d84430702496f617c01c5e2d27d0e82e02390bb7 |
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23-May-2008 |
Thomas Graf <tgr@lsx.localdomain> |
Remove old line counting while dumping
/external/libnl/lib/route/nexthop.c
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8a3efffa5b3fde252675239914118664d36a2c24 |
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14-May-2008 |
Thomas Graf <tgr@lsx.localdomain> |
Thread-safe error handling In order for the interface to become more thread safe, the error handling was revised to no longer depend on a static errno and error string buffer. This patch converts all error paths to return a libnl specific error code which can be translated to a error message using nl_geterror(int error). The functions nl_error() and nl_get_errno() are therefore obsolete. This change required various sets of function prototypes to be changed in order to return an error code, the most prominent are: struct nl_cache *foo_alloc_cache(...); changed to: int foo_alloc_cache(..., struct nl_cache **); struct nl_msg *foo_build_request(...); changed to: int foo_build_request(..., struct nl_msg **); struct foo *foo_parse(...); changed to: int foo_parse(..., struct foo **); This pretty much only leaves trivial allocation functions to still return a pointer object which can still return NULL to signal out of memory. This change is a serious API and ABI breaker, sorry!
/external/libnl/lib/route/nexthop.c
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535e83162249ed6274ba46bc72d8cc683ba20e17 |
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29-Apr-2008 |
Thomas Graf <tgr@lsx.localdomain> |
Big routing code rework (API/ABI BREAK!) Adds all missing routing attributes and brings the routing related code to a working state. In the process the API was broken several times with the justification that nobody is using this code yet. The changes include new example code which is also a prototype for how plain CLI tools could look like to control routes.
/external/libnl/lib/route/nexthop.c
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44d362409d5469aed47d19e7908d19bd194493a4 |
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15-Sep-2007 |
Thomas Graf <tgraf@suug.ch> |
Initial import
/external/libnl/lib/route/nexthop.c
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