1) optional arguments (e.g. OPEN) 3) partial list of section 2 manpages from Debian Linux box: functions we may want to consider interfaces for. Some of the obviously unnecessary/dangerous functions have been deleted from this list, as have the ones we've already got bindings for, but even so, inclusion in this list does _not_ imply we've definitely decided something needs adding. FD_CLR FD_ISSET FD_SET FD_ZERO accept acct adjtime adjtimex bdflush bind break brk cacheflush capget capset clone connect create_module delete_module execve exit flock fstatfs ftime getcontext getdents getdomainname getdtablesize getgroups gethostid gethostname getitimer getpeername getpriority getrlimit getrusage getsockname getsockopt gettimeofday gtty idle init_module ioctl_list ioperm iopl listen llseek lock madvise mincore mknod mlock modify_ldt mount mprotect mpx mremap msgctl msgget msgop msgrcv msgsnd munlock nanosleep nice pause poll prctl pread prof profil pselect ptrace pwrite query_module quotactl readv reboot recv recvfrom recvmsg sbrk sched_get_priority_max sched_get_priority_min sched_getparam sched_getscheduler sched_rr_get_interval sched_setparam sched_setscheduler sched_yield select semctl semget semop send sendfile sendmsg sendto setcontext setdomainname setgroups sethostid sethostname setitimer setpriority setrlimit setsockopt settimeofday sgetmask shmat shmctl shmdt shmget shmop shutdown sigaction sigaltstack sigblock siggetmask sigmask signal sigpause sigpending sigprocmask sigreturn sigsetmask sigsuspend sigvec socket socketcall socketpair ssetmask statfs stime stty swapoff swapon syscalls sysctl sysfs sysinfo times ulimit umount uname ustat vfork vhangup wait3 wait4 writev 4) In the spec but not implemented: - buffers 5) fill out TODO/TBD stuff in the spec 6) sort out exports. All interface functions, all constants, all type coercion functions 7) variable-length functions > like execvp()? Do they take a list, or vector or either? "Either" sounds good. Which is to say, a sequence. 8) In some cases, errno is used for "normal" exit, not just for exceptional exit. For example, EINTR, EAGAIN, reading or writing big buffers, etc... It may be more efficient to just compare two integers than going thru an exception mechanism that will be invoked everytime. 9) proper alien definitions of structures [ possibly an sb-grovel problem, but the way we define calls exposes the problem -- see readdir() ] [ isn't this done? ] 10) some functions (e.g. fdatasync, putenv) have a return value which is purely an error indicator. Currently we're returning the 0 on success, but maybe it would make more sense for them to return (values).