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authorUlrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com>2004-12-22 20:10:10 +0000
committerUlrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com>2004-12-22 20:10:10 +0000
commita334319f6530564d22e775935d9c91663623a1b4 (patch)
treeb5877475619e4c938e98757d518bb1e9cbead751 /posix/gai.conf
parent0ecb606cb6cf65de1d9fc8a919bceb4be476c602 (diff)
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(CFLAGS-tst-align.c): Add -mpreferred-stack-boundary=4.
Diffstat (limited to 'posix/gai.conf')
-rw-r--r--posix/gai.conf52
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 52 deletions
diff --git a/posix/gai.conf b/posix/gai.conf
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-# Configuration for getaddrinfo(3).
-#
-# So far only configuration for the destination address sorting is needed.
-# RFC 3484 governs the sorting.  But the RFC also says that system
-# administrators should be able to overwrite the defaults.  This can be
-# achieved here.
-#
-# All lines have an initial identifier specifying the option followed by
-# up to two values.  Information specified in this file replaces the
-# default information.  Complete absence of data of one kind causes the
-# appropriate default information to be used.  The supported commands include:
-#
-# reload  <yes|no>
-#    If set to yes, each getaddrinfo(3) call will check whether this file
-#    changed and if necessary reload.  This option should not really be
-#    used.  There are possible runtime problems.  The default is no.
-#
-# label   <mask>   <value>
-#    Add another rule to the RFC 3484 label table.  See section 2.1 in
-#    RFC 3484.  The default is:
-#
-#label  ::1/128       0
-#label  ::/0          1
-#label  2002::/16     2
-#label ::/96          3
-#label ::ffff:0:0/96  4
-#label  fec0::/10     5
-#label  fc00::/7      6
-#
-#    This default differs from the tables given in RFC 3484 by handling
-#    (now obsolete) site-local IPv6 addresses and Unique Local Addresses.
-#    The reason for this difference is that these addresses are never
-#    NATed while IPv4 site-local addresses most probably are.  Given
-#    the precedence of IPv6 over IPv4 (see below) on machines having only
-#    site-local IPv4 and IPv6 addresses a lookup for a global address would
-#    see the IPv6 be preferred.  The result is a long delay because the
-#    site-local IPv6 addresses cannot be used while the IPv4 address is
-#    (at least for the foreseeable future) NATed.
-#
-# precedence  <mask>   <value>
-#    Add another rule the to RFC 3484 precedence table.  See section 2.1
-#    and 10.3 in RFC 3484.  The default is:
-#
-#precedence  ::1/128       50
-#precedence  ::/0          40
-#precedence  2002::/16     30
-#precedence ::/96          20
-#precedence ::ffff:0:0/96  10
-#
-#    For sites which prefer IPv4 connections change the last line to
-#
-#precedence ::ffff:0:0/96  100