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Operating Systems BSD LFS-like thing, but with *BSD? Post 302462437 by Blackbird on Thursday 14th of October 2010 08:16:10 AM
Old 10-14-2010
LFS-like thing, but with *BSD?

Hi,

do you know, is there any thing like Linux From Scratch, but for a BSD operating system?

A tutorial or guide to learn (and build) the system inside out? Would be pretty cool IMO. Smilie

Blackbird
 

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GETPROGNAME(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 					    GETPROGNAME(3)

NAME
getprogname, setprogname -- get or set the program name LIBRARY
Utility functions from BSD systems (libbsd, -lbsd) SYNOPSIS
#include <bsd/stdlib.h> const char * getprogname(void); void setprogname(const char *progname); DESCRIPTION
The getprogname() and setprogname() functions manipulate the name of the current program. They are used by error-reporting routines to pro- duce consistent output. The getprogname() function returns the name of the program. If the name has not been set yet, it will return NULL. The setprogname() function sets the name of the program to be the last component of the progname argument. Since a pointer to the given string is kept as the program name, it should not be modified for the rest of the program's lifetime. In FreeBSD, the name of the program is set by the start-up code that is run before main(); thus, running setprogname() is not necessary. Programs that desire maximum portability should still call it; on another operating system, these functions may be implemented in a portabil- ity library. Calling setprogname() allows the aforementioned library to learn the program name without modifications to the start-up code. SEE ALSO
err(3), setproctitle(3) HISTORY
These functions first appeared in NetBSD 1.6, and made their way into FreeBSD 4.4. BSD
May 1, 2001 BSD
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