From: | Kate F <kate(at)cats(dot)meow(dot)at> |
---|---|
To: | Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us> |
Cc: | pgsql-hackers(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: snprintf() |
Date: | 2007-02-03 04:11:25 |
Message-ID: | 20070203041125.GI390@cats.meow.at |
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Lists: | pgsql-hackers |
On Fri, Feb/ 2/07 10:52:28PM -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> Kate F <kate(at)cats(dot)meow(dot)at> writes:
> > ... does PostgreSQL replace my system's snprintf() prototype with
> > its own implementation's?
>
> We do on some platforms where configure decides the system version
> is deficient ... I don't recall the exact conditions at the moment.
> I wouldn't really have expected that to happen on any *BSD, but you
> could look into the generated Makefile.global to find out.
I don't see anything that looks relevant for my Makefile.global; I
would be surprised if NetBSD's were overridden too!
> > For reference, the relevant part of C99:
> > 7.19.6.5 2 If n is zero, nothing is written, and s may be a null
> > pointer.
>
> For reference, the relevant part of the Single Unix Spec:
>
> If the value of n is zero on a call to snprintf(), an
> unspecified value less than 1 is returned.
Aha! I do recall either POSIX or SUS defers to C on conflicts... I
can't find which, though. If this snprintf() is following SUS
behaviour, that's fine. Thank you!
> So the behavior you'd like to depend on is unportable anyway, and
> that coding will get rejected if submitted as a Postgres patch.
Absolutley (and I assume you target C89, too, which does not provide
snprintf()). This was just something personal where I happened to use
it for convenience.
Thank you for checking that - and appologies for posting to the wrong
list; that should have been to -bugs!
Regards,
--
Kate
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