-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I thought the Mach goo was starting to be separated out into its own gooey file? :) You mention it being more work to keep the artificial division, but I though the "division" was one of the goals of making launchd "more" open source? To allow for (namely me :P) the community to start adapting launchd to other non-Mach (and thus no wonderful MIG) systems, like FreeBSD. From my understanding _unix_ipc.c and _mach_ipc.c weren't too "relevant" in terms of offering different IPC implementations, but I was under the impression that further down the line I would be throwing pure unix sockets (or otherwise) IPC into the former for FreeBSD/OpenBSD/etc while the majority of launchd IPC on Darwin remained tied to Mach ports? Besides, its a Sunday, tsk tsk, working on a sunday ;) Cheers, - -R. Tyler Ballance Lead Developer, bleep. LLC http://www.bleepsoft.com On Sep 24, 2006, at 4:38 PM, source_changes@macosforge.org wrote:
Revision 22881 Author zarzycki@apple.com Date 2006-09-24 14:38:16 -0700 (Sun, 24 Sep 2006) Log MessageFold launchd_mach_ipc.c into launchd_core_logic.c. This isn't as bad as it sounds. MIG does nearly all of the hard Mach related IPC logic. It was actually more work in the long run to keep the artificial division. For the casual reader, the code that is in launchd_unix_ipc.c is automatically generated from MIG via the ".defs" file. I was surprised to see that launchd_mach_ipc.c was empty after the MIG callouts were folded into launchd_core_logic.c. In hindsight, that made sense. The rest of the Mach goo was folded into launchd_runtime.c -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.3 (Darwin)
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