[BZ #20482]
* locales/de_AT (LC_TIME): Use 2 letter abbreviations in abday.
* locales/de_BE (LC_TIME): Use 2 letter abbreviations in abday.
* locales/de_CH (LC_TIME): Use 2 letter abbreviations in abday.
* locales/de_DE (LC_TIME): Use readable ASCII in abday.
* locales/de_IT (LC_TIME): Use readable ASCII in abday.
* locales/de_LU (LC_TIME): Use 2 letter abbreviations in abday.
Default semantic for mmap2 syscall is to take the offset in 4096-byte
units. However m68k and ia64 mmap2 implementation take in the
configured pageunit units and for both architecture it can be
different values.
This patch fixes the m68k runtime discover of mmap2 offset unit
and adds the ia64 definition to find it at runtime.
Checked the basic tst-mmap and tst-mmap-offset on m68k (the system
is configured with 4k, so current code is already passing on this
system) and a sanity check on x86_64-linux-gnu (which should not be
affected by this change). Sergei also states that ia64 loader now
work correctly with this change.
Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Sergei Trofimovich <slyfox@inbox.ru>
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/m68k/mmap_internal.h (MMAP2_PAGE_SHIFT):
Rename to MMAP2_PAGE_UNIT.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mmap.c: Include mmap_internal iff
__OFF_T_MATCHES_OFF64_T is not defined.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mmap_internal.h (page_unit): Declare as
uint64_t.
(MMAP2_PAGE_UNIT) [MMAP2_PAGE_UNIT == -1]: Redefine to page_unit.
(page_unit) [MMAP2_PAGE_UNIT != -1]: Remove definition.
All calls to functions with the internal_function attribute
have been removed from assembler implementations, which means that
the definition of internal_function can be changed at the C level
without causing ABI issues with assembler code.
_dl_fixup still uses a regparm calling convention on i386, but this
is controlled through ARCH_FIXUP_ATTRIBUTE, not internal_function.
Assembler code passes the address of _dl_fini to __libc_start_main,
whose function pointer argument lacks the attribute. This means
that calls could use the wrong ABI. Fortunately, for zero-parameter
void-returning functions, internal_function does not change ABI
on i386 (the only architecture which uses internal_function), so
this inconsistency was harmless (which is why it had not been
noticed so far).
See also [BZ #20756].
U+202F NARROW NO-BREAK SPACE: a narrow form of a no-break space,
typically the width of a thin space or a mid space.
U+2009 THIN SPACE.
Many languages use small gap as thousands separator.
Thousands separator should not be a plain space, but a narrow space.
And additionally, it is not allowed to wrap line in the middle of the
number.
Locale data were created in a deep age of 8-bit encodings, so most of
them use space (incorrect: it allows wrapping the line in the middle
of the number), or NBSP (better, but typographically incorrect: space
between groups is too wide).
Now UNICODE is widely supported, so we should leave legacy characters
in favor of correct UNICODE character.
UNICODE has a dedicated character for this purpose:
NNBSP
U+202F NARROW NO-BREAK SPACE: a narrow form of a no-break space,
typically the width of a thin space or a mid space
The NNBSP exists since Unicode 3.0.
Use of NNBSP will prevent line wrapping in the midle of number and
improve readability of numbers.
[BZ #20756]
* locales/aa_DJ (LC_MONETARY): Replace space by NNBSP as thousands separator.
* locales/az_AZ (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/be_BY (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/be_BY@latin (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/bg_BG (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/bs_BA (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/ce_RU (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/crh_UA (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/cs_CZ (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/cs_CZ (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/cv_RU (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/de_AT (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/eo (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/es_CR (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/es_CR (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/es_CU (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/et_EE (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/et_EE (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/fi_FI (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/fi_FI (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/fr_CA (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/fr_FR (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/fr_FR (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/fr_LU (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/fr_LU (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/hr_HR (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/ht_HT (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/kk_KZ (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/kk_KZ (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/ky_KG (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/ky_KG (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/lv_LV (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/lv_LV (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/mg_MG (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/mhr_RU (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/mk_MK (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/mk_MK (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/mn_MN (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/nb_NO (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/nb_NO (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/nl_AW (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/nl_NL (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/nn_NO (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/os_RU (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/pap_AW (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/pap_CW (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/ru_RU (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/ru_RU (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/ru_UA (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/sk_SK (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/sk_SK (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/sl_SI (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/sl_SI (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/sq_MK (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/sv_SE (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/sv_SE (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/tg_TJ (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/tt_RU (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/tt_RU@iqtelif (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/uk_UA (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/uk_UA (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/unm_US (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
* locales/unm_US (LC_NUMERIC): Likewise.
* locales/wo_SN (LC_MONETARY): Likewise.
Make the memmove benchmarks (bench-memmove and bench-memmove-large)
print their output in JSON so that they can be evaluated using the
compare_strings.py script.
* benchtests/bench-memmove-large.c: Print output in JSON
format.
* benchtests/bench-memmove.c: Likewise.
The test run is unnecessary and interferes with the benchmark. The
tests are done during make check, so they're unnecessary here.
* benchtests/bench-memccpy.c (do_one_test): Remove checks.
* benchtests/bench-memchr.c (do_one_test): Likewise.
* benchtests/bench-memcpy-large.c (do_one_test): Likewise.
* benchtests/bench-memcpy.c (do_one_test): Likewise.
* benchtests/bench-memmove-large.c (do_one_test): Likewise.
* benchtests/bench-memmove.c (do_one_test): Likewise.
* benchtests/bench-memset-large.c (do_one_test): Likewise.
* benchtests/bench-memset.c (do_one_test): Likewise.
* benchtests/bench-string.h (test_init): Remove memsets.
The manual contradicted itself by saying the number of bits in an
integer type needed to be computed, and then listing a number of
macros that later standards provided for exactly that. The entire
section has been reworked to provide those macros first, while
preserving the documentation of CHAR_BIT and the associated examples
within that context.
* manual/lang.texi
(Computing the Width of an Integer Data Type): Rename section
to "Width of an Integer Type". Remove inaccurate statement
regarding lack of C language facilities for determining width
of integer types, and reorder content to improve flow and
context of discussion.
The ISO version in which va_copy was introduced is made explicit, and
__va_copy is given @standards. The description is updated to be more
clear about the origins of each macro, and the reader is informed
these macros are now provided by the compiler (information previously
embedded in a Texinfo @comment).
* lang.texi (va_copy): Change standard from ISO to C99.
(__va_copy): Add standard and header annotation.
Update description for clarity of origins and current use.
POWER ISA 3.0 introduces the xssqrtqp instructions, which expects
operands to be in Vector Registers (Altivec/VMX), even though this
instruction belongs to the Vector-Scalar Instruction Set.
In GCC's Extended Assembly for POWER, the 'wq' register constraint is
provided for use with IEEE 754 128-bit floating-point values. However,
this constraint does not limit the register allocation to Vector
Registers (Altivec/VMX) and could assign a Vector-Scalar Register (VSX)
to the operands of the instruction.
This patch changes the register constraint used in sqrtf128 from 'wq' to
'v', in order to request a Vector Register (Altivec/VMX) for use with
the xssqrtqp instruction.
Tested for powerpc64le and --with-cpu=power9.
[BZ #21941]
* sysdeps/powerpc/fpu/math_private.h (__ieee754_sqrtf128): Since
xssqrtqp requires operands to be in Vector Registers
(Altivec/VMX), replace the register constraint 'wq' with 'v'.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64le/power9/fpu/e_sqrtf128.c
(__ieee754_sqrtf128): Likewise.
This is an optimized memcmp for AArch64. This is a complete rewrite
using a different algorithm. The previous version split into cases
where both inputs were aligned, the inputs were mutually aligned and
unaligned using a byte loop. The new version combines all these cases,
while small inputs of less than 8 bytes are handled separately.
This allows the main code to be sped up using unaligned loads since
there are now at least 8 bytes to be compared. After the first 8 bytes,
align the first input. This ensures each iteration does at most one
unaligned access and mutually aligned inputs behave as aligned.
After the main loop, process the last 8 bytes using unaligned accesses.
This improves performance of (mutually) aligned cases by 25% and
unaligned by >500% (yes >6 times faster) on large inputs.
* sysdeps/aarch64/memcmp.S (memcmp):
Rewrite of optimized memcmp.
This commit separates allocating and raising exceptions. This
simplifies catching and re-raising them because it is no longer
necessary to make a temporary, on-stack copy of the exception message.
The hidden attribute was overridden by libc_hidden_proto on GNU/Linux.
It is incorrect because the function is used from nscd.
internal_function is not supposed to be used across DSO boundaries,
so this commit removes it (again, due to the use in nscd).
The test cases should expose non-standard grouping and the trailing
space after the currency sign. After the changes to the Indian
monetary formatting, the Indian formatting still shows the
non-standard grouping. To test the trailing space after the currency
sign I chose the hr_HR locale.
See:
commit 82b3124268bec0609b337dd993e771c93e44cbf2
Author: Akhilesh Kumar <akhilesh.k@samsung.com>
Remove redundant data for LC_MONETARY for Indian locales
[BZ #17563]
[BZ #16905]
* locales/cmn_TW (LC_COLLATE): Use cns11643_stroke file for sorting.
* locales/cmn_TW (LC_TIME): Improve time and date formats.
* locales/cmn_TW (LC_MESSAGES): Add yesstr and nostr.
* locales/cns11643_stroke: New file, stroke count collation for
traditional Chinese.
Remove enum __ptrace_flags along with the only constant it contains,
PTRACE_SEIZE_DEVEL, from Linux's sys/ptrace.h files.
This temporary development constant shouldn't have been added to
sys/ptrace.h in the first place. It was introduced in Linux by commit
v3.1-rc1~308^2~28 as a temporary part of new experimental PTRACE_SEIZE
interface. Later, as PTRACE_SEIZE stabilized and lost its experimental
status, this flag was removed from Linux by commit v3.4-rc1~109^2~20.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sys/ptrace.h (enum __ptrace_flags,
PTRACE_SEIZE_DEVEL): Remove.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/sys/ptrace.h: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ia64/sys/ptrace.h: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/sys/ptrace.h: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/sys/ptrace.h: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sys/ptrace.h: Likewise.
bits/types.h defines a type __qaddr_t that is not used anywhere in
glibc. It doesn't appear to be widely used outside glibc either
(judging by codesearch.debian.net, where hits are generally copies of
definitions of this type, not uses), so it seems appropriate to remove
this type, which this patch does.
Tested for x86_64.
* posix/bits/types.h (__qaddr_t): Remove.
The standard members of ucontext_t, in all standard versions with that
type, are uc_link, uc_sigmask, uc_stack and uc_mcontext.
The uc_* namespace is mostly reserved for additions to the structure.
However, in XPG4.2, it's only reserved when <ucontext.h> is included,
not when <signal.h> is included, while <signal.h> is required to
define ucontext_t (but not allowed to make visible other symbols from
<ucontext.h>). Thus, nonstandard members should avoid uc_* names.
Some already do use __uc_*, but others don't; most architectures (all
except ia64, I think) have a member uc_flags and some have additional
members beyond that.
This patch makes nonstandard members have an __ prefix unless
__USE_MISC is defined. Members whose names indicate they are solely
padding / reserved for future use are renamed unconditionally to use
the __glibc_reserved1 naming convention.
This is part of the preparation for a revised version of the
mcontext_t / sigcontext patch to be able to eliminate all 13 of the
miscellaneous XFAILs in conform/Makefile, rather than only 11 of them
as at present (at least one further fix on top of this one will be
needed for that as well).
Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py.
[BZ #21457]
* sysdeps/arm/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): Move undefine further down.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags. Rename uc_filler to
__glibc_reserved1.
* sysdeps/generic/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): New macro.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags.
* sysdeps/i386/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): Move undefine further down.
(__ctxt): Likewise.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags. Rename uc_filler to
__glibc_reserved1.
* sysdeps/m68k/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): Move undefine further down.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags. Rename uc_filler to
__glibc_reserved1.
* sysdeps/mips/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): Move undefine further down.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags. Rename uc_filler to
__glibc_reserved1.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): New
macro.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): New macro.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): New macro.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags and uc_regspace.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): New macro.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/m68k/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): Move
undefine further down.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags. Rename uc_filler to
__glibc_reserved1.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): Move
undefine further down.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/nios2/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): Move
undefine further down.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/sys/ucontext.h (ucontext_t): Use
__ctx with uc_flags, uc_regs_ptr, uc_regs and uc_reg_space.
Rename uc_pad to __glibc_reserved1.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): Move
undefine further down.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sh/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): Move undefine
further down.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sys/ucontext.h (ucontext_t): Use
__ctx with uc_flags.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/sys/ucontext.h (__ctx): New macro.
(ucontext_t): Use __ctx with uc_flags.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86/sys/ucontext.h (ucontext_t): Use
__ctx with uc_flags.
These comments are useless and only confusing. The encodings used to
create binary locales from source locales are listed in the
localedata/SUPPORTED file. The source files itself are ASCII or UTF-8
encoded where non-ASCII UTF-8 is currently only used in comments. If
all locale source files are UTF-8 anyway, there is no need to specify
that in a special comment.
New locale is added for the Seychelles which is a member of the African
Union. English is an offical language for the Seychelles.
[BZ #21854]
* locales/en_SC: New file.
* localedata/SUPPORTED : Add en_SC/UTF-8.
As decribed in BZ#759, Linux getcontext implementation on Linux does
differs from other SysV system about the returned uc_stack. This is
true not only for i386, but for all the architecture I could actually
check (aarch64, arm, alpha, hppa, m68k, mips, mips64, mips64n32,
powerpc, powerpc64, powerpc64le, s390x, sh, sparc, sparc64, and x86).
And I think we should not change current behavior for some reasons:
1. POSIX 2008 removed this SySV interface for a good reason and changing
this behavior adds nothing for current portable code. POSIX 2001
specification does states that stack should be saved [1] and current
GLIBC code does in a arch-specific manner (inside the mcontext_t)
which allows the setcontext to work correctly.
2. Changing this behavior would potentially require compat symbols and
I see no gain in adding compat symbols for deprecated interfaces.
3. Also, for comment #2 in BZ#759, it is up to kernel do setup the contents
for ucontext_t and currently it does not provide the stack information
as well. Trying to change it is also another fix that does not worth
the possible gains.
Instead my proposal is to make it clear the current interface may differ
depending of the underlying operational system.
glibc documentation and close this bug as invalid.
[BZ #759]
* manual/setjmp.texi (getcontex): Document uc_stack value on Linux.
[1] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/getcontext.html
On Linux/i386, there are 3 ways to make a system call:
1. call *%gs:SYSINFO_OFFSET. This requires TLS initialization.
2. call *_dl_sysinfo. This requires relocation of _dl_sysinfo.
3. int $0x80. This is slower than #2 and #3, but works everywhere.
When an object file is compiled with PIC, #1 is prefered since it is
faster than #3 and doesn't require relocation of _dl_sysinfo. For
dynamic executables, ld.so initializes TLS. However, for static
executables, before TLS is initialized by __libc_setup_tls, #3 should
be used for system calls.
This patch adds <startup.h> which defines _startup_fatal and defaults
it to __libc_fatal. It replaces __libc_fatal with _startup_fatal in
static executables where it is called before __libc_setup_tls is called.
This header file is included in all files containing functions which are
called before __libc_setup_tls is called. On Linux/i386, when PIE is
enabled by default, _startup_fatal is turned into ABORT_INSTRUCTION and
I386_USE_SYSENTER is defined to 0 so that "int $0x80" is used for system
calls before __libc_setup_tls is called.
Tested on i686 and x86-64. Without this patch, all statically-linked
tests will fail on i686 when the compiler defaults to -fPIE.
[BZ #21913]
* csu/libc-tls.c: Include <startup.h> first.
(__libc_setup_tls): Call _startup_fatal instead of __libc_fatal.
* elf/dl-tunables.c: Include <startup.h> first.
* include/libc-symbols.h (BUILD_PIE_DEFAULT): New.
* sysdeps/generic/startup.h: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/startup.h: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/brk.c [BUILD_PIE_DEFAULT != 0]
(I386_USE_SYSENTER): New. Defined to 0.
Unlike the vfork forwarder and like the fork forwarder as in bug 19861,
there won't be a problem when the compiler does not turn this into a tail
call.