The asymmetric quotes used by GNU in the past (`...') don't render
nicely on modern systems. We now use two \x27 characters ('...').
The proper solution would be to use the correct Unicode symmetric
quotes here. However this has the disadvantage that the system
requires Unicode support. We don't want that today. If Unicode is
available a generated po file can be used to output proper quotes. A
simple sed script like the one used for en@quote is sufficient to
change them.
The changes have been done by applying
sed -i "s/\`\([^'\`]*\)'/'\1'/g"
to most files and fixing obvious problems by hand. The msgid strings in
the po files were fixed with a similar command.
* common/estream-printf.c (_ESTREAM_PRINTF_MALLOC): Remove.
(_ESTREAM_PRINTF_FREE): Remove.
(_ESTREAM_PRINTF_REALLOC): New.
(fixed_realloc) [!_ESTREAM_PRINTF_REALLOC]): New.
(estream_vasprintf): Use my_printf_realloc instead of my_printf_malloc
and my_printf_free.
(dynamic_buffer_out): Use my_printf_realloc instead of realloc.
--
This bug will never happen in current GnuPG/Libgcrypt because we use
the standard memory allocation functions via Libgcrypt. However, when
used in other environments it would mess up the heap for an asprintf
with an output length larger than ~512 bytes.
We better do this once and for all instead of cluttering all future
commits with diffs of trailing white spaces. In the majority of cases
blank or single lines are affected and thus this change won't disturb
a git blame too much. For future commits the pre-commit scripts
checks that this won't happen again.