The Linux build was failing with:
sim65/paravirt.c: In function ‘PVOpen’:
sim65/paravirt.c:217:18: error: ‘S_IREAD’ undeclared (first use in this function)
OMode |= S_IREAD;
^
sim65/paravirt.c:217:18: note: each undeclared identifier is reported only once for each function it appears in
sim65/paravirt.c:220:18: error: ‘S_IWRITE’ undeclared (first use in this function)
OMode |= S_IWRITE;
^
make[1]: *** [../wrk/sim65/paravirt.o] Error 1
Files created by my programs running under sim65 had really weird permissions:
--w-r--r-x 1 ppelleti staff 19 Aug 16 23:22 json.test.print.tmp
So, for example, my program running under sim65 was not able to read
the file it had just written.
This is because the third argument to open (mode) was not being
specified in paravirt.c, so it was just picking up random crud off the
stack to use as the mode.
I added a mode of 0666, and now my program runs correctly.
The Microsoft C Library needs to have spawnvp() parameters with spaces quoted manually. We do this only if actually necessary to limit issues with parameters already containing double quotes.
cc65 escapes spaces in paths it writes to dependency files (see WriteEscaped() in cc65/input.c). Given that the output of OptPrintTargetPath() is supposed to be used in Makefiles in pretty much the same way it is appropriate to escape spaces here too.
Although the primary target OS for the Apple II for sure isn't DOS 3.3 but ProDOS 8 the Apple II binary files contained a DOS 3.3 4-byte header. Recently I was made aware of the AppleSingle file format. That format is a much better way to transport Apple II meta data from the cc65 toolchain to the ProDOS 8 file system. Therefore I asked AppleCommander to support the AppleSingle file format. Now that there's an AppleCommander BETA with AppleSingle support it's the right time for this change.
I bumped version to 2.17 because of this from the perspective of Apple II users of course incompatible change.
Reverted part of 3157e4be1e as it actually introduced a regression.
It doesn't make sense to check for Arg[3] == '\0' _before_ checking Arg[2] != '\0'. This made the Win32 builds fail to correctly parse e.g. cl65 -W unused-var test.c
The change allows cc65 to be compiled on 64-bit Windows, without getting warnings. That OS is actually 32 bits with 64-bit pointers. Its pointers are "long long" instead of "long". The change uses type-names that are configured for the actual pointer width.
It checks only the bytes that actually were printed. It won't show a bad error message when disassembling address $0000. Fixes#506 on cc65's Github project.