Some of these are pretty heavily used, so saving 10-20 bytes each can be
quite significant.
No functional differences.
svn path=/trunk/thread/; revision=4401
does using thread_exit(). thread_exit() was freeing the thread structure, so
thread_join was using freed memory. Rearrange things so that if the thread
is detached, the freeing happens in thread_join instead.
svn path=/trunk/thread/; revision=3944
logging API changed slightly (I got sick of gcc warnings about deprecated
features).
resampling (for live input, not yet for reencoding) is in there.
several patches from Karl Heyes have been incorporated.
svn path=/trunk/log/; revision=3751
The original patch from Ben Laurie some years ago was needed because
FreeBSD's default stack size was < 8k and this wasn't acceptable.
Both Linux and Solaris had reasonable defaults for stacksize, or grew the
stack as needed to a reasonable size.
Testing today and consulting documentation shows that the default stack
sizes on FreeBSD, Linux, and Solaris are all acceptable. Linux can grow
to 2MB, 32bit Solaris defaults to 1MB, 64bit Solaris defaults to 2MB, and
FreeBSD defaults to 64k.
In my opinion FreeBSD needs to get with the program and provide a
reasonable default. 64k is enough for us, but might not be for others.
svn path=/trunk/thread/; revision=2222
bases is not enough. ices and icecast need this to be different, and
if one is interested in tuning memory usage, one will want to alter this
per thread.
svn path=/trunk/thread/; revision=2217