The JNI library uses CLEANUP_FREE macros, whose functions are built in
the internal libutils. Currently, trying to use functions that use
CLEANUP_FREE variables will cause the java execution to stop with a
symbol lookup error (for guestfs_int_cleanup_free).
Just code motion.
This commit makes it clearer what is a utility and what is part of the
library. It also makes it clear that we should rename:
guestfs-internal-frontend.h -> utils.h
guestfs-internal-frontend-cleanups.h -> cleanups.h (?)
but this commit does not make that change.
Run the following command over the source:
perl -pi.bak -e 's/(20[01][0-9])-2016/$1-2017/g' `git ls-files`
(Thanks Rich for the perl snippet, as used in past years.)
By adding common CLEANFILES and DISTCLEANFILES variables to
common-rules.mk, we can remove these from most other Makefiles, and
also clean files more consistently.
Note that bin_PROGRAMS are already cleaned by 'make clean', so I
removed cases where these were unnecessarily added to CLEANFILES.
Add makefile variables to enable silent rules for simple command
invocations, such as ocamlc, ocamlopt, javac, and erlc.
This reduces the log output when building with silent rules, still
showing the full command lines otherwise.
Remove man pages and other pages which 'make clean' did not remove
before.
To evaluate which pages could be removed, I did a full build and
check, and then ran 'make clean' followed by 'git clean -xdf'. By
examining the output of the git clean command I could see which files
were being missed.
Files that are _not_ removed by make clean or make distclean:
- generator-built files
- Makefile, Makefile.in, .deps, .depend
- any ./configure output files (maybe they should be?)
This file is mainly a central place to:
- include localenv if it exists, and
- define the RHEL 5 backwards compatibility macros, instead of
spreading them over every other file.
This directory (containing HTML documentation) can be removed
completely when making clean. CLEANFILES cannot recursively remove a
directory, so use a clean-local rule instead.
Certain functions are intended to be internal only, but we currently
export them anyway. This change moves them into a separate section of
guestfs.h protected by a GUESTFS_PRIVATE variable. This change also
enables private structs, but doesn't implement any.
This change only affects the C api. Language bindings aren't affected,
but probably should be in the future.
Rename guestfs_safe_malloc et al to guestfs___safe_malloc etc.
To use the private functions, code now has to define
-DGUESTFS_PRIVATE_FUNCTIONS=1. This will make it easier for us in
future to work out which programs are using these functions and to
minimize both the number of programs and the functions they are
calling.
Note that the Perl, Python, OCaml, Ruby and Java bindings use
guestfs_safe_* calls. None of the other bindings do. This is a bug
(in the bindings using those functions): these functions will call the
out of memory callback on failure. This function defaults to abort(),
and since this happens from a language binding, there is no way to
change this default.
RHEL 5-era autoconf did not define these, so define them manually
when they are missing.
Define builddir as '.' The scripts require this. It won't work
in the srcdir != builddir case, but we don't care about that for
RHEL 5.
This commit also moves the builddir / abs_srcdir variable setting
above the include of subdir-rules.mk, in case that include uses
these variables.
Useful script:
for f in $(find -name Makefile.am | xargs fgrep '$(abs_srcdir)' -l) ; do
if ! grep -q '^abs_srcdir' $f; then
echo missing in $f
fi
done
javah from old GNU classpath won't overwrite the target *.h file,
instead leaving the old one which results in a predictable build
failure. Delete the target so this won't happen.
This avoids conflicts with the globally installed libguestfs
appliance, or lets us build in multiple local directories at the same
time without conflicts.