| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Code cleanup (sorta)
Description:
When the first versions of the HDF5 library were designed, I remembered
vividly the difficulties of porting code from a 32-bit platform to a 16-bit
platform and asked that people use intn & uintn instead of int & unsigned
int, respectively. However, in hindsight, this was overkill and
unnecessary since we weren't going to be porting the HDF5 library to
16-bit architectures.
Currently, the extra uintn & intn typedefs are causing problems for users
who'd like to include both the HDF5 and HDF4 header files in one source
module (like Kent's h4toh5 library).
Solution:
Changed the uintn & intn's to unsigned and int's respectively.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.4 (hawkwind)
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Purpose:
New Feature
Description:
Adding the h5cc script thingy.
Platforms tested:
Linux
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Purpose:
Bug Fix
Description:
The way we were generating Dependencies and .depend files was broken.
If the $srcdir or other macros began with a ".", then it would match
anything and cause problems since it would then overwrite the
beginning of the header file's path.
Solution:
Wrote a Perl script which can handle this type of weirdness better.
It's only used when the environment is a GNU one with a GCC
compiler...
Platforms tested:
Linux
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Bug Fix, Code Cleanup, Code Optimization, etc.
Description:
Fold in the hyperslab speedups, clean up compile warnings and change a
few things from using 'unsigned' or 'hsize_t' to use 'size_t' instead.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.3 (hawkwind), Solaris 2.7 (arabica), Irix64 6.5 (modi4)
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Update
Description:
Replaced
#include <hdf5_file.h>
with
#include "hdf5_file.h"
so that gcc can pick up our files more easily without picking up
system header files (which we don't care about being in the
dependencies list).
Platforms tested:
Linux
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Code Movement
Description:
Moved the tools into their own separate directories (except for these
small tools which are REALLY small, not tested, or documented,
really...They just get put into the misc/ directory).
Platforms tested:
Linux and Kelgia
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