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This also fixes a few wrong SPDX license identifiers, where the original
license comment indicates GPL-2.0-only.
This is not done manually, but by running the following script:
---
#!/bin/bash
# Tool to drop license comments, adding SPDX license identifiers, while preserving
# copyright comments. The point is not to manually do this task, but perform some
# hacked up string replacement.
_cp() {
/bin/cp "$@"
}
_cat() {
/bin/cat "$@"
}
in_file() {
local T=$(mktemp)
_cp -f "$1" "$T"
_cat "$T"
rm -f "$T"
}
out_file() {
local T=$(mktemp)
_cat - > "$T"
_cp -f "$T" "$1"
rm -f "$T"
}
join() {
_cat "$@" | awk '{ printf("%s#x#", $0)}'
}
unjoin() {
_cat - | sed 's/#x#/\n/g'
}
files_all() {
git ls-files |
grep -v '\.png$' |
grep -v '^include/linux-private/'
}
adjust() {
NEWLINES='\(#x#\)\+'
COPYRIGHTS='\(\( \* Copyright (c) 20..\(-20..\|, 20..\)\? [^#]\+#x#\)\+\( \*#x# \* \(Stolen[^#]*\|Based on [^#]*\)#x#\)\?\)'
_cat - |
\
sed '1s%^\(/\* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-only \*/\|\)#x#/\*#x# \* [^#]*#x# \*#x# \*[ ]\+This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or#x# \*[ ]\+modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public#x# \*[ ]\+License as published by the Free Software Foundation version 2.1#x# \*[ ]\+of the License.#x# \*#x#'"$COPYRIGHTS"' \*/'"$NEWLINES"'%/\* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-only \*/#x#/*#x#\2 */#x##x#%' |
\
sed '1s%^/\*#x# \* [^#]*#x# \*#x# \*[ ]\+This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or#x# \*[ ]\+modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public#x# \*[ ]\+License as published by the Free Software Foundation version 2.1#x# \*[ ]\+of the License.#x# \*/'"$NEWLINES"'%/\* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-only \*/#x##x#%' |
\
sed '1s%^\(\)/\*#x# \* [^#]*#x# \*#x# \*[ ]\+This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or#x# \*[ ]\+modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public#x# \*[ ]\+License as published by the Free Software Foundation version 2.1#x# \*[ ]\+of the License.#x# \*#x#'"$COPYRIGHTS"' \*/'"$NEWLINES"'%/\* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-only \*/#x#/*#x#\2 */#x##x#%' |
\
sed '1s%^\(/\* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-only \*/\|\)#x#/\*#x# \* [^#]*#x# \*#x# \*[ ]\+This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or#x# \*[ ]\+modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as#x# \*[ ]\+published by the Free Software Foundation version 2 of the License.#x# \*#x#'"$COPYRIGHTS"' \*/'"$NEWLINES"'%/\* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only \*/#x#/*#x#\2 */#x##x#%'
}
FILES=( $(files_all) )
for f in "${FILES[@]}"; do
echo "processing \"$f\"..."
in_file "$f" | join | adjust | unjoin | out_file "$f"
done
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I have a patch against commit d378220c96c3c8b6f27dca33e7d8ba03318f9c2d
extending libnl with a facility to receive generic netlink messages sent
to multicast groups.
Essentially it add one new function genl_ctrl_resolve_grp which
prototype looks like this
int genl_ctrl_resolve_grp(struct nl_sock *sk, const char *family_name,
const char *grp_name)
It resolves the family name and the group name to group id. Then
the returned id can be used in nl_socket_add_membership to subscribe
to multicast messages.
Besides that it adds two more functions
uint32_t nl_socket_get_peer_groups(struct nl_sock *sk)
void nl_socket_set_peer_groups(struct nl_sock *sk, uint32_t groups)
allowing to modify the socket peer groups field. So it's possible to
multicast messages from the user space using the legacy interface.
Looks like there is no way (or I was not able to find one?) to modify
the netlink socket destination group from the user space, when the
group id is greater then 32.
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