Some POSIX and Windows functions require buffers of at least some
specific size. This is now possible to configure via for example this
minsize configuration: `<minsize type="value" value="26"/>`.
The range for valid buffer size values is 1 to LLONG_MAX
(9223372036854775807)
- Remove redundant function configurations for the same function since
it is not (yet) possible to configure overloaded functions. Instead mark
the optional arguments with `default="0"` so the configuration works
with a different number of arguments.
- Add documentation to boost.cfg (links and function declarations).
- Rearranged configurations so functions, defines, ... are together now.
- Add `direction` for function arguments where applicable.
- Add some tests to boost.cpp.
- CLI: Save the libraries that should be loaded to a list and load them
after the std.cfg has been loaded.
- GUI: Load std.cfg (and windows.cfg / posix.cfg when applicable) before
setting other options and loading the other libraries.
In the project-file-dialog the std.cfg is searched first. If some
other library fails to load is is retried with first loading std.cfg.
- boost.cfg: Enable containers that depend on std containers.
wprintf(): The format string must be initialized. So add `<not-uninit/>`
swprintf(): `<formatstr/>` should not be used because Microsoft uses the
same function with a different order of the arguments. Add comment to
document this in the library configuration also. See ticket
https://trac.cppcheck.net/ticket/4790
As can be read here:
https://www.gnu.org/software/gettext//manual/html_node/Mark-Keywords.html
The _(str) macro is typically defined for a project to abbreviate the
gettext(str) call. Although this is not part of GNU it would enhance the
analysis. Cppcheck often does not know what _() is. In daca@home it is
reported thousands of times as a function without configuration.