2012-12-21 15:22:09 -05:00
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Obsolete Stuff
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==============
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One of the primary design goals of Sortix is to be a modern Unix system with the
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old cruft removed. This means that some features/functions/headers in the C API
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has been removed, never implemented in the first place, or is scheduled for
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future removal. This is likely inconvenient, as a lot of programs still rely on
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these obsolete/broken features, which will have to be fixed. Additionally, it'll
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further complicate porting programs to Sortix. However, it is our belief that
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ultimately such removals will be beneficial and this is merely a transitional
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period. In almost all cases, we have made available superior interfaces that can
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be used instead.
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It may cause problems for portable programs that these features cannot or should
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not be used, as lesser operating systems may not implement the modern
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replacements. Either fix such systems or add some feature detection magic.
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This is a list of common features that may currently be implemented, but that
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you shouldn't use and if you do, then you should fix your program before it
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breaks when the feature is finally removed.
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You might be tempted to use a preprocessor conditional for __sortix__ to detect
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the absence of these obsolete features and the availability of their modern
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replacements. Keep in mind that other systems may have the modern replacements
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and also may have removed features, and that they may supply other extensions to
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replace the features. If you need to be portable, you should use whatever means
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to automatically detect the availability of features at compile time, rather
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than hardcode cases for each platform, as your software is likely to be ported
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to platforms that didn't exist when you wrote your code.
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asctime, asctime_r
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------------------
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This function is fundamentally broken. It doesn't support locales, it adds some
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useless newline character at the end, the date format doesn't comply with ISO
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standards, asctime is not thread safe, and so on. Actually, the POSIX standard
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supplies code that implements the function because the format simply cannot
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change. The function was actually already deprecated back in 1989 when the
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original C standard was released. The solution is today the same as back then,
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simply use the much superior strftime function instead. asctime_r tries to make
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the function thread safe, but it doesn't fix the other broken semantics. The
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only use of this function is to participate in protocols that somehow manages to
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use asctime formatted dates, but then you might as well just paste in the POSIX
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example code and hard code it in your program.
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Sortix currently implement these functions for compatibility reasons.
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creat
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-----
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Use open() instead of this poorly named function. Additionally, open() has a
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similarly poorly named flag O_CREAT that does what you need.
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Sortix currently implement this function for compatibility reasons.
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ctime, ctime_r
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--------------
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These functions are defined in terms of asctime and asctime_r. Therefore they
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will need to be removed as well.
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Sortix currently implement these functions for compatibility reasons.
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ftime
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-----
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Use clock_gettime instead.
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2014-01-18 17:13:39 -05:00
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gethostbyname, gethostbyaddr
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2012-12-21 15:22:09 -05:00
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----------------------------
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Use the protocol agnostic functions such as getaddrinfo(). For instance, if you
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want a HTTP connection to www.example.com, do you really care how the data get
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to and from there? Most of the time you want a reliable transport protocol to a
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named host, but don't care much about the low-level details. If you use these
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modern networking interfaces, then your program can use without modification
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IPv4, IPv6, or whatever new protocol is used in the future.
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getpgrp
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-------
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POSIX and BSD disagree on the function prototype for getpgrp. Use getpgid
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instead, as everyone agrees on that.
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gets
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----
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Use fgets or getline instead. This function has been removed in the latest C
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standard, but most implementations carry it anyways. Curiously it is hated so
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much that some compatibility libraries such as gnulib actively use magic to add
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deprecation warnings not to use it, but these won't compile because gets isn't
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declared in any Sortix headers.
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gettimeofday
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------------
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Use clock_gettime instead.
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getwd
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-----
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Use get_current_dir_name() or getcwd() instead. Don't rely on the existence of
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PATH_MAX, but allocate buffers as needed.
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isascii
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-------
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This function is rather pointless. If we use a character encoding that wasn't
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ascii compatible, then it doesn't make sense. If we use a sane character
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encoding such as UTF-8, then you can simply check if the value is at most 127.
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PATH_MAX
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--------
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There is no such limit in Sortix. The kernel might restrict the path lengths at
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some point, but that'll just be to protect against misbehaving processes. You
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can use pathconf() or fpathconf() to see if a particular path has a limit, but
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otherwise you should just allocate strings as much as needed. There should be
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functions in place so you can use paths of any length. If you really need a
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limit as a hack to fix a broken program, you can do something like:
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#if !defined(PATH_MAX) && defined(__sortix__)
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#define PATH_MAX 32768
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#endif
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If there is ever going to be a path limit, it'll probably be either this value
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or higher. Ideally, your programs ought to work with paths of any reasonable
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length.
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sdl-config
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----------
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This SDL utility program is basically broken for cross-compilation and seems to
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be a poor counterpart to to pkg-config. If you insist on using such config
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tools, use pkg-config instead as it causes fewer problems. If you really need a
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sdl-config script, implement it using pkg-config:
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pkg-config "$@" sdl
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The Sortix build system actually injects such a sdl-config into the PATH to make
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sure programs don't use the wrong SDL libraries when cross-compiling.
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setpgrp
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-------
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POSIX and BSD disagree on the function prototype for setpgrp. Use setpgid
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instead, as everyone agrees on that.
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settimeofday
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------------
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Use clock_settime instead.
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strings.h
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---------
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There must have been some confusion back in the day since this header was
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created, rather than the functions just added to string.h. In sane
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implementations, you can just include string.h that also declares these
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functions. The strings.h header exists in Sortix for source-code compatibility,
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but don't be surprised if it just includes the regular string.h.
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struct timeval
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--------------
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This microsecond precision data structure has been fully replaced by struct
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timespec, which offers nanosecond precision. All kernel APIs use struct timespec
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exclusively.
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Sortix currently provides this structure for compatibility reasons.
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sys/param.h
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-----------
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This is a BSD header that contains a bunch of BSD-specific stuff and other
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miscellaneous junk. The GNU libc implementation contains some uselese macros
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that doesn't justify its existence. The header inclusion can often be deleted
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without any problems, but older systems may require its inclusion.
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sys/time.h
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----------
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You don't need this header and it'll be removed at some point. It is filled with
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obsolete functions and macros. The only reason you might want it is to get the
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declaration of struct timeval, but that data type has been replaced by struct
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timespec.
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Sortix currently provides this header for compatibility reasons.
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sys/timeb.h
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-----------
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This is a header that contains the ftime function that has been replaced, this
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header has been removed as well.
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tmpnam
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------
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There is an inherently race condition prone and has thread safely issues with a
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NULL argument. Use tmpfile() instead if you can do with a file whose name you do
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not know. Unfortunately, Sortix has yet no satisfying temporary file creation
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function that gives you a file and its name without having to deal with silly
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template strings and other problems.
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utime
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-----
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Use utimens instead, or perhaps the more portable utimensat.
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Sortix currently provides this function for compatibility reasons.
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utimes
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------
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Use utimens instead, or perhaps the more portable utimensat.
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