From: Sjoerd Mullender Date: Thu, 25 Jan 2001 10:10:39 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Let's keep things portable to non GCC compilers, please. X-Git-Tag: v2.1a2~191 X-Git-Url: http://git.ipfire.org/gitweb.cgi?a=commitdiff_plain;h=82e00d63506dd024098dda75114cb7839c6d92c6;p=thirdparty%2FPython%2Fcpython.git Let's keep things portable to non GCC compilers, please. You can only use mult-line strings in C if each line ends in \. --- diff --git a/Modules/fcntlmodule.c b/Modules/fcntlmodule.c index 91119c78a24a..5aa5516055fb 100644 --- a/Modules/fcntlmodule.c +++ b/Modules/fcntlmodule.c @@ -262,28 +262,28 @@ fcntl_lockf(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) } static char lockf_doc [] = -"lockf (fd, operation, length=0, start=0, whence=0) - -This is essentially a wrapper around the fcntl() locking calls. fd is the -file descriptor of the file to lock or unlock, and operation is one of the -following values: - - LOCK_UN - unlock - LOCK_SH - acquire a shared lock - LOCK_EX - acquire an exclusive lock - -When operation is LOCK_SH or LOCK_EX, it can also be bit-wise OR'd with -LOCK_NB to avoid blocking on lock acquisition. If LOCK_NB is used and the -lock cannot be acquired, an IOError will be raised and the exception will -have an errno attribute set to EACCES or EAGAIN (depending on the operating -system -- for portability, check for either value). - -length is the number of bytes to lock, with the default meaning to lock to -EOF. start is the byte offset, relative to whence, to that the lock -starts. whence is as with fileobj.seek(), specifically: - - 0 - relative to the start of the file (SEEK_SET) - 1 - relative to the current buffer position (SEEK_CUR) +"lockf (fd, operation, length=0, start=0, whence=0)\n\ +\n\ +This is essentially a wrapper around the fcntl() locking calls. fd is the\n\ +file descriptor of the file to lock or unlock, and operation is one of the\n\ +following values:\n\ +\n\ + LOCK_UN - unlock\n\ + LOCK_SH - acquire a shared lock\n\ + LOCK_EX - acquire an exclusive lock\n\ +\n\ +When operation is LOCK_SH or LOCK_EX, it can also be bit-wise OR'd with\n\ +LOCK_NB to avoid blocking on lock acquisition. If LOCK_NB is used and the\n\ +lock cannot be acquired, an IOError will be raised and the exception will\n\ +have an errno attribute set to EACCES or EAGAIN (depending on the operating\n\ +system -- for portability, check for either value).\n\ +\n\ +length is the number of bytes to lock, with the default meaning to lock to\n\ +EOF. start is the byte offset, relative to whence, to that the lock\n\ +starts. whence is as with fileobj.seek(), specifically:\n\ +\n\ + 0 - relative to the start of the file (SEEK_SET)\n\ + 1 - relative to the current buffer position (SEEK_CUR)\n\ 2 - relative to the end of the file (SEEK_END)"; /* List of functions */