Another goal of Gnulib is to provide application code that can be shared
between several applications. Some people wonder: "What? glibc doesn't
have a function to copy a file?" Indeed, the scope of a system's libc is
-to implement the relevant standards (ISO C99, POSIX:2001) and to provide
+to implement the relevant standards (ISO C, POSIX) and to provide
access functions to the kernel's system calls, and little more.
There is no clear borderline between both areas.
@code{pt_chown}, @code{grantpt}, @code{pty}, @code{savewd},
@code{mkancesdirs}, @code{mkdir-p}, @code{euidaccess}, @code{faccessat}.
The versions of Windows that are supported are Windows XP and newer.
+Only the latest version of mingw is tested; older versions are not supported.
@item
Native Windows, with MSVC as compiler, is rarely tested and low priority.
@item
@itemize
@item
-There is the newest version of Gnulib from the Git repository. The
-source tree can also be fetched from a read-only CVS that mirrors the Git
-repository.
+There is the newest version of Gnulib from the Git repository.
@item
We also make stable releases every two months, at