Hi Jonathan,
There are two more uses of librt left:
* On glibc targets before 2.17 it's needed for clock_gettime. I've no
idea how long gcc is supposed to support such targets (glibc 2.17 was
released in December 2012).
>>>
>>> RHEL 7 uses glibc 2.17, so it will still be
On 17/11/20 14:25 +0100, Rainer Orth wrote:
Hi Jonathan,
There are two more uses of librt left:
* On glibc targets before 2.17 it's needed for clock_gettime. I've no
idea how long gcc is supposed to support such targets (glibc 2.17 was
released in December 2012).
RHEL 7 uses glibc 2.17, s
Hi Jonathan,
>>There are two more uses of librt left:
>>
>>* On glibc targets before 2.17 it's needed for clock_gettime. I've no
>> idea how long gcc is supposed to support such targets (glibc 2.17 was
>> released in December 2012).
>
> RHEL 7 uses glibc 2.17, so it will still be in use for som
On 17/11/20 10:47 +0100, Rainer Orth wrote:
I recently noticed that neither libposix4 nor librt are needed on
Solaris 11 any longer:
* libposix4 was renamed to librt in Solaris 7 back in 1998.
* librt was folded into libc in the OpenSolaris timeframe, leaving librt
only as a filter on libc. T
> I recently noticed that neither libposix4 nor librt are needed on
> Solaris 11 any longer:
>
> * libposix4 was renamed to librt in Solaris 7 back in 1998.
>
> * librt was folded into libc in the OpenSolaris timeframe, leaving librt
> only as a filter on libc. Thus, it's no longer needed on e
I recently noticed that neither libposix4 nor librt are needed on
Solaris 11 any longer:
* libposix4 was renamed to librt in Solaris 7 back in 1998.
* librt was folded into libc in the OpenSolaris timeframe, leaving librt
only as a filter on libc. Thus, it's no longer needed on either
Solari