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Commented out libc includes to uncover all explicit dependencies.
A large fraction has now been ported over (no testing).
I did not port over the command line tools, such as the rc shell.
These will be done independently - as of now I just want the library to
stand independent.
Compilation currently fails due to the lack of math functions.
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Continue filling out the basic standard lib functions.
Included prototypes of the str* and mem* families.
Plan to add e(str|mem) and n(str|mem) variants as well.
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The old methods were simple wrappers of C standard library functions.
We've moved (painfully) over to a new interface that allows for files to
live on the stack. All users of the functionality are ported over.
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We use weak linking to ensure we clean up at exit time correctly. If
libc is linked, then we call our cleanup function by registering an
atexit callback with the library. If libc is not linked, we have a weak
symbol that results in a noop. Similarly, if we call rt·exit while
linked with libc, this immediately calls libc's exit (which will call
our cleanup as we registered it). If we are not linked to libc, exit()
is given as a weak link to a noop function.
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I found the split to be arbitrary. Better to include the functionality
in the standard library. I also split the headers to allow for more
granular inclusion (but the library is still monolithic). The only
ugliness is the circular dependency introduced with libutf's generated
functions. We put explicit prereqs with the necessary object files
instead.
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