Edit C code to reduce warnings from clang. Most warnings are for
implicit declarations of functions, but some warnings want me to add
parentheses or curly braces, or to cast arguments for printf().
Make a few other changes, like declaring float_cst() in h/con_float to
be static, and using C99 bool in ego/ra/makeitems.c and
ego/share/makecldef.c. Such changes don't silence warnings; I make
such changes while I silence warnings in the same file. In
float_cst(), rename parameter `str` to `float_str`, so it doesn't
share a name with the global variable `str`.
Remove `const` from `newmodule(const char *)` in mach/proto/as to
silence a warning. I wrongly added the `const` in d347207.
For warnings about implicit declarations of functions, the fix is to
declare the function before calling it. For example, my OpenBSD
system needs <sys/wait.h> to declare wait().
In util/int, add "whatever.h" to declare more functions. Remove old
declarations from "mem.h", to prefer the newer declarations of the
same functions in "data.h" and "stack.h".
@dram reported a build failure in FreeBSD at
https://github.com/davidgiven/ack/issues/1#issuecomment-273668299
Linux manual for getopt(3) says:
> If the first character of optstring is '-', then each nonoption
> argv-element is handled as if it were the argument of an option with
> character code 1....
>
> The use of '+' and '-' in optstring is a GNU extension.
GNU/Linux and OpenBSD handle '-' in this special way, but FreeBSD
seems not to. If '-' is not special, then em_ego can't find its input
file, so the build must fail. This commit stops using '-' in both
em_b and em_ego, but doesn't change mcg.
Also fix em_ego -O3 to not act like -O4.
same base name and generate multiple files based on it, we can't really use
mkstemp() for every temporary file. Instead, use mkstemp() once on a
placeholder, then generate temporary names based on this. (And delete the
placeholder once we've finished.)
and generate invalid calls to the optimisers.
Previously ego would generate a temporary file template that looked like
/tmp/ego.A.BB.XXXXXX, call mktemp() on it to randomise the XXXXXX, and then
replace A and BB with data.
However, it used strrchr to find the A and B. Which would fine, except when
mktemp produced an A or a B in the randomised part...
This code was written on 4 March 1991. I was 16.
This needed lots of refactoring to ego --- not all platforms have ego descr
files, and ego will just crash if you invoke it without one. I think originally
it was never intended that these platforms would be used at -O2 or above.
Plats now only specify the ego descr file if they have one.