Porting Fedora to Modern C
This page collects some technical details related to Changes/PortingToModernC.
Status
- Gathering data on implicit function declarations (e.g.,
exit (0)
called without#include <stdlib.h>
). - Gathering data on implicit
int
s (e.g., const TWO = 2). - Preparing infrastructure for fix verification for Fedora developers.
Overall Approach
We build packages with instrumented gcc
and redhat-rpm-config
packages that fail the build if certain errors occur anywhere during the build. These forced failures are guaranteed to happen even if the build system ignores the exit status of a gcc
command and continues regardless (for example, during configure
checks). This is implemented by patching gcc
in a special buildroot to log certain errors to a 1777 (sticky bit permission) directory. After the build, redhat-rpm-config
checks if the directory is empty (or more precisely, only contains expected errors), and fails the build otherwise.
Cross-Distribution Collaboration
A mailing list has been set up to exchange issues and observations of wider interest: c-std-porting@lists.linux.dev (archive)
Further resources will follow as needed.
Fedora Bug Tracking
Not every build issue will have a bug in Bugzilla. But if there is no upstream with a mailing list or issue tracker to submit fixes to, it makes sense to create a bug in Bugzilla, especially for cross-distribution collaboration.
Currently, these trackers exist:
- PortingToModernC Umbrella tracker for the tracker bugs below.
- PortingToModernCExemptions Bugs which document that certain packages could not be switched to C99 or later language standards. Typically these packages keep building with
-std=gnu89
. - PortingToModernCHelpNeeded Bugs where help from the package maintainer is needed to address the issue(s).
- PortingToModernCNoUpstream Bugs to provide a reference where there is either no upstream, or the current upstream lacks a public bug tracker or version control repository
Contributing To The Porting Effort
If you want to contribute to this effort, you should subscribe to the c-std-porting
list mentioned above. If you create a Red Hat Bugzilla account, log in, and visit the Bugzilla tracker bugs linked above, a Add me to CC list check mark will appear on the bug pages. If you check that and click the Save Changes button, you will be notified of future bug changes, including bug dependency changes that indicate new issues. You can also subscribe to individual bugs that interest you.
At this point, it is too early to tell what level of knowledge and open-source experience is typically needed to successfully contribute to this project.