_IO_MTSAFE_IO controls whether stdio is *built* with support for
multithreading. In the distant past it might also have worked as a
feature selection macro, allowing library *users* to select
thread-safe or lock-free stdio at application build time, I haven't
done the archaeology. Nowadays, defining _IO_MTSAFE_IO while using
the installed headers, or in _ISOMAC mode, will cause libio.h to throw
syntax errors.
This patch removes _IO_MTSAFE_IO from the public headers
(specifically, from libio/libio.h). The most important thing it
controlled in there was whether libio.h defines _IO_lock_t itself or
expects stdio-lock.h to have done it, and we do still need a
inter-header communication macro for that, because stdio-lock.h can
only define _IO_lock_t as a typedef. I've invented
_IO_lock_t_defined, which is defined by both versions of stdio-lock.h.
_IO_MTSAFE_IO also controlled the definitions of a handful of macros
that _might_ count as part of the public libio.h interface. They are
now unconditionally given their non-_IO_MTSAFE_IO definition in
libio/libio.h, and include/libio.h redefines them with the
_IO_MTSAFE_IO definition. This should minimize the odds of breaking
old software that actually uses those macros.
I suspect that this entire mechanism is vestigial, and that glibc
won't build anymore if you *don't* define _IO_MTSAFE_IO, but that's
another patchset. The bulk of libio.h is internal-use-only stuff that
no longer makes sense to expose (libstdc++ gave up on making a FILE
the same object as a C++ filebuf *decades* ago) but that, too, is
another patchset.
* libio/libio.h: Condition dummy definition of _IO_lock_t on
_IO_lock_t_defined, not _IO_MTSAFE_IO. Unconditionally use the
non-_IO_MTSAFE_IO definitions for _IO_peekc, _IO_flockfile,
_IO_funlockfile, and _IO_ftrylockfile. Only define
_IO_cleanup_region_start and _IO_cleanup_region_end if not
already defined.
* include/libio.h: If _IO_MTSAFE_IO is defined, redefine
_IO_peekc, _IO_flockfile, _IO_funlockfile, and _IO_ftrylockfile
appropriately.
* sysdeps/generic/stdio-lock.h, sysdeps/nptl/stdio-lock.h:
Define _IO_lock_t_defined after defining _IO_lock_t.
This fixes build when _IO_funlockfile is a macro, fixes build where
_IO_acquire_lock_clear_flags2 is used, and fixes unlocking on unexpected
stack unwind.
* sysdeps/generic/stdio-lock.h [__EXCEPTIONS] (_IO_acquire_lock,
_IO_release_lock ): Use cleanup attribute on new
_IO_acquire_lock_file variable instead of assuming that
_IO_release_lock will be called.
[!__EXCEPTIONS] (_IO_acquire_lock): Define to non-existing
_IO_acquire_lock_needs_exceptions_enabled.
(_IO_acquire_lock_clear_flags2): New macro.
It was noted in
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2012-09/msg00305.html> that the
bits/*.h naming scheme should only be used for installed headers.
This patch renames bits/stdio-lock.h to plain stdio-lock.h to follow
that convention.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that installed stripped shared
libraries are unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #14912]
* bits/stdio-lock.h: Move to ...
* sysdeps/generic/stdio-lock.h: ...here.
(_BITS_STDIO_LOCK_H): Rename macro to _STDIO_LOCK_H.
* sysdeps/nptl/bits/stdio-lock.h: Move to ...
* sysdeps/nptl/stdio-lock.h: ...here.
(_BITS_STDIO_LOCK_H): Rename macro to _STDIO_LOCK_H.
* include/libio.h: Include <stdio-lock.h> instead of
<bits/stdio-lock.h>.
* sysdeps/nptl/fork.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/pthread/flockfile.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/pthread/ftrylockfile.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/pthread/funlockfile.c: Likewise.