musl - an implementation of the standard library for Linux-based systems
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Rich Felker 95c6044e2a add support for BOM-determined-endian UCS2, UTF-16, and UTF-32 to iconv
previously, the charset names without endianness specified were always
interpreted as big endian. unicode specifies that UTF-16 and UTF-32
have BOM-determined endianness if BOM is present, and are otherwise
big endian. since commit 5b546faa67
added support for stateful encodings, it is now possible to implement
BOM support via the conversion descriptor state.

for conversions to these charsets, the output is always big endian and
does not have a BOM.
2017-12-18 22:31:18 -05:00
arch fix x32 unistd macros to report as ILP32 not LP64 2017-12-14 21:22:51 -05:00
crt add s390x port 2016-11-11 23:06:21 -05:00
dist add another example option to dist/config.mak 2012-04-24 16:49:11 -04:00
include fix endian errors in netinet/icmp6.h due to failure to include endian.h 2017-12-15 12:58:33 -05:00
ldso fix malloc state corruption when ldso rejects loading a second libc 2017-11-13 15:27:10 -05:00
src add support for BOM-determined-endian UCS2, UTF-16, and UTF-32 to iconv 2017-12-18 22:31:18 -05:00
tools add CFI generation script for x86_64 2015-10-13 18:09:46 -04:00
.gitignore remove obsolete gitignore rules 2016-07-06 00:21:25 -04:00
configure disable global visibility override hack (vis.h) by default 2017-08-11 00:17:00 -04:00
COPYRIGHT update COPYRIGHT file to clarify that permissions apply for all files 2016-04-28 20:41:45 -04:00
INSTALL add powerpc64 and s390x to list of supported archs in INSTALL file 2017-08-29 20:48:02 -04:00
Makefile remove unused explicit dependency rules for crti/crtn 2017-12-14 23:19:34 -05:00
README update version reference in the README file 2014-06-25 14:16:53 -04:00
VERSION release 1.1.18 2017-10-31 15:13:58 -04:00
WHATSNEW release 1.1.18 2017-10-31 15:13:58 -04:00

    musl libc

musl, pronounced like the word "mussel", is an MIT-licensed
implementation of the standard C library targetting the Linux syscall
API, suitable for use in a wide range of deployment environments. musl
offers efficient static and dynamic linking support, lightweight code
and low runtime overhead, strong fail-safe guarantees under correct
usage, and correctness in the sense of standards conformance and
safety. musl is built on the principle that these goals are best
achieved through simple code that is easy to understand and maintain.

The 1.1 release series for musl features coverage for all interfaces
defined in ISO C99 and POSIX 2008 base, along with a number of
non-standardized interfaces for compatibility with Linux, BSD, and
glibc functionality.

For basic installation instructions, see the included INSTALL file.
Information on full musl-targeted compiler toolchains, system
bootstrapping, and Linux distributions built on musl can be found on
the project website:

    http://www.musl-libc.org/