X-Git-Url: http://erislabs.net/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Fposix-functions%2Fgetcwd.texi;h=5dfba599ab7c373111f98797373924a5354e733a;hb=f40e1532834adc754cac576a07d43b9556f89a97;hp=4d00af895572ad2c82e3b2be381736e8b0af909f;hpb=80fc442c212439b65a2fba722b17529aba2aa1ae;p=gnulib.git diff --git a/doc/posix-functions/getcwd.texi b/doc/posix-functions/getcwd.texi index 4d00af895..5dfba599a 100644 --- a/doc/posix-functions/getcwd.texi +++ b/doc/posix-functions/getcwd.texi @@ -4,20 +4,46 @@ POSIX specification:@* @url{http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/getcwd.html} -Gnulib module: getcwd +Gnulib module: getcwd or getcwd-lgpl -Portability problems fixed by Gnulib: +Portability problems fixed by either Gnulib module @code{getcwd} or +@code{getcwd-lgpl}: @itemize @item -This function is missing on some older platforms. +This function is declared in different header files (namely, @code{} or +@code{}) on some platforms: +mingw, MSVC 9. @item On glibc platforms, @code{getcwd (NULL, n)} allocates memory for the result. -On other platforms, this call is not allowed. +On some other platforms, this call is not allowed. +@item +On some platforms, the prototype for @code{getcwd} uses @code{int} +instead of @code{size_t} for the size argument when using non-standard +headers, and the declaration is missing from @code{}: +mingw, MSVC 9. +@item +On some platforms, @code{getcwd (buf, 0)} fails with @code{ERANGE} +instead of the required @code{EINVAL}: +mingw, MSVC 9. +@end itemize + +Portability problems fixed by Gnulib module @code{getcwd}: +@itemize +@item +This function is missing on some older platforms. @item This function does not handle long file names (greater than @code{PATH_MAX}) -correctly on some platforms. +correctly on some platforms: +glibc on Linux 2.4.20, MacOS X 10.5, FreeBSD 6.4, NetBSD 5.1, OpenBSD 4.9, AIX 7.1. @end itemize Portability problems not fixed by Gnulib: @itemize +@item +When using @code{getcwd(NULL, nonzero)}, some platforms, such as glibc +or cygwin, allocate exactly @code{nonzero} bytes and fail with +@code{ERANGE} if it was not big enough, while other platforms, such as +FreeBSD, mingw, or MSVC 9, ignore the size argument and allocate whatever size +is necessary. If this call succeeds, an application cannot portably +access beyond the string length of the result. @end itemize