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This removes all the logic that perl uses to locate an appropriate
errno.h for the target. Instead we simple create a file that does
#include "errno.h"
and use that as the file to parse. This is needed when using an
external toolchain since perl will search in ${STAGING_INCDIR} for
errno.h (when using gcc) and that isn't where it's located - its
wherever the external toolchain keeps it's headers.
--- perl-5.8.8/ext/Errno/Errno_pm.PL 2007/04/30 14:10:10 1.1
+++ perl-5.8.8/ext/Errno/Errno_pm.PL 2007/04/30 14:21:35
@@ -11,8 +11,18 @@
open OUT, ">Errno.pm" or die "Cannot open Errno.pm: $!";
select OUT;
my $file;
-my @files = get_files();
-if ($Config{gccversion} ne '' && $^O eq 'MSWin32') {
+#my @files = get_files();
+my @files = ("errno.h");
+
+if (1) {
+ open INCS, '>includes.c' or
+ die "Cannot open includes.c";
+ print INCS qq[#include "errno.h"\n];
+ close INCS;
+ process_file('includes.c');
+ unlink 'includes.c';
+}
+elsif ($Config{gccversion} ne '' && $^O eq 'MSWin32') {
# MinGW complains "warning: #pragma system_header ignored outside include
# file" if the header files are processed individually, so include them
# all in .c file and process that instead.
@@ -44,7 +54,7 @@
chomp($file = `cygpath -w "$file"`);
}
- return unless defined $file and -f $file;
+# return unless defined $file and -f $file;
# warn "Processing $file\n";
local *FH;
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