xref: /xnu-8792.61.2/osfmk/kern/kcdata.modulemap (revision 42e220869062b56f8d7d0726fd4c88954f87902c)
1*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions#ifdef XNU_KERNEL_PRIVATE
2*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions// kern/kcdata.h gets its own top level module outside of the Darwin module
3*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions// to support building libkdd (one of our alias projects). libkdd can’t use
4*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions// <kern/kcdata.h> because it doesn’t produce that header itself, and so Xcode
5*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions// would pick up the old one in the SDK rather than mapping to the new one in
6*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions// SRCROOT. To get around that, libkdd uses <kcdata.h> to not match anything in
7*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions// the SDK and fall back on the one in SRCROOT. So far so good, but libkdd needs
8*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions// to avoid accidentally also picking up <kern/kcdata.h> via a module, or it
9*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions// will run into all kinds of redeclaration sadness that the include guards
10*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions// somehow don’t block. (Maybe because <kcdata.h> isn’t modular and
11*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions// <kern/kcdata.h> is?) libkdd uses the Darwin module, and so <kern/kcdata.h>
12*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions// needs its own top level module that sits on top of Darwin.
13*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions#endif
14*42e22086SApple OSS Distributionsmodule kcdata [system] {
15*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions  header "kern/kcdata.h"
16*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions  export *
17*42e22086SApple OSS Distributions}
18