Since an obvious implementation of va_list is to make it a pointer
into the stack frame, implementing va_copy as "dst = src" will work on
many systems. Platforms that use something different (e.g., a size-1
array of structs, to be assigned with *(dst) = *(src)) will need some
other compatibility macro, though.
Luckily, as the glibc manual hints, such systems tend to provide the
__va_copy macro (introduced in GCC in March, 1997). By using that if
it is available, we can cover our bases pretty well.
Discovered by building with CC="gcc -std=c89" on an amd64 machine:
$ make CC=c89 strbuf.o
[...]
strbuf.c: In function 'strbuf_vaddf':
strbuf.c:211:2: error: incompatible types when assigning to type 'va_list'
from type 'struct __va_list_tag *'
make: *** [strbuf.o] Error 1
Explained-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
#endif
#ifndef va_copy
-#define va_copy(dst,src) (dst) = (src)
+/*
+ * Since an obvious implementation of va_list would be to make it a
+ * pointer into the stack frame, a simple assignment will work on
+ * many systems. But let's try to be more portable.
+ */
+#ifdef __va_copy
+#define va_copy(dst, src) __va_copy(dst, src)
+#else
+#define va_copy(dst, src) ((dst) = (src))
+#endif
#endif
/*