Simon Josefsson wrote: > Then I'm less sure that it makes sense for > gnulib's limit.h to define HOST_NAME_MAX -- programs written against > POSIX should not assume that symbol exists.
On the other hand, the support of POSIX for unspecified maximum host name lengths is weak: You see in [1] that - when the host name is longer than namelen, the string is truncated, possibly NUL terminated or not, - when gethostname fails, it is unspecified whether it sets errno. The reality (see lib/xgethostname.c) is even worse: - when the host name is longer than namelen, then some platforms return -1, others don't; some platforms even write past the specified namelength bytes, - the errnos appearing in this case are far from standard. I think it's a favour that gnulib can do to its users, to not force developers to deal with these pitfalls. And don't tell me that host names longer than 256 bytes occur frequently :-) > Do sysconf work under mingw? Gnulib could provide a replacement if not. That would be some work, because of the many arguments that sysconf should support. [2] Bruno [1] http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/gethostname.html [2] http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/sysconf.html