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CVS commit: src/distrib/sets/lists
Module Name: src
Committed By: riastradh
Date: Mon Sep 4 19:07:59 UTC 2023
Modified Files:
src/distrib/sets/lists/base: shl.mi
src/distrib/sets/lists/debug: shl.mi
src/distrib/sets/lists/xbase: shl.mi
src/distrib/sets/lists/xdebug: shl.mi
Log Message:
lists: Remove bogus libfoo.so.N and libfoo.so.N.M obsolete entries.
These must stay around so applications linked against them will still
work after upgrade, even if libfoo.so now points to libfoo.so.(N+1)
or libfoo.so.N.(M+1).
Exceptions:
- I'm willing to believe the rump modules have a different story so I
left those obsolete entries alone.
- libuv.so was never supposed to be exposed publicly anyway and never
went out in a release. (Maybe this information should be recorded
somewhere?)
- Same is probably true of lib{gmp,mpc,mpfr}.so, not sure of the
history. Maybe libg2c.so too, no idea what that is.
- libisns.so was moved from /usr/lib to /lib, so it's legitimate for
the debug data to live there too now. (XXX Maybe we should have a
separate marker for this.)
- Libraries under /usr/tests are not used by normal applications, so
they can safely be deleted when obsoleted.
Note: The libfoo.so symlink for a library that has been deleted
altogether, not just upgraded, can be obsoleted. Loadable modules
that applications aren't linked against can be obsoleted, even if
some of them like npf ext_*.so or pam_*.so are formally versioned
(for reasons unclear to me).
Note: This means that incremental builds may complain about these
.so.N and .so.N.M files in destdir (PR misc/57581), but it's much
worse for an upgrade to break working applications.
To generate a diff of this commit:
cvs rdiff -u -r1.968 -r1.969 src/distrib/sets/lists/base/shl.mi
cvs rdiff -u -r1.328 -r1.329 src/distrib/sets/lists/debug/shl.mi
cvs rdiff -u -r1.102 -r1.103 src/distrib/sets/lists/xbase/shl.mi
cvs rdiff -u -r1.68 -r1.69 src/distrib/sets/lists/xdebug/shl.mi
Please note that diffs are not public domain; they are subject to the
copyright notices on the relevant files.
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