#define _AIX
#endif
-/* SYSTEM_TYPE should indicate the kind of system you are using.
- It sets the Lisp variable system-type. */
-#define SYSTEM_TYPE "aix"
-
-/* In AIX, you allocate a pty by opening /dev/ptc to get the master side.
- To get the name of the slave side, you just ttyname() the master side. */
-#define PTY_ITERATION int c; for (c = 0; !c ; c++)
-#define PTY_NAME_SPRINTF strcpy (pty_name, "/dev/ptc");
-#define PTY_TTY_NAME_SPRINTF strcpy (pty_name, ttyname (fd));
-
-/* Define HAVE_PTYS if the system supports pty devices. */
-#define HAVE_PTYS
-
-/* Define HAVE_SOCKETS if system supports 4.2-compatible sockets. */
-#define HAVE_SOCKETS
\f
/* Special items needed to make Emacs run on this system. */
-/* AIX doesn't define this. */
-#define unix 1
-
-/* Perry Smith <pedz@ddivt1.austin.ibm.com> says these are correct. */
-#define SIGNALS_VIA_CHARACTERS
-#define CLASH_DETECTION
-
/* Perry Smith <pedz@ddivt1.austin.ibm.com> says these are correct. */
#undef sigmask
#define NO_EDITRES
#endif
-/* On AIX Emacs uses the gmalloc.c malloc implementation. But given
- the way this system works, libc functions that return malloced
- memory use the libc malloc implementation. Calling xfree or
- xrealloc on the results of such functions results in a crash.
-
- One solution for this could be to define SYSTEM_MALLOC in configure,
- but that does not currently work on this system.
-
- It is possible to completely override the malloc implementation on
- AIX, but that involves putting the malloc functions in a shared
- library and setting the MALLOCTYPE environment variable to point to
- that shared library.
-
- Emacs currently calls xrealloc on the results of get_current_dir name,
- to avoid a crash just use the Emacs implementation for that function. */
-#define BROKEN_GET_CURRENT_DIR_NAME 1
-
/* Conservative garbage collection has not been tested, so for now
play it safe and stick with the old-fashioned way of marking. */
#define GC_MARK_STACK GC_USE_GCPROS_AS_BEFORE