a399e7da08
Survey of the working tree found 83 tracked files
that no longer exist on disk (tracked-but-missing).
Most were inside source/ dirs (extraction differences
between git revisions) and are out of scope for this
commit. The 28 non-source tracked-but-missing files
fell into these categories:
1. Broken self-referential symlinks in driver and
tui recipes (5 files):
- local/recipes/drivers/ehcid/ehcid ->
../../local/recipes/drivers/ehcid (loops)
- local/recipes/drivers/ohcid/ohcid -> ...
- local/recipes/drivers/uhcid/uhcid -> ...
- local/recipes/drivers/usb-core/usb-core -> ...
- local/recipes/tui/mc/mc -> ...
These were created by the now-removed
apply-patches.sh symlink-overlay system. Per
AGENTS.md § 'NO OVERLAY-STYLE PATCHES', the
overlay pattern is retired. Recipes now use the
`path = 'source'` form in [source] blocks
pointing at the in-tree Red Bear fork. The
self-referential symlinks broke because the
overlay indirection was removed.
2. Broken absolute-path symlinks in gpu/driver
recipes (2 files):
- local/recipes/gpu/drivers/linux-kpi/source
-> /mnt/data/homes/kellito/Builds/rbos/...
- local/recipes/gpu/drivers/redox-driver-sys/source
-> /mnt/data/homes/kellito/Builds/rbos/...
These were committed on a different filesystem
layout. The actual source trees are in
`local/sources/{linux-kpi,redox-driver-sys}/`
and are loaded via `path = 'source'` config.
3. Tracked empty `~` (emacs backup) files in
autotools-generated source dirs (13 files).
Autotools regen produces `configure~`,
`config.h.in~`, etc. whenever a developer runs
`autoreconf` in the source dir. These are
ephemeral working files, not upstream source.
Re-running the cookbook's autoreconf will
regenerate them on the next fetch.
4. Tracked-but-missing upstream WIP recipes
(12 recipes, 596 files):
- recipes/wip/dev/build-system/{meson,ninja-build}
- recipes/wip/dev/other/{bison,flex}
- recipes/wip/libs/gnome/libepoxy
- recipes/wip/libs/other/m4
- recipes/wip/libs/qt/qt6/{qt6-sensors,
qt6-sensors-local}
- recipes/wip/wayland/qt6-wayland-smoke
- recipes/wip/x11/{libxau,libxcb,x11proto}
These were tracked in the upstream Redox WIP
area but the underlying dirs/files no longer
exist on disk (likely removed when upstream
WIP was reorganized). They were never
referenced by any `config/redbear-*.toml`
and have no surviving tree dependencies.
5. Top-level `gparted-git/` orphan (4 files):
A staging dir from a previous attempt to add a
gparted recipe (RBPKGBUILD + import/). The recipe
was never finished and the postmortem H-4 says
it was 'removed' but the dir persisted.
6. `recipes/gpu/drivers` tracked as a file blob
but working tree has it as a directory.
Tree conflict from a prior overlay layout.
.gitignore additions:
- `*\~` (emacs backup)
- `.*.swp`, `.*.swo` (vim swap)
These patterns prevent future accidental commits
of ephemeral editor / autotools-regen files.
Net effect: 617 files removed, 1,304,942 lines
deleted from tracked history, 0 lines added. The
working tree is now 0 tracked-but-missing files
outside of source/ dirs (source/ extraction
differences are out of scope for this commit).
GNU libasprintf - automatic formatted output to strings
This package makes the C formatted output routines (fprintf et al.) usable
in C++ programs.
Sample use
----------
char *pathname = autosprintf ("%s/%s", directory, filename);
cerr << autosprintf ("syntax error in %s:%d: %s", filename, line, errstring);
Benefits
--------
The benefits of autosprintf over the usual "piecewise meal" idiom
cerr << "syntax error in " << filename << ":" << line << ": " << errstring;
are:
- Reuses of the standard POSIX printf facility. Easy migration from C to C++.
- English sentences are kept together.
- Internationalization requires format strings, because
1. Internationalization requires the ability for the translator to change
the order of parts of a sentence. The POSIX printf formatted output
functions (and thus also autosprintf) support this through the %m$ and
*m$ syntax.
2. Translators are used to translate one string per sentence, not
multiple strings per sentence, and not C++ code statements.
- Reduces the risk of programming errors due to forgotten state in the
output stream (e.g. 'cout << hex;' not followed by 'cout << dec;').
The benefits of autosprintf over C sprintf are:
- Autosprintf avoids buffer overruns and truncated results.
The C sprintf() function often leads to buffer overruns. On the other
hand, the C snprintf() function requires extra coding for an a priori
estimate of the result's size and truncates the result if the estimate
was too low.
- Autosprintf avoids memory leaks.
Temporarily allocated memory is cleaned up automatically.
Installation
------------
See INSTALL. Usually "./configure; make; make install" should work.
The installed files are:
- An include file "autosprintf.h" which defines the class 'autosprintf',
in the namespace 'gnu'.
- A library libasprintf containing this class.
Use
---
To use the class autosprintf, use
#include "autosprintf.h"
using gnu::autosprintf;
and link with the linker option
-lasprintf
Misc notes
----------
An instance of class 'autosprintf' contains the formatted output result;
this string is freed when the instance's destructor is run.
The class name 'autosprintf' is meant to remind the C function sprintf(),
the GNU C library function asprintf(), and the C++ autoptr programming idiom.
Distribution
------------
https://haible.de/bruno/gnu/libasprintf-1.0.tar.gz
Homepage
--------
https://haible.de/bruno/packages-libasprintf.html
Bug reports
-----------
Report bugs
- in the bug tracker at <https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/gettext>
- or by email to <bug-gettext@gnu.org>.
Bruno Haible <brunoe@clisp.org>