On 10-Jan-2011, Bruno Haible wrote: | These are simply the old replacement idioms that are not C++ safe. | We introduced the C++ safe idioms for most header files in March 2010, | but the old idioms are still used in a couple of places: | | m4/eaccess.m4: [AC_DEFINE([eaccess], [access], | m4/fnmatch.m4: AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED([fnmatch], [${gl_fnmatch_required_lowercase}_fnmatch], | m4/getpass.m4: AC_DEFINE([getpass], [gnu_getpass], | m4/gettimeofday.m4: AC_DEFINE([gmtime], [rpl_gmtime], | m4/gettimeofday.m4: AC_DEFINE([localtime], [rpl_localtime], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([re_compile_fastmap], [rpl_re_compile_fastmap], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([re_compile_pattern], [rpl_re_compile_pattern], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([re_comp], [rpl_re_comp], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([re_exec], [rpl_re_exec], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([regcomp], [rpl_regcomp], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([regerror], [rpl_regerror], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([regexec], [rpl_regexec], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([regfree], [rpl_regfree], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([re_match_2], [rpl_re_match_2], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([re_match], [rpl_re_match], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([re_search_2], [rpl_re_search_2], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([re_search], [rpl_re_search], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([re_set_registers], [rpl_re_set_registers], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([re_set_syntax], [rpl_re_set_syntax], | m4/regex.m4: AC_DEFINE([re_syntax_options], [rpl_re_syntax_options], | m4/selinux-selinux-h.m4: AC_DEFINE([fgetfilecon], [rpl_fgetfilecon], | m4/selinux-selinux-h.m4: AC_DEFINE([getfilecon], [rpl_getfilecon], | m4/selinux-selinux-h.m4: AC_DEFINE([lgetfilecon], [rpl_lgetfilecon], | m4/strftime.m4: AC_DEFINE([my_strftime], [nstrftime], | m4/timegm.m4: AC_DEFINE([mktime], [rpl_mktime], | m4/tzset.m4: AC_DEFINE([tzset], [rpl_tzset], | | Which of these modules are used by Octave?
Of the above, we are currently using fnmatch, gettimeofday, and strftime. jwe