> > If something goes wrong somewhere and X11 segfaults (which I think does > not happen more than once in a few decades, at least with the stable version > of Xorg), then we might complain and make a fuss, but in the end is not that > big deal. Having systemd as PID 1 segfaulting is a completely different story, > and blaming other libraries does not help systemd acquiring more credibility. > PID1 *cannot* segfault, or we are just back to the dark days of BSODs. > Fullstop.
[T.J. ] That's fine. =) I only meant that glibc and GCC are far from flawless and which may cause problems with software that is built with them. I have personally seen C/C++ code segfault on Linux simply because a single line (having nothing to do with anything other than standard C/C++ libraries) was written one way over another, when both ways should have worked. I apologize the commentary is not specific enough for some, it has been a number of years since the last instance, and I do not remember the exact code. It might have been on an Alpha processor if that matters - perhaps it was x86. I have not worked with anything besides X64 now for some time, hence why I do not remember the specifics. As for my mentioning realloc and C99, you are certainly welcome to look that up to see what the general state of things are. In fact, I will go so far as to publicly withdraw my comments as too generalized, and save anyone else the trouble. I have absolutely no more time to waste on the topic, and I do not think that it is fair to anyone else to spend any more time on this either. T.J. _______________________________________________ Dng mailing list Dng@lists.dyne.org https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng