Commit Graph

41334 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Florian Weimer
34e52acd55 support: Report errno constants in TEST_COMPARE failures
If the expression is errno, decode it as an errno constant
using strerrorname_np.

Reviewed-by: Arjun Shankar <arjun@redhat.com>
2024-08-26 16:46:45 +02:00
Florian Weimer
79f44e1a47 inet: Avoid label at end of compound statement in tst-if_nameindex
This fails to compile with GCC 8.
2024-08-26 16:45:31 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
f071795d80 mach: Fix bogus negative return
One can be very unlucky to call time_now first just before a second switch,
and mach_msg sleep just a bit more enough for the second time_now call to
count one second too many (or even more if scheduling is really unlucky).

So we have to protect against returning a bogus negative value in such case.
2024-08-25 03:35:29 +02:00
Mahesh Bodapati
82b5340ebd powerpc64: Optimize strcpy and stpcpy for Power9/10
This patch modifies the current Power9 implementation of strcpy and
stpcpy to optimize it for Power9 and Power10.

No new Power10 instructions are used, so the original Power9 strcpy
is modified instead of creating a new implementation for Power10.

The changes also affect stpcpy, which uses the same implementation
with some additional code before returning.

Improvements compared to the old Power9 version:

Use simple comparisons for the first ~512 bytes:
  The main loop is good for long strings, but comparing 16B each time is
  better for shorter strings. After aligning the address to 16 bytes, we
  unroll the loop four times, checking 128 bytes each time. There may be
  some overlap with the main loop for unaligned strings, but it is better
  for shorter strings.

Loop with 64 bytes for longer bytes:
  Use 4 consecutive lxv/stxv instructions.

Showed an average improvement of 13%.

Reviewed-by: Paul E. Murphy <murphyp@linux.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Peter Bergner <bergner@linux.ibm.com>
2024-08-23 16:48:32 -05:00
Adhemerval Zanella
89b53077d2 nptl: Fix Race conditions in pthread cancellation [BZ#12683]
The current racy approach is to enable asynchronous cancellation
before making the syscall and restore the previous cancellation
type once the syscall returns, and check if cancellation has happen
during the cancellation entrypoint.

As described in BZ#12683, this approach shows 2 problems:

  1. Cancellation can act after the syscall has returned from the
     kernel, but before userspace saves the return value.  It might
     result in a resource leak if the syscall allocated a resource or a
     side effect (partial read/write), and there is no way to program
     handle it with cancellation handlers.

  2. If a signal is handled while the thread is blocked at a cancellable
     syscall, the entire signal handler runs with asynchronous
     cancellation enabled.  This can lead to issues if the signal
     handler call functions which are async-signal-safe but not
     async-cancel-safe.

For the cancellation to work correctly, there are 5 points at which the
cancellation signal could arrive:

	[ ... )[ ... )[ syscall ]( ...
	   1      2        3    4   5

  1. Before initial testcancel, e.g. [*... testcancel)
  2. Between testcancel and syscall start, e.g. [testcancel...syscall start)
  3. While syscall is blocked and no side effects have yet taken
     place, e.g. [ syscall ]
  4. Same as 3 but with side-effects having occurred (e.g. a partial
     read or write).
  5. After syscall end e.g. (syscall end...*]

And libc wants to act on cancellation in cases 1, 2, and 3 but not
in cases 4 or 5.  For the 4 and 5 cases, the cancellation will eventually
happen in the next cancellable entrypoint without any further external
event.

The proposed solution for each case is:

  1. Do a conditional branch based on whether the thread has received
     a cancellation request;

  2. It can be caught by the signal handler determining that the saved
     program counter (from the ucontext_t) is in some address range
     beginning just before the "testcancel" and ending with the
     syscall instruction.

  3. SIGCANCEL can be caught by the signal handler and determine that
     the saved program counter (from the ucontext_t) is in the address
     range beginning just before "testcancel" and ending with the first
     uninterruptable (via a signal) syscall instruction that enters the
      kernel.

  4. In this case, except for certain syscalls that ALWAYS fail with
     EINTR even for non-interrupting signals, the kernel will reset
     the program counter to point at the syscall instruction during
     signal handling, so that the syscall is restarted when the signal
     handler returns.  So, from the signal handler's standpoint, this
     looks the same as case 2, and thus it's taken care of.

  5. For syscalls with side-effects, the kernel cannot restart the
     syscall; when it's interrupted by a signal, the kernel must cause
     the syscall to return with whatever partial result is obtained
     (e.g. partial read or write).

  6. The saved program counter points just after the syscall
     instruction, so the signal handler won't act on cancellation.
     This is similar to 4. since the program counter is past the syscall
     instruction.

So The proposed fixes are:

  1. Remove the enable_asynccancel/disable_asynccancel function usage in
     cancellable syscall definition and instead make them call a common
     symbol that will check if cancellation is enabled (__syscall_cancel
     at nptl/cancellation.c), call the arch-specific cancellable
     entry-point (__syscall_cancel_arch), and cancel the thread when
     required.

  2. Provide an arch-specific generic system call wrapper function
     that contains global markers.  These markers will be used in
     SIGCANCEL signal handler to check if the interruption has been
     called in a valid syscall and if the syscalls has side-effects.

     A reference implementation sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/syscall_cancel.c
     is provided.  However, the markers may not be set on correct
     expected places depending on how INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS is
     implemented by the architecture.  It is expected that all
     architectures add an arch-specific implementation.

  3. Rewrite SIGCANCEL asynchronous handler to check for both canceling
     type and if current IP from signal handler falls between the global
     markers and act accordingly.

  4. Adjust libc code to replace LIBC_CANCEL_ASYNC/LIBC_CANCEL_RESET to
     use the appropriate cancelable syscalls.

  5. Adjust 'lowlevellock-futex.h' arch-specific implementations to
     provide cancelable futex calls.

Some architectures require specific support on syscall handling:

  * On i386 the syscall cancel bridge needs to use the old int80
    instruction because the optimized vDSO symbol the resulting PC value
    for an interrupted syscall points to an address outside the expected
    markers in __syscall_cancel_arch.  It has been discussed in LKML [1]
    on how kernel could help userland to accomplish it, but afaik
    discussion has stalled.

    Also, sysenter should not be used directly by libc since its calling
    convention is set by the kernel depending of the underlying x86 chip
    (check kernel commit 30bfa7b3488bfb1bb75c9f50a5fcac1832970c60).

  * mips o32 is the only kABI that requires 7 argument syscall, and to
    avoid add a requirement on all architectures to support it, mips
    support is added with extra internal defines.

Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu, arm-linux-gnueabihf, powerpc-linux-gnu,
powerpc64-linux-gnu, powerpc64le-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, and
x86_64-linux-gnu.

[1] https://lkml.org/lkml/2016/3/8/1105
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2024-08-23 14:27:43 -03:00
Joseph Myers
55cd51d971 Test mkdirat use of mode argument
The test io/tst-mkdirat doesn't verify the permissions on the created
directory (thus, doesn't verify at all anything about how mkdirat uses
the mode argument).  Add checks of this to the existing test.

Tested for x86_64.
2024-08-22 11:25:14 +00:00
Joseph Myers
7f04bb4e49 Add more tests of getline
There is very little test coverage for getline (only a minimal
stdio-common/tstgetln.c which doesn't verify anything about the
results of the getline calls).  Add some more thorough tests
(generally using fopencookie for convenience in testing various cases
for what the input and possible errors / EOF in the file read might
look like).

Note the following regarding testing of error cases:

* Nothing is said in the specifications about what if anything might
  be written into the buffer, and whether it might be reallocated, in
  error cases.  The expectation of the tests (required to avoid memory
  leaks on error) is that at least on error cases, the invariant that
  lineptr points to at least n bytes is maintained.

* The optional EOVERFLOW error case specified in POSIX, "The number of
  bytes to be written into the buffer, including the delimiter
  character (if encountered), would exceed {SSIZE_MAX}.", doesn't seem
  practically testable, as any case reading so many characters (half
  the address space) would also be liable to run into allocation
  failure along (ENOMEM) the way.

* If a read error occurs part way through reading an input line, it
  seems unclear whether a partial line should be returned by getline
  (avoid input getting lost), which is what glibc does at least in the
  fopencookie case used in this test, or whether getline should return
  -1 (error) (so avoiding the program misbehaving by processing a
  truncated line as if it were complete).  (There was a short,
  inconclusive discussion about this on the Austin Group list on 9-10
  November 2014.)

* The POSIX specification of getline inherits errors from fgetc.  I
  didn't try to cover fgetc errors systematically, just one example of
  such an error.

Tested for x86_64 and x86.
2024-08-21 19:58:14 +00:00
Florian Weimer
498ba34ee2 Revert "inet: Avoid label at end of compound statement in tst-if_nameindex"
This reverts commit 26aca73db5.

Reason for revert: Unintended semantic change.
2024-08-21 20:06:33 +02:00
Florian Weimer
26aca73db5 inet: Avoid label at end of compound statement in tst-if_nameindex
This fails to compile with GCC 8.
2024-08-21 19:16:04 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
734e7f91e7 Rules: Also build memcheck tests even when not running them
This will avoid in the future cases like a57cbbd853 ("malloc: Link
threading tests with $(shared-thread-library") missing the memcheck
cases added in 251843e16f ("malloc: Link threading tests with
$(shared-thread-library)")
2024-08-20 16:23:03 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
251843e16f malloc: Link threading tests with $(shared-thread-library)
Fixes build failures on Hurd.
2024-08-20 16:16:25 +02:00
DJ Delorie
2eee835eca inet: test if_nametoindex and if_indextoname
Tests for if_nameindex, if_name2index, and if_index2name

Tests that valid results are consistent.

Tests that invalid parameters fail correctly.

Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
2024-08-19 17:37:37 -04:00
Adhemerval Zanella
745c3cc10f elf: Make dl-fptr and dl-symaddr hppa specific
With ia64 removal, the function descriptor supports is only used
by HPPA and new architectures do not seem leaning towards this
design.

Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
2024-08-19 14:54:07 -03:00
Matthew Sterrett
294a892769 x86: Unifies 'strnlen-evex' and 'strnlen-evex512' implementations.
This commit uses a common implementation 'strnlen-evex-base.S' for both
'strnlen-evex' and 'strnlen-evex512'

This patch serves both to reduce the number of implementations, and it also does some small optimizations that benefit strnlen-evex and strnlen-evex512.

All tests pass on x86.

Benchmarks were taken on SKX.
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/123613/intel-core-i97900x-xseries-processor-13-75m-cache-up-to-4-30-ghz/specifications.html

Geometric mean for strnlen-evex over all benchmarks (N=10) was (new/old) 0.881
Geometric mean for strnlen-evex512 over all benchmarks (N=10) was (new/old) 0.953

Code Size Changes:
    strnlen-evex       :  +31 bytes
    strnlen-evex512    :  +156 bytes
Reviewed-by: Noah Goldstein <goldstein.w.n@gmail.com>
2024-08-19 07:34:02 -07:00
Florian Weimer
25a5eb4010 string: strerror, strsignal cannot use buffer after dlmopen (bug 32026)
Secondary namespaces have a different malloc.  Allocating the
buffer in one namespace and freeing it another results in
heap corruption.  Fix this by using a static string (potentially
translated) in secondary namespaces.  It would also be possible
to use the malloc from the initial namespace to manage the
buffer, but these functions would still not be safe to use in
auditors etc. because a call to strerror could still free a
buffer while it is used by the application.  Another approach
could use proper initial-exec TLS, duplicated in secondary
namespaces, but that would need a callback interface for freeing
libc resources in namespaces on thread exit, which does not exist
today.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-19 15:48:03 +02:00
Florian Weimer
e7c14e542d support: Use macros for *stat wrappers
Macros will automatically use the correct types, without
having to fiddle with internal glibc macros.  It's also
impossible to get the types wrong due to aliasing because
support_check_stat_fd and support_check_stat_path do not
depend on the struct stat* types.

The changes reveal some inconsistencies in tests.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-16 16:05:20 +02:00
Florian Weimer
bf29274841 io: Use struct statx and xstatx in tests
This avoids the need to define struct_statx to an appropriate
struct stat type variant because struct statx does not change
based on time/file offset flags.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-16 16:05:20 +02:00
Florian Weimer
9216905129 support: Add the xstatx function
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-16 16:05:19 +02:00
Florian Weimer
34bb581e77 support: Include <string.h> for strcmp in support_format_addrinfo.c
This is currently implied by the internal headers, but it makes
sense not to rely on this.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-16 16:05:19 +02:00
Florian Weimer
91ae020f5a support: Remove #include <config.h>
This is not needed: include/intprops.h has its own detection logic.
It makes building these files outside of glibc easer.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-16 16:05:19 +02:00
Maciej W. Rozycki
9fb237a1c8 nptl: Fix extraneous testing run by tst-rseq-nptl in the test driver
Fix an issue with commit 8f4632deb3 ("Linux: rseq registration tests")
and prevent testing from being run in the process of the test driver
itself rather than just the test child where one has been forked.  The
problem here is the unguarded use of a destructor to call a part of the
testing.  The destructor function, 'do_rseq_destructor_test' is called
implicitly at program completion, however because it is associated with
the executable itself rather than an individual process, it is called
both in the test child *and* in the test driver itself.

Prevent this from happening by providing a guard variable that only
enables test invocation from 'do_rseq_destructor_test' in the process
that has first run 'do_test'.  Consequently extra testing is invoked
from 'do_rseq_destructor_test' only once and in the correct process,
regardless of the use or the lack of of the '--direct' option.  Where
called in the controlling test driver process that has neved called
'do_test' the destructor function silently returns right away without
taking any further actions, letting the test driver fail gracefully
where applicable.

This arrangement prevents 'tst-rseq-nptl' from ever causing testing to
hang forever and never complete, such as currently happening with the
'mips-linux-gnu' (o32 ABI) target.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-16 14:38:33 +01:00
Carlos O'Donell
b22923abb0 Report error if setaffinity wrapper fails (Bug 32040)
Previously if the setaffinity wrapper failed the rest of the subtest
would not execute and the current subtest would be reported as passing.
Now if the setaffinity wrapper fails the subtest is correctly reported
as faling. Tested manually by changing the conditions of the affinity
call including setting size to zero, or checking the wrong condition.

No regressions on x86_64.

Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
2024-08-15 15:28:48 -04:00
Siddhesh Poyarekar
3e1d8d1d1d ungetc: Fix backup buffer leak on program exit [BZ #27821]
If a file descriptor is left unclosed and is cleaned up by _IO_cleanup
on exit, its backup buffer remains unfreed, registering as a leak in
valgrind.  This is not strictly an issue since (1) the program should
ideally be closing the stream once it's not in use and (2) the program
is about to exit anyway, so keeping the backup buffer around a wee bit
longer isn't a real problem.  Free it anyway to keep valgrind happy
when the streams in question are the standard ones, i.e. stdout, stdin
or stderr.

Also, the _IO_have_backup macro checks for _IO_save_base,
which is a roundabout way to check for a backup buffer instead of
directly looking for _IO_backup_base.  The roundabout check breaks when
the main get area has not been used and user pushes a char into the
backup buffer with ungetc.  Fix this to use the _IO_backup_base
directly.

Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2024-08-15 13:56:13 -04:00
Siddhesh Poyarekar
cdf0f88f97 ungetc: Fix uninitialized read when putting into unused streams [BZ #27821]
When ungetc is called on an unused stream, the backup buffer is
allocated without the main get area being present.  This results in
every subsequent ungetc (as the stream remains in the backup area)
checking uninitialized memory in the backup buffer when trying to put a
character back into the stream.

Avoid comparing the input character with buffer contents when in backup
to avoid this uninitialized read.  The uninitialized read is harmless in
this context since the location is promptly overwritten with the input
character, thus fulfilling ungetc functionality.

Also adjust wording in the manual to drop the paragraph that says glibc
cannot do multiple ungetc back to back since with this change, ungetc
can actually do this.

Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2024-08-15 13:55:07 -04:00
Siddhesh Poyarekar
3f7df7e757 Make tst-ungetc use libsupport
Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2024-08-15 13:54:37 -04:00
Noah Goldstein
f446d90fe6 x86: Add Avoid_STOSB tunable to allow NT memset without ERMS
The goal of this flag is to allow targets which don't prefer/have ERMS
to still access the non-temporal memset implementation.

There are 4 cases for tuning memset:
    1) `Avoid_STOSB && Avoid_Non_Temporal_Memset`
        - Memset with temporal stores
    2) `Avoid_STOSB && !Avoid_Non_Temporal_Memset`
        - Memset with temporal/non-temporal stores. Non-temporal path
          goes through `rep stosb` path. We accomplish this by setting
          `x86_rep_stosb_threshold` to
          `x86_memset_non_temporal_threshold`.
    3) `!Avoid_STOSB && Avoid_Non_Temporal_Memset`
        - Memset with temporal stores/`rep stosb`
    3) `!Avoid_STOSB && !Avoid_Non_Temporal_Memset`
        - Memset with temporal stores/`rep stosb`/non-temporal stores.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
2024-08-15 08:19:15 -07:00
Noah Goldstein
b93dddfaf4 x86: Use Avoid_Non_Temporal_Memset to control non-temporal path
This is just a refactor and there should be no behavioral change from
this commit.

The goal is to make `Avoid_Non_Temporal_Memset` a more universal knob
for controlling whether we use non-temporal memset rather than having
extra logic based on vendor.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
2024-08-15 08:19:15 -07:00
Noah Goldstein
7da0886247 x86: Fix bug in strchrnul-evex512 [BZ #32078]
Issue was we were expecting not matches with CHAR before the start of
the string in the page cross case.

The check code in the page cross case:
```
    and    $0xffffffffffffffc0,%rax
    vmovdqa64 (%rax),%zmm17
    vpcmpneqb %zmm17,%zmm16,%k1
    vptestmb %zmm17,%zmm17,%k0{%k1}
    kmovq  %k0,%rax
    inc    %rax
    shr    %cl,%rax
    je     L(continue)
```

expects that all characters that neither match null nor CHAR will be
1s in `rax` prior to the `inc`. Then the `inc` will overflow all of
the 1s where no relevant match was found.

This is incorrect in the page-cross case, as the
`vmovdqa64 (%rax),%zmm17` loads from before the start of the input
string.

If there are matches with CHAR before the start of the string, `rax`
won't properly overflow.

The fix is quite simple. Just replace:

```
    inc    %rax
    shr    %cl,%rax
```
With:
```
    sar    %cl,%rax
    inc    %rax
```

The arithmetic shift will clear any matches prior to the start of the
string while maintaining the signbit so the 1s can properly overflow
to zero in the case of no matches.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
2024-08-15 08:11:33 -07:00
Joseph Myers
207d64feb2 Test errno setting on strtod overflow in tst-strtod-round
We have no tests that errno is set to ERANGE on overflow of
strtod-family functions (we do have some tests for underflow, in
tst-strtod-underflow).  Add such tests to tst-strtod-round.

Tested for x86_64.
2024-08-14 17:15:46 +00:00
Frédéric Bérat
3f54e459a6 libio/tst-getdelim: Add new test covering NUL as a delimiter
Add a new test to getdelim to verify that '\0' can be set as a
delimiter.

Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
2024-08-14 11:48:34 +02:00
Florian Weimer
2be0572f3a manual: Document dprintf and vdprintf
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2024-08-13 15:52:34 +02:00
Florian Weimer
0e16db440c manual: Document generic printf error codes
Describe EOVERFLOW, ENOMEN, EILSEQ.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2024-08-13 15:52:34 +02:00
Pavel Kozlov
cf03971f7a
ARC: Regenerate ULPs
Regenerate fpu and soft-fp ULPs. Based on results from HSDK-4xD board
with GCC 14 build.
Including new tests added by 0797283910.
2024-08-11 15:29:56 +02:00
Florian Weimer
c2a474f461 support: Add options list terminator to the test driver
This avoids crashes if a test is passed unknown options.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-09 17:01:19 +02:00
Florian Weimer
eb0e50e9a1 Define __libc_initial for the static libc
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-09 16:17:14 +02:00
Florian Weimer
4331769c0f Turn on -Wimplicit-fallthrough by default if available
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-09 15:34:53 +02:00
mengqinggang
5662433c38 LoongArch: Add cfi instructions for _dl_tlsdesc_dynamic
In _dl_tlsdesc_dynamic, there are three 'addi.d sp, sp, -size'
instructions to allocate stack size for Float/LSX/LASX registers.
Every 'addi.d sp, sp, -size' needs a cfi_adjust_cfa_offset because
of sp is used to compute CFA. But only one 'addi.d sp, sp, -size'
will be run according to HWCAP value. And all cfi_adjust_cfa_offset
will be executed in stack unwinding, it result in incorrect CFA.

Change _dl_tlsdesc_dynamic to _dl_tlsdesc_dynamic,
_dl_tlsdesc_dynamic_lsx and _dl_tlsdesc_dynamic_lasx.
Conflicting cfi instructions can be distributed to the three functions.
And cfi instructions can correspond to stack down instructions.
2024-08-09 09:06:17 +08:00
caiyinyu
d5f1da2a8a LoongArch: Regenerate ULPs
From new tests added by 0797283910.

Signed-off-by: caiyinyu <caiyinyu@loongson.cn>
2024-08-09 09:06:17 +08:00
Julian Zhu
a0ecbb4596 RISC-V: Regenerate ULPs
From new tests added by 0797283910.

Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
2024-08-08 14:53:55 +02:00
Julian Zhu
0f39b60a7e MIPS: Regenerate ULPs
From new tests added by 0797283910.

Signed-off-by: Julian Zhu <jz531210@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
2024-08-08 14:53:53 +02:00
Florian Weimer
9446351dac powerpc64le: Update ulps
Based on results from a POWER8 system with a GCC 8 build.
2024-08-08 13:42:12 +02:00
Florian Weimer
2d14f72c9a elf: Remove struct dl_init_args from elf/dl-open.c
It is completely redundant with struct dl_open_args.
2024-08-08 13:35:03 +02:00
Florian Weimer
bd410d14e1 s390x: Update ulps
Based on results from a z16 system with a GCC 8 build.
2024-08-08 13:01:02 +02:00
Maciej W. Rozycki
bea2ad022d nptl: Fix stray process left by tst-cancel7 blocking testing
Fix an issue with commit b74121ae4b ("Update.") and prevent a stray
process from being left behind by tst-cancel7 (and also tst-cancelx7,
which is the same test built with '-fexceptions' additionally supplied
to the compiler), which then blocks remote testing until the process has
been killed by hand.

This test case creates a thread that runs an extra copy of the test via
system(3) and using the '--direct' option so that the test wrapper does
not interfere with this instance.  This extra copy executes its business
and calls sigsuspend(2) and then never terminates by itself.  Instead it
relies on being killed by the main test process directly via a thread
cancellation request or, should that fail, by issuing SIGKILL either at
the conclusion of 'do_test' or by the test driver via 'do_cleanup' where
the test timeout has been hit or the test driver interrupted.

However if the main test process has been instead killed by a signal,
such as due to incorrect execution, before it had a chance to kill the
extra copy of the test case, then the test wrapper will terminate
without running 'do_cleanup' and consequently the extra copy of the test
case will remain forever in its suspended state, and in the remote case
in particular it means that the remote test wrapper will wait forever
for the SSH command to complete.

This has been observed with the 'alpha-linux-gnu' target, where the main
test process triggers SIGSEGV and the test wrapper correctly records:

Didn't expect signal from child: got `Segmentation fault'

in nptl/tst-cancel7.out and terminates, but then the calling SSH command
continues waiting for the remaining process started in the same session
on the remote target to complete.

Address this problem by also registering 'do_cleanup' via atexit(3),
observing that 'support_delete_temp_files' is registered by the test
wrapper before the test initializing function 'do_prepare' is called and
that we call all the functions registered in the reverse of the order in
which they were registered, so it is safe to refer to 'pidfilename' in
'do_cleanup' invoked by exit(3) because by that time temporary files
have not yet been deleted.

A minor inconvenience is that if 'signal_handler' is invoked in the test
wrapper as a result of SIGALRM rather than SIGINT, then 'do_cleanup'
will be called twice, once as a cleanup handler and again by exit(3).
In reality it is harmless though, because issuing SIGKILL is guarded by
a record lock, so if the first call has succeeded in killing the extra
copy of the test case, then the subsequent call will do nothing.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-07 19:46:21 +01:00
Maciej W. Rozycki
934ba77add nptl: Reorder semaphore release in tst-cancel7
Move the release of the semaphore used to synchronize between an extra
copy of the test run as a separate process and the main test process
until after the PID file has been locked.  It is so that if the cleanup
function gets called by the test driver due to premature termination of
the main test process, then the function does not get at the PID file
before it has been locked and conclude that the extra copy of the test
has already terminated.  This won't usually happen due to a relatively
high amount of time required to elapse before timeout triggers in the
test driver, but it will change with the next change.

There is still a small time window remaining with this change in place
where the main test process gets killed for some reason between the
extra copy of the test has been already started by pthread_create(3) and
a successful return from the call to sem_wait(3), in which case the
cleanup function can be reached before PID has been written to the PID
file and the file locked.  It seems that with the test case structured
as it is now and PID-based process management we have no means to avoid
it.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2024-08-07 19:46:21 +01:00
Adhemerval Zanella
6396e10b20 powerpc: Regenerate ULPs for soft-fp
From new tests added by 0797283910.
2024-08-07 11:02:03 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
6411dba836 powerpc: Update soft-fp ulps
From new tests added by 0797283910.
2024-08-07 11:02:03 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
1dcc107a1f sparc: Regenerate ULPs
From new tests added by 0797283910.
2024-08-07 11:02:03 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
f8aafb5a16 i386: Regenerate ULPs
From new tests added by 0797283910.
2024-08-07 11:02:03 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
d8023eb460 arm: Regenerate ULPs
From new tests added by 0797283910.
2024-08-07 11:02:03 -03:00