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# Copyright (c) 2000-2002 Sendmail, Inc. and its suppliers. # All rights reserved. # # By using this file, you agree to the terms and conditions set # forth in the LICENSE file which can be found at the top level of # the sendmail distribution. # # $Id: README,v 1.21 2002/01/23 17:30:48 gshapiro Exp $ # Libsm is a library of generally useful C abstractions. For documentation, see index.html. Libsm stands alone; it depends on no other sendmail libraries, and the only sendmail header files it depends on are its own, which reside in ../include/sm. The t-*.c files are regression tests. These tests are incomplete: we do not yet test all of the APIs, and we have not yet converted all tests to use the test harness. If a test fails read the explanation it generates. Sometimes it is sufficient to change a compile time flag, which are also listed below. If that does not help, check the sendmail/README files for problems on your OS. The b-*.c files are benchmarks that compare system routines with those provided by libsm. By default sendmail uses the routines provided by the OS. In several cases, the routines provided by libsm are faster than those of the OS. If your OS provides the routines, you can compare the performance of them with the libsm versions by running the programs with the option -d (by default the programs just issue an explanation when/how to use them). The programs are: b-strcmp.c tests strcasecmp(). +----------------------+ | CONFIGURATION MACROS | +----------------------+ Libsm uses a set of C preprocessor macros to specify platform specific features of the C compiler and standard C libraries. If you are porting sendmail to a new platform, you may need to tweak the values of some of these macros. The following macros are given default values in <sm/config.h>. If the default value is wrong for a given platform, then a platform specific value is specified in one of two ways: - A -D option is added to the confENVDEF macro; this change can be made to the platform M4 file in devtools/OS, or to the site.config.m4 file in devtools/Site. - The confSM_OS_HEADER macro in the platform M4 file defines sm_os_foo, which forces "sm/os/sm_os_foo.h" to be included by "sm/config.h" via a link that is made from "sm_os.h" to "sm/os/sm_os_foo.h". Platform specific configuration macro settings are added to <sm/os/sm_os_foo.h>. SM_CONF_STDBOOL_H Set to 1 if the header file <stdbool.h> exists, and defines true, false and bool. SM_CONF_SYS_CDEFS_H Set to 1 if the header file <sys/cdefs.h> exists, and defines __P. You may need to do this to eliminate warnings about __P being multiply defined. SM_CONF_STDDEF_H Set to 0 if the header file <stddef.h> does not exist. SM_CONF_SETITIMER Set to 0 if the setitimer function is not available. SM_CONF_SYSEXITS_H Set to 1 if <sysexits.h> exists, and sets the EX_* macros to values different from the default BSD values in <sm/sysexits.h>. SM_CONF_UID_GID Set to 0 if <sys/types.h> does not define uid_t and gid_t. SM_CONF_SSIZE_T Set to 0 if <sys/types.h> does not define ssize_t. SM_CONF_BROKEN_SIZE_T Set to 1 if size_t is not unsigned. SM_CONF_LONGLONG Set to 1 if your C compiler supports the 'long long' type. This will be set automatically if you use gcc or a C compiler that conforms to the 1999 ISO C standard. SM_CONF_QUAD_T Set to 1 if your C compiler does not support 'long long', but <sys/types.h> defines quad_t as an integral type. SM_CONF_SHM Set to 1 if System V shared memory APIs are available. SM_CONF_MSG Set to 1 if System V message queues are available. SM_CONF_SEM Set to 1 if semaphores are available. SM_CONF_BROKEN_STRTOD Set to 1 if your strtod() does not work properly. SM_CONF_GETOPT Set to 1 if your operating system does not include getopt(3). SM_CONF_LDAP_MEMFREE Set to 1 if your LDAP client libraries include ldap_memfree(3). SM_IO_MAX_BUF_FILE Set this to a useful buffer size for regular files if stat(2) does not return a value for st_blksize that is the "optimal blocksize for I/O". SM_IO_MAX_BUF Set this to a useful maximum buffer size for other than regular files if stat(2) does not return a value for st_blksize that is the "optimal blocksize for I/O". SM_IO_MIN_BUF Set this to a useful minimum buffer size for other than regular files if stat(2) does not return a value for st_blksize that is the "optimal blocksize for I/O".