Even more fun fact is that this # as EOL thing was introduced specially in XNU.
For the first second I thought this was in *BSD, but I did't found anything related in bsd source code (I was checking 4.3BSD and FreeBSD versions around 3.*)
Some blaming on xnu git[hub] mirror lead me to that.
This conceptual thing was introduced in XNU-517, about 21 years ago, and it's still in kernel.
Even more fun fact is that this
#
as EOL thing was introduced specially in XNU.For the first second I thought this was in *BSD, but I did't found anything related in bsd source code (I was checking 4.3BSD and FreeBSD versions around 3.*)
Some blaming on xnu git[hub] mirror lead me to that.
This conceptual thing was introduced in XNU-517, about 21 years ago, and it's still in kernel.