e0f69f36ea
Previously the libgo Makefile explicitly listed the set of files to compile for each package. For packages that use build tags, this required a lot of awkward automake conditionals in the Makefile. This CL changes the build to look at the build tags in the files. The new shell script libgo/match.sh does the matching. This required adjusting a lot of build tags, and removing some files that are never used. I verified that the exact same sets of files are compiled on amd64 GNU/Linux. I also tested the build on i386 Solaris. Writing match.sh revealed some bugs in the build tag handling that already exists, in a slightly different form, in the gotest shell script. This CL fixes those problems as well. The old code used automake conditionals to handle systems that were missing strerror_r and wait4. Rather than deal with those in Go, those functions are now implemented in runtime/go-nosys.c when necessary, so the Go code can simply assume that they exist. The os testsuite looked for dir_unix.go, which was never built for gccgo and has now been removed. I changed the testsuite to look for dir.go instead. Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/25546 From-SVN: r239189
32 lines
882 B
Go
32 lines
882 B
Go
// errstr_linux.go -- GNU/Linux specific error strings.
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// Copyright 2010 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
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// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
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// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
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// We use this rather than errstr.go because on GNU/Linux sterror_r
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// returns a pointer to the error message, and may not use buf at all.
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package syscall
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import "unsafe"
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//sysnb strerror_r(errnum int, b []byte) (errstr *byte)
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//strerror_r(errnum _C_int, b *byte, len Size_t) *byte
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func Errstr(errnum int) string {
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a := make([]byte, 128)
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p := strerror_r(errnum, a)
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b := (*[1000]byte)(unsafe.Pointer(p))
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i := 0
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for b[i] != 0 {
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i++
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}
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// Lowercase first letter: Bad -> bad, but STREAM -> STREAM.
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if i > 1 && 'A' <= b[0] && b[0] <= 'Z' && 'a' <= b[1] && b[1] <= 'z' {
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c := b[0] + 'a' - 'A'
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return string(c) + string(b[1:i])
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}
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return string(b[:i])
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}
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