PR htop-dev/htop#70 got rid of the infrastructure for generating header
files, but it left behind some code duplication.
Some of cases are things that belong in the header file and don't need
to be repeated in the C file. Other cases are things that belong in the
C file and don't need to be in the header file.
In this commit I tried to fix all of these that I could find. When given
a choice I preferred keeping things out of the header file, unless they
were being used by someone else.
`env` is allocated by checked allocation functions and can not be NULL.
This checks confuses clang analyzer and causes a null-dereference
warning on `env[size-1]`.
The MIN, MAX, CLAMP, MINIMUM, and MAXIMUM macros appear
throughout the codebase with many re-definitions. Make
a single copy of each in a common header file, and use
the BSD variants of MINIMUM/MAXIMUM due to conflicts in
the system <sys/param.h> headers.
Reasoning:
- implementation was unsound -- broke down when I added a fairly
basic macro definition expanding to a struct initializer in a *.c
file.
- made it way too easy (e.g. via otherwise totally innocuous git
commands) to end up with timestamps such that it always ran
MakeHeader.py but never used its output, leading to overbuild noise
when running what should be a null 'make'.
- but mostly: it's just an awkward way of dealing with C code.
GCC10 and Clang11 now default to -fno-common.
ld: error: duplicate symbol: jail_errmsg
>>> defined at Platform.c
>>> freebsd/Platform.o:(jail_errmsg)
>>> defined at FreeBSDProcessList.c
>>> freebsd/FreeBSDProcessList.o:(.bss+0x90)
Signed-off-by: Tobias Kortkamp <t@tobik.me>
Drop the copyright notice from the version output as a number
of people seem to be confused by what this means, and we can
do without all the (well intentioned) bug reports.