Consistently say "GNU C Library" in NEWS, not "glibc".

This commit is contained in:
Joseph Myers 2017-07-05 13:46:57 +00:00
parent 2b2ccd0c63
commit 7e368000c0

40
NEWS
View File

@ -19,19 +19,19 @@ Major new features:
* Improvements to the DNS stub resolver, contributed by Florian Weimer:
- glibc will now detect when /etc/resolv.conf has been modified and reload
the changed configuration. The new resolver option “no-reload”
(RES_NORELOAD) disables this behavior.
- The GNU C Library will now detect when /etc/resolv.conf has been
modified and reload the changed configuration. The new resolver option
“no-reload” (RES_NORELOAD) disables this behavior.
- glibc now supports an arbitrary number of search domains (configured using
the “search” directive in /etc/resolv.conf); previously, there was a
hard limit of six domains. For backward compatibility, applications
that directly modify the _res global object are still limited to six
search domains.
- The GNU C Library now supports an arbitrary number of search domains
(configured using the “search” directive in /etc/resolv.conf);
previously, there was a hard limit of six domains. For backward
compatibility, applications that directly modify the _res global
object are still limited to six search domains.
- When the “rotate” (RES_ROTATE) resolver option is active, glibc will now
randomly pick a name server from the configuration as a starting point.
(Previously, the second name server was always used.)
- When the “rotate” (RES_ROTATE) resolver option is active, the GNU C
Library will now randomly pick a name server from the configuration as a
starting point. (Previously, the second name server was always used.)
* The tunables feature is now enabled by default. This allows users to tweak
behavior of the GNU C Library using the GLIBC_TUNABLES environment variable.
@ -167,7 +167,7 @@ Deprecated and removed features, and other changes affecting compatibility:
removed.
* Sun RPC is deprecated. The rpcgen program, librpcsvc, and Sun RPC headers
will only be built and installed when glibc is configured with
will only be built and installed when the GNU C Library is configured with
--enable-obsolete-rpc. This allows alternative RPC implementations, such
as TIRPC or rpcsvc-proto, to be used.
@ -178,8 +178,8 @@ Deprecated and removed features, and other changes affecting compatibility:
The NIS(+) support library, libnsl, is also deprecated. By default, a
compatibility shared library will be built and installed, but not headers
or development libraries. Only a few NIS-related programs require this
library. (In particular, glibc has never required programs that use
'gethostbyname' to be linked with libnsl.)
library. (In particular, the GNU C Library has never required programs
that use 'gethostbyname' to be linked with libnsl.)
Replacement implementations based on TIRPC, which additionally support
IPv6, are available from <https://github.com/thkukuk/>. The configure
@ -247,15 +247,15 @@ Changes to build and runtime requirements:
supported by that kernel. (This is a change from version 2.25 only for
x86-32 and x86-64.)
* GNU Binutils 2.25 or later is now required to build glibc.
* GNU Binutils 2.25 or later is now required to build the GNU C Library.
* On most architectures, GCC 4.9 or later is required to build glibc. On
powerpc64le, GCC 6.2 or later is required.
* On most architectures, GCC 4.9 or later is required to build the GNU C
Library. On powerpc64le, GCC 6.2 or later is required.
Older GCC versions and non-GNU compilers are still supported when
compiling programs that use glibc. (We do not know exactly how old,
and some GNU extensions to C may be _de facto_ required. If you are
interested in helping us make this statement less vague, please
compiling programs that use the GNU C Library. (We do not know exactly
how old, and some GNU extensions to C may be _de facto_ required. If you
are interested in helping us make this statement less vague, please
contact libc-alpha@sourceware.org.)
Security related changes: