Mail Archives: djgpp/1998/05/08/13:19:01
Nate Eldredge wrote:
>
> At 09:59 5/4/1998 -0400, Vic wrote:
> >We're making n OS and would like to make it POSIX compliant. Where can
> >we find a description of the standard, without buying it from anyone, or
> >a book.
>
[snip]
> BTW, I think it's the case (or at least it used to be) that the official
> definition of "POSIX-compliant" involved running the package through a
> verification suite. This suite is owned by someone (USL?) and they charge a
> lot of money to do it.
You also need to produce a compliance statement. This consists of,
amongst other things, statements about which optional features are
supported
and definitions of resource limits where POSIX makes minimum
requirements
but no maximum requirements. One example might be the maximum number
of files that one process can open. POSIX sets a minimum bound; you
are also required to describe the behaviour. In some systems, the
value may be hard-coded. In others, a kernel parameter (can be changed,
but kernel rebuild needed.) In others, a boot-time parameter. In others,
a user-by-user limit. And in yet others, it may vary depending on what
resources are available.
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