On Wed, 25 Mar 2015, Pedro Giffuni wrote:

On 03/25/15 21:14, Bruce Evans wrote:
On Wed, 25 Mar 2015, Pedro F. Giffuni wrote:

Log:
 Temporarily revert 280458.

 GCC is still carries an old version of cdefs.h which doesn't
 accept multiple parameters for the nonnull attribute.
 Since this issue probably affects many ports in the tree
 we will revert it for now until gcc gets fixed.

Note that sys/cdefs.h is supposed to work with any version of
gcc back to gcc-1, and does mostly work back to at least gcc-2.95.
The whole point of sys/cdefs.h is to provide compatibity macros
for old and other non-default compilers.  Standard compilers don't
even have __attribute__(()).  So no changes in future versions
of gcc will fix the previous commit.

cdefs.h still works for all versions of gcc back to gcc-1 AFAICT.

I now remember other bugs in it.  I think you put the varargs stuff
in the non-gcc version.  That won't work compilers that don't support
varargs for macros.  Neither will not changing the non-gcc version.

glibc (2.6 at least) avoids using varargs in its __nonnull() macro
by using the same portable method that is used in many optional
debugging statements including FreeBSD's KASSERT().  (KASSERT() is
broken as designed.  It never needed this since it wasn't implmented
until several years after C99 standardized  varargs for macros.)
The macro takes a single arg consisting of a normal list of args
enclosed in parentheses.  The extra parentheses are not passed to
the __attribute__() list.  All invocations of the macro must be
ugly to supply the parantheses.  The parentheses give a large
syntactic difference, so the ugliness cannot be fixed easily by
switching to varargs macros.  For KASSERT(), there would be about
7500 in /usr/src lines to clean up.  For __nonnull(), there would
be only about lines 160 in /usr/src to change.  Mostly
__nonnull(1) -> __nonnull((1)).  But __nonnull() is more likely to
be (mis)used in ports.

The reason why I had to revert the change is actually a systematic
bug in gcc: during it's build process gcc generates a new cdefs.h
from our headers. Attempting to use an older gcc from ports
that was build with the broken mono-parameter __nonnull() ended
up causing breakage in any code using signal.h or pthreads.h.

I see.  gcc's "fixed" headers cause lots of problems.

The lesson here is to update gcc every time cdefs.h is updated

Whenever a "fixed" header is changed.

Bruce
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