-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- Copyright (c) 1998-2008,2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. --
+-- Copyright 2020 Thomas E. Dickey --
+-- Copyright 1998-2010,2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc. --
-- --
-- Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a --
-- copy of this software and associated documentation files (the --
-- sale, use or other dealings in this Software without prior written --
-- authorization. --
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- $Id: TO-DO,v 1.54 2010/01/09 16:48:05 tom Exp $
+-- $Id: TO-DO,v 1.58 2020/02/02 23:34:34 tom Exp $
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SHORT-TERM TO-DO ITEMS:
+ the --with-pthread configuration builds for Cygwin, but does not work
properly (test/worm.c shows all of the worms in the same location).
-+ the Ada95 tree requires a small fix to build on Cygwin, since the GNAT port
- to that platform provides an incomplete Interrupts.Names package. For
- instance (your gcc version may be different):
- /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-cygwin/3.4.4/adainclude/a-intnam.ads
-
- cut here...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---- a-intnam.ads.orig 2003-10-21 13:41:51.000000000 +0000
-+++ a-intnam.ads 2007-05-05 22:40:02.609375000 +0000
-@@ -44,5 +44,6 @@
-
- DUMMY_INTERRUPT_1 : constant Interrupt_ID := 1;
- DUMMY_INTERRUPT_2 : constant Interrupt_ID := 2;
-+ SIGINT : constant Interrupt_ID := 2;
-
- end Ada.Interrupts.Names;
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
+ the --enable-rpath configure option builds for the corresponding platforms;
however combining it with --with-ticlib and --with-termlib does not always
produce libraries that can be run without setting environment variables.
Building those with libtool does not work either. (This is a problem with
the BSD platforms).
++ more work is needed to make the MinGW port support ordinary terminals.
+
Portability (or lack thereof):
+ Users of older System V UNIXes (but not Solaris, and probably not SVr4) may