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by JdeBP
360 days ago
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The opposite, if anything. Very little was written against the old semantics, with most of the time the supplied C library providing what was needed, and so the code that did rely upon old semantics barely got exercised. A little-used shim that had been broken wasn't noticed, in other words, until just the right combination of circumstances got the shim being used on a platform where it would break. What there are piles of, are softwares that reinvent the C library, all too often in little bits of conditionally-compiled code that have either been reinvented or nicked from some old C library and sit unused in every platform that that application is nowadays ported to. Every time that I see a build log dutifully informing me that it has checked for <string.h> or some other thing that has been standard for 35 years I wonder (a) why that is thought to be necessary in 2025, and (b) what sort of shims would get used if the check ever failed. |
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Most programs will probably just fail to compile: "#undef HAVE_STRING_H" gets added to config.h, but it's never checked. Or something along those lines. It's little more than "failed to find <string.h>" with extra steps.
The exceptions are older projects which support tons of systems: bash, Vim, probably Emacs, that type of thing. A major difficulty is that it can be very hard to know what is safe to remove. So to use your strings.h example, bash currently does:
And Vim has an even more complex check: Looks like that NO_STRINGS_WITH_STRING_H gets defined on "OS/X". Is that still applicable? Probably not?Is any of this still needed? Who knows. Is it safe to remove? Who knows. No one is really tracking any of this. There is no "caniuse" for this, and even the autoconf people aren't sure on what systems autoconf does and doesn't work. There is no way to know who is running what on what, and people do run some of these programs on pretty old systems.
So ... people don't touch any of this because no one knows what is or isn't broken and what does and doesn't break if you touch it.
Aside: people love to complain about telemetry, sometimes claiming it's never useful, but this is where telemetry would absolutely be very useful.