Date: Thu, 09 Sep 1999 14:59:37 +0200 From: Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@scc.nl> To: Dmitrij Tejblum <tejblum@arc.hq.cti.ru> Cc: hackers@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: 32+ signals and library versions Message-ID: <37D7AF39.ECC65D14@scc.nl> References: <199909090953.NAA01806@tejblum.pp.ru>
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Dmitrij Tejblum wrote: > > Marcel Moolenaar wrote: > > > I suggest to try to avoid the version bump. NetBSD-like way to do it: > > > Give new implementations another names in object files, so that they > > > don't conflict with old implementations, and preserve old > > > implementations in the library too. To make the compiler generate calls > > > to new implementations, one can add appropriate #define s in .h files. > > > For GCC, __asm__ attribute also can be used. > > No, when new functions are added into the library, and binaries linked > with the old library will continue to work with new library, version bump > is not required. > > This is a standard rule. It was also recently discussed on -committers > on Aug 20 in the thread > Re: cvs commit: src/include histedit.h src/lib/libedit Makefile editline.3 el.c el.h In that discussion it has been said that datatype changes require a version change. Now you're telling me that we should implement datatype changes as new functions which consequently don't require a version change. So now the policy is "version bump avoidance at all cost"? Can someone tell me why we have the freakin' version numbers? > > How else > > do I know wich version x library has the new implementations (besides the > > larger one :-)? > > Linker knows it. If some function ("new implementation") is missing, linker print > an error message. This is all you need. I strongly disagree. Spitting "unresolved references" is *not* a way to tell the user that he doesn't have the right libraries. Now I know why Bruce doesn't believe in version numbers. They're probably the most misused objects in the universe :-( -- Marcel Moolenaar mailto:marcel@scc.nl SCC Internetworking & Databases http://www.scc.nl/ The FreeBSD project mailto:marcel@FreeBSD.org To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message
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