* harbour/include/hbapi.h
* harbour/source/common/hbstr.c
+ added hb_numToStr()
* harbour/source/vm/estack.c
* harbour/source/compiler/genc.c
* harbour/source/compiler/gencc.c
* use hb_numToStr() for integer number conversions
* harbour/source/vm/dlmalloc.c
* disable #pragma warning ... in MinGW builds. If some newer MinGW
versions support it and it's useful then it can be enabled after
checking MinGW version
* source/common/hbfopen.c
* Changed hb_fopen() to use fopen_s(), secure version of
fopen() for MSVS 2005 and upper.
* source/common/hbstr.c
+ Added hb_snprintf() Harbour wrapper for snprintf() which
terminates the buffer with a '\0' char for CRTLs that
need this (like MSVC).
MSVC _snprintf() doesn't do so.
* hb_snprintf() used _snprintf_s(), secure version of
_snprintf() for MSVS 2005 and upper.
; TOFIX: There is still one strcpy() marked as non-secure
in debug lib. Could someone please take a look
at it and replace it with hb_strncpy() or something
else secure? The code is cryptic and as someone
not using the debugger, I didn't dare to touch it,
and this is the only one such call left.
; TODO: Change all snprintf() calls to hb_snprintf().
When that happens, Harbour will no more use anything
depicted as "non-secure" by MSVS 2005/2008.
; NOTE: This function may need tweaking, pls review and
fix if/where needed.
* source/vm/dlmalloc.c
! Fixed MSVC C++ mode compile error. This fix also exists
as part of the next dlmalloc version (2.8.4b).
2008-10-26 07:27 UTC+0200 Viktor Szakats (harbour.01 syenar hu)
* contrib/hbdbgfx/dbgfx.prg
* Minor cleanup.
* contrib/hbdbgfx/dbgfxc.c
! Fixed GPF when non-string parameter passed to
hb_outdebug().
* harbour/source/vm/fm.c
+ harbour/source/vm/dlmalloc.c
+ added alternative memory manager written by Doug Lea
It can be activated by recompiling Harbour with HB_FM_DL_ALLOC macro.
Please make test on different platforms with different C compilers.
Linux users will not benefit from it because the default GLIBC MM
is derived from a version of code.
NOTE: the results may strongly depend on total memory allocation
and will be different then in simple memory tests.