* common/util.h: Remove argparse.h.
* common/argparse.c: Undef GPGRT_ENABLE_ARGPARSE_MACROS.
* configure.ac (GPGRT_ENABLE_ARGPARSE_MACROS): Define.
* agent/gpg-agent.c: Undef GPGRT_ENABLE_ARGPARSE_MACROS and include
argparse.h. Do this also for all main modules which use our option
parser except for gpg. Replace calls to strusage by calls to
gpgrt_strusage everywhere.
* g10/gpg.c (opts): Change type to gpgrt_opt_t. Flag oOptions and
oNoOptions with ARGPARSE_conffile and ARGPARSE_no_conffile.
(main): Change type of pargs to gpgrt_argparse_t. Rework the option
parser to make use of the new gpgrt_argparser.
--
This is not yet finished but a make check works. gpg has the most
complex and oldest option handling and thus this is the first
migration target. SE-Linux checks and version-ed config files are
missing and will be added later.
GnuPG-bug-id: 4788
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/compress-bz2.c: Include bzlib.h after gcrypt.h.
* tools/gpgsplit.c: Likewise.
--
bzlib.h may include windows.h on Windows. It is better
after gcrypt.h which may include winsock2.h.
Signed-off-by: NIIBE Yutaka <gniibe@fsij.org>
* common/logging.h: Rename JNLIB_LOG_* to GPGRT_LOG_*.
* common/mischelp.h: Rename JNLIB_GCC_* to GPGRT_GCC_*.
--
JNLIB has no more meaning. Thus we switch to a GPGRT_ prefix in
anticipation that some code may eventually be moved to libgpg-error.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* tools/gpgsplit.c [!HAVE_ZLIB]: Do not include zlib.h.
(handle_zlib): Build only if HAVE_ZLIB is defined.
(write_part): Support zlib and zip only if HAVE_ZLIB is defined.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
Replace hardwired strings at many places with new macros from config.h
and use the new strusage macro replacement feature.
* common/asshelp.c (lock_spawning) [W32]: Change the names of the spawn
sentinels.
* agent/command.c (cmd_import_key): Use asprintf to create the prompt.
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.