Move everything to where it should be.
Along the way, we lose <net/ethertypes.h>. glibc only has a handful of these
types, and they're all in <net/ethernet.h>, not <net/ethertypes.h>. I've taken
the liberty of not including the AppleTalk ones, since it is 2016.
Also, <net/if_ether.h> should be <netinet/if_ether.h> (though with different
contents).
Bug: http://b/28519060
Change-Id: Ia41c3fc136fd3e6b008c8d08018e0629134ea6fc
This is just a subset of the recently-implemented getifaddrs(3), though if
we want to handle interfaces (such as "rmnet_*") that don't have an address,
we need to either expose ifaddrs_storage and keep track of which interfaces
we've already seen (which is pretty messy), or refactor the netlink code so
we can reuse it and just extract the information we need for if_nameindex(3).
This patch goes the latter route.
Also clean up if_nametoindex(3) and if_indextoname(3).
Change-Id: I5ffc5df0bab62286cdda2e7af06f032c767119a8
Previously it couldn't be included alone. Also add a header and include guard,
and fix its siblings' include guards.
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=82638
Change-Id: I32139a4bda0a6b015508a2319bf4e1a1453345f2
Note that the Linux kernel handed over responsibility for most of the
socket constants to glibc some time ago. Someone had updated our
external/kernel-headers file but not regenerated the bionic headers,
so this change copies the missing stuff from the old bionic <linux/socket.h>
into <sys/socket.h>. This is what glibc does.
I've hacked a few of the other files to #include <sys/socket.h> for
backward compatibility, but even so this requires numerous other
changes to switch people over from direct inclusion of <linux/...> headers.
Change-Id: I0e4af64e631d3cef911a31d90f2f806e058278a0
This was misleading 'configure' into thinking we actually support AF_LINK,
but we're Linux, so we don't, and we never implemented the functions we
declared here either.
Reported to AOSP by Jun-ya Kato.
Change-Id: I111f9887f3812469b411b9cf5124d9dd624f19f7