Move valloc() to posix.cfg since it is a legacy POSIX function and not
part of the standard (not even commonly used). It is not available in
msvc (Visual Studio).
This fixes issue 8996 by improving the alias checking by using lifetime analysis. It also extends the lifetime checker to handle constructors and initializer lists for containers and arrays.
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)
The official documentation recommends to include the Python C API via
`#include "Python.h"`:
https://docs.python.org/3/c-api/intro.html
And many projects do it exactly this way, that is why the client script
often does not detect the usage of the Python C API.
- 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.