- May 14, 2020
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Nick Mathewson authored
(These are not "changes since 0.4.2")
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Nick Mathewson authored
This was made by taking all 0.4.3.x changelogs up to this point and sorting them.
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
This is a workaround for https://github.com/torproject/stem/issues/63
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- May 06, 2020
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
Fixes bug 34131; bugfix on 0.4.3.1-alpha.
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Nick Mathewson authored
This one is harmless like the others (so far)
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
GCC added an implicit-fallthrough warning a while back, where it would complain if you had a nontrivial "case:" block that didn't end with break, return, or something like that. Clang recently added the same thing. GCC, however, would let you annotate a fall-through as intended by any of various magic "/* fall through */" comments. Clang, however, only seems to like "__attribute__((fallthrough))". Fortunately, GCC accepts that too. A previous commit in this branch defined a FALLTHROUGH macro to do the right thing if GNUC is defined; here we replace all of our "fall through" comments with uses of that macro. This is an automated commit, made with the following perl one-liner: #!/usr/bin/perl -i -p s#/\* *falls? ?thr.*?\*/#FALLTHROUGH;#i; (In order to avoid conflicts, I'm applying this script separately to each maint branch. This is the 0.4.3 version.)
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Nick Mathewson authored
This is an "ours" merge to avoid taking the maint-0.4.2 version of the 34078 fix.
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Nick Mathewson authored
GCC added an implicit-fallthrough warning a while back, where it would complain if you had a nontrivial "case:" block that didn't end with break, return, or something like that. Clang recently added the same thing. GCC, however, would let you annotate a fall-through as intended by any of various magic "/* fall through */" comments. Clang, however, only seems to like "__attribute__((fallthrough))". Fortunately, GCC accepts that too. A previous commit in this branch defined a FALLTHROUGH macro to do the right thing if GNUC is defined; here we replace all of our "fall through" comments with uses of that macro. This is an automated commit, made with the following perl one-liner: #!/usr/bin/perl -i -p s#/\* *falls? ?thr.*?\*/#FALLTHROUGH;#i; (In order to avoid conflicts, I'm applying this script separately to each maint branch. This is the 0.4.2 version.)
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Nick Mathewson authored
This is an "ours" merge to avoid taking the 0.4.1 version of the 34078 fix.
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Nick Mathewson authored
GCC added an implicit-fallthrough warning a while back, where it would complain if you had a nontrivial "case:" block that didn't end with break, return, or something like that. Clang recently added the same thing. GCC, however, would let you annotate a fall-through as intended by any of various magic "/* fall through */" comments. Clang, however, only seems to like "__attribute__((fallthrough))". Fortunately, GCC accepts that too. A previous commit in this branch defined a FALLTHROUGH macro to do the right thing if GNUC is defined; here we replace all of our "fall through" comments with uses of that macro. This is an automated commit, made with the following perl one-liner: #!/usr/bin/perl -i -p s#/\* *falls? ?thr.*?\*/#FALLTHROUGH;#i; (In order to avoid conflicts, I'm applying this script separately to each maint branch. This is the 0.4.1 version.)
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Nick Mathewson authored
This is an "ours" merge to avoid taking the 0.3.5 fix for 34078.
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Nick Mathewson authored
GCC added an implicit-fallthrough warning a while back, where it would complain if you had a nontrivial "case:" block that didn't end with break, return, or something like that. Clang recently added the same thing. GCC, however, would let you annotate a fall-through as intended by any of various magic "/* fall through */" comments. Clang, however, only seems to like "__attribute__((fallthrough))". Fortunately, GCC accepts that too. A previous commit in this branch defined a FALLTHROUGH macro to do the right thing if GNUC is defined; here we replace all of our "fall through" comments with uses of that macro. This is an automated commit, made with the following perl one-liner: #!/usr/bin/perl -i -p s#/\* *falls? ?thr.*?\*/#FALLTHROUGH;#i;
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
There's nothing wrong with the comment, but the script I'm about to apply wouldn't like it.
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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Nick Mathewson authored
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