![]() On some architectures, uint64_t is defined as: typedef unsigned long long int __u64; on another architectures as: typedef unsigned long int __u64; So, according to man 3 printf, uint64_t should be printed as "%llu" on some architectures, and as "%lu" on another. The same for scanf. To eliminate that challenge, there is inttypes.h, in which appropriate constants are defined for current architecture. 32-bit types (and even 16 and 8 bit types) should be printed using such constants if printed variable defined as uint_XXXt or intXXXt type. But in reality 32-bit and less types does not gain run-time error (except in scanf), because they pushed to stack as 32-bit values at least. So, I decide not to fix that. |
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api.c | ||
bonding.c | ||
bridge.c | ||
dummy.c | ||
inet.c | ||
inet6.c | ||
vlan.c |