Patch is required in NDK headers as well to be able to build multilib
GCC with libgomp support.
It's here: https://android-review.googlesource.com/#/c/62982
Change-Id: I2bec25d8cbca0e5ef1a0857008ececd92f4911be
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
We were missing SIG_ATOMIC_MAX, SIG_ATOMIC_MIN, SIZE_MAX,
WCHAR_MAX, WCHAR_MIN, WINT_MAX, and WINT_MIN.
Change-Id: I2535f36bc220fbaea009b483599b7af811c4cb5c
This reverts commit d8627af159 which caused build breakage:
In file included from bionic/libc/include/limits.h:86:0,
from bionic/libc/include/stdint.h:33,
from bionic/libc/arch-arm/bionic/crtbegin.c:31:
bionic/libc/include/sys/limits.h:30:26: fatal error: linux/limits.h: No such file or directory
compilation terminated.
make: *** [out/target/product/generic/obj/lib/crtbegin_dynamic1.o] Error 1
Change-Id: I128095ecb99df92626e1f57e34c61e08c98a4078
The near duplicates upset fussier compilers that insist that
typedefs be exactly the same, but the fix isn't to make all
copies identical...
Change-Id: Icfdace41726f36ec33c9ae919dbb5a54d3529cc9
These preprocessor tricks have caused trouble for -std=gnu99 and -ansi, and
both netbsd's libc and glibc seem to unconditionally define these types.
Change-Id: Ib8dffa341a8ca88f80d275ba2b7f93a4c910ee32
This patch prevents the definition of various macros when <stdint.h> is
included from C++. The ISO C99 standard mentions that when this header
is included from a C++ source file, limit and constant related macros
should only be defined when asked explicitely by defining
__STDC_LIMIT_MACROS and __STD_CONSTANT_MACROS, respectively.
The <stdint.h> lacked the proper #ifdef .. #endif blocks for the
following macros:
INTPTR_MIN, INTPTR_MAX, UINTPTR_MAX, PTRDIFF_MIN, PTRDIFF_MAX
INTMAX_MIN, INTMAX_MAX, UINTMAX_MAX,
INPTR_C, UINTPR_C, PTRDIFF_C, INTMAX_C, UINTMAX_C
This is intended to fix http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=14380
after we copy this file to development/ndk/platforms/android-3/include/
Change-Id: Ia77e0822edfaaf568ea599d7de673b310eeeaa4a
Compiling with -std=c99 defines __STRICT_ANSI__, but the 64 bit types
and type macros should still be defined in this case.
This helps compiling third party code that needs -std=c99 with the NDK.