that's not really true, since inet_pton() doesn't support
all of the string forms that are supported by inet_ntoa();
as per http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=482987.
Describe IPv6 address formats.
Describe dotted decimal format in more detail.
Add an example program.
Remove unneeded header files from SYNOPSIS.
Make NAME line more precise.
Make description of return value more precise.
SEE ALSO: Add inet(3), Add getaddrinfo(3).
Rewrite discussion of why inet_addr() is disfavored.
SEE ALSO: Add getaddrinfo(3).
as per http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=482979.
Describe the various address forms supported by inet_aton().
Rewrite description of inet_network().
Clarify discussion of inet_lnaof(), inet_netof(), and inet_makeaddr().
Add discussion of Classful Addressing, noting that it is obsolete.
Added an EXAMPLE program.
Relocate discussion of i386 byte order to NOTES.
Note that inet_aton() returns an address in network byte order.
SEE ALSO: Add byteorder(3) and getnameinfo(3).
Add details on numeric strings that can be specified for 'node'.
Other fairly major restructrings and rewrites to improve
logical structure and clarity of the page.
Using a NULL envp does in fact seem to be portable (works
on Solaris and FreeBSD), but the Linux semantics for a NULL
argv certainly aren't consistent with other implementations.
See http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=8408.
This file displays the "badness" score of the process, which
provides the basis for OOM-killer decisions.
Document /proc/PID/oom_adj, which was new in kernel 2.6.11.
This file influences the oom_score of a process.
Document /proc/PID/limits, which was new in 2.6.24.
This file displays a process's resource limits.
Document /proc/PID/fdinfo/*, which was new in 2.6.22.
These files display info about each descriptor opened by the
process: the current file offset, and the file access mode +
file status flags as set in open() or fcntl(F_SETFL).
Document /proc/PID/mountinfo, which was new in 2.6.26.
This file displays information about mount points.
Closely based on text from Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt.
Document /proc/PID/mountstats, which was new in 2.6.17.
This file displays statistics about mount points.