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Unfortunately "-std=c99" is not sufficient to make gcc ignore code that
uses constructs of earlier C standards, which were abandoned in C99.
See https://lwn.net/ml/fedora-devel/Y1kvF35WozzGBpc8@redhat.com/ for
some related discussion.
Change-Id: I79c51b78d1b055361f9ef5434361847353791d0d
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See Id8d997c9d5e655ff1842ec69eab6c073875c6330
Related: CID#275417
Related: SYS#5599
Change-Id: I63d52a4f5dba32d3a3887dd9c5e42e1695fb2aa3
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Related: SYS#5895
Change-Id: I9f4651b6bee457583aba99052dc82bbf675515e6
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Defining a protocol of message types with lists of IEs bears a lot of
repetitive, copy-paste-error-prone writing out of data structures.
Add a third layer to libosmo-gtlv, which allows helpful code generation.
By non-repetitive data structures that briefly describe the protocol's
messages and IEs, generate possibly repetitive IE list arrays and
decoded-struct definitions automatically, avoiding grunt work errors.
I tried C macros for this at first, but it became too convoluted.
Generating C code that can be read and grepped makes things easier.
A usage example is found in tests/libosmo-gtlv/test_gtlv_gen/.
Related: SYS#5599
Change-Id: Ifb3ea54d2797ce060b95834aa117725ec2d6c4cf
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