strnlen, strict ansi, newlib vs glibc
Joel Sherrill
joel.sherrill@oarcorp.com
Thu Aug 14 15:57:00 GMT 2014
On August 14, 2014 10:30:55 AM CDT, Luca Barbato <lu_zero@gentoo.org> wrote:
>On 14/08/14 17:27, Joel Sherrill wrote:
>> Hi
>>
>> I have some native C++ code that I developed on CentOS and it
>> has no warnings. Someone moved it to Cygwin and reported warnings
>> for strnlen() not being prototyped. I investigated and the program
>did
>> include string.h. I tried RTEMS tools and got the same as Cygwin
>> since we have the same string.h from newlib.
>>
>> Investigating this, it appears that strnlen() is protected by
>> __STRICT_ANSI__ on newlib and __USE_XOPEN2K8 on Linux.
>>
>> Command: g++ -Wall -std=c++0x -c strtest.cc
>>
>> This program is enough to reproduce the issue:
>>
>> #include <string.h>
>>
>> // size_t strnlen( const char *, size_t );
>>
>> size_t f( const char *str )
>> {
>> return strnlen( str, 1000 );
>> }
>>
>>
>> What do you all think?
>>
>
>It is a known issue with newlib headers.
>
>They mistakenly assume __STRICT_ANSI__ as nothing but old-C.
>
>using -std=c99 triggers the same kind of issues.
>
>The common way to solve it is adding -U__STRICT_ANSI__
Thanks for the quick reply.
How about I try to fix this based on what glibc and FreeBSD do?
>lu
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