From: Rick Hohensee <humbubba@smarty.smart.net>
To: jlundell@pobox.com (Jonathan Lundell)
Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: mktime in include/linux
Date: Fri, 22 Jun 2001 12:49:19 -0400 (EDT) [thread overview]
Message-ID: <200106221649.MAA11881@smarty.smart.net> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <p05100301b759107790aa@[207.213.214.37]> from "Jonathan Lundell" at Jun 22, 2001 08:16:19 AM
>
> At 1:43 PM +0200 2001-06-22, Erik Mouw wrote:
> >On Thu, Jun 21, 2001 at 10:30:40PM -0400, Rick Hohensee wrote:
> >> Why does Linux have a mktime routine fully coded in linux/time.h that
> >> conflicts directly with the ANSI C standard library routine of the same
> >> name? It breaks a couple things against libc5, including gcc 3.0. OK, you
> >> don't care about libc5. It's still pretty weird. Wierd? Weird.
> >
> >This has been brought up many times on this list: you are not supposed
> >to include kernel headers in userland.
>
> That's not the problem, I think. Most of time.h, including the
> definition of mktime, is #ifdef __KERNEL__, so it shouldn't be
> breaking anything in userland even if you do include it. And you
> might, in order to obtain the interface definition of struct
> timespec. What's weird is: why is __KERNEL__ getting #defined in
> Rick's userland?
>
> There can't, of course, be any blanket prohibition against using
> kernel headers in userland. Think about ioctl.h, for example.
Sounds like a clue. Thanks.
Rick
> --
> /Jonathan Lundell.
>
prev parent reply other threads:[~2001-06-22 16:39 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 4+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2001-06-22 2:30 mktime in include/linux Rick Hohensee
2001-06-22 11:43 ` Erik Mouw
2001-06-22 15:16 ` Jonathan Lundell
2001-06-22 16:49 ` Rick Hohensee [this message]
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