Apparently, our windows code for detecting ipv6 structures has worked for a while. Remove the special-case, remove the related XXXX020s, and add useful comments instead.

svn:r13377
This commit is contained in:
Nick Mathewson 2008-02-05 19:36:06 +00:00
parent c397c64d15
commit 54029559d7

View File

@ -271,8 +271,11 @@ int get_n_open_sockets(void);
typedef int socklen_t; typedef int socklen_t;
#endif #endif
/* XXXX020 detect in6_addr correctly on ms_windows; this is a hack. */ /* Define struct in6_addr on platforms that do not have it. Generally,
#if !defined(HAVE_STRUCT_IN6_ADDR) && !defined(MS_WINDOWS) * these platforms are ones without IPv6 support, but we want to have
* a working in6_addr there anyway, so we can use it to parse IPv6
* addresses. */
#if !defined(HAVE_STRUCT_IN6_ADDR)
struct in6_addr struct in6_addr
{ {
union { union {
@ -313,8 +316,9 @@ typedef uint16_t sa_family_t;
#define S6_ADDR16(x) ((uint16_t*)((char*)&(x).s6_addr)) #define S6_ADDR16(x) ((uint16_t*)((char*)&(x).s6_addr))
#endif #endif
/* XXXX020 detect sockaddr_in6 correctly on ms_windows; this is also a hack. */ /* Define struct sockaddr_in6 on platforms that do not have it. See notes
#if !defined(HAVE_STRUCT_SOCKADDR_IN6) && !defined(MS_WINDOWS) * on struct in6_addr. */
#if !defined(HAVE_STRUCT_SOCKADDR_IN6)
struct sockaddr_in6 { struct sockaddr_in6 {
sa_family_t sin6_family; sa_family_t sin6_family;
uint16_t sin6_port; uint16_t sin6_port;