Rather than killing the process with close, read EOF after sending the
"exit" command and wait for OS cleanup (per the expect examples).
Not cleaning up with wait caused expect to crash on all 32-bit platforms
including i586 and armv7l with "alloc: invalid block: 0xbf993ccb: 3d 3b".
64-bit platforms were not affected, for reasons that are not clear.
CentOS 7 does not have rhel_version as one of its macros, so trying to
build results in CMake errors, since we get `cmake` instead of
`cmake3`. These additional conditions allow the spec to build
successfully on CentOS 7.
Using %rhel should allow one set of conditionals to work across CentOS 7
and RHEL 7.
This has been tested on both.
This was broken in a8eb02f9f5 when the
detection was corrected for FreeBSD. This patch makes the detection work
for both Linux and FreeBSD instead of one or the other (tested).
Using `setlocale` is both not thread-safe and not correct, as
a) The global locale is usually stored in static storage, so
simultaneous calls to `setlocale` can result in corruption, and
b) `setlocale` changes the locale for the entire application, not
just the calling thread. This means that even if we wrapped the
`wcstod_l` in a mutex to prevent the previous point, the results
would still be incorrect because this would incorrectly influence the
results of locale-aware functions executed in other threads while
this thread is executing.
The previous comment mentioned that `uselocale` hadn't worked. I'm not
sure what the failing implementation looked like, but `uselocale` can be
tricky. The committed implementation passes the tests for me under Linux
and FreeBSD.
This was the actual issue leading to memory corruption under FreeBSD in
issue #5453, worked around by correcting the detection of `wcstod_l` so
that our version of the function is not called at all.
If we are 100% certain that `wcstod_l` does not exist, then then the
existing code is fine. But given that our checks have failed seperately
on two different platforms already (FreeBSD and Cygwin/newlib), it's a
good precaution to take.
CMake seems to have trouble finding libraries from multiarch packages
that do not have the compatibility symlink installed to the
arch-independent library directory. Users must either manually supply
the path to the library in question via command-line parameters or we
can fall back to CMake's alternate method of finding packages based off
of pkg-config rather than using the hard-coded `FindCurses` CMake module
specific to the CMake version/distribution installed.
e4b6007f33 introduced the following warning:
configure.ac:327: warning: AC_LANG_CONFTEST: no AC_LANG_SOURCE call
detected in body
Fix by using the right autoconf macros for the job.
Turns out busybox diff (used on alpine) defaults to unified output,
which we can't use because that prints filenames, and those are
tempfiles made by psub.
Instead, we use builtins to print the first line and compare the others.
This isn't all that important, and it breaks on musl just because the message is different.
Just skip it for now, until we figure out how to better test this.
This `set TERM`. Which, if $TERM is inherited, is already exported,
but not if it isn't.
This is the case on sr.ht's arch images, so we failed without a TERM variable.
This checks if uname exists (we already call it elsewhere without
check, nobody has complained, uname is in POSIX), then calls to see if
it's "Linux", and only then offers any completions.
Since we don't have any other version to offer, the check is worse
than useless.
This helps on netbsd, because enter_standout_mode et al are const
there.
These methods don't alter their argument, so they should have been
const to begin with.