| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Since this codebase is already extremely nonportable, I've decided to
relax the obsessive ifdef-else-error usage around all the extensions.
From now on, if there's no alternative to using an extension, we can
just use that extension. If it's possible to do something in a
relatively portable way, we can still try to do that in order to make
the code somewhat reusable, in contexts where that makes sense.
I also decided to use langext.h for naked functions and tail calls. If
that's used in another codebase build with a different compiler, those
just won't work, but that's fine. The benefit is really just that
there's less ceremony in places where those are used, because it's
likely there'll be a few more such places in the future, and it gets
annoying reading all the double-underscore stuff all over the place.
I still kind of want to do something about all the _WIN32 ifdefs too,
but I've realised that doing so will lead to almost nothing actually
being built on Linux. Then again, none of it currently runs on Linux so
I guess that's a moot point. Will worry about it later, anyway.
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Turns out, there's no need for the trailing underscores. Plus, glibc
does some stupid stuff with __attribute__ for non-GCC compilers. Not
that that matters here, but it seems like a good practice just to use
the forms that never have such problems. And it's shorter too.
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The code I'm about to commit appears to generate a call to this. Funny
we never needed it until now...
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I think memcpy might have been returning the wrong thing before,
actually, but I guess it didn't matter in practice. Who the hell uses
the return value from memcpy?
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This will save users having to install the VS runtime in order to load
the plugin. Turns out there was very little to implement to make this
work.
Turning off stack probing might cause spooky outcomes further down the
line but we'll burn that bridge when we get there.
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