Adding _POSIX_C_SOURCE to CPPFLAGS globally produces all sorts of problems
since it causes certain system functions to be hidden on some (BSD) systems.
The solution is to only add the flag on systems that really require it, i.e.
glibc-based ones.
This change makes BSD systems compile out-of-the-box without the need for
adding specific flags manually. It also allows dropping a number of flags
set manually on a file-per-file basis, but were only present to work around
breakage introduced by the presence of _POSIX_C_SOURCE.
Also add _XOPEN_SOURCE to CPPFLAGS for glibc systems. We use XSI extensions
in several places already, so it is preferable to define it globally instead
of littering source files with individual #defines only needed for glibc.
When attempting to re-enable the AltiVec support it was noticed
that we need to undefine _POSIX_C_SOURCE to appease the headers
for ff_get_cpu_flags_ppc() to be able to compile.
Signed-off-by: Luca Barbato <lu_zero@gentoo.org>
Instead of defining functions in per-arch header files included
by the main cpu.c, define them normally and call them from the
generic one.
Originally committed as revision 25084 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk