It's never worked very well having nesemu1.com and printvideo.com spawning an ffmpeg or sox subprocess and streaming audio samples via pipes. Since these programs don't work very well for that purpose, and if you're SSH'ing into the cloud, the speaker could be very far away. This change is part of an experiment to instead patch desktop terminals such as PuTTY, KiTTY, gnome-terminal, etc. to support receiving inband audio samples as ANSI code, and then playing them on the speakers of the local machine that's being used. This way we can use printf() as a cross platform audio playback library. |
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.. | ||
calls | ||
consts | ||
errfuns | ||
consts.sh | ||
describeos.greg.c | ||
errfun.S | ||
errfuns.h | ||
errfuns.sh | ||
errno.c | ||
errno_location.greg.c | ||
gen.sh | ||
gettls.greg.c | ||
macros.internal.h | ||
README.md | ||
restorert.S | ||
strace.greg.c | ||
syscall.S | ||
syscalls.sh | ||
syscount.S | ||
systemfive.S | ||
sysv.mk |
SYNOPSIS
System Five Import Libraries
OVERVIEW
Bell System Five is the umbrella term we use to describe Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and Mac OS X which all have nearly-identical application binary interfaces that stood the test of time, having definitions nearly the same as those of AT&T back in the 1980's.
Cosmopolitan aims to help you build apps that can endure over the course of decades, just like these systems have: without needing to lift a finger for maintenance churn, broken builds, broken hearts.
The challenge to System V binary compatibility basically boils down to numbers. All these systems agree on what services are provided, but tend to grant them wildly different numbers.
We address this by putting all the numbers in a couple big shell scripts, ask the GNU Assembler to encode them into binaries using an efficient LEB128 encoding, unpacked by _init(), and ref'd via extern const. It gives us good debuggability, and any costs are gained back by fewer branches in wrapper functions.z