Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Lines |
|
POSIX 2024 added a requirement that mbsnrtowcs, like mbrtowc, consume
any final partial character and store it in the mbstate_t object
before returning. this was previously unspecified but documented as a
potential future change.
an internal mbstate_t object is added for the case where the argument
is a null pointer. previously this was not needed since no operations
could modify the internal object and not processing it at all gave the
same behavior "as if" there were an internal object.
|
|
the value computed as an output limit that bounds the amount of input
consumed below the input limit was incorrectly being used as the
actual amount of input consumed. instead, compute the actual amount of
input consumed as a difference of pointers before and after the
conversion.
patch by Mikhail Kremnyov.
|
|
despite clarifications made to the COPYRIGHT file in commit
f0a61399330bae42beeb27d6ecd05570b3382a60, there continues to be
confusion about whether the permissions granted actually apply to all
files. I am the sole author of these files and clearly intend, and
have always intended, for the grant of permission to apply to them.
|
|
|
|
to deal with the fact that the public headers may be used with pre-c99
compilers, __restrict is used in place of restrict, and defined
appropriately for any supported compiler. we also avoid the form
[restrict] since older versions of gcc rejected it due to a bug in the
original c99 standard, and instead use the form *restrict.
|
|
these are POSIX 2008 (previously GNU extension) functions that are
rarely used. apparently they had never been tested before, since the
end-of-string logic was completely missing. mbsnrtowcs is used by
modern versions of bash for its glob implementation, and and this bug
was causing tab completion to hang in an infinite loop.
|
|
|