1) The maketgz script does not insert the timestamp in curlver.h,
it actually updates it. For CVS versions it is the "CVS" string.
2) testcurl.pl will always print the "date" string which represents
the moment the test build is run.
3) testcurl.pl may not print the "timestamp" string since the script
may end before it is printed out. (i.e. unable to update from CVS)
4) The "timestamp" string printed will be the same as the "date" one
unless one of the following conditions is met.
*) It is a tarball-based build. Timestamp will be creation time.
*) CVS update has been done. Timestamp will be end of CVS update.
for tarball-based tests and builds, the maketgz script inserts it when
the tarball is created. For CVS-based tests and builds the timestamp we
show is the current UTC build time as it is the CVS version timestamp.
In this way, all builds will have a valid source code timestamp which
isn't related to the moment the tests and build is performed, with the
exception of CVS-based ones which have the same "date" and "timestamp"
the multi interface and connection re-use that could make a
curl_multi_remove_handle() ruin a pointer in another handle.
The second problem was less of an actual problem but more of minor quirk:
the re-using of connections wasn't properly checking if the connection was
marked for closure.
making them available to any source code file which includes "setup.h".
Macro SOCKERRNO / SET_SOCKERRNO() returns / sets the *socket-related* errno
(or equivalent) on this platform to hide platform details to code using it.
Macro ERRNO / SET_ERRNO() returns / sets the NOT *socket-related* errno
(or equivalent) on this platform to hide platform details to code using it.
FD_ISSET, and FD_ZERO macros emits warnings #1469 and #593.
So for icc 9.0 we also ignore warnings #1469 and #593.
* 593 warns on "variable __d0 was set but never used"
* 1469 warns on "cc clobber ignored"