At 10:17 AM -0600 3/8/02, David W. Chapman Jr. wrote: >Yes. Recent changes to netinet/in.h have made it require the >inclusion of arpa/inet.h. As well, arpa/inet.h must include >netinet/in.h. IOW, each of these files must #include the >other in order to work correctly. > >As you might guess, this is a less than desirable situation. >[A #includes B] and [B #includes A] is a very bad arrangement. >However, unless both files are overhauled, that is what will >have to happen. > >To say that this sucks is an understatement. [...]
>Since the problem is a large one, and any change will not >happen without a reasonable amount of deliberation, I suggest >you submit a PR with a patch for kdelibs source tree. Mike Barcroft, Bruce Evans, and maybe a few others are working on an update to about eight different include files which should clear up many of these issues. I think it would be very desirable to get this include-file-cleanup patch committed before the snapshot is done. The present version of this patch clears up a lot of the compile-time warnings that come up when doing a buildworld of current, but it still isn't quite right. If this current snapshot means more people will be running current, then I'd hate to see them chasing after compile-time warnings which are due to the present state of the system include files... -- Garance Alistair Drosehn = [EMAIL PROTECTED] Senior Systems Programmer or [EMAIL PROTECTED] Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute or [EMAIL PROTECTED] To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message