Bug Fix/Code Cleanup/Doc Cleanup/Optimization/Branch Sync :-)
Description:
Generally speaking, this is the "signed->unsigned" change to selections.
However, in the process of merging code back, things got stickier and stickier
until I ended up doing a big "sync the two branches up" operation. So... I
brought back all the "infrastructure" fixes from the development branch to the
release branch (which I think were actually making some improvement in
performance) as well as fixed several bugs which had been fixed in one branch,
but not the other.
I've also tagged the repository before making this checkin with the label
"before_signed_unsigned_changes".
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.10 (sleipnir) w/parallel & fphdf5
FreeBSD 4.10 (sleipnir) w/threadsafe
FreeBSD 4.10 (sleipnir) w/backward compatibility
Solaris 2.7 (arabica) w/"purify options"
Solaris 2.8 (sol) w/FORTRAN & C++
AIX 5.x (copper) w/parallel & FORTRAN
IRIX64 6.5 (modi4) w/FORTRAN
Linux 2.4 (heping) w/FORTRAN & C++
Misc. update:
Code cleanup & bug fix
Description:
Cleanup another set of warnings on Windows and also fix mis-placed assertion
that caused the daily tests to fail.
Platforms tested:
IRIX64 6.5 (modi4) w/-n32
Purpose:
bug fix
Description:
Need to use HDopen, HDread for windows support.
off_t in windows is 32-bit; however, windows can support 64-bit file. So we
have to change off_t to int64 in order that >4G file can be supported.
Solution:
See above
Platforms tested:
linux2.2.18smp, windows 2000
Misc. update:
Update MANIFEST if you add or remove any file.
Update release_docs/RELEASE for bug fixes, new features, etc.
Update applicable document files too.
Update
Description:
Replaced
#include <hdf5_file.h>
with
#include "hdf5_file.h"
so that gcc can pick up our files more easily without picking up
system header files (which we don't care about being in the
dependencies list).
Platforms tested:
Linux
Code Movement
Description:
Moved the tools into their own separate directories (except for these
small tools which are REALLY small, not tested, or documented,
really...They just get put into the misc/ directory).
Platforms tested:
Linux and Kelgia