| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The global was only referenced in the main() function, which passes it
as an argument of the same name to the parse_line() function, leading
to gcc -Wshadow warnings:
makekeys.c: In function ‘parse_line’:
makekeys.c:58:24: warning: declaration of ‘buf’ shadows a global declaration
makekeys.c:54:13: warning: shadowed declaration is here
Signed-off-by: Alan Coopersmith <alan.coopersmith@oracle.com>
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Since makekeys is built using build environment's gcc and
runs natively, we have to make sure that the size of the
Signature type is the same on both the native environment
and the target, otherwise we get mismatches upon running X,
and some LSB test failures (xts5).
Use an unsigned 32-bit integer on all platforms. Also,
eliminate the redundant multiple typedefs for the
Signature type.
Signed-off-by: Derek Buitenhuis <derek.buitenhuis@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
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Since we can't really live without vendor keysyms, scan them all in to
generate ks_tables.h, rather than only doing the core ones, and leaving
the vendor syms to be manually synchronised with XKeysymDB.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Reviewed-by: Alan Coopersmith <alan.coopersmith@oracle.com>
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Signed-off-by: Alan Coopersmith <alan.coopersmith@sun.com>
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Makekeys is used to create an optimal hash of the keysyms defined
in x11proto’s keysymdef.h.
The recent addition of new keysyms there has triggered a bug in
makekeys where it tries to use a zero on the rhs of the % (mod)
operator (resulting in a divide by zero error) whenever it fails
to find a solution within its constraints.
Increasing the size of the arrays allows it to find a solution for
the current set of keysyms.
Makekeys is only run durring the build process, so this has no impact
on users of libX11, only on the amount of VM needed to build it.
It still needs a more complete fix, but this allows compiles to
progress until that is completed.
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This has already been started while replacing copyright info in file
headers and has now been completed with this commit.
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In the process of building nxagent against more and more system-wide installed
X.org libraries, we come to the limit of including structs from this (bundled
nx-X11) and that (system-wide X.Org) library.
This commit introduces a clear namespace separation of headers provided by
nx-X11 and headers provided by X.Org. This approach is only temporary as we
want to drop all nx-X11 bundled libraries from nx-libs.
However, for a while we need to make this separation clear and also ship
some reduced fake X.Org headers that avoid pulling in libX* and libNX_X*
symbols at the same time.
This patch has been tested on Debian jessie and unstable and requires no
overall testing on various distros and distro versions, as we finally will
drop all libNX_X* libraries and build against X.org's client libs.
For now, this hack eases our development / cleanup process.
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Summary: Imported nx-X11-3.1.0-1.tar.gz
Keywords:
Imported nx-X11-3.1.0-1.tar.gz
into Git repository
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