Apparently <stdint.h> is not enough for uint32_t on OpenBSD; use
"unsigned int" -- hopefully that would stay 32-bit on every
platform we care about, at least until we update the pack-index
file format.
Our sha1 routines optimized for architectures use uint32_t and
expects '#include <stdint.h>' to be enough, so OpenBSD on arm or
ppc might have similar issues down the road, I dunno.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
#include "tree-walk.h"
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <signal.h>
-#include <stdint.h>
static const char pack_usage[] = "git-pack-objects [-q] [--no-reuse-delta] [--non-empty] [--local] [--incremental] [--window=N] [--depth=N] {--stdout | base-name} < object-list";
rix->revindex = xmalloc(sizeof(unsigned long) * (num_ent + 1));
for (i = 0; i < num_ent; i++) {
- uint32_t hl = *((uint32_t *)(index + 24 * i));
+ unsigned int hl = *((unsigned int *)(index + 24 * i));
rix->revindex[i] = ntohl(hl);
}
/* This knows the pack format -- the 20-byte trailer
#include "commit.h"
#include "tag.h"
#include "tree.h"
-#include <stdint.h>
#ifndef O_NOATIME
#if defined(__linux__) && (defined(__i386__) || defined(__PPC__))
int mi = (lo + hi) / 2;
int cmp = memcmp(index + 24 * mi + 4, sha1, 20);
if (!cmp) {
- e->offset = ntohl(*((uint32_t *)(index + 24 * mi)));
+ e->offset = ntohl(*((unsigned int *)(index + 24 * mi)));
memcpy(e->sha1, sha1, 20);
e->p = p;
return 1;