After the UB was fixed in value.c, I tried running the build again and encoutered another instance of UB in gc.c. With this fixed I can now build janet with ubsan enabled, meaning there's no more UB encountered in janet_boot during the build.
The `janet_get_addrinfo` function retained code that was meant for
compliance with 3 separate function signatures under a single function
name. Changing things to be a single function signature was broken until
the code pertaining to the aforementioned was stripped out.
Prior commits was an attempt to make this one function adhere to 3
different function signatures! This puts an end to that and makes it
where it's a single function signature and if one wants to use the 4th
argument they'll need to explicitly set the 3rd argument (to nil for
default).
janet_get_sockettype expects a keyword but we're making it optional that
the call to the functions that use it with arity >=3 will be guaranteed
to have it as a keyword value! If it's not a keyword then it's the same
as NULL.
Primarily because trying to check the value results in a panic when the
value is not the type of value requested from the API. Also probably
cheaper and the previous idea of just getting the value then comparing
was pretty stupid (needed a string comparison... and was going to do
pointer comparison).
This will allow us to set the address we use for outgoing connections.
Builds, haven't checked it passes current tests, haven't checked it
actually works either.
Minimum interval for a timer must be 1 or more (or we get EINVAL) and
Janet fails tests and halts events that the programmer may still be
interested in.
A comptime known value of 0 for data in EV_SET with EVFILT_TIMER causes
a complete compilation failure (fails to link). This fixes it by making
it a 1 instead of a 0 for amount of milliseconds in the interval to wait
under NetBSD.
NetBSD and OpenBSD lack NOTE_ABSTIME and NOTE_MSECONDS, so we define
those and create a macro that we use for all timeout values in EV_TIMER
events that will on all BSD excepting FreeBSD change an absolute time
into an interval.
Checking throught NetBSD's man pages, excepting for NetBSD-current,
NetBSD uses `intptr_t` as the type for `.udata`. This change allows for
`.udata` to match whatever type (by cast) the underlying system uses.
Pretty obvious I thought control statements were glued to their opening
parenthesis at first and then I realized not and voila, a bundle of
mixed style. Hopefully this fixes all of it.