Squashed commit of the following:
sched/sched/sched_getsockets.c: Fix an error in conditional compilation.
fs/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
Documentation/: Remove all references to CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
include/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
libs/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
net/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
sched/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
syscall/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
tools/: Fixups for CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS no longer used to disable sockets.
This commit backs out most of commit b4747286b1. That change was added because sem_wait() would sometimes cause cancellation points inappropriated. But with these recent changes, nxsem_wait() is used instead and it is not a cancellation point.
In the OS, all calls to sem_wait() changed to nxsem_wait(). nxsem_wait() does not return errors via errno so each place where nxsem_wait() is now called must not examine the errno variable.
In all OS functions (not libraries), change sem_wait() to nxsem_wait(). This will prevent the OS from creating bogus cancellation points and from modifying the per-task errno variable.
sched/semaphore: Add the function nxsem_wait(). This is a new internal OS interface. It is functionally equivalent to sem_wait() except that (1) it is not a cancellation point, and (2) it does not set the per-thread errno value on return.
psock_close() and net_close() are internal OS functions and should not set the errno variable.
psock_ioctl() and netdev_ioctl() are internal OS functions and should not set the errno variable.
net_dupsd() and net_dupsd2() are internal OS functions and should not set the errno variable.
net/ and fs/: net_vfcntl(), file_fcntl(), file_dup(), and file_dup2() are all internal OS interfaces and should not modify the errno value.
User-space networking stack API allows user-space daemon to
provide TCP/IP stack implementation for NuttX network.
Main use for this is to allow use and seamless integration of
HW-provided TCP/IP stacks to NuttX.
For example, user-space daemon can translate /dev/usrsock
API requests to HW TCP/IP API requests while rest of the
user-space can access standard socket API, with socket
descriptors that can be used with NuttX system calls.