I ran into a similar problem with the user-mode kernel, and my fix for it
might be applicable. I need to #include both user and kernel headers, the
kernel headers because I'm building a kernel, the user headers because the
lowest levels are implemented in terms of system calls.
I found out that you are asking for a world of hurt if you include both user
and kernel headers into the same file. What I did was split my sources into
"user" and "kernel" files, which include only user and kernel headers,
respectively. Communication between these two groups happens in terms of
basic C types.
So, what might work for C++ is to have little C files which include the kernel
headers, which pass their information back out to the C++ files using types
that everyone agrees on.
Jeff
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