- | mips64vr5900-* | mips64vr5900el-* \
- | mipsisa32-* | mipsisa32el-* \
- | mipsisa32r2-* | mipsisa32r2el-* \
- | mipsisa64-* | mipsisa64el-* \
- | mipsisa64r2-* | mipsisa64r2el-* \
- | mipsisa64sb1-* | mipsisa64sb1el-* \
- | mipsisa64sr71k-* | mipsisa64sr71kel-* \
- | mipstx39-* | mipstx39el-* \
- | mmix-* \
- | ms1-* \
- | msp430-* \
- | none-* | np1-* | ns16k-* | ns32k-* \
- | orion-* \
- | pdp10-* | pdp11-* | pj-* | pjl-* | pn-* | power-* \
- | powerpc-* | powerpc64-* | powerpc64le-* | powerpcle-* | ppcbe-* \
- | pyramid-* \
- | romp-* | rs6000-* \
- | sh-* | sh[1234]-* | sh[24]a-* | sh[23]e-* | sh[34]eb-* | shbe-* \
- | shle-* | sh[1234]le-* | sh3ele-* | sh64-* | sh64le-* \
- | sparc-* | sparc64-* | sparc64b-* | sparc86x-* | sparclet-* \
- | sparclite-* \
- | sparcv8-* | sparcv9-* | sparcv9b-* | strongarm-* | sv1-* | sx?-* \
- | tahoe-* | thumb-* \
- | tic30-* | tic4x-* | tic54x-* | tic55x-* | tic6x-* | tic80-* \
- | tron-* \
- | v850-* | v850e-* | vax-* \
- | we32k-* \
- | x86-* | x86_64-* | xps100-* | xscale-* | xscalee[bl]-* \
- | xstormy16-* | xtensa-* \
- | ymp-* \
- | z8k-*)
- ;;
- m32c-*)
- ;;
- # Recognize the various machine names and aliases which stand
- # for a CPU type and a company and sometimes even an OS.
- 386bsd)
- basic_machine=i386-unknown
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- 3b1 | 7300 | 7300-att | att-7300 | pc7300 | safari | unixpc)
- basic_machine=m68000-att
- ;;
- 3b*)
- basic_machine=we32k-att
- ;;
- a29khif)
- basic_machine=a29k-amd
- os=-udi
- ;;
- abacus)
- basic_machine=abacus-unknown
- ;;
- adobe68k)
- basic_machine=m68010-adobe
- os=-scout
- ;;
- alliant | fx80)
- basic_machine=fx80-alliant
- ;;
- altos | altos3068)
- basic_machine=m68k-altos
- ;;
- am29k)
- basic_machine=a29k-none
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- amd64)
- basic_machine=x86_64-pc
- ;;
- amd64-*)
- basic_machine=x86_64-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'`
- ;;
- amdahl)
- basic_machine=580-amdahl
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- amiga | amiga-*)
- basic_machine=m68k-unknown
- ;;
- amigaos | amigados)
- basic_machine=m68k-unknown
- os=-amigaos
- ;;
- amigaunix | amix)
- basic_machine=m68k-unknown
- os=-sysv4
- ;;
- apollo68)
- basic_machine=m68k-apollo
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- apollo68bsd)
- basic_machine=m68k-apollo
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- aux)
- basic_machine=m68k-apple
- os=-aux
- ;;
- balance)
- basic_machine=ns32k-sequent
- os=-dynix
- ;;
- c90)
- basic_machine=c90-cray
- os=-unicos
- ;;
- convex-c1)
- basic_machine=c1-convex
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- convex-c2)
- basic_machine=c2-convex
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- convex-c32)
- basic_machine=c32-convex
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- convex-c34)
- basic_machine=c34-convex
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- convex-c38)
- basic_machine=c38-convex
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- cray | j90)
- basic_machine=j90-cray
- os=-unicos
- ;;
- craynv)
- basic_machine=craynv-cray
- os=-unicosmp
- ;;
- cr16c)
- basic_machine=cr16c-unknown
- os=-elf
- ;;
- crds | unos)
- basic_machine=m68k-crds
- ;;
- crisv32 | crisv32-* | etraxfs*)
- basic_machine=crisv32-axis
- ;;
- cris | cris-* | etrax*)
- basic_machine=cris-axis
- ;;
- crx)
- basic_machine=crx-unknown
- os=-elf
- ;;
- da30 | da30-*)
- basic_machine=m68k-da30
- ;;
- decstation | decstation-3100 | pmax | pmax-* | pmin | dec3100 | decstatn)
- basic_machine=mips-dec
- ;;
- decsystem10* | dec10*)
- basic_machine=pdp10-dec
- os=-tops10
- ;;
- decsystem20* | dec20*)
- basic_machine=pdp10-dec
- os=-tops20
- ;;
- delta | 3300 | motorola-3300 | motorola-delta \
- | 3300-motorola | delta-motorola)
- basic_machine=m68k-motorola
- ;;
- delta88)
- basic_machine=m88k-motorola
- os=-sysv3
- ;;
- djgpp)
- basic_machine=i586-pc
- os=-msdosdjgpp
- ;;
- dpx20 | dpx20-*)
- basic_machine=rs6000-bull
- os=-bosx
- ;;
- dpx2* | dpx2*-bull)
- basic_machine=m68k-bull
- os=-sysv3
- ;;
- ebmon29k)
- basic_machine=a29k-amd
- os=-ebmon
- ;;
- elxsi)
- basic_machine=elxsi-elxsi
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- encore | umax | mmax)
- basic_machine=ns32k-encore
- ;;
- es1800 | OSE68k | ose68k | ose | OSE)
- basic_machine=m68k-ericsson
- os=-ose
- ;;
- fx2800)
- basic_machine=i860-alliant
- ;;
- genix)
- basic_machine=ns32k-ns
- ;;
- gmicro)
- basic_machine=tron-gmicro
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- go32)
- basic_machine=i386-pc
- os=-go32
- ;;
- h3050r* | hiux*)
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-hitachi
- os=-hiuxwe2
- ;;
- h8300hms)
- basic_machine=h8300-hitachi
- os=-hms
- ;;
- h8300xray)
- basic_machine=h8300-hitachi
- os=-xray
- ;;
- h8500hms)
- basic_machine=h8500-hitachi
- os=-hms
- ;;
- harris)
- basic_machine=m88k-harris
- os=-sysv3
- ;;
- hp300-*)
- basic_machine=m68k-hp
- ;;
- hp300bsd)
- basic_machine=m68k-hp
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- hp300hpux)
- basic_machine=m68k-hp
- os=-hpux
- ;;
- hp3k9[0-9][0-9] | hp9[0-9][0-9])
- basic_machine=hppa1.0-hp
- ;;
- hp9k2[0-9][0-9] | hp9k31[0-9])
- basic_machine=m68000-hp
- ;;
- hp9k3[2-9][0-9])
- basic_machine=m68k-hp
- ;;
- hp9k6[0-9][0-9] | hp6[0-9][0-9])
- basic_machine=hppa1.0-hp
- ;;
- hp9k7[0-79][0-9] | hp7[0-79][0-9])
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp
- ;;
- hp9k78[0-9] | hp78[0-9])
- # FIXME: really hppa2.0-hp
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp
- ;;
- hp9k8[67]1 | hp8[67]1 | hp9k80[24] | hp80[24] | hp9k8[78]9 | hp8[78]9 | hp9k893 | hp893)
- # FIXME: really hppa2.0-hp
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp
- ;;
- hp9k8[0-9][13679] | hp8[0-9][13679])
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp
- ;;
- hp9k8[0-9][0-9] | hp8[0-9][0-9])
- basic_machine=hppa1.0-hp
- ;;
- hppa-next)
- os=-nextstep3
- ;;
- hppaosf)
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp
- os=-osf
- ;;
- hppro)
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp
- os=-proelf
- ;;
- i370-ibm* | ibm*)
- basic_machine=i370-ibm
- ;;
-# I'm not sure what "Sysv32" means. Should this be sysv3.2?
- i*86v32)
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86.*/86-pc/'`
- os=-sysv32
- ;;
- i*86v4*)
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86.*/86-pc/'`
- os=-sysv4
- ;;
- i*86v)
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86.*/86-pc/'`
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- i*86sol2)
- basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86.*/86-pc/'`
- os=-solaris2
- ;;
- i386mach)
- basic_machine=i386-mach
- os=-mach
- ;;
- i386-vsta | vsta)
- basic_machine=i386-unknown
- os=-vsta
- ;;
- iris | iris4d)
- basic_machine=mips-sgi
- case $os in
- -irix*)
- ;;
- *)
- os=-irix4
- ;;
- esac
- ;;
- isi68 | isi)
- basic_machine=m68k-isi
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- m88k-omron*)
- basic_machine=m88k-omron
- ;;
- magnum | m3230)
- basic_machine=mips-mips
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- merlin)
- basic_machine=ns32k-utek
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- mingw32)
- basic_machine=i386-pc
- os=-mingw32
- ;;
- miniframe)
- basic_machine=m68000-convergent
- ;;
- *mint | -mint[0-9]* | *MiNT | *MiNT[0-9]*)
- basic_machine=m68k-atari
- os=-mint
- ;;
- mips3*-*)
- basic_machine=`echo $basic_machine | sed -e 's/mips3/mips64/'`
- ;;
- mips3*)
- basic_machine=`echo $basic_machine | sed -e 's/mips3/mips64/'`-unknown
- ;;
- monitor)
- basic_machine=m68k-rom68k
- os=-coff
- ;;
- morphos)
- basic_machine=powerpc-unknown
- os=-morphos
- ;;
- msdos)
- basic_machine=i386-pc
- os=-msdos
- ;;
- mvs)
- basic_machine=i370-ibm
- os=-mvs
- ;;
- ncr3000)
- basic_machine=i486-ncr
- os=-sysv4
- ;;
- netbsd386)
- basic_machine=i386-unknown
- os=-netbsd
- ;;
- netwinder)
- basic_machine=armv4l-rebel
- os=-linux
- ;;
- news | news700 | news800 | news900)
- basic_machine=m68k-sony
- os=-newsos
- ;;
- news1000)
- basic_machine=m68030-sony
- os=-newsos
- ;;
- news-3600 | risc-news)
- basic_machine=mips-sony
- os=-newsos
- ;;
- necv70)
- basic_machine=v70-nec
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- next | m*-next )
- basic_machine=m68k-next
- case $os in
- -nextstep* )
- ;;
- -ns2*)
- os=-nextstep2
- ;;
- *)
- os=-nextstep3
- ;;
- esac
- ;;
- nh3000)
- basic_machine=m68k-harris
- os=-cxux
- ;;
- nh[45]000)
- basic_machine=m88k-harris
- os=-cxux
- ;;
- nindy960)
- basic_machine=i960-intel
- os=-nindy
- ;;
- mon960)
- basic_machine=i960-intel
- os=-mon960
- ;;
- nonstopux)
- basic_machine=mips-compaq
- os=-nonstopux
- ;;
- np1)
- basic_machine=np1-gould
- ;;
- nsr-tandem)
- basic_machine=nsr-tandem
- ;;
- op50n-* | op60c-*)
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-oki
- os=-proelf
- ;;
- openrisc | openrisc-*)
- basic_machine=or32-unknown
- ;;
- os400)
- basic_machine=powerpc-ibm
- os=-os400
- ;;
- OSE68000 | ose68000)
- basic_machine=m68000-ericsson
- os=-ose
- ;;
- os68k)
- basic_machine=m68k-none
- os=-os68k
- ;;
- pa-hitachi)
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-hitachi
- os=-hiuxwe2
- ;;
- paragon)
- basic_machine=i860-intel
- os=-osf
- ;;
- pbd)
- basic_machine=sparc-tti
- ;;
- pbb)
- basic_machine=m68k-tti
- ;;
- pc532 | pc532-*)
- basic_machine=ns32k-pc532
- ;;
- pentium | p5 | k5 | k6 | nexgen | viac3)
- basic_machine=i586-pc
- ;;
- pentiumpro | p6 | 6x86 | athlon | athlon_*)
- basic_machine=i686-pc
- ;;
- pentiumii | pentium2 | pentiumiii | pentium3)
- basic_machine=i686-pc
- ;;
- pentium4)
- basic_machine=i786-pc
- ;;
- pentium-* | p5-* | k5-* | k6-* | nexgen-* | viac3-*)
- basic_machine=i586-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'`
- ;;
- pentiumpro-* | p6-* | 6x86-* | athlon-*)
- basic_machine=i686-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'`
- ;;
- pentiumii-* | pentium2-* | pentiumiii-* | pentium3-*)
- basic_machine=i686-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'`
- ;;
- pentium4-*)
- basic_machine=i786-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'`
- ;;
- pn)
- basic_machine=pn-gould
- ;;
- power) basic_machine=power-ibm
- ;;
- ppc) basic_machine=powerpc-unknown
- ;;
- ppc-*) basic_machine=powerpc-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'`
- ;;
- ppcle | powerpclittle | ppc-le | powerpc-little)
- basic_machine=powerpcle-unknown
- ;;
- ppcle-* | powerpclittle-*)
- basic_machine=powerpcle-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'`
- ;;
- ppc64) basic_machine=powerpc64-unknown
- ;;
- ppc64-*) basic_machine=powerpc64-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'`
- ;;
- ppc64le | powerpc64little | ppc64-le | powerpc64-little)
- basic_machine=powerpc64le-unknown
- ;;
- ppc64le-* | powerpc64little-*)
- basic_machine=powerpc64le-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'`
- ;;
- ps2)
- basic_machine=i386-ibm
- ;;
- pw32)
- basic_machine=i586-unknown
- os=-pw32
- ;;
- rom68k)
- basic_machine=m68k-rom68k
- os=-coff
- ;;
- rm[46]00)
- basic_machine=mips-siemens
- ;;
- rtpc | rtpc-*)
- basic_machine=romp-ibm
- ;;
- s390 | s390-*)
- basic_machine=s390-ibm
- ;;
- s390x | s390x-*)
- basic_machine=s390x-ibm
- ;;
- sa29200)
- basic_machine=a29k-amd
- os=-udi
- ;;
- sb1)
- basic_machine=mipsisa64sb1-unknown
- ;;
- sb1el)
- basic_machine=mipsisa64sb1el-unknown
- ;;
- sei)
- basic_machine=mips-sei
- os=-seiux
- ;;
- sequent)
- basic_machine=i386-sequent
- ;;
- sh)
- basic_machine=sh-hitachi
- os=-hms
- ;;
- sh64)
- basic_machine=sh64-unknown
- ;;
- sparclite-wrs | simso-wrs)
- basic_machine=sparclite-wrs
- os=-vxworks
- ;;
- sps7)
- basic_machine=m68k-bull
- os=-sysv2
- ;;
- spur)
- basic_machine=spur-unknown
- ;;
- st2000)
- basic_machine=m68k-tandem
- ;;
- stratus)
- basic_machine=i860-stratus
- os=-sysv4
- ;;
- sun2)
- basic_machine=m68000-sun
- ;;
- sun2os3)
- basic_machine=m68000-sun
- os=-sunos3
- ;;
- sun2os4)
- basic_machine=m68000-sun
- os=-sunos4
- ;;
- sun3os3)
- basic_machine=m68k-sun
- os=-sunos3
- ;;
- sun3os4)
- basic_machine=m68k-sun
- os=-sunos4
- ;;
- sun4os3)
- basic_machine=sparc-sun
- os=-sunos3
- ;;
- sun4os4)
- basic_machine=sparc-sun
- os=-sunos4
- ;;
- sun4sol2)
- basic_machine=sparc-sun
- os=-solaris2
- ;;
- sun3 | sun3-*)
- basic_machine=m68k-sun
- ;;
- sun4)
- basic_machine=sparc-sun
- ;;
- sun386 | sun386i | roadrunner)
- basic_machine=i386-sun
- ;;
- sv1)
- basic_machine=sv1-cray
- os=-unicos
- ;;
- symmetry)
- basic_machine=i386-sequent
- os=-dynix
- ;;
- t3e)
- basic_machine=alphaev5-cray
- os=-unicos
- ;;
- t90)
- basic_machine=t90-cray
- os=-unicos
- ;;
- tic54x | c54x*)
- basic_machine=tic54x-unknown
- os=-coff
- ;;
- tic55x | c55x*)
- basic_machine=tic55x-unknown
- os=-coff
- ;;
- tic6x | c6x*)
- basic_machine=tic6x-unknown
- os=-coff
- ;;
- tx39)
- basic_machine=mipstx39-unknown
- ;;
- tx39el)
- basic_machine=mipstx39el-unknown
- ;;
- toad1)
- basic_machine=pdp10-xkl
- os=-tops20
- ;;
- tower | tower-32)
- basic_machine=m68k-ncr
- ;;
- tpf)
- basic_machine=s390x-ibm
- os=-tpf
- ;;
- udi29k)
- basic_machine=a29k-amd
- os=-udi
- ;;
- ultra3)
- basic_machine=a29k-nyu
- os=-sym1
- ;;
- v810 | necv810)
- basic_machine=v810-nec
- os=-none
- ;;
- vaxv)
- basic_machine=vax-dec
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- vms)
- basic_machine=vax-dec
- os=-vms
- ;;
- vpp*|vx|vx-*)
- basic_machine=f301-fujitsu
- ;;
- vxworks960)
- basic_machine=i960-wrs
- os=-vxworks
- ;;
- vxworks68)
- basic_machine=m68k-wrs
- os=-vxworks
- ;;
- vxworks29k)
- basic_machine=a29k-wrs
- os=-vxworks
- ;;
- w65*)
- basic_machine=w65-wdc
- os=-none
- ;;
- w89k-*)
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-winbond
- os=-proelf
- ;;
- xbox)
- basic_machine=i686-pc
- os=-mingw32
- ;;
- xps | xps100)
- basic_machine=xps100-honeywell
- ;;
- ymp)
- basic_machine=ymp-cray
- os=-unicos
- ;;
- z8k-*-coff)
- basic_machine=z8k-unknown
- os=-sim
- ;;
- none)
- basic_machine=none-none
- os=-none
- ;;
-
-# Here we handle the default manufacturer of certain CPU types. It is in
-# some cases the only manufacturer, in others, it is the most popular.
- w89k)
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-winbond
- ;;
- op50n)
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-oki
- ;;
- op60c)
- basic_machine=hppa1.1-oki
- ;;
- romp)
- basic_machine=romp-ibm
- ;;
- mmix)
- basic_machine=mmix-knuth
- ;;
- rs6000)
- basic_machine=rs6000-ibm
- ;;
- vax)
- basic_machine=vax-dec
- ;;
- pdp10)
- # there are many clones, so DEC is not a safe bet
- basic_machine=pdp10-unknown
- ;;
- pdp11)
- basic_machine=pdp11-dec
- ;;
- we32k)
- basic_machine=we32k-att
- ;;
- sh[1234] | sh[24]a | sh[34]eb | sh[1234]le | sh[23]ele)
- basic_machine=sh-unknown
- ;;
- sparc | sparcv8 | sparcv9 | sparcv9b)
- basic_machine=sparc-sun
- ;;
- cydra)
- basic_machine=cydra-cydrome
- ;;
- orion)
- basic_machine=orion-highlevel
- ;;
- orion105)
- basic_machine=clipper-highlevel
- ;;
- mac | mpw | mac-mpw)
- basic_machine=m68k-apple
- ;;
- pmac | pmac-mpw)
- basic_machine=powerpc-apple
- ;;
- *-unknown)
- # Make sure to match an already-canonicalized machine name.
- ;;
- *)
- echo Invalid configuration \`$1\': machine \`$basic_machine\' not recognized 1>&2
- exit 1
- ;;
-esac
-
-# Here we canonicalize certain aliases for manufacturers.
-case $basic_machine in
- *-digital*)
- basic_machine=`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/digital.*/dec/'`
- ;;
- *-commodore*)
- basic_machine=`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/commodore.*/cbm/'`
- ;;
- *)
- ;;
-esac
-
-# Decode manufacturer-specific aliases for certain operating systems.
-
-if [ x"$os" != x"" ]
-then
-case $os in
- # First match some system type aliases
- # that might get confused with valid system types.
- # -solaris* is a basic system type, with this one exception.
- -solaris1 | -solaris1.*)
- os=`echo $os | sed -e 's|solaris1|sunos4|'`
- ;;
- -solaris)
- os=-solaris2
- ;;
- -svr4*)
- os=-sysv4
- ;;
- -unixware*)
- os=-sysv4.2uw
- ;;
- -gnu/linux*)
- os=`echo $os | sed -e 's|gnu/linux|linux-gnu|'`
- ;;
- # First accept the basic system types.
- # The portable systems comes first.
- # Each alternative MUST END IN A *, to match a version number.
- # -sysv* is not here because it comes later, after sysvr4.
- -gnu* | -bsd* | -mach* | -minix* | -genix* | -ultrix* | -irix* \
- | -*vms* | -sco* | -esix* | -isc* | -aix* | -sunos | -sunos[34]*\
- | -hpux* | -unos* | -osf* | -luna* | -dgux* | -solaris* | -sym* \
- | -amigaos* | -amigados* | -msdos* | -newsos* | -unicos* | -aof* \
- | -aos* \
- | -nindy* | -vxsim* | -vxworks* | -ebmon* | -hms* | -mvs* \
- | -clix* | -riscos* | -uniplus* | -iris* | -rtu* | -xenix* \
- | -hiux* | -386bsd* | -knetbsd* | -mirbsd* | -netbsd* | -openbsd* \
- | -ekkobsd* | -kfreebsd* | -freebsd* | -riscix* | -lynxos* \
- | -bosx* | -nextstep* | -cxux* | -aout* | -elf* | -oabi* \
- | -ptx* | -coff* | -ecoff* | -winnt* | -domain* | -vsta* \
- | -udi* | -eabi* | -lites* | -ieee* | -go32* | -aux* \
- | -chorusos* | -chorusrdb* \
- | -cygwin* | -pe* | -psos* | -moss* | -proelf* | -rtems* \
- | -mingw32* | -linux-gnu* | -linux-uclibc* | -uxpv* | -beos* | -mpeix* | -udk* \
- | -interix* | -uwin* | -mks* | -rhapsody* | -darwin* | -opened* \
- | -openstep* | -oskit* | -conix* | -pw32* | -nonstopux* \
- | -storm-chaos* | -tops10* | -tenex* | -tops20* | -its* \
- | -os2* | -vos* | -palmos* | -uclinux* | -nucleus* \
- | -morphos* | -superux* | -rtmk* | -rtmk-nova* | -windiss* \
- | -powermax* | -dnix* | -nx6 | -nx7 | -sei* | -dragonfly* \
- | -skyos* | -haiku*)
- # Remember, each alternative MUST END IN *, to match a version number.
- ;;
- -qnx*)
- case $basic_machine in
- x86-* | i*86-*)
- ;;
- *)
- os=-nto$os
- ;;
- esac
- ;;
- -nto-qnx*)
- ;;
- -nto*)
- os=`echo $os | sed -e 's|nto|nto-qnx|'`
- ;;
- -sim | -es1800* | -hms* | -xray | -os68k* | -none* | -v88r* \
- | -windows* | -osx | -abug | -netware* | -os9* | -beos* | -haiku* \
- | -macos* | -mpw* | -magic* | -mmixware* | -mon960* | -lnews*)
- ;;
- -mac*)
- os=`echo $os | sed -e 's|mac|macos|'`
- ;;
- -linux-dietlibc)
- os=-linux-dietlibc
- ;;
- -linux*)
- os=`echo $os | sed -e 's|linux|linux-gnu|'`
- ;;
- -sunos5*)
- os=`echo $os | sed -e 's|sunos5|solaris2|'`
- ;;
- -sunos6*)
- os=`echo $os | sed -e 's|sunos6|solaris3|'`
- ;;
- -opened*)
- os=-openedition
- ;;
- -os400*)
- os=-os400
- ;;
- -wince*)
- os=-wince
- ;;
- -osfrose*)
- os=-osfrose
- ;;
- -osf*)
- os=-osf
- ;;
- -utek*)
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- -dynix*)
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- -acis*)
- os=-aos
- ;;
- -atheos*)
- os=-atheos
- ;;
- -syllable*)
- os=-syllable
- ;;
- -386bsd)
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- -ctix* | -uts*)
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- -nova*)
- os=-rtmk-nova
- ;;
- -ns2 )
- os=-nextstep2
- ;;
- -nsk*)
- os=-nsk
- ;;
- # Preserve the version number of sinix5.
- -sinix5.*)
- os=`echo $os | sed -e 's|sinix|sysv|'`
- ;;
- -sinix*)
- os=-sysv4
- ;;
- -tpf*)
- os=-tpf
- ;;
- -triton*)
- os=-sysv3
- ;;
- -oss*)
- os=-sysv3
- ;;
- -svr4)
- os=-sysv4
- ;;
- -svr3)
- os=-sysv3
- ;;
- -sysvr4)
- os=-sysv4
- ;;
- # This must come after -sysvr4.
- -sysv*)
- ;;
- -ose*)
- os=-ose
- ;;
- -es1800*)
- os=-ose
- ;;
- -xenix)
- os=-xenix
- ;;
- -*mint | -mint[0-9]* | -*MiNT | -MiNT[0-9]*)
- os=-mint
- ;;
- -aros*)
- os=-aros
- ;;
- -kaos*)
- os=-kaos
- ;;
- -zvmoe)
- os=-zvmoe
- ;;
- -none)
- ;;
- *)
- # Get rid of the `-' at the beginning of $os.
- os=`echo $os | sed 's/[^-]*-//'`
- echo Invalid configuration \`$1\': system \`$os\' not recognized 1>&2
- exit 1
- ;;
-esac
-else
-
-# Here we handle the default operating systems that come with various machines.
-# The value should be what the vendor currently ships out the door with their
-# machine or put another way, the most popular os provided with the machine.
-
-# Note that if you're going to try to match "-MANUFACTURER" here (say,
-# "-sun"), then you have to tell the case statement up towards the top
-# that MANUFACTURER isn't an operating system. Otherwise, code above
-# will signal an error saying that MANUFACTURER isn't an operating
-# system, and we'll never get to this point.
-
-case $basic_machine in
- *-acorn)
- os=-riscix1.2
- ;;
- arm*-rebel)
- os=-linux
- ;;
- arm*-semi)
- os=-aout
- ;;
- c4x-* | tic4x-*)
- os=-coff
- ;;
- # This must come before the *-dec entry.
- pdp10-*)
- os=-tops20
- ;;
- pdp11-*)
- os=-none
- ;;
- *-dec | vax-*)
- os=-ultrix4.2
- ;;
- m68*-apollo)
- os=-domain
- ;;
- i386-sun)
- os=-sunos4.0.2
- ;;
- m68000-sun)
- os=-sunos3
- # This also exists in the configure program, but was not the
- # default.
- # os=-sunos4
- ;;
- m68*-cisco)
- os=-aout
- ;;
- mips*-cisco)
- os=-elf
- ;;
- mips*-*)
- os=-elf
- ;;
- or32-*)
- os=-coff
- ;;
- *-tti) # must be before sparc entry or we get the wrong os.
- os=-sysv3
- ;;
- sparc-* | *-sun)
- os=-sunos4.1.1
- ;;
- *-be)
- os=-beos
- ;;
- *-haiku)
- os=-haiku
- ;;
- *-ibm)
- os=-aix
- ;;
- *-knuth)
- os=-mmixware
- ;;
- *-wec)
- os=-proelf
- ;;
- *-winbond)
- os=-proelf
- ;;
- *-oki)
- os=-proelf
- ;;
- *-hp)
- os=-hpux
- ;;
- *-hitachi)
- os=-hiux
- ;;
- i860-* | *-att | *-ncr | *-altos | *-motorola | *-convergent)
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- *-cbm)
- os=-amigaos
- ;;
- *-dg)
- os=-dgux
- ;;
- *-dolphin)
- os=-sysv3
- ;;
- m68k-ccur)
- os=-rtu
- ;;
- m88k-omron*)
- os=-luna
- ;;
- *-next )
- os=-nextstep
- ;;
- *-sequent)
- os=-ptx
- ;;
- *-crds)
- os=-unos
- ;;
- *-ns)
- os=-genix
- ;;
- i370-*)
- os=-mvs
- ;;
- *-next)
- os=-nextstep3
- ;;
- *-gould)
- os=-sysv
- ;;
- *-highlevel)
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- *-encore)
- os=-bsd
- ;;
- *-sgi)
- os=-irix
- ;;
- *-siemens)
- os=-sysv4
- ;;
- *-masscomp)
- os=-rtu
- ;;
- f30[01]-fujitsu | f700-fujitsu)
- os=-uxpv
- ;;
- *-rom68k)
- os=-coff
- ;;
- *-*bug)
- os=-coff
- ;;
- *-apple)
- os=-macos
- ;;
- *-atari*)
- os=-mint
- ;;
- *)
- os=-none
- ;;
-esac
-fi
-
-# Here we handle the case where we know the os, and the CPU type, but not the
-# manufacturer. We pick the logical manufacturer.
-vendor=unknown
-case $basic_machine in
- *-unknown)
- case $os in
- -riscix*)
- vendor=acorn
- ;;
- -sunos*)
- vendor=sun
- ;;
- -aix*)
- vendor=ibm
- ;;
- -beos*)
- vendor=be
- ;;
- -hpux*)
- vendor=hp
- ;;
- -mpeix*)
- vendor=hp
- ;;
- -hiux*)
- vendor=hitachi
- ;;
- -unos*)
- vendor=crds
- ;;
- -dgux*)
- vendor=dg
- ;;
- -luna*)
- vendor=omron
- ;;
- -genix*)
- vendor=ns
- ;;
- -mvs* | -opened*)
- vendor=ibm
- ;;
- -os400*)
- vendor=ibm
- ;;
- -ptx*)
- vendor=sequent
- ;;
- -tpf*)
- vendor=ibm
- ;;
- -vxsim* | -vxworks* | -windiss*)
- vendor=wrs
- ;;
- -aux*)
- vendor=apple
- ;;
- -hms*)
- vendor=hitachi
- ;;
- -mpw* | -macos*)
- vendor=apple
- ;;
- -*mint | -mint[0-9]* | -*MiNT | -MiNT[0-9]*)
- vendor=atari
- ;;
- -vos*)
- vendor=stratus
- ;;
- esac
- basic_machine=`echo $basic_machine | sed "s/unknown/$vendor/"`
- ;;
-esac
-
-echo $basic_machine$os
-exit
-
-# Local variables:
-# eval: (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp)
-# time-stamp-start: "timestamp='"
-# time-stamp-format: "%:y-%02m-%02d"
-# time-stamp-end: "'"
-# End:
diff --git a/talloc/configure.ac b/talloc/configure.ac
deleted file mode 100644
index d2538f92..00000000
--- a/talloc/configure.ac
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
-AC_PREREQ(2.50)
-AC_INIT(talloc, 1.2.0)
-AC_CONFIG_SRCDIR([talloc.c])
-AC_SUBST(datarootdir)
-AC_CONFIG_HEADER(config.h)
-
-AC_LIBREPLACE_ALL_CHECKS
-
-m4_include(libtalloc.m4)
-
-AC_PATH_PROG(XSLTPROC,xsltproc)
-DOC_TARGET=""
-if test -n "$XSLTPROC"; then
- DOC_TARGET=doc
-fi
-AC_SUBST(DOC_TARGET)
-
-AC_LD_PICFLAG
-AC_LD_SHLIBEXT
-AC_LD_SONAMEFLAG
-AC_LIBREPLACE_SHLD
-AC_LIBREPLACE_SHLD_FLAGS
-
-m4_include(build_macros.m4)
-BUILD_WITH_SHARED_BUILD_DIR
-
-AC_OUTPUT(Makefile talloc.pc)
diff --git a/talloc/install-sh b/talloc/install-sh
deleted file mode 100755
index 58719246..00000000
--- a/talloc/install-sh
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,238 +0,0 @@
-#! /bin/sh
-#
-# install - install a program, script, or datafile
-# This comes from X11R5.
-#
-# Calling this script install-sh is preferred over install.sh, to prevent
-# `make' implicit rules from creating a file called install from it
-# when there is no Makefile.
-#
-# This script is compatible with the BSD install script, but was written
-# from scratch.
-#
-
-
-# set DOITPROG to echo to test this script
-
-# Don't use :- since 4.3BSD and earlier shells don't like it.
-doit="${DOITPROG-}"
-
-
-# put in absolute paths if you don't have them in your path; or use env. vars.
-
-mvprog="${MVPROG-mv}"
-cpprog="${CPPROG-cp}"
-chmodprog="${CHMODPROG-chmod}"
-chownprog="${CHOWNPROG-chown}"
-chgrpprog="${CHGRPPROG-chgrp}"
-stripprog="${STRIPPROG-strip}"
-rmprog="${RMPROG-rm}"
-mkdirprog="${MKDIRPROG-mkdir}"
-
-transformbasename=""
-transform_arg=""
-instcmd="$mvprog"
-chmodcmd="$chmodprog 0755"
-chowncmd=""
-chgrpcmd=""
-stripcmd=""
-rmcmd="$rmprog -f"
-mvcmd="$mvprog"
-src=""
-dst=""
-dir_arg=""
-
-while [ x"$1" != x ]; do
- case $1 in
- -c) instcmd="$cpprog"
- shift
- continue;;
-
- -d) dir_arg=true
- shift
- continue;;
-
- -m) chmodcmd="$chmodprog $2"
- shift
- shift
- continue;;
-
- -o) chowncmd="$chownprog $2"
- shift
- shift
- continue;;
-
- -g) chgrpcmd="$chgrpprog $2"
- shift
- shift
- continue;;
-
- -s) stripcmd="$stripprog"
- shift
- continue;;
-
- -t=*) transformarg=`echo $1 | sed 's/-t=//'`
- shift
- continue;;
-
- -b=*) transformbasename=`echo $1 | sed 's/-b=//'`
- shift
- continue;;
-
- *) if [ x"$src" = x ]
- then
- src=$1
- else
- # this colon is to work around a 386BSD /bin/sh bug
- :
- dst=$1
- fi
- shift
- continue;;
- esac
-done
-
-if [ x"$src" = x ]
-then
- echo "install: no input file specified"
- exit 1
-else
- true
-fi
-
-if [ x"$dir_arg" != x ]; then
- dst=$src
- src=""
-
- if [ -d $dst ]; then
- instcmd=:
- else
- instcmd=mkdir
- fi
-else
-
-# Waiting for this to be detected by the "$instcmd $src $dsttmp" command
-# might cause directories to be created, which would be especially bad
-# if $src (and thus $dsttmp) contains '*'.
-
- if [ -f $src -o -d $src ]
- then
- true
- else
- echo "install: $src does not exist"
- exit 1
- fi
-
- if [ x"$dst" = x ]
- then
- echo "install: no destination specified"
- exit 1
- else
- true
- fi
-
-# If destination is a directory, append the input filename; if your system
-# does not like double slashes in filenames, you may need to add some logic
-
- if [ -d $dst ]
- then
- dst="$dst"/`basename $src`
- else
- true
- fi
-fi
-
-## this sed command emulates the dirname command
-dstdir=`echo $dst | sed -e 's,[^/]*$,,;s,/$,,;s,^$,.,'`
-
-# Make sure that the destination directory exists.
-# this part is taken from Noah Friedman's mkinstalldirs script
-
-# Skip lots of stat calls in the usual case.
-if [ ! -d "$dstdir" ]; then
-defaultIFS='
-'
-IFS="${IFS-${defaultIFS}}"
-
-oIFS="${IFS}"
-# Some sh's can't handle IFS=/ for some reason.
-IFS='%'
-set - `echo ${dstdir} | sed -e 's@/@%@g' -e 's@^%@/@'`
-IFS="${oIFS}"
-
-pathcomp=''
-
-while [ $# -ne 0 ] ; do
- pathcomp="${pathcomp}${1}"
- shift
-
- if [ ! -d "${pathcomp}" ] ;
- then
- $mkdirprog "${pathcomp}"
- else
- true
- fi
-
- pathcomp="${pathcomp}/"
-done
-fi
-
-if [ x"$dir_arg" != x ]
-then
- $doit $instcmd $dst &&
-
- if [ x"$chowncmd" != x ]; then $doit $chowncmd $dst; else true ; fi &&
- if [ x"$chgrpcmd" != x ]; then $doit $chgrpcmd $dst; else true ; fi &&
- if [ x"$stripcmd" != x ]; then $doit $stripcmd $dst; else true ; fi &&
- if [ x"$chmodcmd" != x ]; then $doit $chmodcmd $dst; else true ; fi
-else
-
-# If we're going to rename the final executable, determine the name now.
-
- if [ x"$transformarg" = x ]
- then
- dstfile=`basename $dst`
- else
- dstfile=`basename $dst $transformbasename |
- sed $transformarg`$transformbasename
- fi
-
-# don't allow the sed command to completely eliminate the filename
-
- if [ x"$dstfile" = x ]
- then
- dstfile=`basename $dst`
- else
- true
- fi
-
-# Make a temp file name in the proper directory.
-
- dsttmp=$dstdir/#inst.$$#
-
-# Move or copy the file name to the temp name
-
- $doit $instcmd $src $dsttmp &&
-
- trap "rm -f ${dsttmp}" 0 &&
-
-# and set any options; do chmod last to preserve setuid bits
-
-# If any of these fail, we abort the whole thing. If we want to
-# ignore errors from any of these, just make sure not to ignore
-# errors from the above "$doit $instcmd $src $dsttmp" command.
-
- if [ x"$chowncmd" != x ]; then $doit $chowncmd $dsttmp; else true;fi &&
- if [ x"$chgrpcmd" != x ]; then $doit $chgrpcmd $dsttmp; else true;fi &&
- if [ x"$stripcmd" != x ]; then $doit $stripcmd $dsttmp; else true;fi &&
- if [ x"$chmodcmd" != x ]; then $doit $chmodcmd $dsttmp; else true;fi &&
-
-# Now rename the file to the real destination.
-
- $doit $rmcmd -f $dstdir/$dstfile &&
- $doit $mvcmd $dsttmp $dstdir/$dstfile
-
-fi &&
-
-
-exit 0
diff --git a/talloc/libtalloc.m4 b/talloc/libtalloc.m4
deleted file mode 100644
index e6830fbe..00000000
--- a/talloc/libtalloc.m4
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,33 +0,0 @@
-dnl find the talloc sources. This is meant to work both for
-dnl talloc standalone builds, and builds of packages using talloc
-tallocdir=""
-tallocpaths=". lib/talloc talloc ../talloc ../lib/talloc"
-for d in $tallocpaths; do
- if test -f "$srcdir/$d/talloc.c"; then
- tallocdir="$d"
- AC_SUBST(tallocdir)
- break;
- fi
-done
-if test x"$tallocdir" = "x"; then
- AC_MSG_ERROR([cannot find talloc source in $tallocpaths])
-fi
-TALLOC_OBJ="talloc.o"
-AC_SUBST(TALLOC_OBJ)
-
-TALLOC_CFLAGS="-I$srcdir/$tallocdir"
-AC_SUBST(TALLOC_CFLAGS)
-
-TALLOC_LIBS=""
-AC_SUBST(TALLOC_LIBS)
-
-AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(size_t,cross)
-AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(void *,cross)
-
-if test $ac_cv_sizeof_size_t -lt $ac_cv_sizeof_void_p; then
- AC_WARN([size_t cannot represent the amount of used memory of a process])
- AC_WARN([please report this to <samba-technical@samba.org>])
- AC_WARN([sizeof(size_t) = $ac_cv_sizeof_size_t])
- AC_WARN([sizeof(void *) = $ac_cv_sizeof_void_p])
- AC_ERROR([sizeof(size_t) < sizeof(void *)])
-fi
diff --git a/talloc/pytalloc.c b/talloc/pytalloc.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 8bc85eea..00000000
--- a/talloc/pytalloc.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,52 +0,0 @@
-/*
- Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
- Python/Talloc glue
- Copyright (C) Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org> 2008
-
- This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
- (at your option) any later version.
-
- This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
- GNU General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
- along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-*/
-
-#include <talloc.h>
-#include "../lib/talloc/pytalloc.h"
-
-void py_talloc_dealloc(PyObject* self)
-{
- py_talloc_Object *obj = (py_talloc_Object *)self;
- talloc_free(obj->talloc_ctx);
- obj->talloc_ctx = NULL;
- self->ob_type->tp_free(self);
-}
-
-PyObject *py_talloc_import_ex(PyTypeObject *py_type, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
- void *ptr)
-{
- py_talloc_Object *ret = (py_talloc_Object *)py_type->tp_alloc(py_type, 0);
- ret->talloc_ctx = talloc_new(NULL);
- if (ret->talloc_ctx == NULL) {
- return NULL;
- }
- if (talloc_reference(ret->talloc_ctx, mem_ctx) == NULL) {
- return NULL;
- }
- ret->ptr = ptr;
- return (PyObject *)ret;
-}
-
-PyObject *py_talloc_default_repr(PyObject *py_obj)
-{
- py_talloc_Object *obj = (py_talloc_Object *)py_obj;
- PyTypeObject *type = (PyTypeObject*)PyObject_Type((PyObject *)obj);
-
- return PyString_FromFormat("<%s talloc object at 0x%x>", type->tp_name, (intptr_t)py_obj);
-}
diff --git a/talloc/pytalloc.h b/talloc/pytalloc.h
deleted file mode 100644
index c5a1428b..00000000
--- a/talloc/pytalloc.h
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,53 +0,0 @@
-/*
- Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
- Samba utility functions
- Copyright (C) Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org> 2008
-
- This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
- (at your option) any later version.
-
- This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
- GNU General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
- along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-*/
-
-#ifndef _PY_TALLOC_H_
-#define _PY_TALLOC_H_
-
-#include <Python.h>
-#include <talloc.h>
-
-typedef struct {
- PyObject_HEAD
- TALLOC_CTX *talloc_ctx;
- void *ptr;
-} py_talloc_Object;
-
-/* Deallocate a py_talloc_Object */
-void py_talloc_dealloc(PyObject* self);
-
-/* Retrieve the pointer for a py_talloc_object. Like talloc_get_type()
- * but for py_talloc_Objects. */
-
-/* FIXME: Call PyErr_SetString(PyExc_TypeError, "expected " __STR(type) ")
- * when talloc_get_type() returns NULL. */
-#define py_talloc_get_type(py_obj, type) (talloc_get_type(py_talloc_get_ptr(py_obj), type))
-
-#define py_talloc_get_ptr(py_obj) (((py_talloc_Object *)py_obj)->ptr)
-#define py_talloc_get_mem_ctx(py_obj) ((py_talloc_Object *)py_obj)->talloc_ctx
-
-PyObject *py_talloc_import_ex(PyTypeObject *py_type, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, void *ptr);
-#define py_talloc_import(py_type, talloc_ptr) py_talloc_import_ex(py_type, talloc_ptr, talloc_ptr)
-
-/* Sane default implementation of reprfunc. */
-PyObject *py_talloc_default_repr(PyObject *py_obj);
-
-#define py_talloc_new(type, typeobj) py_talloc_import(typeobj, talloc_zero(NULL, type))
-
-#endif /* _PY_TALLOC_H_ */
diff --git a/talloc/rules.mk b/talloc/rules.mk
deleted file mode 100644
index 6cee1265..00000000
--- a/talloc/rules.mk
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
-.SUFFIXES: .c .o .3 .3.xml .xml .html
-
-showflags::
- @echo 'talloc will be compiled with flags:'
- @echo ' CFLAGS = $(CFLAGS)'
- @echo ' LIBS = $(LIBS)'
-
-.c.o:
- $(CC) $(PICFLAG) -o $@ -c $< $(CFLAGS)
-
-.3.xml.3:
- -test -z "$(XSLTPROC)" || $(XSLTPROC) --nonet -o $@ http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current/manpages/docbook.xsl $<
-
-.xml.html:
- -test -z "$(XSLTPROC)" || $(XSLTPROC) --nonet -o $@ http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current/html/docbook.xsl $<
-
-distclean::
- rm -f *~ */*~
diff --git a/talloc/talloc.3.xml b/talloc/talloc.3.xml
deleted file mode 100644
index 67de15bf..00000000
--- a/talloc/talloc.3.xml
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,738 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0"?>
-<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
-<refentry>
- <refmeta>
- <refentrytitle>talloc</refentrytitle>
- <manvolnum>3</manvolnum>
- </refmeta>
- <refnamediv>
- <refname>talloc</refname>
-<refpurpose>hierarchical reference counted memory pool system with destructors</refpurpose>
- </refnamediv>
- <refsynopsisdiv>
-<synopsis>#include &lt;talloc/talloc.h&gt;</synopsis>
- </refsynopsisdiv>
- <refsect1><title>DESCRIPTION</title>
- <para>
- If you are used to talloc from Samba3 then please read this
- carefully, as talloc has changed a lot.
- </para>
- <para>
- The new talloc is a hierarchical, reference counted memory pool
- system with destructors. Quite a mouthful really, but not too bad
- once you get used to it.
- </para>
- <para>
- Perhaps the biggest change from Samba3 is that there is no
- distinction between a "talloc context" and a "talloc pointer". Any
- pointer returned from talloc() is itself a valid talloc context.
- This means you can do this:
- </para>
- <programlisting>
- struct foo *X = talloc(mem_ctx, struct foo);
- X->name = talloc_strdup(X, "foo");
- </programlisting>
- <para>
- and the pointer <literal role="code">X-&gt;name</literal>
- would be a "child" of the talloc context <literal
- role="code">X</literal> which is itself a child of
- <literal role="code">mem_ctx</literal>. So if you do
- <literal role="code">talloc_free(mem_ctx)</literal> then
- it is all destroyed, whereas if you do <literal
- role="code">talloc_free(X)</literal> then just <literal
- role="code">X</literal> and <literal
- role="code">X-&gt;name</literal> are destroyed, and if
- you do <literal
- role="code">talloc_free(X-&gt;name)</literal> then just
- the name element of <literal role="code">X</literal> is
- destroyed.
- </para>
- <para>
- If you think about this, then what this effectively gives you is an
- n-ary tree, where you can free any part of the tree with
- talloc_free().
- </para>
- <para>
- If you find this confusing, then I suggest you run the <literal
- role="code">testsuite</literal> program to watch talloc
- in action. You may also like to add your own tests to <literal
- role="code">testsuite.c</literal> to clarify how some
- particular situation is handled.
- </para>
- </refsect1>
- <refsect1><title>TALLOC API</title>
- <para>
- The following is a complete guide to the talloc API. Read it all at
- least twice.
- </para>
- <refsect2><title>(type *)talloc(const void *ctx, type);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc() macro is the core of the talloc library. It takes a
- memory <emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis> and a <emphasis
- role="italic">type</emphasis>, and returns a pointer to a new
- area of memory of the given <emphasis
- role="italic">type</emphasis>.
- </para>
- <para>
- The returned pointer is itself a talloc context, so you can use
- it as the <emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis> argument to more
- calls to talloc() if you wish.
- </para>
- <para>
- The returned pointer is a "child" of the supplied context. This
- means that if you talloc_free() the <emphasis
- role="italic">ctx</emphasis> then the new child disappears as
- well. Alternatively you can free just the child.
- </para>
- <para>
- The <emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis> argument to talloc()
- can be NULL, in which case a new top level context is created.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_size(const void *ctx, size_t size);</title>
- <para>
- The function talloc_size() should be used when you don't have a
- convenient type to pass to talloc(). Unlike talloc(), it is not
- type safe (as it returns a void *), so you are on your own for
- type checking.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>(typeof(ptr)) talloc_ptrtype(const void *ctx, ptr);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_ptrtype() macro should be used when you have a pointer and
- want to allocate memory to point at with this pointer. When compiling
- with gcc >= 3 it is typesafe. Note this is a wrapper of talloc_size()
- and talloc_get_name() will return the current location in the source file.
- and not the type.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>int talloc_free(void *ptr);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_free() function frees a piece of talloc memory, and
- all its children. You can call talloc_free() on any pointer
- returned by talloc().
- </para>
- <para>
- The return value of talloc_free() indicates success or failure,
- with 0 returned for success and -1 for failure. The only
- possible failure condition is if <emphasis
- role="italic">ptr</emphasis> had a destructor attached to it and
- the destructor returned -1. See <link
- linkend="talloc_set_destructor"><quote>talloc_set_destructor()</quote></link>
- for details on destructors.
- </para>
- <para>
- If this pointer has an additional parent when talloc_free() is
- called then the memory is not actually released, but instead the
- most recently established parent is destroyed. See <link
- linkend="talloc_reference"><quote>talloc_reference()</quote></link>
- for details on establishing additional parents.
- </para>
- <para>
- For more control on which parent is removed, see <link
- linkend="talloc_unlink"><quote>talloc_unlink()</quote></link>.
- </para>
- <para>
- talloc_free() operates recursively on its children.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2 id="talloc_reference"><title>void *talloc_reference(const void *ctx, const void *ptr);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_reference() function makes <emphasis
- role="italic">ctx</emphasis> an additional parent of <emphasis
- role="italic">ptr</emphasis>.
- </para>
- <para>
- The return value of talloc_reference() is always the original
- pointer <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>, unless talloc ran
- out of memory in creating the reference in which case it will
- return NULL (each additional reference consumes around 48 bytes
- of memory on intel x86 platforms).
- </para>
- <para>
- If <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis> is NULL, then the
- function is a no-op, and simply returns NULL.
- </para>
- <para>
- After creating a reference you can free it in one of the
- following ways:
- </para>
- <para>
- <itemizedlist>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- you can talloc_free() any parent of the original pointer.
- That will reduce the number of parents of this pointer by 1,
- and will cause this pointer to be freed if it runs out of
- parents.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- you can talloc_free() the pointer itself. That will destroy
- the most recently established parent to the pointer and leave
- the pointer as a child of its current parent.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </itemizedlist>
- </para>
- <para>
- For more control on which parent to remove, see <link
- linkend="talloc_unlink"><quote>talloc_unlink()</quote></link>.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2 id="talloc_unlink"><title>int talloc_unlink(const void *ctx, const void *ptr);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_unlink() function removes a specific parent from
- <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>. The <emphasis
- role="italic">ctx</emphasis> passed must either be a context used
- in talloc_reference() with this pointer, or must be a direct
- parent of ptr.
- </para>
- <para>
- Note that if the parent has already been removed using
- talloc_free() then this function will fail and will return -1.
- Likewise, if <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis> is NULL, then
- the function will make no modifications and return -1.
- </para>
- <para>
- Usually you can just use talloc_free() instead of
- talloc_unlink(), but sometimes it is useful to have the
- additional control on which parent is removed.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2 id="talloc_set_destructor"><title>void talloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, int (*destructor)(void *));</title>
- <para>
- The function talloc_set_destructor() sets the <emphasis
- role="italic">destructor</emphasis> for the pointer <emphasis
- role="italic">ptr</emphasis>. A <emphasis
- role="italic">destructor</emphasis> is a function that is called
- when the memory used by a pointer is about to be released. The
- destructor receives <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis> as an
- argument, and should return 0 for success and -1 for failure.
- </para>
- <para>
- The <emphasis role="italic">destructor</emphasis> can do anything
- it wants to, including freeing other pieces of memory. A common
- use for destructors is to clean up operating system resources
- (such as open file descriptors) contained in the structure the
- destructor is placed on.
- </para>
- <para>
- You can only place one destructor on a pointer. If you need more
- than one destructor then you can create a zero-length child of
- the pointer and place an additional destructor on that.
- </para>
- <para>
- To remove a destructor call talloc_set_destructor() with NULL for
- the destructor.
- </para>
- <para>
- If your destructor attempts to talloc_free() the pointer that it
- is the destructor for then talloc_free() will return -1 and the
- free will be ignored. This would be a pointless operation
- anyway, as the destructor is only called when the memory is just
- about to go away.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>int talloc_increase_ref_count(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_increase_ref_count(<emphasis
- role="italic">ptr</emphasis>) function is exactly equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>talloc_reference(NULL, ptr);</programlisting>
- <para>
- You can use either syntax, depending on which you think is
- clearer in your code.
- </para>
- <para>
- It returns 0 on success and -1 on failure.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>size_t talloc_reference_count(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- Return the number of references to the pointer.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2 id="talloc_set_name"><title>void talloc_set_name(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, ...);</title>
- <para>
- Each talloc pointer has a "name". The name is used principally
- for debugging purposes, although it is also possible to set and
- get the name on a pointer in as a way of "marking" pointers in
- your code.
- </para>
- <para>
- The main use for names on pointer is for "talloc reports". See
- <link
- linkend="talloc_report"><quote>talloc_report_depth_cb()</quote></link>,
- <link
- linkend="talloc_report"><quote>talloc_report_depth_file()</quote></link>,
- <link
- linkend="talloc_report"><quote>talloc_report()</quote></link>
- <link
- linkend="talloc_report"><quote>talloc_report()</quote></link>
- and <link
- linkend="talloc_report_full"><quote>talloc_report_full()</quote></link>
- for details. Also see <link
- linkend="talloc_enable_leak_report"><quote>talloc_enable_leak_report()</quote></link>
- and <link
- linkend="talloc_enable_leak_report_full"><quote>talloc_enable_leak_report_full()</quote></link>.
- </para>
- <para>
- The talloc_set_name() function allocates memory as a child of the
- pointer. It is logically equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, talloc_asprintf(ptr, fmt, ...));</programlisting>
- <para>
- Note that multiple calls to talloc_set_name() will allocate more
- memory without releasing the name. All of the memory is released
- when the ptr is freed using talloc_free().
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void talloc_set_name_const(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">name</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The function talloc_set_name_const() is just like
- talloc_set_name(), but it takes a string constant, and is much
- faster. It is extensively used by the "auto naming" macros, such
- as talloc_p().
- </para>
- <para>
- This function does not allocate any memory. It just copies the
- supplied pointer into the internal representation of the talloc
- ptr. This means you must not pass a <emphasis
- role="italic">name</emphasis> pointer to memory that will
- disappear before <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis> is freed
- with talloc_free().
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_named(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, size_t <emphasis role="italic">size</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">fmt</emphasis>, ...);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_named() function creates a named talloc pointer. It
- is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>ptr = talloc_size(ctx, size);
-talloc_set_name(ptr, fmt, ....);</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_named_const(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, size_t <emphasis role="italic">size</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">name</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- This is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>ptr = talloc_size(ctx, size);
-talloc_set_name_const(ptr, name);</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>const char *talloc_get_name(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- This returns the current name for the given talloc pointer,
- <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>. See <link
- linkend="talloc_set_name"><quote>talloc_set_name()</quote></link>
- for details.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_init(const char *<emphasis role="italic">fmt</emphasis>, ...);</title>
- <para>
- This function creates a zero length named talloc context as a top
- level context. It is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>talloc_named(NULL, 0, fmt, ...);</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_new(void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- This is a utility macro that creates a new memory context hanging
- off an exiting context, automatically naming it "talloc_new:
- __location__" where __location__ is the source line it is called
- from. It is particularly useful for creating a new temporary
- working context.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>(<emphasis role="italic">type</emphasis> *)talloc_realloc(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>, <emphasis role="italic">type</emphasis>, <emphasis role="italic">count</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_realloc() macro changes the size of a talloc pointer.
- It has the following equivalences:
- </para>
- <programlisting>talloc_realloc(ctx, NULL, type, 1) ==> talloc(ctx, type);
-talloc_realloc(ctx, ptr, type, 0) ==> talloc_free(ptr);</programlisting>
- <para>
- The <emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis> argument is only used
- if <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis> is not NULL, otherwise
- it is ignored.
- </para>
- <para>
- talloc_realloc() returns the new pointer, or NULL on failure.
- The call will fail either due to a lack of memory, or because the
- pointer has more than one parent (see <link
- linkend="talloc_reference"><quote>talloc_reference()</quote></link>).
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_realloc_size(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t size);</title>
- <para>
- the talloc_realloc_size() function is useful when the type is not
- known so the type-safe talloc_realloc() cannot be used.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>TYPE *talloc_steal(const void *<emphasis role="italic">new_ctx</emphasis>, const TYPE *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_steal() function changes the parent context of a
- talloc pointer. It is typically used when the context that the
- pointer is currently a child of is going to be freed and you wish
- to keep the memory for a longer time.
- </para>
- <para>
- The talloc_steal() function returns the pointer that you pass it.
- It does not have any failure modes.
- </para>
- <para>
- NOTE: It is possible to produce loops in the parent/child
- relationship if you are not careful with talloc_steal(). No
- guarantees are provided as to your sanity or the safety of your
- data if you do this.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>TYPE *talloc_move(const void *<emphasis role="italic">new_ctx</emphasis>, TYPE **<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_move() function is a wrapper around
- talloc_steal() which zeros the source pointer after the
- move. This avoids a potential source of bugs where a
- programmer leaves a pointer in two structures, and uses the
- pointer from the old structure after it has been moved to a
- new one.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>size_t talloc_total_size(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_total_size() function returns the total size in bytes
- used by this pointer and all child pointers. Mostly useful for
- debugging.
- </para>
- <para>
- Passing NULL is allowed, but it will only give a meaningful
- result if talloc_enable_leak_report() or
- talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has been called.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>size_t talloc_total_blocks(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_total_blocks() function returns the total memory block
- count used by this pointer and all child pointers. Mostly useful
- for debugging.
- </para>
- <para>
- Passing NULL is allowed, but it will only give a meaningful
- result if talloc_enable_leak_report() or
- talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has been called.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2 id="talloc_report"><title>void talloc_report(const void *ptr, FILE *f);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_report() function prints a summary report of all
- memory used by <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>. One line
- of report is printed for each immediate child of ptr, showing the
- total memory and number of blocks used by that child.
- </para>
- <para>
- You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is
- printed for the top level memory context, but only if
- talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full()
- has been called.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2 id="talloc_report_full"><title>void talloc_report_full(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>, FILE *<emphasis role="italic">f</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- This provides a more detailed report than talloc_report(). It
- will recursively print the entire tree of memory referenced by
- the pointer. References in the tree are shown by giving the name
- of the pointer that is referenced.
- </para>
- <para>
- You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is
- printed for the top level memory context, but only if
- talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full()
- has been called.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2 id="talloc_report_depth_cb">
- <funcsynopsis><funcprototype>
- <funcdef>void <function>talloc_report_depth_cb</function></funcdef>
- <paramdef><parameter>const void *ptr</parameter></paramdef>
- <paramdef><parameter>int depth</parameter></paramdef>
- <paramdef><parameter>int max_depth</parameter></paramdef>
- <paramdef><parameter>void (*callback)(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, int is_ref, void *priv)</parameter></paramdef>
- <paramdef><parameter>void *priv</parameter></paramdef>
- </funcprototype></funcsynopsis>
- <para>
- This provides a more flexible reports than talloc_report(). It
- will recursively call the callback for the entire tree of memory
- referenced by the pointer. References in the tree are passed with
- <emphasis role="italic">is_ref = 1</emphasis> and the pointer that is referenced.
- </para>
- <para>
- You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is
- printed for the top level memory context, but only if
- talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full()
- has been called.
- </para>
- <para>
- The recursion is stopped when depth >= max_depth.
- max_depth = -1 means only stop at leaf nodes.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2 id="talloc_report_depth_file">
- <funcsynopsis><funcprototype>
- <funcdef>void <function>talloc_report_depth_file</function></funcdef>
- <paramdef><parameter>const void *ptr</parameter></paramdef>
- <paramdef><parameter>int depth</parameter></paramdef>
- <paramdef><parameter>int max_depth</parameter></paramdef>
- <paramdef><parameter>FILE *f</parameter></paramdef>
- </funcprototype></funcsynopsis>
- <para>
- This provides a more flexible reports than talloc_report(). It
- will let you specify the depth and max_depth.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2 id="talloc_enable_leak_report"><title>void talloc_enable_leak_report(void);</title>
- <para>
- This enables calling of talloc_report(NULL, stderr) when the
- program exits. In Samba4 this is enabled by using the
- --leak-report command line option.
- </para>
- <para>
- For it to be useful, this function must be called before any
- other talloc function as it establishes a "null context" that
- acts as the top of the tree. If you don't call this function
- first then passing NULL to talloc_report() or
- talloc_report_full() won't give you the full tree printout.
- </para>
- <para>
- Here is a typical talloc report:
- </para>
- <screen format="linespecific">talloc report on 'null_context' (total 267 bytes in 15 blocks)
-libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks
-libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks
-iconv(UTF8,CP850) contains 42 bytes in 2 blocks
-libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks
-iconv(CP850,UTF8) contains 42 bytes in 2 blocks
-iconv(UTF8,UTF-16LE) contains 45 bytes in 2 blocks
-iconv(UTF-16LE,UTF8) contains 45 bytes in 2 blocks
- </screen>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2 id="talloc_enable_leak_report_full"><title>void talloc_enable_leak_report_full(void);</title>
- <para>
- This enables calling of talloc_report_full(NULL, stderr) when the
- program exits. In Samba4 this is enabled by using the
- --leak-report-full command line option.
- </para>
- <para>
- For it to be useful, this function must be called before any
- other talloc function as it establishes a "null context" that
- acts as the top of the tree. If you don't call this function
- first then passing NULL to talloc_report() or
- talloc_report_full() won't give you the full tree printout.
- </para>
- <para>
- Here is a typical full report:
- </para>
- <screen format="linespecific">full talloc report on 'root' (total 18 bytes in 8 blocks)
-p1 contains 18 bytes in 7 blocks (ref 0)
- r1 contains 13 bytes in 2 blocks (ref 0)
- reference to: p2
- p2 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 1)
- x3 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0)
- x2 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0)
- x1 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0)
- </screen>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>(<emphasis role="italic">type</emphasis> *)talloc_zero(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, <emphasis role="italic">type</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_zero() macro is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>ptr = talloc(ctx, type);
-if (ptr) memset(ptr, 0, sizeof(type));</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_zero_size(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, size_t <emphasis role="italic">size</emphasis>)</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_zero_size() function is useful when you don't have a
- known type.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_memdup(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, const void *<emphasis role="italic">p</emphasis>, size_t size);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_memdup() function is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>ptr = talloc_size(ctx, size);
-if (ptr) memcpy(ptr, p, size);</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>char *talloc_strdup(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">p</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_strdup() function is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>ptr = talloc_size(ctx, strlen(p)+1);
-if (ptr) memcpy(ptr, p, strlen(p)+1);</programlisting>
- <para>
- This function sets the name of the new pointer to the passed
- string. This is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>char *talloc_strndup(const void *<emphasis role="italic">t</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">p</emphasis>, size_t <emphasis role="italic">n</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_strndup() function is the talloc equivalent of the C
- library function strndup(3).
- </para>
- <para>
- This function sets the name of the new pointer to the passed
- string. This is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>char *talloc_append_string(const void *<emphasis role="italic">t</emphasis>, char *<emphasis role="italic">orig</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">append</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_append_string() function appends the given formatted
- string to the given string.
- </para>
- <para>
- This function sets the name of the new pointer to the new
- string. This is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>char *talloc_vasprintf(const void *<emphasis role="italic">t</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">fmt</emphasis>, va_list <emphasis role="italic">ap</emphasis>);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_vasprintf() function is the talloc equivalent of the C
- library function vasprintf(3).
- </para>
- <para>
- This function sets the name of the new pointer to the new
- string. This is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>char *talloc_asprintf(const void *<emphasis role="italic">t</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">fmt</emphasis>, ...);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_asprintf() function is the talloc equivalent of the C
- library function asprintf(3).
- </para>
- <para>
- This function sets the name of the new pointer to the passed
- string. This is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>char *talloc_asprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, ...);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_asprintf_append() function appends the given formatted
- string to the given string.
- </para>
- <para>
- This function sets the name of the new pointer to the new
- string. This is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>(type *)talloc_array(const void *ctx, type, uint_t count);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_array() macro is equivalent to:
- </para>
- <programlisting>(type *)talloc_size(ctx, sizeof(type) * count);</programlisting>
- <para>
- except that it provides integer overflow protection for the
- multiply, returning NULL if the multiply overflows.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_array_size(const void *ctx, size_t size, uint_t count);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_array_size() function is useful when the type is not
- known. It operates in the same way as talloc_array(), but takes a
- size instead of a type.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>(typeof(ptr)) talloc_array_ptrtype(const void *ctx, ptr, uint_t count);</title>
- <para>
- The talloc_ptrtype() macro should be used when you have a pointer to an array
- and want to allocate memory of an array to point at with this pointer. When compiling
- with gcc >= 3 it is typesafe. Note this is a wrapper of talloc_array_size()
- and talloc_get_name() will return the current location in the source file.
- and not the type.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_realloc_fn(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t size)</title>
- <para>
- This is a non-macro version of talloc_realloc(), which is useful
- as libraries sometimes want a realloc function pointer. A
- realloc(3) implementation encapsulates the functionality of
- malloc(3), free(3) and realloc(3) in one call, which is why it is
- useful to be able to pass around a single function pointer.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_autofree_context(void);</title>
- <para>
- This is a handy utility function that returns a talloc context
- which will be automatically freed on program exit. This can be
- used to reduce the noise in memory leak reports.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>void *talloc_check_name(const void *ptr, const char *name);</title>
- <para>
- This function checks if a pointer has the specified <emphasis
- role="italic">name</emphasis>. If it does then the pointer is
- returned. It it doesn't then NULL is returned.
- </para>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>(type *)talloc_get_type(const void *ptr, type);</title>
- <para>
- This macro allows you to do type checking on talloc pointers. It
- is particularly useful for void* private pointers. It is
- equivalent to this:
- </para>
- <programlisting>(type *)talloc_check_name(ptr, #type)</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- <refsect2><title>talloc_set_type(const void *ptr, type);</title>
- <para>
- This macro allows you to force the name of a pointer to be a
- particular <emphasis>type</emphasis>. This can be
- used in conjunction with talloc_get_type() to do type checking on
- void* pointers.
- </para>
- <para>
- It is equivalent to this:
- </para>
- <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, #type)</programlisting>
- </refsect2>
- </refsect1>
- <refsect1><title>PERFORMANCE</title>
- <para>
- All the additional features of talloc(3) over malloc(3) do come at a
- price. We have a simple performance test in Samba4 that measures
- talloc() versus malloc() performance, and it seems that talloc() is
- about 10% slower than malloc() on my x86 Debian Linux box. For
- Samba, the great reduction in code complexity that we get by using
- talloc makes this worthwhile, especially as the total overhead of
- talloc/malloc in Samba is already quite small.
- </para>
- </refsect1>
- <refsect1><title>SEE ALSO</title>
- <para>
- malloc(3), strndup(3), vasprintf(3), asprintf(3),
- <ulink url="http://talloc.samba.org/"/>
- </para>
- </refsect1>
- <refsect1><title>COPYRIGHT/LICENSE</title>
- <para>
- Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004
- </para>
- <para>
- This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at
- your option) any later version.
- </para>
- <para>
- This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
- WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
- General Public License for more details.
- </para>
- <para>
- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
- along with this program; if not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
- </para>
- </refsect1>
-</refentry>
diff --git a/talloc/talloc.c b/talloc/talloc.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 1f7e5243..00000000
--- a/talloc/talloc.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1732 +0,0 @@
-/*
- Samba Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
-
- Samba trivial allocation library - new interface
-
- NOTE: Please read talloc_guide.txt for full documentation
-
- Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004
- Copyright (C) Stefan Metzmacher 2006
-
- ** NOTE! The following LGPL license applies to the talloc
- ** library. This does NOT imply that all of Samba is released
- ** under the LGPL
-
- This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
- modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
- version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
- This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
- Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-*/
-
-/*
- inspired by http://swapped.cc/halloc/
-*/
-
-#ifdef _SAMBA_BUILD_
-#include "version.h"
-#if (SAMBA_VERSION_MAJOR<4)
-#include "includes.h"
-/* This is to circumvent SAMBA3's paranoid malloc checker. Here in this file
- * we trust ourselves... */
-#ifdef malloc
-#undef malloc
-#endif
-#ifdef realloc
-#undef realloc
-#endif
-#define _TALLOC_SAMBA3
-#endif /* (SAMBA_VERSION_MAJOR<4) */
-#endif /* _SAMBA_BUILD_ */
-
-#ifndef _TALLOC_SAMBA3
-#include "replace.h"
-#include "talloc.h"
-#endif /* not _TALLOC_SAMBA3 */
-
-/* use this to force every realloc to change the pointer, to stress test
- code that might not cope */
-#define ALWAYS_REALLOC 0
-
-
-#define MAX_TALLOC_SIZE 0x10000000
-#define TALLOC_MAGIC 0xe814ec70
-#define TALLOC_FLAG_FREE 0x01
-#define TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP 0x02
-#define TALLOC_FLAG_POOL 0x04 /* This is a talloc pool */
-#define TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM 0x08 /* This is allocated in a pool */
-#define TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE ((const char *)1)
-
-/* by default we abort when given a bad pointer (such as when talloc_free() is called
- on a pointer that came from malloc() */
-#ifndef TALLOC_ABORT
-#define TALLOC_ABORT(reason) abort()
-#endif
-
-#ifndef discard_const_p
-#if defined(__intptr_t_defined) || defined(HAVE_INTPTR_T)
-# define discard_const_p(type, ptr) ((type *)((intptr_t)(ptr)))
-#else
-# define discard_const_p(type, ptr) ((type *)(ptr))
-#endif
-#endif
-
-/* these macros gain us a few percent of speed on gcc */
-#if (__GNUC__ >= 3)
-/* the strange !! is to ensure that __builtin_expect() takes either 0 or 1
- as its first argument */
-#ifndef likely
-#define likely(x) __builtin_expect(!!(x), 1)
-#endif
-#ifndef unlikely
-#define unlikely(x) __builtin_expect(!!(x), 0)
-#endif
-#else
-#ifndef likely
-#define likely(x) (x)
-#endif
-#ifndef unlikely
-#define unlikely(x) (x)
-#endif
-#endif
-
-/* this null_context is only used if talloc_enable_leak_report() or
- talloc_enable_leak_report_full() is called, otherwise it remains
- NULL
-*/
-static void *null_context;
-static void *autofree_context;
-
-struct talloc_reference_handle {
- struct talloc_reference_handle *next, *prev;
- void *ptr;
-};
-
-typedef int (*talloc_destructor_t)(void *);
-
-struct talloc_chunk {
- struct talloc_chunk *next, *prev;
- struct talloc_chunk *parent, *child;
- struct talloc_reference_handle *refs;
- talloc_destructor_t destructor;
- const char *name;
- size_t size;
- unsigned flags;
-
- /*
- * "pool" has dual use:
- *
- * For the talloc pool itself (i.e. TALLOC_FLAG_POOL is set), "pool"
- * marks the end of the currently allocated area.
- *
- * For members of the pool (i.e. TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM is set), "pool"
- * is a pointer to the struct talloc_chunk of the pool that it was
- * allocated from. This way children can quickly find the pool to chew
- * from.
- */
- void *pool;
-};
-
-/* 16 byte alignment seems to keep everyone happy */
-#define TC_HDR_SIZE ((sizeof(struct talloc_chunk)+15)&~15)
-#define TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc) ((void *)(TC_HDR_SIZE + (char*)tc))
-
-static void talloc_abort_double_free(void)
-{
- TALLOC_ABORT("Bad talloc magic value - double free");
-}
-
-static void talloc_abort_unknown_value(void)
-{
- TALLOC_ABORT("Bad talloc magic value - unknown value");
-}
-
-/* panic if we get a bad magic value */
-static inline struct talloc_chunk *talloc_chunk_from_ptr(const void *ptr)
-{
- const char *pp = (const char *)ptr;
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = discard_const_p(struct talloc_chunk, pp - TC_HDR_SIZE);
- if (unlikely((tc->flags & (TALLOC_FLAG_FREE | ~0xF)) != TALLOC_MAGIC)) {
- if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_FREE) {
- talloc_abort_double_free();
- } else {
- talloc_abort_unknown_value();
- }
- }
- return tc;
-}
-
-/* hook into the front of the list */
-#define _TLIST_ADD(list, p) \
-do { \
- if (!(list)) { \
- (list) = (p); \
- (p)->next = (p)->prev = NULL; \
- } else { \
- (list)->prev = (p); \
- (p)->next = (list); \
- (p)->prev = NULL; \
- (list) = (p); \
- }\
-} while (0)
-
-/* remove an element from a list - element doesn't have to be in list. */
-#define _TLIST_REMOVE(list, p) \
-do { \
- if ((p) == (list)) { \
- (list) = (p)->next; \
- if (list) (list)->prev = NULL; \
- } else { \
- if ((p)->prev) (p)->prev->next = (p)->next; \
- if ((p)->next) (p)->next->prev = (p)->prev; \
- } \
- if ((p) && ((p) != (list))) (p)->next = (p)->prev = NULL; \
-} while (0)
-
-
-/*
- return the parent chunk of a pointer
-*/
-static inline struct talloc_chunk *talloc_parent_chunk(const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- while (tc->prev) tc=tc->prev;
-
- return tc->parent;
-}
-
-void *talloc_parent(const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr);
- return tc? TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc) : NULL;
-}
-
-/*
- find parents name
-*/
-const char *talloc_parent_name(const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr);
- return tc? tc->name : NULL;
-}
-
-/*
- A pool carries an in-pool object count count in the first 16 bytes.
- bytes. This is done to support talloc_steal() to a parent outside of the
- pool. The count includes the pool itself, so a talloc_free() on a pool will
- only destroy the pool if the count has dropped to zero. A talloc_free() of a
- pool member will reduce the count, and eventually also call free(3) on the
- pool memory.
-
- The object count is not put into "struct talloc_chunk" because it is only
- relevant for talloc pools and the alignment to 16 bytes would increase the
- memory footprint of each talloc chunk by those 16 bytes.
-*/
-
-#define TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE 16
-
-static unsigned int *talloc_pool_objectcount(struct talloc_chunk *tc)
-{
- return (unsigned int *)((char *)tc + sizeof(struct talloc_chunk));
-}
-
-/*
- Allocate from a pool
-*/
-
-static struct talloc_chunk *talloc_alloc_pool(struct talloc_chunk *parent,
- size_t size)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *pool_ctx = NULL;
- size_t space_left;
- struct talloc_chunk *result;
- size_t chunk_size;
-
- if (parent == NULL) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- if (parent->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOL) {
- pool_ctx = parent;
- }
- else if (parent->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM) {
- pool_ctx = (struct talloc_chunk *)parent->pool;
- }
-
- if (pool_ctx == NULL) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- space_left = ((char *)pool_ctx + TC_HDR_SIZE + pool_ctx->size)
- - ((char *)pool_ctx->pool);
-
- /*
- * Align size to 16 bytes
- */
- chunk_size = ((size + 15) & ~15);
-
- if (space_left < chunk_size) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- result = (struct talloc_chunk *)pool_ctx->pool;
-
-#if defined(DEVELOPER) && defined(VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED)
- VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED(result, size);
-#endif
-
- pool_ctx->pool = (void *)((char *)result + chunk_size);
-
- result->flags = TALLOC_MAGIC | TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM;
- result->pool = pool_ctx;
-
- *talloc_pool_objectcount(pool_ctx) += 1;
-
- return result;
-}
-
-/*
- Allocate a bit of memory as a child of an existing pointer
-*/
-static inline void *__talloc(const void *context, size_t size)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = NULL;
-
- if (unlikely(context == NULL)) {
- context = null_context;
- }
-
- if (unlikely(size >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- if (context != NULL) {
- tc = talloc_alloc_pool(talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context),
- TC_HDR_SIZE+size);
- }
-
- if (tc == NULL) {
- tc = (struct talloc_chunk *)malloc(TC_HDR_SIZE+size);
- if (unlikely(tc == NULL)) return NULL;
- tc->flags = TALLOC_MAGIC;
- tc->pool = NULL;
- }
-
- tc->size = size;
- tc->destructor = NULL;
- tc->child = NULL;
- tc->name = NULL;
- tc->refs = NULL;
-
- if (likely(context)) {
- struct talloc_chunk *parent = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context);
-
- if (parent->child) {
- parent->child->parent = NULL;
- tc->next = parent->child;
- tc->next->prev = tc;
- } else {
- tc->next = NULL;
- }
- tc->parent = parent;
- tc->prev = NULL;
- parent->child = tc;
- } else {
- tc->next = tc->prev = tc->parent = NULL;
- }
-
- return TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc);
-}
-
-/*
- * Create a talloc pool
- */
-
-void *talloc_pool(const void *context, size_t size)
-{
- void *result = __talloc(context, size + TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE);
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (unlikely(result == NULL)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(result);
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_POOL;
- tc->pool = (char *)result + TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE;
-
- *talloc_pool_objectcount(tc) = 1;
-
-#if defined(DEVELOPER) && defined(VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS)
- VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS(tc->pool, size);
-#endif
-
- return result;
-}
-
-/*
- setup a destructor to be called on free of a pointer
- the destructor should return 0 on success, or -1 on failure.
- if the destructor fails then the free is failed, and the memory can
- be continued to be used
-*/
-void _talloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, int (*destructor)(void *))
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- tc->destructor = destructor;
-}
-
-/*
- increase the reference count on a piece of memory.
-*/
-int talloc_increase_ref_count(const void *ptr)
-{
- if (unlikely(!talloc_reference(null_context, ptr))) {
- return -1;
- }
- return 0;
-}
-
-/*
- helper for talloc_reference()
-
- this is referenced by a function pointer and should not be inline
-*/
-static int talloc_reference_destructor(struct talloc_reference_handle *handle)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *ptr_tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(handle->ptr);
- _TLIST_REMOVE(ptr_tc->refs, handle);
- return 0;
-}
-
-/*
- more efficient way to add a name to a pointer - the name must point to a
- true string constant
-*/
-static inline void _talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- tc->name = name;
-}
-
-/*
- internal talloc_named_const()
-*/
-static inline void *_talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name)
-{
- void *ptr;
-
- ptr = __talloc(context, size);
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- _talloc_set_name_const(ptr, name);
-
- return ptr;
-}
-
-/*
- make a secondary reference to a pointer, hanging off the given context.
- the pointer remains valid until both the original caller and this given
- context are freed.
-
- the major use for this is when two different structures need to reference the
- same underlying data, and you want to be able to free the two instances separately,
- and in either order
-*/
-void *_talloc_reference(const void *context, const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
- struct talloc_reference_handle *handle;
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL;
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- handle = (struct talloc_reference_handle *)_talloc_named_const(context,
- sizeof(struct talloc_reference_handle),
- TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE);
- if (unlikely(handle == NULL)) return NULL;
-
- /* note that we hang the destructor off the handle, not the
- main context as that allows the caller to still setup their
- own destructor on the context if they want to */
- talloc_set_destructor(handle, talloc_reference_destructor);
- handle->ptr = discard_const_p(void, ptr);
- _TLIST_ADD(tc->refs, handle);
- return handle->ptr;
-}
-
-
-/*
- internal talloc_free call
-*/
-static inline int _talloc_free(void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- return -1;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (unlikely(tc->refs)) {
- int is_child;
- /* check this is a reference from a child or grantchild
- * back to it's parent or grantparent
- *
- * in that case we need to remove the reference and
- * call another instance of talloc_free() on the current
- * pointer.
- */
- is_child = talloc_is_parent(tc->refs, ptr);
- _talloc_free(tc->refs);
- if (is_child) {
- return _talloc_free(ptr);
- }
- return -1;
- }
-
- if (unlikely(tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP)) {
- /* we have a free loop - stop looping */
- return 0;
- }
-
- if (unlikely(tc->destructor)) {
- talloc_destructor_t d = tc->destructor;
- if (d == (talloc_destructor_t)-1) {
- return -1;
- }
- tc->destructor = (talloc_destructor_t)-1;
- if (d(ptr) == -1) {
- tc->destructor = d;
- return -1;
- }
- tc->destructor = NULL;
- }
-
- if (tc->parent) {
- _TLIST_REMOVE(tc->parent->child, tc);
- if (tc->parent->child) {
- tc->parent->child->parent = tc->parent;
- }
- } else {
- if (tc->prev) tc->prev->next = tc->next;
- if (tc->next) tc->next->prev = tc->prev;
- }
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-
- while (tc->child) {
- /* we need to work out who will own an abandoned child
- if it cannot be freed. In priority order, the first
- choice is owner of any remaining reference to this
- pointer, the second choice is our parent, and the
- final choice is the null context. */
- void *child = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc->child);
- const void *new_parent = null_context;
- if (unlikely(tc->child->refs)) {
- struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(tc->child->refs);
- if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p);
- }
- if (unlikely(_talloc_free(child) == -1)) {
- if (new_parent == null_context) {
- struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr);
- if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p);
- }
- talloc_steal(new_parent, child);
- }
- }
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_FREE;
-
- if (tc->flags & (TALLOC_FLAG_POOL|TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM)) {
- struct talloc_chunk *pool;
- unsigned int *pool_object_count;
-
- pool = (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOL)
- ? tc : (struct talloc_chunk *)tc->pool;
-
- pool_object_count = talloc_pool_objectcount(pool);
-
- if (*pool_object_count == 0) {
- TALLOC_ABORT("Pool object count zero!");
- }
-
- *pool_object_count -= 1;
-
- if (*pool_object_count == 0) {
- free(pool);
- }
- }
- else {
- free(tc);
- }
- return 0;
-}
-
-/*
- move a lump of memory from one talloc context to another return the
- ptr on success, or NULL if it could not be transferred.
- passing NULL as ptr will always return NULL with no side effects.
-*/
-void *_talloc_steal(const void *new_ctx, const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc, *new_tc;
-
- if (unlikely(!ptr)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- if (unlikely(new_ctx == NULL)) {
- new_ctx = null_context;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (unlikely(new_ctx == NULL)) {
- if (tc->parent) {
- _TLIST_REMOVE(tc->parent->child, tc);
- if (tc->parent->child) {
- tc->parent->child->parent = tc->parent;
- }
- } else {
- if (tc->prev) tc->prev->next = tc->next;
- if (tc->next) tc->next->prev = tc->prev;
- }
-
- tc->parent = tc->next = tc->prev = NULL;
- return discard_const_p(void, ptr);
- }
-
- new_tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(new_ctx);
-
- if (unlikely(tc == new_tc || tc->parent == new_tc)) {
- return discard_const_p(void, ptr);
- }
-
- if (tc->parent) {
- _TLIST_REMOVE(tc->parent->child, tc);
- if (tc->parent->child) {
- tc->parent->child->parent = tc->parent;
- }
- } else {
- if (tc->prev) tc->prev->next = tc->next;
- if (tc->next) tc->next->prev = tc->prev;
- }
-
- tc->parent = new_tc;
- if (new_tc->child) new_tc->child->parent = NULL;
- _TLIST_ADD(new_tc->child, tc);
-
- return discard_const_p(void, ptr);
-}
-
-
-
-/*
- remove a secondary reference to a pointer. This undo's what
- talloc_reference() has done. The context and pointer arguments
- must match those given to a talloc_reference()
-*/
-static inline int talloc_unreference(const void *context, const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- struct talloc_reference_handle *h;
-
- if (unlikely(context == NULL)) {
- context = null_context;
- }
-
- for (h=tc->refs;h;h=h->next) {
- struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(h);
- if (p == NULL) {
- if (context == NULL) break;
- } else if (TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p) == context) {
- break;
- }
- }
- if (h == NULL) {
- return -1;
- }
-
- return _talloc_free(h);
-}
-
-/*
- remove a specific parent context from a pointer. This is a more
- controlled varient of talloc_free()
-*/
-int talloc_unlink(const void *context, void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc_p, *new_p;
- void *new_parent;
-
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- return -1;
- }
-
- if (context == NULL) {
- context = null_context;
- }
-
- if (talloc_unreference(context, ptr) == 0) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- if (context == NULL) {
- if (talloc_parent_chunk(ptr) != NULL) {
- return -1;
- }
- } else {
- if (talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context) != talloc_parent_chunk(ptr)) {
- return -1;
- }
- }
-
- tc_p = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (tc_p->refs == NULL) {
- return _talloc_free(ptr);
- }
-
- new_p = talloc_parent_chunk(tc_p->refs);
- if (new_p) {
- new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(new_p);
- } else {
- new_parent = NULL;
- }
-
- if (talloc_unreference(new_parent, ptr) != 0) {
- return -1;
- }
-
- talloc_steal(new_parent, ptr);
-
- return 0;
-}
-
-/*
- add a name to an existing pointer - va_list version
-*/
-static inline const char *talloc_set_name_v(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0);
-
-static inline const char *talloc_set_name_v(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- tc->name = talloc_vasprintf(ptr, fmt, ap);
- if (likely(tc->name)) {
- _talloc_set_name_const(tc->name, ".name");
- }
- return tc->name;
-}
-
-/*
- add a name to an existing pointer
-*/
-const char *talloc_set_name(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- const char *name;
- va_list ap;
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- name = talloc_set_name_v(ptr, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
- return name;
-}
-
-
-/*
- create a named talloc pointer. Any talloc pointer can be named, and
- talloc_named() operates just like talloc() except that it allows you
- to name the pointer.
-*/
-void *talloc_named(const void *context, size_t size, const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- va_list ap;
- void *ptr;
- const char *name;
-
- ptr = __talloc(context, size);
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL;
-
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- name = talloc_set_name_v(ptr, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
-
- if (unlikely(name == NULL)) {
- _talloc_free(ptr);
- return NULL;
- }
-
- return ptr;
-}
-
-/*
- return the name of a talloc ptr, or "UNNAMED"
-*/
-const char *talloc_get_name(const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- if (unlikely(tc->name == TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE)) {
- return ".reference";
- }
- if (likely(tc->name)) {
- return tc->name;
- }
- return "UNNAMED";
-}
-
-
-/*
- check if a pointer has the given name. If it does, return the pointer,
- otherwise return NULL
-*/
-void *talloc_check_name(const void *ptr, const char *name)
-{
- const char *pname;
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL;
- pname = talloc_get_name(ptr);
- if (likely(pname == name || strcmp(pname, name) == 0)) {
- return discard_const_p(void, ptr);
- }
- return NULL;
-}
-
-
-/*
- this is for compatibility with older versions of talloc
-*/
-void *talloc_init(const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- va_list ap;
- void *ptr;
- const char *name;
-
- /*
- * samba3 expects talloc_report_depth_cb(NULL, ...)
- * reports all talloc'ed memory, so we need to enable
- * null_tracking
- */
- talloc_enable_null_tracking();
-
- ptr = __talloc(NULL, 0);
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL;
-
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- name = talloc_set_name_v(ptr, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
-
- if (unlikely(name == NULL)) {
- _talloc_free(ptr);
- return NULL;
- }
-
- return ptr;
-}
-
-/*
- this is a replacement for the Samba3 talloc_destroy_pool functionality. It
- should probably not be used in new code. It's in here to keep the talloc
- code consistent across Samba 3 and 4.
-*/
-void talloc_free_children(void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- return;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- while (tc->child) {
- /* we need to work out who will own an abandoned child
- if it cannot be freed. In priority order, the first
- choice is owner of any remaining reference to this
- pointer, the second choice is our parent, and the
- final choice is the null context. */
- void *child = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc->child);
- const void *new_parent = null_context;
- if (unlikely(tc->child->refs)) {
- struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(tc->child->refs);
- if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p);
- }
- if (unlikely(_talloc_free(child) == -1)) {
- if (new_parent == null_context) {
- struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr);
- if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p);
- }
- talloc_steal(new_parent, child);
- }
- }
-
- if ((tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOL)
- && (*talloc_pool_objectcount(tc) == 1)) {
- tc->pool = ((char *)tc + TC_HDR_SIZE + TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE);
-#if defined(DEVELOPER) && defined(VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS)
- VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS(
- tc->pool, tc->size - TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE);
-#endif
- }
-}
-
-/*
- Allocate a bit of memory as a child of an existing pointer
-*/
-void *_talloc(const void *context, size_t size)
-{
- return __talloc(context, size);
-}
-
-/*
- externally callable talloc_set_name_const()
-*/
-void talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name)
-{
- _talloc_set_name_const(ptr, name);
-}
-
-/*
- create a named talloc pointer. Any talloc pointer can be named, and
- talloc_named() operates just like talloc() except that it allows you
- to name the pointer.
-*/
-void *talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name)
-{
- return _talloc_named_const(context, size, name);
-}
-
-/*
- free a talloc pointer. This also frees all child pointers of this
- pointer recursively
-
- return 0 if the memory is actually freed, otherwise -1. The memory
- will not be freed if the ref_count is > 1 or the destructor (if
- any) returns non-zero
-*/
-int talloc_free(void *ptr)
-{
- return _talloc_free(ptr);
-}
-
-
-
-/*
- A talloc version of realloc. The context argument is only used if
- ptr is NULL
-*/
-void *_talloc_realloc(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size, const char *name)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
- void *new_ptr;
- bool malloced = false;
-
- /* size zero is equivalent to free() */
- if (unlikely(size == 0)) {
- _talloc_free(ptr);
- return NULL;
- }
-
- if (unlikely(size >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- /* realloc(NULL) is equivalent to malloc() */
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- return _talloc_named_const(context, size, name);
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- /* don't allow realloc on referenced pointers */
- if (unlikely(tc->refs)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- /* don't shrink if we have less than 1k to gain */
- if ((size < tc->size) && ((tc->size - size) < 1024)) {
- tc->size = size;
- return ptr;
- }
-
- /* by resetting magic we catch users of the old memory */
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_FREE;
-
-#if ALWAYS_REALLOC
- new_ptr = malloc(size + TC_HDR_SIZE);
- if (new_ptr) {
- memcpy(new_ptr, tc, tc->size + TC_HDR_SIZE);
- free(tc);
- }
-#else
- if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM) {
-
- new_ptr = talloc_alloc_pool(tc, size + TC_HDR_SIZE);
- *talloc_pool_objectcount((struct talloc_chunk *)
- (tc->pool)) -= 1;
-
- if (new_ptr == NULL) {
- new_ptr = malloc(TC_HDR_SIZE+size);
- malloced = true;
- }
-
- if (new_ptr) {
- memcpy(new_ptr, tc, MIN(tc->size,size) + TC_HDR_SIZE);
- }
- }
- else {
- new_ptr = realloc(tc, size + TC_HDR_SIZE);
- }
-#endif
- if (unlikely(!new_ptr)) {
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_FREE;
- return NULL;
- }
-
- tc = (struct talloc_chunk *)new_ptr;
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_FREE;
- if (malloced) {
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM;
- }
- if (tc->parent) {
- tc->parent->child = tc;
- }
- if (tc->child) {
- tc->child->parent = tc;
- }
-
- if (tc->prev) {
- tc->prev->next = tc;
- }
- if (tc->next) {
- tc->next->prev = tc;
- }
-
- tc->size = size;
- _talloc_set_name_const(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc), name);
-
- return TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc);
-}
-
-/*
- a wrapper around talloc_steal() for situations where you are moving a pointer
- between two structures, and want the old pointer to be set to NULL
-*/
-void *_talloc_move(const void *new_ctx, const void *_pptr)
-{
- const void **pptr = discard_const_p(const void *,_pptr);
- void *ret = _talloc_steal(new_ctx, *pptr);
- (*pptr) = NULL;
- return ret;
-}
-
-/*
- return the total size of a talloc pool (subtree)
-*/
-size_t talloc_total_size(const void *ptr)
-{
- size_t total = 0;
- struct talloc_chunk *c, *tc;
-
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- ptr = null_context;
- }
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-
- total = tc->size;
- for (c=tc->child;c;c=c->next) {
- total += talloc_total_size(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c));
- }
-
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-
- return total;
-}
-
-/*
- return the total number of blocks in a talloc pool (subtree)
-*/
-size_t talloc_total_blocks(const void *ptr)
-{
- size_t total = 0;
- struct talloc_chunk *c, *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-
- total++;
- for (c=tc->child;c;c=c->next) {
- total += talloc_total_blocks(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c));
- }
-
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-
- return total;
-}
-
-/*
- return the number of external references to a pointer
-*/
-size_t talloc_reference_count(const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- struct talloc_reference_handle *h;
- size_t ret = 0;
-
- for (h=tc->refs;h;h=h->next) {
- ret++;
- }
- return ret;
-}
-
-/*
- report on memory usage by all children of a pointer, giving a full tree view
-*/
-void talloc_report_depth_cb(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth,
- void (*callback)(const void *ptr,
- int depth, int max_depth,
- int is_ref,
- void *private_data),
- void *private_data)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *c, *tc;
-
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- ptr = null_context;
- }
- if (ptr == NULL) return;
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP) {
- return;
- }
-
- callback(ptr, depth, max_depth, 0, private_data);
-
- if (max_depth >= 0 && depth >= max_depth) {
- return;
- }
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
- for (c=tc->child;c;c=c->next) {
- if (c->name == TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE) {
- struct talloc_reference_handle *h = (struct talloc_reference_handle *)TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c);
- callback(h->ptr, depth + 1, max_depth, 1, private_data);
- } else {
- talloc_report_depth_cb(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c), depth + 1, max_depth, callback, private_data);
- }
- }
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-}
-
-static void talloc_report_depth_FILE_helper(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, int is_ref, void *_f)
-{
- const char *name = talloc_get_name(ptr);
- FILE *f = (FILE *)_f;
-
- if (is_ref) {
- fprintf(f, "%*sreference to: %s\n", depth*4, "", name);
- return;
- }
-
- if (depth == 0) {
- fprintf(f,"%stalloc report on '%s' (total %6lu bytes in %3lu blocks)\n",
- (max_depth < 0 ? "full " :""), name,
- (unsigned long)talloc_total_size(ptr),
- (unsigned long)talloc_total_blocks(ptr));
- return;
- }
-
- fprintf(f, "%*s%-30s contains %6lu bytes in %3lu blocks (ref %d) %p\n",
- depth*4, "",
- name,
- (unsigned long)talloc_total_size(ptr),
- (unsigned long)talloc_total_blocks(ptr),
- (int)talloc_reference_count(ptr), ptr);
-
-#if 0
- fprintf(f, "content: ");
- if (talloc_total_size(ptr)) {
- int tot = talloc_total_size(ptr);
- int i;
-
- for (i = 0; i < tot; i++) {
- if ((((char *)ptr)[i] > 31) && (((char *)ptr)[i] < 126)) {
- fprintf(f, "%c", ((char *)ptr)[i]);
- } else {
- fprintf(f, "~%02x", ((char *)ptr)[i]);
- }
- }
- }
- fprintf(f, "\n");
-#endif
-}
-
-/*
- report on memory usage by all children of a pointer, giving a full tree view
-*/
-void talloc_report_depth_file(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, FILE *f)
-{
- talloc_report_depth_cb(ptr, depth, max_depth, talloc_report_depth_FILE_helper, f);
- fflush(f);
-}
-
-/*
- report on memory usage by all children of a pointer, giving a full tree view
-*/
-void talloc_report_full(const void *ptr, FILE *f)
-{
- talloc_report_depth_file(ptr, 0, -1, f);
-}
-
-/*
- report on memory usage by all children of a pointer
-*/
-void talloc_report(const void *ptr, FILE *f)
-{
- talloc_report_depth_file(ptr, 0, 1, f);
-}
-
-/*
- report on any memory hanging off the null context
-*/
-static void talloc_report_null(void)
-{
- if (talloc_total_size(null_context) != 0) {
- talloc_report(null_context, stderr);
- }
-}
-
-/*
- report on any memory hanging off the null context
-*/
-static void talloc_report_null_full(void)
-{
- if (talloc_total_size(null_context) != 0) {
- talloc_report_full(null_context, stderr);
- }
-}
-
-/*
- enable tracking of the NULL context
-*/
-void talloc_enable_null_tracking(void)
-{
- if (null_context == NULL) {
- null_context = _talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "null_context");
- }
-}
-
-/*
- disable tracking of the NULL context
-*/
-void talloc_disable_null_tracking(void)
-{
- _talloc_free(null_context);
- null_context = NULL;
-}
-
-/*
- enable leak reporting on exit
-*/
-void talloc_enable_leak_report(void)
-{
- talloc_enable_null_tracking();
- atexit(talloc_report_null);
-}
-
-/*
- enable full leak reporting on exit
-*/
-void talloc_enable_leak_report_full(void)
-{
- talloc_enable_null_tracking();
- atexit(talloc_report_null_full);
-}
-
-/*
- talloc and zero memory.
-*/
-void *_talloc_zero(const void *ctx, size_t size, const char *name)
-{
- void *p = _talloc_named_const(ctx, size, name);
-
- if (p) {
- memset(p, '\0', size);
- }
-
- return p;
-}
-
-/*
- memdup with a talloc.
-*/
-void *_talloc_memdup(const void *t, const void *p, size_t size, const char *name)
-{
- void *newp = _talloc_named_const(t, size, name);
-
- if (likely(newp)) {
- memcpy(newp, p, size);
- }
-
- return newp;
-}
-
-static inline char *__talloc_strlendup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t len)
-{
- char *ret;
-
- ret = (char *)__talloc(t, len + 1);
- if (unlikely(!ret)) return NULL;
-
- memcpy(ret, p, len);
- ret[len] = 0;
-
- _talloc_set_name_const(ret, ret);
- return ret;
-}
-
-/*
- strdup with a talloc
-*/
-char *talloc_strdup(const void *t, const char *p)
-{
- if (unlikely(!p)) return NULL;
- return __talloc_strlendup(t, p, strlen(p));
-}
-
-/*
- strndup with a talloc
-*/
-char *talloc_strndup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t n)
-{
- if (unlikely(!p)) return NULL;
- return __talloc_strlendup(t, p, strnlen(p, n));
-}
-
-static inline char *__talloc_strlendup_append(char *s, size_t slen,
- const char *a, size_t alen)
-{
- char *ret;
-
- ret = talloc_realloc(NULL, s, char, slen + alen + 1);
- if (unlikely(!ret)) return NULL;
-
- /* append the string and the trailing \0 */
- memcpy(&ret[slen], a, alen);
- ret[slen+alen] = 0;
-
- _talloc_set_name_const(ret, ret);
- return ret;
-}
-
-/*
- * Appends at the end of the string.
- */
-char *talloc_strdup_append(char *s, const char *a)
-{
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_strdup(NULL, a);
- }
-
- if (unlikely(!a)) {
- return s;
- }
-
- return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, strlen(s), a, strlen(a));
-}
-
-/*
- * Appends at the end of the talloc'ed buffer,
- * not the end of the string.
- */
-char *talloc_strdup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a)
-{
- size_t slen;
-
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_strdup(NULL, a);
- }
-
- if (unlikely(!a)) {
- return s;
- }
-
- slen = talloc_get_size(s);
- if (likely(slen > 0)) {
- slen--;
- }
-
- return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, slen, a, strlen(a));
-}
-
-/*
- * Appends at the end of the string.
- */
-char *talloc_strndup_append(char *s, const char *a, size_t n)
-{
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_strdup(NULL, a);
- }
-
- if (unlikely(!a)) {
- return s;
- }
-
- return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, strlen(s), a, strnlen(a, n));
-}
-
-/*
- * Appends at the end of the talloc'ed buffer,
- * not the end of the string.
- */
-char *talloc_strndup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a, size_t n)
-{
- size_t slen;
-
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_strdup(NULL, a);
- }
-
- if (unlikely(!a)) {
- return s;
- }
-
- slen = talloc_get_size(s);
- if (likely(slen > 0)) {
- slen--;
- }
-
- return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, slen, a, strnlen(a, n));
-}
-
-#ifndef HAVE_VA_COPY
-#ifdef HAVE___VA_COPY
-#define va_copy(dest, src) __va_copy(dest, src)
-#else
-#define va_copy(dest, src) (dest) = (src)
-#endif
-#endif
-
-char *talloc_vasprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
-{
- int len;
- char *ret;
- va_list ap2;
- char c;
-
- /* this call looks strange, but it makes it work on older solaris boxes */
- va_copy(ap2, ap);
- len = vsnprintf(&c, 1, fmt, ap2);
- va_end(ap2);
- if (unlikely(len < 0)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- ret = (char *)__talloc(t, len+1);
- if (unlikely(!ret)) return NULL;
-
- va_copy(ap2, ap);
- vsnprintf(ret, len+1, fmt, ap2);
- va_end(ap2);
-
- _talloc_set_name_const(ret, ret);
- return ret;
-}
-
-
-/*
- Perform string formatting, and return a pointer to newly allocated
- memory holding the result, inside a memory pool.
- */
-char *talloc_asprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- va_list ap;
- char *ret;
-
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- ret = talloc_vasprintf(t, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
- return ret;
-}
-
-static inline char *__talloc_vaslenprintf_append(char *s, size_t slen,
- const char *fmt, va_list ap)
- PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(3,0);
-
-static inline char *__talloc_vaslenprintf_append(char *s, size_t slen,
- const char *fmt, va_list ap)
-{
- ssize_t alen;
- va_list ap2;
- char c;
-
- va_copy(ap2, ap);
- alen = vsnprintf(&c, 1, fmt, ap2);
- va_end(ap2);
-
- if (alen <= 0) {
- /* Either the vsnprintf failed or the format resulted in
- * no characters being formatted. In the former case, we
- * ought to return NULL, in the latter we ought to return
- * the original string. Most current callers of this
- * function expect it to never return NULL.
- */
- return s;
- }
-
- s = talloc_realloc(NULL, s, char, slen + alen + 1);
- if (!s) return NULL;
-
- va_copy(ap2, ap);
- vsnprintf(s + slen, alen + 1, fmt, ap2);
- va_end(ap2);
-
- _talloc_set_name_const(s, s);
- return s;
-}
-
-/**
- * Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and @p ap,
- * and return @p s, which may have moved. Good for gradually
- * accumulating output into a string buffer. Appends at the end
- * of the string.
- **/
-char *talloc_vasprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
-{
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_vasprintf(NULL, fmt, ap);
- }
-
- return __talloc_vaslenprintf_append(s, strlen(s), fmt, ap);
-}
-
-/**
- * Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and @p ap,
- * and return @p s, which may have moved. Always appends at the
- * end of the talloc'ed buffer, not the end of the string.
- **/
-char *talloc_vasprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
-{
- size_t slen;
-
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_vasprintf(NULL, fmt, ap);
- }
-
- slen = talloc_get_size(s);
- if (likely(slen > 0)) {
- slen--;
- }
-
- return __talloc_vaslenprintf_append(s, slen, fmt, ap);
-}
-
-/*
- Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and return @p
- s, which may have moved. Good for gradually accumulating output
- into a string buffer.
- */
-char *talloc_asprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- va_list ap;
-
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- s = talloc_vasprintf_append(s, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
- return s;
-}
-
-/*
- Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and return @p
- s, which may have moved. Good for gradually accumulating output
- into a buffer.
- */
-char *talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- va_list ap;
-
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- s = talloc_vasprintf_append_buffer(s, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
- return s;
-}
-
-/*
- alloc an array, checking for integer overflow in the array size
-*/
-void *_talloc_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name)
-{
- if (count >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE/el_size) {
- return NULL;
- }
- return _talloc_named_const(ctx, el_size * count, name);
-}
-
-/*
- alloc an zero array, checking for integer overflow in the array size
-*/
-void *_talloc_zero_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name)
-{
- if (count >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE/el_size) {
- return NULL;
- }
- return _talloc_zero(ctx, el_size * count, name);
-}
-
-/*
- realloc an array, checking for integer overflow in the array size
-*/
-void *_talloc_realloc_array(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name)
-{
- if (count >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE/el_size) {
- return NULL;
- }
- return _talloc_realloc(ctx, ptr, el_size * count, name);
-}
-
-/*
- a function version of talloc_realloc(), so it can be passed as a function pointer
- to libraries that want a realloc function (a realloc function encapsulates
- all the basic capabilities of an allocation library, which is why this is useful)
-*/
-void *talloc_realloc_fn(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size)
-{
- return _talloc_realloc(context, ptr, size, NULL);
-}
-
-
-static int talloc_autofree_destructor(void *ptr)
-{
- autofree_context = NULL;
- return 0;
-}
-
-static void talloc_autofree(void)
-{
- _talloc_free(autofree_context);
-}
-
-/*
- return a context which will be auto-freed on exit
- this is useful for reducing the noise in leak reports
-*/
-void *talloc_autofree_context(void)
-{
- if (autofree_context == NULL) {
- autofree_context = _talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "autofree_context");
- talloc_set_destructor(autofree_context, talloc_autofree_destructor);
- atexit(talloc_autofree);
- }
- return autofree_context;
-}
-
-size_t talloc_get_size(const void *context)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (context == NULL)
- return 0;
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context);
-
- return tc->size;
-}
-
-/*
- find a parent of this context that has the given name, if any
-*/
-void *talloc_find_parent_byname(const void *context, const char *name)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (context == NULL) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context);
- while (tc) {
- if (tc->name && strcmp(tc->name, name) == 0) {
- return TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc);
- }
- while (tc && tc->prev) tc = tc->prev;
- if (tc) {
- tc = tc->parent;
- }
- }
- return NULL;
-}
-
-/*
- show the parentage of a context
-*/
-void talloc_show_parents(const void *context, FILE *file)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (context == NULL) {
- fprintf(file, "talloc no parents for NULL\n");
- return;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context);
- fprintf(file, "talloc parents of '%s'\n", talloc_get_name(context));
- while (tc) {
- fprintf(file, "\t'%s'\n", talloc_get_name(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc)));
- while (tc && tc->prev) tc = tc->prev;
- if (tc) {
- tc = tc->parent;
- }
- }
- fflush(file);
-}
-
-/*
- return 1 if ptr is a parent of context
-*/
-int talloc_is_parent(const void *context, const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (context == NULL) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context);
- while (tc) {
- if (TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc) == ptr) return 1;
- while (tc && tc->prev) tc = tc->prev;
- if (tc) {
- tc = tc->parent;
- }
- }
- return 0;
-}
diff --git a/talloc/talloc.h b/talloc/talloc.h
deleted file mode 100644
index 54319716..00000000
--- a/talloc/talloc.h
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,183 +0,0 @@
-#ifndef _TALLOC_H_
-#define _TALLOC_H_
-/*
- Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
- Samba temporary memory allocation functions
-
- Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004-2005
- Copyright (C) Stefan Metzmacher 2006
-
- ** NOTE! The following LGPL license applies to the talloc
- ** library. This does NOT imply that all of Samba is released
- ** under the LGPL
-
- This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
- modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
- version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
- This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
- Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-*/
-
-#include <stdlib.h>
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <stdarg.h>
-
-/* this is only needed for compatibility with the old talloc */
-typedef void TALLOC_CTX;
-
-/*
- this uses a little trick to allow __LINE__ to be stringified
-*/
-#ifndef __location__
-#define __TALLOC_STRING_LINE1__(s) #s
-#define __TALLOC_STRING_LINE2__(s) __TALLOC_STRING_LINE1__(s)
-#define __TALLOC_STRING_LINE3__ __TALLOC_STRING_LINE2__(__LINE__)
-#define __location__ __FILE__ ":" __TALLOC_STRING_LINE3__
-#endif
-
-#ifndef TALLOC_DEPRECATED
-#define TALLOC_DEPRECATED 0
-#endif
-
-#ifndef PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE
-#if (__GNUC__ >= 3)
-/** Use gcc attribute to check printf fns. a1 is the 1-based index of
- * the parameter containing the format, and a2 the index of the first
- * argument. Note that some gcc 2.x versions don't handle this
- * properly **/
-#define PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(a1, a2) __attribute__ ((format (__printf__, a1, a2)))
-#else
-#define PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(a1, a2)
-#endif
-#endif
-
-/* try to make talloc_set_destructor() and talloc_steal() type safe,
- if we have a recent gcc */
-#if (__GNUC__ >= 3)
-#define _TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr) __typeof__(ptr)
-#define talloc_set_destructor(ptr, function) \
- do { \
- int (*_talloc_destructor_fn)(_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr)) = (function); \
- _talloc_set_destructor((ptr), (int (*)(void *))_talloc_destructor_fn); \
- } while(0)
-/* this extremely strange macro is to avoid some braindamaged warning
- stupidity in gcc 4.1.x */
-#define talloc_steal(ctx, ptr) ({ _TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr) __talloc_steal_ret = (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))_talloc_steal((ctx),(ptr)); __talloc_steal_ret; })
-#else
-#define talloc_set_destructor(ptr, function) \
- _talloc_set_destructor((ptr), (int (*)(void *))(function))
-#define _TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr) void *
-#define talloc_steal(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))_talloc_steal((ctx),(ptr))
-#endif
-
-#define talloc_reference(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))_talloc_reference((ctx),(ptr))
-#define talloc_move(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(*(ptr)))_talloc_move((ctx),(void *)(ptr))
-
-/* useful macros for creating type checked pointers */
-#define talloc(ctx, type) (type *)talloc_named_const(ctx, sizeof(type), #type)
-#define talloc_size(ctx, size) talloc_named_const(ctx, size, __location__)
-#define talloc_ptrtype(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))talloc_size(ctx, sizeof(*(ptr)))
-
-#define talloc_new(ctx) talloc_named_const(ctx, 0, "talloc_new: " __location__)
-
-#define talloc_zero(ctx, type) (type *)_talloc_zero(ctx, sizeof(type), #type)
-#define talloc_zero_size(ctx, size) _talloc_zero(ctx, size, __location__)
-
-#define talloc_zero_array(ctx, type, count) (type *)_talloc_zero_array(ctx, sizeof(type), count, #type)
-#define talloc_array(ctx, type, count) (type *)_talloc_array(ctx, sizeof(type), count, #type)
-#define talloc_array_size(ctx, size, count) _talloc_array(ctx, size, count, __location__)
-#define talloc_array_ptrtype(ctx, ptr, count) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))talloc_array_size(ctx, sizeof(*(ptr)), count)
-
-#define talloc_realloc(ctx, p, type, count) (type *)_talloc_realloc_array(ctx, p, sizeof(type), count, #type)
-#define talloc_realloc_size(ctx, ptr, size) _talloc_realloc(ctx, ptr, size, __location__)
-
-#define talloc_memdup(t, p, size) _talloc_memdup(t, p, size, __location__)
-
-#define talloc_set_type(ptr, type) talloc_set_name_const(ptr, #type)
-#define talloc_get_type(ptr, type) (type *)talloc_check_name(ptr, #type)
-
-#define talloc_find_parent_bytype(ptr, type) (type *)talloc_find_parent_byname(ptr, #type)
-
-#if TALLOC_DEPRECATED
-#define talloc_zero_p(ctx, type) talloc_zero(ctx, type)
-#define talloc_p(ctx, type) talloc(ctx, type)
-#define talloc_array_p(ctx, type, count) talloc_array(ctx, type, count)
-#define talloc_realloc_p(ctx, p, type, count) talloc_realloc(ctx, p, type, count)
-#define talloc_destroy(ctx) talloc_free(ctx)
-#define talloc_append_string(c, s, a) (s?talloc_strdup_append(s,a):talloc_strdup(c, a))
-#endif
-
-/* The following definitions come from talloc.c */
-void *_talloc(const void *context, size_t size);
-void *talloc_pool(const void *context, size_t size);
-void _talloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, int (*destructor)(void *));
-int talloc_increase_ref_count(const void *ptr);
-size_t talloc_reference_count(const void *ptr);
-void *_talloc_reference(const void *context, const void *ptr);
-int talloc_unlink(const void *context, void *ptr);
-const char *talloc_set_name(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3);
-void talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name);
-void *talloc_named(const void *context, size_t size,
- const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(3,4);
-void *talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name);
-const char *talloc_get_name(const void *ptr);
-void *talloc_check_name(const void *ptr, const char *name);
-void *talloc_parent(const void *ptr);
-const char *talloc_parent_name(const void *ptr);
-void *talloc_init(const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(1,2);
-int talloc_free(void *ptr);
-void talloc_free_children(void *ptr);
-void *_talloc_realloc(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size, const char *name);
-void *_talloc_steal(const void *new_ctx, const void *ptr);
-void *_talloc_move(const void *new_ctx, const void *pptr);
-size_t talloc_total_size(const void *ptr);
-size_t talloc_total_blocks(const void *ptr);
-void talloc_report_depth_cb(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth,
- void (*callback)(const void *ptr,
- int depth, int max_depth,
- int is_ref,
- void *private_data),
- void *private_data);
-void talloc_report_depth_file(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, FILE *f);
-void talloc_report_full(const void *ptr, FILE *f);
-void talloc_report(const void *ptr, FILE *f);
-void talloc_enable_null_tracking(void);
-void talloc_disable_null_tracking(void);
-void talloc_enable_leak_report(void);
-void talloc_enable_leak_report_full(void);
-void *_talloc_zero(const void *ctx, size_t size, const char *name);
-void *_talloc_memdup(const void *t, const void *p, size_t size, const char *name);
-void *_talloc_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name);
-void *_talloc_zero_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name);
-void *_talloc_realloc_array(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name);
-void *talloc_realloc_fn(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size);
-void *talloc_autofree_context(void);
-size_t talloc_get_size(const void *ctx);
-void *talloc_find_parent_byname(const void *ctx, const char *name);
-void talloc_show_parents(const void *context, FILE *file);
-int talloc_is_parent(const void *context, const void *ptr);
-
-char *talloc_strdup(const void *t, const char *p);
-char *talloc_strdup_append(char *s, const char *a);
-char *talloc_strdup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a);
-
-char *talloc_strndup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t n);
-char *talloc_strndup_append(char *s, const char *a, size_t n);
-char *talloc_strndup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a, size_t n);
-
-char *talloc_vasprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0);
-char *talloc_vasprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0);
-char *talloc_vasprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0);
-
-char *talloc_asprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3);
-char *talloc_asprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3);
-char *talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3);
-
-#endif
diff --git a/talloc/talloc.i b/talloc/talloc.i
deleted file mode 100644
index a9afb97e..00000000
--- a/talloc/talloc.i
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,31 +0,0 @@
-/*
- Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
- Copyright (C) Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org> 2007
-
- This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
- (at your option) any later version.
-
- This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
- GNU General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
- along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-*/
-
-/* Don't expose talloc contexts in Python code. Python does reference
- counting for us, so just create a new top-level talloc context.
- */
-%typemap(in, numinputs=0, noblock=1) TALLOC_CTX * {
- $1 = NULL;
-}
-
-%define %talloctype(TYPE)
-%nodefaultctor TYPE;
-%extend TYPE {
- ~TYPE() { talloc_free($self); }
-}
-%enddef
diff --git a/talloc/talloc.mk b/talloc/talloc.mk
deleted file mode 100644
index f183cd57..00000000
--- a/talloc/talloc.mk
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,37 +0,0 @@
-TALLOC_OBJ = $(tallocdir)/talloc.o
-
-TALLOC_SOLIB = libtalloc.$(SHLIBEXT).$(PACKAGE_VERSION)
-TALLOC_SONAME = libtalloc.$(SHLIBEXT).1
-
-all:: libtalloc.a $(TALLOC_SOLIB) testsuite
-
-testsuite:: $(LIBOBJ) testsuite.o testsuite_main.o
- $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o testsuite testsuite.o testsuite_main.o $(LIBOBJ) $(LIBS)
-
-libtalloc.a: $(LIBOBJ)
- ar -rv $@ $(LIBOBJ)
- @-ranlib $@
-
-install:: all
- ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(DESTDIR)$(libdir)
- ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(DESTDIR)$(libdir)/pkgconfig
- ${INSTALLCMD} -m 755 libtalloc.a $(DESTDIR)$(libdir)
- ${INSTALLCMD} -m 755 $(TALLOC_SOLIB) $(DESTDIR)$(libdir)
- ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(DESTDIR)${includedir}
- ${INSTALLCMD} -m 644 $(srcdir)/talloc.h $(DESTDIR)$(includedir)
- ${INSTALLCMD} -m 644 talloc.pc $(DESTDIR)$(libdir)/pkgconfig
- if [ -f talloc.3 ];then ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man3; fi
- if [ -f talloc.3 ];then ${INSTALLCMD} -m 644 talloc.3 $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man3; fi
- which swig >/dev/null 2>&1 && ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(DESTDIR)$(prefix)`swig -swiglib` || true
- which swig >/dev/null 2>&1 && ${INSTALLCMD} -m 644 talloc.i $(DESTDIR)$(prefix)`swig -swiglib` || true
-
-doc:: talloc.3 talloc.3.html
-
-clean::
- rm -f *~ $(LIBOBJ) $(TALLOC_SOLIB) libtalloc.a testsuite testsuite.o testsuite_main.o *.gc?? talloc.3 talloc.3.html
-
-test:: testsuite
- ./testsuite
-
-gcov::
- gcov talloc.c
diff --git a/talloc/talloc.pc.in b/talloc/talloc.pc.in
deleted file mode 100644
index 459cce70..00000000
--- a/talloc/talloc.pc.in
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
-prefix=@prefix@
-exec_prefix=@exec_prefix@
-libdir=@libdir@
-includedir=@includedir@
-
-Name: talloc
-Description: A hierarchical pool based memory system with destructors
-Version: @PACKAGE_VERSION@
-Libs: -L${libdir} -ltalloc
-Cflags: -I${includedir}
-URL: http://talloc.samba.org/
diff --git a/talloc/talloc_guide.txt b/talloc/talloc_guide.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 3201fe6f..00000000
--- a/talloc/talloc_guide.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,694 +0,0 @@
-Using talloc in Samba4
-======================
-
-.. contents::
-
-Andrew Tridgell
-September 2004
-
-The most current version of this document is available at
- http://samba.org/ftp/unpacked/samba4/source/lib/talloc/talloc_guide.txt
-
-If you are used to the "old" talloc from Samba3 before 3.0.20 then please read
-this carefully, as talloc has changed a lot. With 3.0.20 (or 3.0.14?) the
-Samba4 talloc has been ported back to Samba3, so this guide applies to both.
-
-The new talloc is a hierarchical, reference counted memory pool system
-with destructors. Quite a mouthful really, but not too bad once you
-get used to it.
-
-Perhaps the biggest change from Samba3 is that there is no distinction
-between a "talloc context" and a "talloc pointer". Any pointer
-returned from talloc() is itself a valid talloc context. This means
-you can do this::
-
- struct foo *X = talloc(mem_ctx, struct foo);
- X->name = talloc_strdup(X, "foo");
-
-and the pointer X->name would be a "child" of the talloc context "X"
-which is itself a child of mem_ctx. So if you do talloc_free(mem_ctx)
-then it is all destroyed, whereas if you do talloc_free(X) then just X
-and X->name are destroyed, and if you do talloc_free(X->name) then
-just the name element of X is destroyed.
-
-If you think about this, then what this effectively gives you is an
-n-ary tree, where you can free any part of the tree with
-talloc_free().
-
-If you find this confusing, then I suggest you run the testsuite to
-watch talloc in action. You may also like to add your own tests to
-testsuite.c to clarify how some particular situation is handled.
-
-
-Performance
------------
-
-All the additional features of talloc() over malloc() do come at a
-price. We have a simple performance test in Samba4 that measures
-talloc() versus malloc() performance, and it seems that talloc() is
-about 4% slower than malloc() on my x86 Debian Linux box. For Samba,
-the great reduction in code complexity that we get by using talloc
-makes this worthwhile, especially as the total overhead of
-talloc/malloc in Samba is already quite small.
-
-
-talloc API
-----------
-
-The following is a complete guide to the talloc API. Read it all at
-least twice.
-
-Multi-threading
----------------
-
-talloc itself does not deal with threads. It is thread-safe (assuming
-the underlying "malloc" is), as long as each thread uses different
-memory contexts.
-If two threads uses the same context then they need to synchronize in
-order to be safe. In particular:
-- when using talloc_enable_leak_report(), giving directly NULL as a
-parent context implicitly refers to a hidden "null context" global
-variable, so this should not be used in a multi-threaded environment
-without proper synchronization ;
-- the context returned by talloc_autofree_context() is also global so
-shouldn't be used by several threads simultaneously without
-synchronization.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(type *)talloc(const void *context, type);
-
-The talloc() macro is the core of the talloc library. It takes a
-memory context and a type, and returns a pointer to a new area of
-memory of the given type.
-
-The returned pointer is itself a talloc context, so you can use it as
-the context argument to more calls to talloc if you wish.
-
-The returned pointer is a "child" of the supplied context. This means
-that if you talloc_free() the context then the new child disappears as
-well. Alternatively you can free just the child.
-
-The context argument to talloc() can be NULL, in which case a new top
-level context is created.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_size(const void *context, size_t size);
-
-The function talloc_size() should be used when you don't have a
-convenient type to pass to talloc(). Unlike talloc(), it is not type
-safe (as it returns a void *), so you are on your own for type checking.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(typeof(ptr)) talloc_ptrtype(const void *ctx, ptr);
-
-The talloc_ptrtype() macro should be used when you have a pointer and
-want to allocate memory to point at with this pointer. When compiling
-with gcc >= 3 it is typesafe. Note this is a wrapper of talloc_size()
-and talloc_get_name() will return the current location in the source file.
-and not the type.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-int talloc_free(void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_free() function frees a piece of talloc memory, and all its
-children. You can call talloc_free() on any pointer returned by
-talloc().
-
-The return value of talloc_free() indicates success or failure, with 0
-returned for success and -1 for failure. The only possible failure
-condition is if the pointer had a destructor attached to it and the
-destructor returned -1. See talloc_set_destructor() for details on
-destructors.
-
-If this pointer has an additional parent when talloc_free() is called
-then the memory is not actually released, but instead the most
-recently established parent is destroyed. See talloc_reference() for
-details on establishing additional parents.
-
-For more control on which parent is removed, see talloc_unlink()
-
-talloc_free() operates recursively on its children.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-int talloc_free_children(void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_free_children() walks along the list of all children of a
-talloc context and talloc_free()s only the children, not the context
-itself.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_reference(const void *context, const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_reference() function makes "context" an additional parent
-of "ptr".
-
-The return value of talloc_reference() is always the original pointer
-"ptr", unless talloc ran out of memory in creating the reference in
-which case it will return NULL (each additional reference consumes
-around 48 bytes of memory on intel x86 platforms).
-
-If "ptr" is NULL, then the function is a no-op, and simply returns NULL.
-
-After creating a reference you can free it in one of the following
-ways:
-
- - you can talloc_free() any parent of the original pointer. That
- will reduce the number of parents of this pointer by 1, and will
- cause this pointer to be freed if it runs out of parents.
-
- - you can talloc_free() the pointer itself. That will destroy the
- most recently established parent to the pointer and leave the
- pointer as a child of its current parent.
-
-For more control on which parent to remove, see talloc_unlink()
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-int talloc_unlink(const void *context, const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_unlink() function removes a specific parent from ptr. The
-context passed must either be a context used in talloc_reference()
-with this pointer, or must be a direct parent of ptr.
-
-Note that if the parent has already been removed using talloc_free()
-then this function will fail and will return -1. Likewise, if "ptr"
-is NULL, then the function will make no modifications and return -1.
-
-Usually you can just use talloc_free() instead of talloc_unlink(), but
-sometimes it is useful to have the additional control on which parent
-is removed.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, int (*destructor)(void *));
-
-The function talloc_set_destructor() sets the "destructor" for the
-pointer "ptr". A destructor is a function that is called when the
-memory used by a pointer is about to be released. The destructor
-receives the pointer as an argument, and should return 0 for success
-and -1 for failure.
-
-The destructor can do anything it wants to, including freeing other
-pieces of memory. A common use for destructors is to clean up
-operating system resources (such as open file descriptors) contained
-in the structure the destructor is placed on.
-
-You can only place one destructor on a pointer. If you need more than
-one destructor then you can create a zero-length child of the pointer
-and place an additional destructor on that.
-
-To remove a destructor call talloc_set_destructor() with NULL for the
-destructor.
-
-If your destructor attempts to talloc_free() the pointer that it is
-the destructor for then talloc_free() will return -1 and the free will
-be ignored. This would be a pointless operation anyway, as the
-destructor is only called when the memory is just about to go away.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-int talloc_increase_ref_count(const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_increase_ref_count(ptr) function is exactly equivalent to:
-
- talloc_reference(NULL, ptr);
-
-You can use either syntax, depending on which you think is clearer in
-your code.
-
-It returns 0 on success and -1 on failure.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-size_t talloc_reference_count(const void *ptr);
-
-Return the number of references to the pointer.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_set_name(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, ...);
-
-Each talloc pointer has a "name". The name is used principally for
-debugging purposes, although it is also possible to set and get the
-name on a pointer in as a way of "marking" pointers in your code.
-
-The main use for names on pointer is for "talloc reports". See
-talloc_report() and talloc_report_full() for details. Also see
-talloc_enable_leak_report() and talloc_enable_leak_report_full().
-
-The talloc_set_name() function allocates memory as a child of the
-pointer. It is logically equivalent to:
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, talloc_asprintf(ptr, fmt, ...));
-
-Note that multiple calls to talloc_set_name() will allocate more
-memory without releasing the name. All of the memory is released when
-the ptr is freed using talloc_free().
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name);
-
-The function talloc_set_name_const() is just like talloc_set_name(),
-but it takes a string constant, and is much faster. It is extensively
-used by the "auto naming" macros, such as talloc_p().
-
-This function does not allocate any memory. It just copies the
-supplied pointer into the internal representation of the talloc
-ptr. This means you must not pass a name pointer to memory that will
-disappear before the ptr is freed with talloc_free().
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_named(const void *context, size_t size, const char *fmt, ...);
-
-The talloc_named() function creates a named talloc pointer. It is
-equivalent to:
-
- ptr = talloc_size(context, size);
- talloc_set_name(ptr, fmt, ....);
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name);
-
-This is equivalent to::
-
- ptr = talloc_size(context, size);
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, name);
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-const char *talloc_get_name(const void *ptr);
-
-This returns the current name for the given talloc pointer. See
-talloc_set_name() for details.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_init(const char *fmt, ...);
-
-This function creates a zero length named talloc context as a top
-level context. It is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_named(NULL, 0, fmt, ...);
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_new(void *ctx);
-
-This is a utility macro that creates a new memory context hanging
-off an exiting context, automatically naming it "talloc_new: __location__"
-where __location__ is the source line it is called from. It is
-particularly useful for creating a new temporary working context.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(type *)talloc_realloc(const void *context, void *ptr, type, count);
-
-The talloc_realloc() macro changes the size of a talloc
-pointer. The "count" argument is the number of elements of type "type"
-that you want the resulting pointer to hold.
-
-talloc_realloc() has the following equivalences::
-
- talloc_realloc(context, NULL, type, 1) ==> talloc(context, type);
- talloc_realloc(context, NULL, type, N) ==> talloc_array(context, type, N);
- talloc_realloc(context, ptr, type, 0) ==> talloc_free(ptr);
-
-The "context" argument is only used if "ptr" is NULL, otherwise it is
-ignored.
-
-talloc_realloc() returns the new pointer, or NULL on failure. The call
-will fail either due to a lack of memory, or because the pointer has
-more than one parent (see talloc_reference()).
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_realloc_size(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size);
-
-the talloc_realloc_size() function is useful when the type is not
-known so the typesafe talloc_realloc() cannot be used.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_steal(const void *new_ctx, const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_steal() function changes the parent context of a talloc
-pointer. It is typically used when the context that the pointer is
-currently a child of is going to be freed and you wish to keep the
-memory for a longer time.
-
-The talloc_steal() function returns the pointer that you pass it. It
-does not have any failure modes.
-
-NOTE: It is possible to produce loops in the parent/child relationship
-if you are not careful with talloc_steal(). No guarantees are provided
-as to your sanity or the safety of your data if you do this.
-
-talloc_steal (new_ctx, NULL) will return NULL with no sideeffects.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-size_t talloc_total_size(const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_total_size() function returns the total size in bytes used
-by this pointer and all child pointers. Mostly useful for debugging.
-
-Passing NULL is allowed, but it will only give a meaningful result if
-talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has
-been called.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-size_t talloc_total_blocks(const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_total_blocks() function returns the total memory block
-count used by this pointer and all child pointers. Mostly useful for
-debugging.
-
-Passing NULL is allowed, but it will only give a meaningful result if
-talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has
-been called.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_report_depth_cb(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth,
- void (*callback)(const void *ptr,
- int depth, int max_depth,
- int is_ref,
- void *priv),
- void *priv);
-
-This provides a more flexible reports than talloc_report(). It
-will recursively call the callback for the entire tree of memory
-referenced by the pointer. References in the tree are passed with
-is_ref = 1 and the pointer that is referenced.
-
-You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is
-printed for the top level memory context, but only if
-talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full()
-has been called.
-
-The recursion is stopped when depth >= max_depth.
-max_depth = -1 means only stop at leaf nodes.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_report_depth_file(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, FILE *f);
-
-This provides a more flexible reports than talloc_report(). It
-will let you specify the depth and max_depth.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_report(const void *ptr, FILE *f);
-
-The talloc_report() function prints a summary report of all memory
-used by ptr. One line of report is printed for each immediate child of
-ptr, showing the total memory and number of blocks used by that child.
-
-You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is printed
-for the top level memory context, but only if
-talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has
-been called.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_report_full(const void *ptr, FILE *f);
-
-This provides a more detailed report than talloc_report(). It will
-recursively print the ensire tree of memory referenced by the
-pointer. References in the tree are shown by giving the name of the
-pointer that is referenced.
-
-You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is printed
-for the top level memory context, but only if
-talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has
-been called.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_enable_leak_report(void);
-
-This enables calling of talloc_report(NULL, stderr) when the program
-exits. In Samba4 this is enabled by using the --leak-report command
-line option.
-
-For it to be useful, this function must be called before any other
-talloc function as it establishes a "null context" that acts as the
-top of the tree. If you don't call this function first then passing
-NULL to talloc_report() or talloc_report_full() won't give you the
-full tree printout.
-
-Here is a typical talloc report:
-
-talloc report on 'null_context' (total 267 bytes in 15 blocks)
- libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks
- libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks
- iconv(UTF8,CP850) contains 42 bytes in 2 blocks
- libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks
- iconv(CP850,UTF8) contains 42 bytes in 2 blocks
- iconv(UTF8,UTF-16LE) contains 45 bytes in 2 blocks
- iconv(UTF-16LE,UTF8) contains 45 bytes in 2 blocks
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_enable_leak_report_full(void);
-
-This enables calling of talloc_report_full(NULL, stderr) when the
-program exits. In Samba4 this is enabled by using the
---leak-report-full command line option.
-
-For it to be useful, this function must be called before any other
-talloc function as it establishes a "null context" that acts as the
-top of the tree. If you don't call this function first then passing
-NULL to talloc_report() or talloc_report_full() won't give you the
-full tree printout.
-
-Here is a typical full report:
-
-full talloc report on 'root' (total 18 bytes in 8 blocks)
- p1 contains 18 bytes in 7 blocks (ref 0)
- r1 contains 13 bytes in 2 blocks (ref 0)
- reference to: p2
- p2 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 1)
- x3 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0)
- x2 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0)
- x1 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_enable_null_tracking(void);
-
-This enables tracking of the NULL memory context without enabling leak
-reporting on exit. Useful for when you want to do your own leak
-reporting call via talloc_report_null_full();
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_disable_null_tracking(void);
-
-This disables tracking of the NULL memory context.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(type *)talloc_zero(const void *ctx, type);
-
-The talloc_zero() macro is equivalent to::
-
- ptr = talloc(ctx, type);
- if (ptr) memset(ptr, 0, sizeof(type));
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_zero_size(const void *ctx, size_t size)
-
-The talloc_zero_size() function is useful when you don't have a known type
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_memdup(const void *ctx, const void *p, size_t size);
-
-The talloc_memdup() function is equivalent to::
-
- ptr = talloc_size(ctx, size);
- if (ptr) memcpy(ptr, p, size);
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_strdup(const void *ctx, const char *p);
-
-The talloc_strdup() function is equivalent to::
-
- ptr = talloc_size(ctx, strlen(p)+1);
- if (ptr) memcpy(ptr, p, strlen(p)+1);
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the passed
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_strndup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t n);
-
-The talloc_strndup() function is the talloc equivalent of the C
-library function strndup()
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the passed
-string. This is equivalent to:
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_append_string(const void *t, char *orig, const char *append);
-
-The talloc_append_string() function appends the given formatted
-string to the given string.
-
-This function sets the name of the new pointer to the new
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_vasprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, va_list ap);
-
-The talloc_vasprintf() function is the talloc equivalent of the C
-library function vasprintf()
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_asprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, ...);
-
-The talloc_asprintf() function is the talloc equivalent of the C
-library function asprintf()
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_asprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, ...);
-
-The talloc_asprintf_append() function appends the given formatted
-string to the given string.
-Use this varient when the string in the current talloc buffer may
-have been truncated in length.
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, ...);
-
-The talloc_asprintf_append() function appends the given formatted
-string to the end of the currently allocated talloc buffer.
-Use this varient when the string in the current talloc buffer has
-not been changed.
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-((type *)talloc_array(const void *ctx, type, uint_t count);
-
-The talloc_array() macro is equivalent to::
-
- (type *)talloc_size(ctx, sizeof(type) * count);
-
-except that it provides integer overflow protection for the multiply,
-returning NULL if the multiply overflows.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_array_size(const void *ctx, size_t size, uint_t count);
-
-The talloc_array_size() function is useful when the type is not
-known. It operates in the same way as talloc_array(), but takes a size
-instead of a type.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(typeof(ptr)) talloc_array_ptrtype(const void *ctx, ptr, uint_t count);
-
-The talloc_ptrtype() macro should be used when you have a pointer to an array
-and want to allocate memory of an array to point at with this pointer. When compiling
-with gcc >= 3 it is typesafe. Note this is a wrapper of talloc_array_size()
-and talloc_get_name() will return the current location in the source file.
-and not the type.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_realloc_fn(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t size);
-
-This is a non-macro version of talloc_realloc(), which is useful
-as libraries sometimes want a ralloc function pointer. A realloc()
-implementation encapsulates the functionality of malloc(), free() and
-realloc() in one call, which is why it is useful to be able to pass
-around a single function pointer.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_autofree_context(void);
-
-This is a handy utility function that returns a talloc context
-which will be automatically freed on program exit. This can be used
-to reduce the noise in memory leak reports.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_check_name(const void *ptr, const char *name);
-
-This function checks if a pointer has the specified name. If it does
-then the pointer is returned. It it doesn't then NULL is returned.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(type *)talloc_get_type(const void *ptr, type);
-
-This macro allows you to do type checking on talloc pointers. It is
-particularly useful for void* private pointers. It is equivalent to
-this::
-
- (type *)talloc_check_name(ptr, #type)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-talloc_set_type(const void *ptr, type);
-
-This macro allows you to force the name of a pointer to be a
-particular type. This can be used in conjunction with
-talloc_get_type() to do type checking on void* pointers.
-
-It is equivalent to this::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, #type)
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-talloc_get_size(const void *ctx);
-
-This function lets you know the amount of memory alloced so far by
-this context. It does NOT account for subcontext memory.
-This can be used to calculate the size of an array.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_find_parent_byname(const void *ctx, const char *name);
-
-Find a parent memory context of the current context that has the given
-name. This can be very useful in complex programs where it may be
-difficult to pass all information down to the level you need, but you
-know the structure you want is a parent of another context.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(type *)talloc_find_parent_bytype(ctx, type);
-
-Like talloc_find_parent_byname() but takes a type, making it typesafe.
-
diff --git a/talloc/testsuite.c b/talloc/testsuite.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 3d490ddf..00000000
--- a/talloc/testsuite.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1142 +0,0 @@
-/*
- Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
-
- local testing of talloc routines.
-
- Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004
-
- ** NOTE! The following LGPL license applies to the talloc
- ** library. This does NOT imply that all of Samba is released
- ** under the LGPL
-
- This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
- modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
- version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
- This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
- Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-*/
-
-#include "replace.h"
-#include "system/time.h"
-#include "talloc.h"
-
-static struct timeval timeval_current(void)
-{
- struct timeval tv;
- gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);
- return tv;
-}
-
-static double timeval_elapsed(struct timeval *tv)
-{
- struct timeval tv2 = timeval_current();
- return (tv2.tv_sec - tv->tv_sec) +
- (tv2.tv_usec - tv->tv_usec)*1.0e-6;
-}
-
-#define torture_assert(test, expr, str) if (!(expr)) { \
- printf("failure: %s [\n%s: Expression %s failed: %s\n]\n", \
- test, __location__, #expr, str); \
- return false; \
-}
-
-#define torture_assert_str_equal(test, arg1, arg2, desc) \
- if (arg1 == NULL && arg2 == NULL) { \
- } else if (strcmp(arg1, arg2)) { \
- printf("failure: %s [\n%s: Expected %s, got %s: %s\n]\n", \
- test, __location__, arg1, arg2, desc); \
- return false; \
- }
-
-#if _SAMBA_BUILD_==3
-#ifdef malloc
-#undef malloc
-#endif
-#ifdef strdup
-#undef strdup
-#endif
-#endif
-
-#define CHECK_SIZE(test, ptr, tsize) do { \
- if (talloc_total_size(ptr) != (tsize)) { \
- printf("failed: %s [\nwrong '%s' tree size: got %u expected %u\n]\n", \
- test, #ptr, \
- (unsigned)talloc_total_size(ptr), \
- (unsigned)tsize); \
- talloc_report_full(ptr, stdout); \
- return false; \
- } \
-} while (0)
-
-#define CHECK_BLOCKS(test, ptr, tblocks) do { \
- if (talloc_total_blocks(ptr) != (tblocks)) { \
- printf("failed: %s [\nwrong '%s' tree blocks: got %u expected %u\n]\n", \
- test, #ptr, \
- (unsigned)talloc_total_blocks(ptr), \
- (unsigned)tblocks); \
- talloc_report_full(ptr, stdout); \
- return false; \
- } \
-} while (0)
-
-#define CHECK_PARENT(test, ptr, parent) do { \
- if (talloc_parent(ptr) != (parent)) { \
- printf("failed: %s [\n'%s' has wrong parent: got %p expected %p\n]\n", \
- test, #ptr, \
- talloc_parent(ptr), \
- (parent)); \
- talloc_report_full(ptr, stdout); \
- talloc_report_full(parent, stdout); \
- talloc_report_full(NULL, stdout); \
- return false; \
- } \
-} while (0)
-
-
-/*
- test references
-*/
-static bool test_ref1(void)
-{
- void *root, *p1, *p2, *ref, *r1;
-
- printf("test: ref1\n# SINGLE REFERENCE FREE\n");
-
- root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root");
- p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p1");
- p2 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "p2");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x1");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 2, "x2");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 3, "x3");
-
- r1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "r1");
- ref = talloc_reference(r1, p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", p1, 5);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", p2, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", r1, 2);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p2\n");
- talloc_free(p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", p1, 5);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", p2, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", r1, 1);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p1\n");
- talloc_free(p1);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", r1, 1);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing r1\n");
- talloc_free(r1);
- talloc_report_full(NULL, stderr);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Testing NULL\n");
- if (talloc_reference(root, NULL)) {
- return false;
- }
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", root, 1);
-
- CHECK_SIZE("ref1", root, 0);
-
- talloc_free(root);
- printf("success: ref1\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-/*
- test references
-*/
-static bool test_ref2(void)
-{
- void *root, *p1, *p2, *ref, *r1;
-
- printf("test: ref2\n# DOUBLE REFERENCE FREE\n");
- root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root");
- p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p1");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x1");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x2");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x3");
- p2 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "p2");
-
- r1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "r1");
- ref = talloc_reference(r1, p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", p1, 5);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", p2, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", r1, 2);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing ref\n");
- talloc_free(ref);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", p1, 5);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", p2, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", r1, 1);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p2\n");
- talloc_free(p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", p1, 4);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", r1, 1);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p1\n");
- talloc_free(p1);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", r1, 1);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing r1\n");
- talloc_free(r1);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_SIZE("ref2", root, 0);
-
- talloc_free(root);
- printf("success: ref2\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-/*
- test references
-*/
-static bool test_ref3(void)
-{
- void *root, *p1, *p2, *ref, *r1;
-
- printf("test: ref3\n# PARENT REFERENCE FREE\n");
-
- root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root");
- p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p1");
- p2 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p2");
- r1 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "r1");
- ref = talloc_reference(p2, r1);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref3", p1, 2);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref3", p2, 2);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref3", r1, 1);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p1\n");
- talloc_free(p1);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref3", p2, 2);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref3", r1, 1);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p2\n");
- talloc_free(p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_SIZE("ref3", root, 0);
-
- talloc_free(root);
-
- printf("success: ref3\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-/*
- test references
-*/
-static bool test_ref4(void)
-{
- void *root, *p1, *p2, *ref, *r1;
-
- printf("test: ref4\n# REFERRER REFERENCE FREE\n");
-
- root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root");
- p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p1");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x1");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x2");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x3");
- p2 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "p2");
-
- r1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "r1");
- ref = talloc_reference(r1, p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", p1, 5);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", p2, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", r1, 2);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing r1\n");
- talloc_free(r1);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", p1, 5);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", p2, 1);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p2\n");
- talloc_free(p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", p1, 4);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p1\n");
- talloc_free(p1);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_SIZE("ref4", root, 0);
-
- talloc_free(root);
-
- printf("success: ref4\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-
-/*
- test references
-*/
-static bool test_unlink1(void)
-{
- void *root, *p1, *p2, *ref, *r1;
-
- printf("test: unlink\n# UNLINK\n");
-
- root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root");
- p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p1");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x1");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x2");
- talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x3");
- p2 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "p2");
-
- r1 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "r1");
- ref = talloc_reference(r1, p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", p1, 7);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", p2, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", r1, 2);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Unreferencing r1\n");
- talloc_unlink(r1, p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", p1, 6);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", p2, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", r1, 1);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p1\n");
- talloc_free(p1);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
-
- CHECK_SIZE("unlink", root, 0);
-
- talloc_free(root);
-
- printf("success: unlink\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-static int fail_destructor(void *ptr)
-{
- return -1;
-}
-
-/*
- miscellaneous tests to try to get a higher test coverage percentage
-*/
-static bool test_misc(void)
-{
- void *root, *p1;
- char *p2;
- double *d;
- const char *name;
-
- printf("test: misc\n# MISCELLANEOUS\n");
-
- root = talloc_new(NULL);
-
- p1 = talloc_size(root, 0x7fffffff);
- torture_assert("misc", !p1, "failed: large talloc allowed\n");
-
- p1 = talloc_strdup(root, "foo");
- talloc_increase_ref_count(p1);
- talloc_increase_ref_count(p1);
- talloc_increase_ref_count(p1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 2);
- talloc_free(p1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 2);
- talloc_unlink(NULL, p1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 2);
- p2 = talloc_strdup(p1, "foo");
- torture_assert("misc", talloc_unlink(root, p2) == -1,
- "failed: talloc_unlink() of non-reference context should return -1\n");
- torture_assert("misc", talloc_unlink(p1, p2) == 0,
- "failed: talloc_unlink() of parent should succeed\n");
- talloc_free(p1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 2);
-
- name = talloc_set_name(p1, "my name is %s", "foo");
- torture_assert_str_equal("misc", talloc_get_name(p1), "my name is foo",
- "failed: wrong name after talloc_set_name(my name is foo)");
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 2);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 3);
-
- talloc_set_name_const(p1, NULL);
- torture_assert_str_equal ("misc", talloc_get_name(p1), "UNNAMED",
- "failed: wrong name after talloc_set_name(NULL)");
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 2);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 3);
-
- torture_assert("misc", talloc_free(NULL) == -1,
- "talloc_free(NULL) should give -1\n");
-
- talloc_set_destructor(p1, fail_destructor);
- torture_assert("misc", talloc_free(p1) == -1,
- "Failed destructor should cause talloc_free to fail\n");
- talloc_set_destructor(p1, NULL);
-
- talloc_report(root, stderr);
-
-
- p2 = (char *)talloc_zero_size(p1, 20);
- torture_assert("misc", p2[19] == 0, "Failed to give zero memory\n");
- talloc_free(p2);
-
- torture_assert("misc", talloc_strdup(root, NULL) == NULL,
- "failed: strdup on NULL should give NULL\n");
-
- p2 = talloc_strndup(p1, "foo", 2);
- torture_assert("misc", strcmp("fo", p2) == 0,
- "strndup doesn't work\n");
- p2 = talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(p2, "o%c", 'd');
- torture_assert("misc", strcmp("food", p2) == 0,
- "talloc_asprintf_append_buffer doesn't work\n");
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p2, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 3);
-
- p2 = talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(NULL, "hello %s", "world");
- torture_assert("misc", strcmp("hello world", p2) == 0,
- "talloc_asprintf_append_buffer doesn't work\n");
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p2, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 3);
- talloc_free(p2);
-
- d = talloc_array(p1, double, 0x20000000);
- torture_assert("misc", !d, "failed: integer overflow not detected\n");
-
- d = talloc_realloc(p1, d, double, 0x20000000);
- torture_assert("misc", !d, "failed: integer overflow not detected\n");
-
- talloc_free(p1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 1);
-
- p1 = talloc_named(root, 100, "%d bytes", 100);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 2);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 3);
- talloc_unlink(root, p1);
-
- p1 = talloc_init("%d bytes", 200);
- p2 = talloc_asprintf(p1, "my test '%s'", "string");
- torture_assert_str_equal("misc", p2, "my test 'string'",
- "failed: talloc_asprintf(\"my test '%%s'\", \"string\") gave: \"%s\"");
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 3);
- CHECK_SIZE("misc", p2, 17);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 1);
- talloc_unlink(NULL, p1);
-
- p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 10, "p1");
- p2 = (char *)talloc_named_const(root, 20, "p2");
- (void)talloc_reference(p1, p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
- talloc_unlink(root, p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p2, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 2);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 3);
- talloc_unlink(p1, p2);
- talloc_unlink(root, p1);
-
- p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 10, "p1");
- p2 = (char *)talloc_named_const(root, 20, "p2");
- (void)talloc_reference(NULL, p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
- talloc_unlink(root, p2);
- talloc_report_full(root, stderr);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p2, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 1);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 2);
- talloc_unlink(NULL, p2);
- talloc_unlink(root, p1);
-
- /* Test that talloc_unlink is a no-op */
-
- torture_assert("misc", talloc_unlink(root, NULL) == -1,
- "failed: talloc_unlink(root, NULL) == -1\n");
-
- talloc_report(root, stderr);
- talloc_report(NULL, stderr);
-
- CHECK_SIZE("misc", root, 0);
-
- talloc_free(root);
-
- CHECK_SIZE("misc", NULL, 0);
-
- talloc_enable_leak_report();
- talloc_enable_leak_report_full();
-
- printf("success: misc\n");
-
- return true;
-}
-
-
-/*
- test realloc
-*/
-static bool test_realloc(void)
-{
- void *root, *p1, *p2;
-
- printf("test: realloc\n# REALLOC\n");
-
- root = talloc_new(NULL);
-
- p1 = talloc_size(root, 10);
- CHECK_SIZE("realloc", p1, 10);
-
- p1 = talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p1, 20);
- CHECK_SIZE("realloc", p1, 20);
-
- talloc_new(p1);
-
- p2 = talloc_realloc_size(p1, NULL, 30);
-
- talloc_new(p1);
-
- p2 = talloc_realloc_size(p1, p2, 40);
-
- CHECK_SIZE("realloc", p2, 40);
- CHECK_SIZE("realloc", root, 60);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc", p1, 4);
-
- p1 = talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p1, 20);
- CHECK_SIZE("realloc", p1, 60);
-
- talloc_increase_ref_count(p2);
- torture_assert("realloc", talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p2, 5) == NULL,
- "failed: talloc_realloc() on a referenced pointer should fail\n");
- CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc", p1, 4);
-
- talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p2, 0);
- talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p2, 0);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc", p1, 3);
-
- torture_assert("realloc", talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p1, 0x7fffffff) == NULL,
- "failed: oversize talloc should fail\n");
-
- talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p1, 0);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc", root, 1);
- CHECK_SIZE("realloc", root, 0);
-
- talloc_free(root);
-
- printf("success: realloc\n");
-
- return true;
-}
-
-/*
- test realloc with a child
-*/
-static bool test_realloc_child(void)
-{
- void *root;
- struct el2 {
- const char *name;
- } *el2;
- struct el1 {
- int count;
- struct el2 **list, **list2, **list3;
- } *el1;
-
- printf("test: REALLOC WITH CHILD\n");
-
- root = talloc_new(NULL);
-
- el1 = talloc(root, struct el1);
- el1->list = talloc(el1, struct el2 *);
- el1->list[0] = talloc(el1->list, struct el2);
- el1->list[0]->name = talloc_strdup(el1->list[0], "testing");
-
- el1->list2 = talloc(el1, struct el2 *);
- el1->list2[0] = talloc(el1->list2, struct el2);
- el1->list2[0]->name = talloc_strdup(el1->list2[0], "testing2");
-
- el1->list3 = talloc(el1, struct el2 *);
- el1->list3[0] = talloc(el1->list3, struct el2);
- el1->list3[0]->name = talloc_strdup(el1->list3[0], "testing2");
-
- el2 = talloc(el1->list, struct el2);
- el2 = talloc(el1->list2, struct el2);
- el2 = talloc(el1->list3, struct el2);
-
- el1->list = talloc_realloc(el1, el1->list, struct el2 *, 100);
- el1->list2 = talloc_realloc(el1, el1->list2, struct el2 *, 200);
- el1->list3 = talloc_realloc(el1, el1->list3, struct el2 *, 300);
-
- talloc_free(root);
-
- printf("success: REALLOC WITH CHILD\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-/*
- test type checking
-*/
-static bool test_type(void)
-{
- void *root;
- struct el1 {
- int count;
- };
- struct el2 {
- int count;
- };
- struct el1 *el1;
-
- printf("test: type\n# talloc type checking\n");
-
- root = talloc_new(NULL);
-
- el1 = talloc(root, struct el1);
-
- el1->count = 1;
-
- torture_assert("type", talloc_get_type(el1, struct el1) == el1,
- "type check failed on el1\n");
- torture_assert("type", talloc_get_type(el1, struct el2) == NULL,
- "type check failed on el1 with el2\n");
- talloc_set_type(el1, struct el2);
- torture_assert("type", talloc_get_type(el1, struct el2) == (struct el2 *)el1,
- "type set failed on el1 with el2\n");
-
- talloc_free(root);
-
- printf("success: type\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-/*
- test steal
-*/
-static bool test_steal(void)
-{
- void *root, *p1, *p2;
-
- printf("test: steal\n# STEAL\n");
-
- root = talloc_new(NULL);
-
- p1 = talloc_array(root, char, 10);
- CHECK_SIZE("steal", p1, 10);
-
- p2 = talloc_realloc(root, NULL, char, 20);
- CHECK_SIZE("steal", p1, 10);
- CHECK_SIZE("steal", root, 30);
-
- torture_assert("steal", talloc_steal(p1, NULL) == NULL,
- "failed: stealing NULL should give NULL\n");
-
- torture_assert("steal", talloc_steal(p1, p1) == p1,
- "failed: stealing to ourselves is a nop\n");
- CHECK_BLOCKS("steal", root, 3);
- CHECK_SIZE("steal", root, 30);
-
- talloc_steal(NULL, p1);
- talloc_steal(NULL, p2);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("steal", root, 1);
- CHECK_SIZE("steal", root, 0);
-
- talloc_free(p1);
- talloc_steal(root, p2);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("steal", root, 2);
- CHECK_SIZE("steal", root, 20);
-
- talloc_free(p2);
-
- CHECK_BLOCKS("steal", root, 1);
- CHECK_SIZE("steal", root, 0);
-
- talloc_free(root);
-
- p1 = talloc_size(NULL, 3);
- talloc_report_full(NULL, stderr);
- CHECK_SIZE("steal", NULL, 3);
- talloc_free(p1);
-
- printf("success: steal\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-/*
- test move
-*/
-static bool test_move(void)
-{
- void *root;
- struct t_move {
- char *p;
- int *x;
- } *t1, *t2;
-
- printf("test: move\n# MOVE\n");
-
- root = talloc_new(NULL);
-
- t1 = talloc(root, struct t_move);
- t2 = talloc(root, struct t_move);
- t1->p = talloc_strdup(t1, "foo");
- t1->x = talloc(t1, int);
- *t1->x = 42;
-
- t2->p = talloc_move(t2, &t1->p);
- t2->x = talloc_move(t2, &t1->x);
- torture_assert("move", t1->p == NULL && t1->x == NULL &&
- strcmp(t2->p, "foo") == 0 && *t2->x == 42,
- "talloc move failed");
-
- talloc_free(root);
-
- printf("success: move\n");
-
- return true;
-}
-
-/*
- test talloc_realloc_fn
-*/
-static bool test_realloc_fn(void)
-{
- void *root, *p1;
-
- printf("test: realloc_fn\n# talloc_realloc_fn\n");
-
- root = talloc_new(NULL);
-
- p1 = talloc_realloc_fn(root, NULL, 10);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc_fn", root, 2);
- CHECK_SIZE("realloc_fn", root, 10);
- p1 = talloc_realloc_fn(root, p1, 20);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc_fn", root, 2);
- CHECK_SIZE("realloc_fn", root, 20);
- p1 = talloc_realloc_fn(root, p1, 0);
- CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc_fn", root, 1);
- CHECK_SIZE("realloc_fn", root, 0);
-
- talloc_free(root);
-
- printf("success: realloc_fn\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-
-static bool test_unref_reparent(void)
-{
- void *root, *p1, *p2, *c1;
-
- printf("test: unref_reparent\n# UNREFERENCE AFTER PARENT FREED\n");
-
- root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root");
- p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "orig parent");
- p2 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "parent by reference");
-
- c1 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "child");
- talloc_reference(p2, c1);
-
- CHECK_PARENT("unref_reparent", c1, p1);
-
- talloc_free(p1);
-
- CHECK_PARENT("unref_reparent", c1, p2);
-
- talloc_unlink(p2, c1);
-
- CHECK_SIZE("unref_reparent", root, 1);
-
- talloc_free(p2);
- talloc_free(root);
-
- printf("success: unref_reparent\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-/*
- measure the speed of talloc versus malloc
-*/
-static bool test_speed(void)
-{
- void *ctx = talloc_new(NULL);
- unsigned count;
- const int loop = 1000;
- int i;
- struct timeval tv;
-
- printf("test: speed\n# TALLOC VS MALLOC SPEED\n");
-
- tv = timeval_current();
- count = 0;
- do {
- void *p1, *p2, *p3;
- for (i=0;i<loop;i++) {
- p1 = talloc_size(ctx, loop % 100);
- p2 = talloc_strdup(p1, "foo bar");
- p3 = talloc_size(p1, 300);
- talloc_free(p1);
- }
- count += 3 * loop;
- } while (timeval_elapsed(&tv) < 5.0);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "talloc: %.0f ops/sec\n", count/timeval_elapsed(&tv));
-
- talloc_free(ctx);
-
- ctx = talloc_pool(NULL, 1024);
-
- tv = timeval_current();
- count = 0;
- do {
- void *p1, *p2, *p3;
- for (i=0;i<loop;i++) {
- p1 = talloc_size(ctx, loop % 100);
- p2 = talloc_strdup(p1, "foo bar");
- p3 = talloc_size(p1, 300);
- talloc_free_children(ctx);
- }
- count += 3 * loop;
- } while (timeval_elapsed(&tv) < 5.0);
-
- talloc_free(ctx);
-
- fprintf(stderr, "talloc_pool: %.0f ops/sec\n", count/timeval_elapsed(&tv));
-
- tv = timeval_current();
- count = 0;
- do {
- void *p1, *p2, *p3;
- for (i=0;i<loop;i++) {
- p1 = malloc(loop % 100);
- p2 = strdup("foo bar");
- p3 = malloc(300);
- free(p1);
- free(p2);
- free(p3);
- }
- count += 3 * loop;
- } while (timeval_elapsed(&tv) < 5.0);
- fprintf(stderr, "malloc: %.0f ops/sec\n", count/timeval_elapsed(&tv));
-
- printf("success: speed\n");
-
- return true;
-}
-
-static bool test_lifeless(void)
-{
- void *top = talloc_new(NULL);
- char *parent, *child;
- void *child_owner = talloc_new(NULL);
-
- printf("test: lifeless\n# TALLOC_UNLINK LOOP\n");
-
- parent = talloc_strdup(top, "parent");
- child = talloc_strdup(parent, "child");
- (void)talloc_reference(child, parent);
- (void)talloc_reference(child_owner, child);
- talloc_report_full(top, stderr);
- talloc_unlink(top, parent);
- talloc_free(child);
- talloc_report_full(top, stderr);
- talloc_free(top);
- talloc_free(child_owner);
- talloc_free(child);
-
- printf("success: lifeless\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-static int loop_destructor_count;
-
-static int test_loop_destructor(char *ptr)
-{
- loop_destructor_count++;
- return 0;
-}
-
-static bool test_loop(void)
-{
- void *top = talloc_new(NULL);
- char *parent;
- struct req1 {
- char *req2, *req3;
- } *req1;
-
- printf("test: loop\n# TALLOC LOOP DESTRUCTION\n");
-
- parent = talloc_strdup(top, "parent");
- req1 = talloc(parent, struct req1);
- req1->req2 = talloc_strdup(req1, "req2");
- talloc_set_destructor(req1->req2, test_loop_destructor);
- req1->req3 = talloc_strdup(req1, "req3");
- (void)talloc_reference(req1->req3, req1);
- talloc_report_full(top, stderr);
- talloc_free(parent);
- talloc_report_full(top, stderr);
- talloc_report_full(NULL, stderr);
- talloc_free(top);
-
- torture_assert("loop", loop_destructor_count == 1,
- "FAILED TO FIRE LOOP DESTRUCTOR\n");
- loop_destructor_count = 0;
-
- printf("success: loop\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-static int fail_destructor_str(char *ptr)
-{
- return -1;
-}
-
-static bool test_free_parent_deny_child(void)
-{
- void *top = talloc_new(NULL);
- char *level1;
- char *level2;
- char *level3;
-
- printf("test: free_parent_deny_child\n# TALLOC FREE PARENT DENY CHILD\n");
-
- level1 = talloc_strdup(top, "level1");
- level2 = talloc_strdup(level1, "level2");
- level3 = talloc_strdup(level2, "level3");
-
- talloc_set_destructor(level3, fail_destructor_str);
- talloc_free(level1);
- talloc_set_destructor(level3, NULL);
-
- CHECK_PARENT("free_parent_deny_child", level3, top);
-
- talloc_free(top);
-
- printf("success: free_parent_deny_child\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-static bool test_talloc_ptrtype(void)
-{
- void *top = talloc_new(NULL);
- struct struct1 {
- int foo;
- int bar;
- } *s1, *s2, **s3, ***s4;
- const char *location1;
- const char *location2;
- const char *location3;
- const char *location4;
-
- printf("test: ptrtype\n# TALLOC PTRTYPE\n");
-
- s1 = talloc_ptrtype(top, s1);location1 = __location__;
-
- if (talloc_get_size(s1) != sizeof(struct struct1)) {
- printf("failure: ptrtype [\n"
- "talloc_ptrtype() allocated the wrong size %lu (should be %lu)\n"
- "]\n", (unsigned long)talloc_get_size(s1),
- (unsigned long)sizeof(struct struct1));
- return false;
- }
-
- if (strcmp(location1, talloc_get_name(s1)) != 0) {
- printf("failure: ptrtype [\n"
- "talloc_ptrtype() sets the wrong name '%s' (should be '%s')\n]\n",
- talloc_get_name(s1), location1);
- return false;
- }
-
- s2 = talloc_array_ptrtype(top, s2, 10);location2 = __location__;
-
- if (talloc_get_size(s2) != (sizeof(struct struct1) * 10)) {
- printf("failure: ptrtype [\n"
- "talloc_array_ptrtype() allocated the wrong size "
- "%lu (should be %lu)\n]\n",
- (unsigned long)talloc_get_size(s2),
- (unsigned long)(sizeof(struct struct1)*10));
- return false;
- }
-
- if (strcmp(location2, talloc_get_name(s2)) != 0) {
- printf("failure: ptrtype [\n"
- "talloc_array_ptrtype() sets the wrong name '%s' (should be '%s')\n]\n",
- talloc_get_name(s2), location2);
- return false;
- }
-
- s3 = talloc_array_ptrtype(top, s3, 10);location3 = __location__;
-
- if (talloc_get_size(s3) != (sizeof(struct struct1 *) * 10)) {
- printf("failure: ptrtype [\n"
- "talloc_array_ptrtype() allocated the wrong size "
- "%lu (should be %lu)\n]\n",
- (unsigned long)talloc_get_size(s3),
- (unsigned long)(sizeof(struct struct1 *)*10));
- return false;
- }
-
- torture_assert_str_equal("ptrtype", location3, talloc_get_name(s3),
- "talloc_array_ptrtype() sets the wrong name");
-
- s4 = talloc_array_ptrtype(top, s4, 10);location4 = __location__;
-
- if (talloc_get_size(s4) != (sizeof(struct struct1 **) * 10)) {
- printf("failure: ptrtype [\n"
- "talloc_array_ptrtype() allocated the wrong size "
- "%lu (should be %lu)\n]\n",
- (unsigned long)talloc_get_size(s4),
- (unsigned long)(sizeof(struct struct1 **)*10));
- return false;
- }
-
- torture_assert_str_equal("ptrtype", location4, talloc_get_name(s4),
- "talloc_array_ptrtype() sets the wrong name");
-
- talloc_free(top);
-
- printf("success: ptrtype\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-static int _test_talloc_free_in_destructor(void **ptr)
-{
- talloc_free(*ptr);
- return 0;
-}
-
-static bool test_talloc_free_in_destructor(void)
-{
- void *level0;
- void *level1;
- void *level2;
- void *level3;
- void *level4;
- void **level5;
-
- printf("test: free_in_destructor\n# TALLOC FREE IN DESTRUCTOR\n");
-
- level0 = talloc_new(NULL);
- level1 = talloc_new(level0);
- level2 = talloc_new(level1);
- level3 = talloc_new(level2);
- level4 = talloc_new(level3);
- level5 = talloc(level4, void *);
-
- *level5 = level3;
- (void)talloc_reference(level0, level3);
- (void)talloc_reference(level3, level3);
- (void)talloc_reference(level5, level3);
-
- talloc_set_destructor(level5, _test_talloc_free_in_destructor);
-
- talloc_free(level1);
-
- talloc_free(level0);
-
- printf("success: free_in_destructor\n");
- return true;
-}
-
-static bool test_autofree(void)
-{
-#if _SAMBA_BUILD_ < 4
- /* autofree test would kill smbtorture */
- void *p;
- printf("test: autofree\n# TALLOC AUTOFREE CONTEXT\n");
-
- p = talloc_autofree_context();
- talloc_free(p);
-
- p = talloc_autofree_context();
- talloc_free(p);
-
- printf("success: autofree\n");
-#endif
- return true;
-}
-
-static bool test_pool(void)
-{
- void *pool;
- void *p1, *p2, *p3, *p4;
-
- pool = talloc_pool(NULL, 1024);
-
- p1 = talloc_size(pool, 80);
- p2 = talloc_size(pool, 20);
- p3 = talloc_size(p1, 50);
- p4 = talloc_size(p3, 1000);
-
- talloc_free(pool);
-
- return true;
-}
-
-struct torture_context;
-bool torture_local_talloc(struct torture_context *tctx)
-{
- bool ret = true;
-
- setlinebuf(stdout);
-
- talloc_disable_null_tracking();
- talloc_enable_null_tracking();
-
- ret &= test_ref1();
- ret &= test_ref2();
- ret &= test_ref3();
- ret &= test_ref4();
- ret &= test_unlink1();
- ret &= test_misc();
- ret &= test_realloc();
- ret &= test_realloc_child();
- ret &= test_steal();
- ret &= test_move();
- ret &= test_unref_reparent();
- ret &= test_realloc_fn();
- ret &= test_type();
- ret &= test_lifeless();
- ret &= test_loop();
- ret &= test_free_parent_deny_child();
- ret &= test_talloc_ptrtype();
- ret &= test_talloc_free_in_destructor();
- ret &= test_pool();
-
- if (ret) {
- ret &= test_speed();
- }
- ret &= test_autofree();
-
- return ret;
-}
diff --git a/talloc/testsuite_main.c b/talloc/testsuite_main.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 1b513332..00000000
--- a/talloc/testsuite_main.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,37 +0,0 @@
-/*
- Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
-
- local testing of talloc routines.
-
- Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004
-
- ** NOTE! The following LGPL license applies to the talloc
- ** library. This does NOT imply that all of Samba is released
- ** under the LGPL
-
- This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
- modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
- version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
- This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
- Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-*/
-
-#include "replace.h"
-
-struct torture_context;
-bool torture_local_talloc(struct torture_context *tctx);
-
-int main(void)
-{
- bool ret = torture_local_talloc(NULL);
- if (!ret)
- return -1;
- return 0;
-}
diff --git a/talloc/web/index.html b/talloc/web/index.html
deleted file mode 100644
index 5deab936..00000000
--- a/talloc/web/index.html
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,46 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN">
-<HTML>
-<HEAD>
-<TITLE>talloc</TITLE>
-</HEAD>
-<BODY BGCOLOR="#ffffff" TEXT="#000000" VLINK="#292555" LINK="#292555" ALINK="#cc0033">
-
-<h1>talloc</h1>
-
-talloc is a hierarchical pool based memory allocator with
-destructors. It is the core memory allocator used in Samba4, and has
-made a huge difference in many aspects of Samba4 development.<p>
-
-To get started with talloc, I would recommend you read the <a
-href="http://samba.org/ftp/unpacked/talloc/talloc_guide.txt">talloc guide</a>.
-
-<h2>Discussion and bug reports</h2>
-
-talloc does not currently have its own mailing list or bug tracking
-system. For now, please use the <a
-href="https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba-technical">samba-technical</a>
-mailing list, and the <a href="http://bugzilla.samba.org/">Samba
-bugzilla</a> bug tracking system.
-
-<h2>Download</h2>
-
-You can download the latest release either via rsync or git.<br>
-<br>
-To fetch via git see the following guide:<br>
-<a href="http://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Using_Git_for_Samba_Development">Using Git for Samba Development</a><br>
-Once you have cloned the tree switch to the v4-0-test branch and cd into the source/lib/talloc directory.<br>
-<br>
-To fetch via rsync use this command:
-
-<pre>
- rsync -Pavz samba.org::ftp/unpacked/talloc .
-</pre>
-
-<hr>
-<tiny>
-<a href="http://samba.org/~tridge/">Andrew Tridgell</a><br>
-talloc AT tridgell.net
-</tiny>
-
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-</HTML>