Cheyenne Wills c04c2d0722 afs: Move function prototypes into headers
Several .c files contain external function prototypes, while the
implementing files do not have these prototypes.

Move these prototypes into header files so that the prototypes are
available to both the caller and the implementation.

Because the file holding the implementation does not have prototypes,
these functions are flagged when building against a Linux 6.8 kernel
(which sets the -Wmissing-declarations and -Wmissing-prototypes compiler
flags as default). Linux 6.8 commit:
 'Makefile.extrawarn: turn on missing-prototypes globally' (0fcb70851f).

When building against a kernel with CONFIG_WERROR=y, the build fails.

Add the prototypes for the following to afs_prototypes.h:
  exporter_add
  afs_syscall (AFS_LINUX_ENV)
  BlobScan

Remove the prototypes from the .c files where they are referenced.

Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.openafs.org/15642
Reviewed-by: Andrew Deason <adeason@sinenomine.net>
Tested-by: BuildBot <buildbot@rampaginggeek.com>
Reviewed-by: Mark Vitale <mvitale@sinenomine.net>
Reviewed-by: Benjamin Kaduk <kaduk@mit.edu>
(cherry picked from commit 85781d7e83ae4501d8ab267bf55ef63f90f63101)

Change-Id: I74333e99e08af88bebdcbff4767d79397acac358
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.openafs.org/15695
Tested-by: BuildBot <buildbot@rampaginggeek.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Deason <adeason@sinenomine.net>
Reviewed-by: Michael Meffie <mmeffie@sinenomine.net>
Reviewed-by: Benjamin Kaduk <kaduk@mit.edu>
2024-05-12 18:04:09 -04:00
2023-08-17 13:13:55 -04:00
2018-02-09 21:48:12 -05:00
2016-09-25 21:05:23 -04:00
2003-05-28 19:18:08 +00:00
2024-03-08 18:09:08 -05:00
2024-03-08 18:09:08 -05:00
2023-04-13 16:58:38 -04:00
2023-08-17 13:23:40 -04:00
2024-03-08 18:09:08 -05:00
2020-01-25 15:53:31 -05:00
2015-12-28 19:32:17 -05:00

AFS is a distributed file system that enables users to share and
access all of the files stored in a network of computers as easily as
they access the files stored on their local machines. The file system is
called distributed for this exact reason: files can reside on many
different machines, but are available to users on every machine.

OpenAFS 1.0 was originally released by IBM under the terms of the
IBM Public License 1.0 (IPL10).  For details on IPL10 see the LICENSE
file in this directory.  The current OpenAFS distribution is licensed
under a combination of the IPL10 and many other licenses as granted by
the relevant copyright holders.  The LICENSE file in this directory
contains more details, thought it is not a comprehensive statement.

See INSTALL for information about building and installing OpenAFS
on various platforms.

See CODING for developer information and guidelines.

See NEWS for recent changes to OpenAFS.

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