Hi,
Currently, when linking your source against libcheck, you get an
annoying warning about unsafe usage of tempnam(3). The following
patch fixes that, by commenting out a block of code which, according
to comments above it, is supposed to solve issues with Windows, and
shouldn't be relevant in OpenBSD case.
Index: Makefile
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/ports/devel/check/Makefile,v
retrieving revision 1.12
diff -u -p -u -r1.12 Makefile
--- Makefile 29 Sep 2014 19:58:04 -0000 1.12
+++ Makefile 21 Nov 2014 00:26:44 -0000
@@ -3,6 +3,7 @@
COMMENT = unit test framework for C programs
DISTNAME = check-0.9.14
+REVISION = 0
SHARED_LIBS += check 3.0 # unknown
CATEGORIES = devel
Index: patches/patch-src_check_msg_c
===================================================================
RCS file: patches/patch-src_check_msg_c
diff -N patches/patch-src_check_msg_c
--- /dev/null 1 Jan 1970 00:00:00 -0000
+++ patches/patch-src_check_msg_c 20 Nov 2014 23:50:20 -0000
@@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
+--- src/check_msg.c.orig Fri Nov 21 01:47:21 2014
++++ src/check_msg.c Fri Nov 21 01:50:16 2014
+@@ -232,10 +232,12 @@
+ /* and finally, the "b" from "w+b" is ignored on OS X, not sure about
WIN32 */
+
+ file = tmpfile();
++/*
+ if(file == NULL)
+ {
+ char *tmp = getenv("TEMP");
+ char *tmp_file = tempnam(tmp, "check_");
++*/
+
+ /*
+ * Note, tempnam is not enough to get a unique name. Between
+@@ -247,12 +249,14 @@
+ * we append the pid to the file. The pid should be unique on the
+ * system.
+ */
++/*
+ char *uniq_tmp_file = ck_strdup_printf("%s.%d", tmp_file, getpid());
+
+ file = fopen(uniq_tmp_file, "w+b");
+ *name = uniq_tmp_file;
+ free(tmp_file);
+ }
++*/
+ return file;
+ }
+