I received a number of "-Wshadow" related warnings (treated as errors) while
trying to build on OS X Leopard. In addition, there were two miscellaneous
other warnings in the flash drivers. Attached are two patches which correct
these issues and the commit messages to accompany them.
My system has the following configuration (taken from uname -a):
Darwin 9.8.0 Darwin Kernel Version 9.8.0: Wed Jul 15 16:55:01 PDT 2009;
root:xnu-1228.15.4~1/RELEASE_I386 i386
=== Werror_patch.txt Commit Message ===
compilation: fixes for -Wshadow warnings on OS X
These changes fix -Wshadow compilation warnings on OS X 10.5.8
Compiled with the following configure command:
../configure --prefix=/usr/local --enable-maintainer-mode --enable-jlink
--enable-ft2232_libftdi
=== flash_patch.txt Commit Message ===
compilation: fixes for flash driver warnings on OS X
These changes fix two compilation warnings on OS X 10.5.8:
../../../../src/flash/nor/at91sam3.c:2767: warning: redundant redeclaration
of 'at91sam3_flash'
../../../../src/flash/nor/at91sam3.c:101: warning: previous declaration of
'at91sam3_flash' was here
and
../../../../src/flash/nor/stmsmi.c:205: warning: format not a string literal
and no format arguments
Compiled with the following configure command:
../configure --prefix=/usr/local --enable-maintainer-mode --enable-jlink
--enable-ft2232_libftdi
===
Andrew
Make these ".h" files adopt the same policy the ".c" files already
follow: don't use <subsystem/...h> syntax for private interfaces.
If we ever get reviewed/supported "public" interfaces they should
come exclusively from some include/... directory; that'll be the
time to switch to <...> syntax for any subsystem's own interfaces.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Changes from the flat namespace to heirarchical one. Instead of writing:
#include "mips_ejtag.h"
the following form should be used.
#include <target/mips_ejtag.h>
The exception is from .c files in the same directory.
This will allow data to be allocated in read only
memory instead of on the stack. Speeds things up
and reduces stack usage.
Signed-off-by: Øyvind Harboe <oyvind.harboe@zylin.com>