glibc 2.27 is to be released soon, and it will provide memfd_create().
If glibc provides the function, we must not define it ourselves,
otherwise building fails due to conflict between the two implementations
of the same function.
BugLink: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=104733
[AC_MSG_ERROR([*** Your Linux kernel does not support memfd shared memory.
*** Use linux v3.17 or higher for such a feature.])])
+AS_IF([test "x$HAVE_MEMFD" = "x1"],
+ AC_CHECK_FUNCS([memfd_create]))
+
AC_SUBST(HAVE_MEMFD)
AM_CONDITIONAL([HAVE_MEMFD], [test "x$HAVE_MEMFD" = x1])
AS_IF([test "x$HAVE_MEMFD" = "x1"], AC_DEFINE([HAVE_MEMFD], 1, [Have memfd shared memory.]))
License along with PulseAudio; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
***/
-#ifdef HAVE_MEMFD
+#if defined(HAVE_MEMFD) && !defined(HAVE_MEMFD_CREATE)
#include <sys/syscall.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
/*
- * No glibc wrappers exist for memfd_create(2), so provide our own.
+ * Before glibc version 2.27 there was no wrapper for memfd_create(2),
+ * so we have to provide our own.
*
* Also define memfd fcntl sealing macros. While they are already
* defined in the kernel header file <linux/fcntl.h>, that file as
#define F_SEAL_WRITE 0x0008 /* prevent writes */
#endif
-#endif /* HAVE_MEMFD */
+#endif /* HAVE_MEMFD && !HAVE_MEMFD_CREATE */
#endif