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2000-09-11 Benjamin Kosnik <bkoz@purist.soma.redhat.com> * acinclude.m4 (GLIBCPP_CHECK_GNU_MAKE): Remove test != "0". * aclocal.m4: Regenerate. * configure: Regenerate. * bits/c++config (__GLIBCPP__): Update, in the hopes of making a snapshot release soon. (_GNU_SOURCE): Define this in the header files, as ISO C99 support is pretty much assumed. * testsuite/22_locale/global_templates.cc: New file. Add tests for use_facet and has_facet. * bits/codecvt.h (codecvt<_InT, _ExT, __enc_traits>::do_out): Modify/correct iconv signatures for glibc2.2. From-SVN: r36344 |
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backward | ||
bits | ||
config | ||
docs | ||
ext | ||
libio | ||
math | ||
shadow | ||
src | ||
std | ||
testsuite | ||
acconfig.h | ||
acinclude.m4 | ||
aclocal.m4 | ||
ChangeLog | ||
config.h.in | ||
configure | ||
configure.host | ||
configure.in | ||
Makefile.am | ||
Makefile.in | ||
mkc++config | ||
mkcheck.in | ||
mkcshadow | ||
mkinclosure | ||
mknumeric_limits | ||
README |
file: isolib/README New users may wish to point their web browsers to the file index.html in the 'docs' subdirectory. It contains brief building instructions and notes on how to configure the library in interesting ways. Instructions for configuring and building this snapshot appear in install.html. This directory contains the files needed to create [a still broken subset of] an ISO Standard C++ Library. It has subdirectories: bits Files included by standard headers and by other files in the bits directory. Includes a set of files bits/std_xxxx.h that implement the standard headers <xxxx>. std Files meant to be found by #include <name> directives in standard-conforming user programs. These headers are not referred to by other headers, because such dependencies confuse Make (leading it to delete them, all too often). Installations may substitute symbolic links in place of these files. ext Headers that define extensions to the standard library. No standard header refers to any of them. backward Headers provided for backward compatibility, such as <iostream.h>. They are not used in this library. src Files that are used in constructing the library, but are not installed. testsuites/17_* to 27_* Test programs are here, and may be used to begin to exercise the library. Support for "make check" and "make check-install" is complete, and runs through all the subdirectories here when this command is issued from the build directory. Please note that "make check" calls the script mkcheck, which requires bash, and which may need the paths to bash adjusted to work properly, as /bin/bash is assumed. shadow Headers intended to shadow standard C headers provided by an underlying OS or C library, and other headers depended on directly by C++ headers (e.g. unistd.h). These are meant to wrap the names defined there into the _CSwamp namespace. [NB: this is still experimental, and is not currently used.] cshadow The contents of this directory are constructed by scripts which examine the underlying C headers to discover other headers they depend on. These headers are wrappers for them. [NB: this is still experimental, and is not currently used.] Other subdirectories contain variant versions of certain files that are meant to be copied or linked by the configure script. Currently these are: amm1 generic glibc math Files needed only to construct the library, but not installed, are in src/. Files to be copied as part of an installation are all found in the subdirectories mentioned above. (A configure script may link files from another directory into one of these.) In a normal installation the bits/ directory is copied under the std/ directory, and arranged to be searched only when an include directive specifies a filename of "bits/..." or <bits/...>. When building the library, we use -Istd -I. -Iconfig/* -Iconfig/cpu/* to get the same effect. Note that glibc also has a bits/ subdirectory. We will either need to be careful not to collide with names in its bits/ directory; or rename bits to (e.g.) cppbits/. To install libstdc++ you need GNU make. The makefiles do not work with any other make. In files throughout the system, lines marked with an "XXX" indicate a bug or incompletely-implemented feature. Lines marked "XXX MT" indicate a place that may require attention for multi-thread safety. (Warning: places that need an atomic read are not so marked yet.)