From 50633f8f4e8d629e65d96f83abd9f99ca2cad463 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Lorry Tar Creator Date: Tue, 26 Apr 2016 20:55:49 +0000 Subject: gzip-1.8 --- lib/stddef.in.h | 110 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 110 insertions(+) create mode 100644 lib/stddef.in.h (limited to 'lib/stddef.in.h') diff --git a/lib/stddef.in.h b/lib/stddef.in.h new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f4c4a10 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/stddef.in.h @@ -0,0 +1,110 @@ +/* A substitute for POSIX 2008 , for platforms that have issues. + + Copyright (C) 2009-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + + 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, 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 . */ + +/* Written by Eric Blake. */ + +/* + * POSIX 2008 for platforms that have issues. + * + */ + +#if __GNUC__ >= 3 +@PRAGMA_SYSTEM_HEADER@ +#endif +@PRAGMA_COLUMNS@ + +#if defined __need_wchar_t || defined __need_size_t \ + || defined __need_ptrdiff_t || defined __need_NULL \ + || defined __need_wint_t +/* Special invocation convention inside gcc header files. In + particular, gcc provides a version of that blindly + redefines NULL even when __need_wint_t was defined, even though + wint_t is not normally provided by . Hence, we must + remember if special invocation has ever been used to obtain wint_t, + in which case we need to clean up NULL yet again. */ + +# if !(defined _@GUARD_PREFIX@_STDDEF_H && defined _GL_STDDEF_WINT_T) +# ifdef __need_wint_t +# define _GL_STDDEF_WINT_T +# endif +# @INCLUDE_NEXT@ @NEXT_STDDEF_H@ +# endif + +#else +/* Normal invocation convention. */ + +# ifndef _@GUARD_PREFIX@_STDDEF_H + +/* The include_next requires a split double-inclusion guard. */ + +# @INCLUDE_NEXT@ @NEXT_STDDEF_H@ + +/* On NetBSD 5.0, the definition of NULL lacks proper parentheses. */ +# if (@REPLACE_NULL@ \ + && (!defined _@GUARD_PREFIX@_STDDEF_H || defined _GL_STDDEF_WINT_T)) +# undef NULL +# ifdef __cplusplus + /* ISO C++ says that the macro NULL must expand to an integer constant + expression, hence '((void *) 0)' is not allowed in C++. */ +# if __GNUG__ >= 3 + /* GNU C++ has a __null macro that behaves like an integer ('int' or + 'long') but has the same size as a pointer. Use that, to avoid + warnings. */ +# define NULL __null +# else +# define NULL 0L +# endif +# else +# define NULL ((void *) 0) +# endif +# endif + +# ifndef _@GUARD_PREFIX@_STDDEF_H +# define _@GUARD_PREFIX@_STDDEF_H + +/* Some platforms lack wchar_t. */ +#if !@HAVE_WCHAR_T@ +# define wchar_t int +#endif + +/* Some platforms lack max_align_t. The check for _GCC_MAX_ALIGN_T is + a hack in case the configure-time test was done with g++ even though + we are currently compiling with gcc. */ +#if ! (@HAVE_MAX_ALIGN_T@ || defined _GCC_MAX_ALIGN_T) +/* On the x86, the maximum storage alignment of double, long, etc. is 4, + but GCC's C11 ABI for x86 says that max_align_t has an alignment of 8, + and the C11 standard allows this. Work around this problem by + using __alignof__ (which returns 8 for double) rather than _Alignof + (which returns 4), and align each union member accordingly. */ +# ifdef __GNUC__ +# define _GL_STDDEF_ALIGNAS(type) \ + __attribute__ ((__aligned__ (__alignof__ (type)))) +# else +# define _GL_STDDEF_ALIGNAS(type) /* */ +# endif +typedef union +{ + char *__p _GL_STDDEF_ALIGNAS (char *); + double __d _GL_STDDEF_ALIGNAS (double); + long double __ld _GL_STDDEF_ALIGNAS (long double); + long int __i _GL_STDDEF_ALIGNAS (long int); +} max_align_t; +#endif + +# endif /* _@GUARD_PREFIX@_STDDEF_H */ +# endif /* _@GUARD_PREFIX@_STDDEF_H */ +#endif /* __need_XXX */ -- cgit v1.2.1