This patch adds missing newlines, trims multiple redundant final
newlines into a single one, and trims redundant leading newlines in all
*.phpt sections.
According to POSIX, a line is a sequence of zero or more non-' <newline>'
characters plus a terminating '<newline>' character. [1] Files should
normally have at least one final newline character.
C89 [2] and later standards [3] mention a final newline:
"A source file that is not empty shall end in a new-line character,
which shall not be immediately preceded by a backslash character."
Although it is not mandatory for all files to have a final newline
fixed, a more consistent and homogeneous approach brings less of commit
differences issues and a better development experience in certain text
editors and IDEs.
[1] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap03.html#tag_03_206
[2] https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c89/c89-draft.html#2.1.1.2
[3] https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c99/n1256.html#5.1.1.2
This patch adds missing newlines, trims multiple redundant final
newlines into a single one, and trims redundant leading newlines.
According to POSIX, a line is a sequence of zero or more non-' <newline>'
characters plus a terminating '<newline>' character. [1] Files should
normally have at least one final newline character.
C89 [2] and later standards [3] mention a final newline:
"A source file that is not empty shall end in a new-line character,
which shall not be immediately preceded by a backslash character."
Although it is not mandatory for all files to have a final newline
fixed, a more consistent and homogeneous approach brings less of commit
differences issues and a better development experience in certain text
editors and IDEs.
[1] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap03.html#tag_03_206
[2] https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c89/c89-draft.html#2.1.1.2
[3] https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c99/n1256.html#5.1.1.2
The *BSD systems have ACL routines built-in in libc rather than
in separate libacl. Update the configure check to detect that and enable
ACL support without adding 'acl' library.
FPM must be configured as a user.
Normally it defaults to the current user,
but if that's root it'll fail to startup
unless the --run-as-root option is provided.
Extend that logic into the test runner so that
we don't fail for stupid reasons.
If you're running `make test` as root and you want
FPM tests to run anyway, set TEST_FPM_RUN_AS_ROOT=1
in your environment.
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=74166
A host system with no/limited IPv6 support will fail at binding
the IPv6 ANYADDR address (::) as the address family is unsupported.
Deal with this by handling failure to implicitly bind to ::
as a soft failure, falling back to 0.0.0.0.
If binding to :: failed for some other reason (e.g. port in use)
then binding to 0.0.0.0 will likely fail as well, but we'll
get appropriate warnings for that.