Mercurial > gnulib
view doc/obsolete.texi @ 40226:5b87a9bf7240
uninorm tests: Free allocated memory.
* tests/uninorm/test-u32-normalize-big.h
(struct normalization_test_file): Remove 'const' from allocated member.
(free_normalization_test_file): New declaration.
* tests/uninorm/test-u32-normalize-big.c (test_other): Free allocated
memory.
(free_normalization_test_file): New function.
* tests/uninorm/test-u32-nfc-big.c (main): Free allocated
'struct normalization_test_file' contents.
* tests/uninorm/test-u32-nfd-big.c (main): Likewise.
* tests/uninorm/test-u32-nfkc-big.c (main): Likewise.
* tests/uninorm/test-u32-nfkd-big.c (main): Likewise.
author | Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 10 Mar 2019 15:14:01 +0100 |
parents | 99c5c7bed4f9 |
children |
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@node Obsolete modules @section Obsolete modules @cindex Obsolete modules Modules can be marked obsolete. This means that the problems they fix don't occur any more on the platforms that are reasonable porting targets now. @code{gnulib-tool} warns when obsolete modules are mentioned on the command line, and by default ignores dependencies from modules to obsolete modules. When you pass the option @code{--with-obsolete} to @code{gnulib-tool}, dependencies to obsolete modules will be included, however, unless blocked through an @code{--avoid} option. This option is useful if your package should be portable even to very old platforms. In order to mark a module obsolete, you need to add this to the module description: @example Status: obsolete Notice: This module is obsolete. @end example