In commit aa706e13f4,
sysdeps/mips/ieee754/ieee754.h was changed to use GCC’s predefined
macro __LDBL_MANT_DIG__, instead of including <float.h> and using
LDBL_MANT_DIG (and therefore polluting the user namespace with all of
the macros defined in float.h). In order to support compilers that
don’t provide __LDBL_MANT_DIG__, there is a fallback #if block which
was supposed to include <float.h> and then define __LDBL_MANT_DIG__ to
LDBL_MANT_DIG. However, at some point during the development of the
patch, a typo was introduced, causing the fallback block to define
__LDBL_MANT_DIG__ to expand to __LDBL_MANT_DIG__.
Correct this typo.
Without a proper size, we get MACH_RCV_TOO_LARGE instead of MACH_MSG_SUCCESS.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/setitimer.c (timer_thread): Add return_code_type
field to received message, and set the receive size in __mach_msg call.
As explained on
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2020-01/msg00049.html
the presence of __errno_location in libpthread.so on GNU/Linux makes
libpthread getting linked in for libstdc++. This aligns on that behavior, to
avoid issues that only GNU/Hurd would get.
This follows bd60ce8652 ('nptl: Move pthread_atfork to libc_nonshared.a')
with the same rationale: there is no non-libpthread equivalent to be used
for making linking against libpthread optional.
libpthread_nonshared.a is unused after this, so remove it from the
build.
There is no ABI impact because pthread_atfork was implemented using
__register_atfork in libc even before this change.
pthread_atfork has to be a weak alias because pthread_* names are not
reserved in libc.
This patch avoid probing the __NR_clock_getttime64 syscall each time
__clock_gettime64 is issued on a kernel without 64 bit time support.
Once ENOSYS is obtained, only 32-bit clock_gettime are used.
The following snippet:
clock_getres (CLOCK_REALTIME, &(struct timespec) { 0 });
clock_getres (CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &(struct timespec) { 0 });
clock_getres (CLOCK_BOOTTIME, &(struct timespec) { 0 });
clock_getres (20, &(struct timespec) { 0 });
On a kernel without 64 bit time support issues the syscalls:
syscall_0x196(0, 0xffb83330, [...]) = -1 ENOSYS (Function not implemented)
clock_getres(CLOCK_REALTIME, {tv_sec=0, tv_nsec=1}) = 0
clock_getres(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, {tv_sec=0, tv_nsec=1}) = 0
clock_getres(CLOCK_BOOTTIME, {tv_sec=0, tv_nsec=1}) = 0
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on 4.15 kernel.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
No architecture currently defines the vDSO symbol. On archictures
with 64-bit time_t the HAVE_CLOCK_GETRES_VSYSCALL is renamed to
HAVE_CLOCK_GETRES64_VSYSCALL, it simplifies clock_gettime code.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
It was added on Linux 5.3 (commit 22ca962288c0a).
Checked on i686-linux-gnu with 5.3.0 kernel.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
This patch avoid probing the __NR_clock_getttime64 syscall each time
__clock_gettime64 is issued on a kernel without 64 bit time support.
Once ENOSYS is obtained, only 32-bit clock_gettime are used.
The following snippet:
clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME, &(struct timespec) { 0 });
clock_gettime (CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &(struct timespec) { 0 });
clock_gettime (CLOCK_BOOTTIME, &(struct timespec) { 0 });
clock_gettime (20, &(struct timespec) { 0 });
On a kernel without 64 bit time support and with vDSO support results
on the following syscalls:
syscall_0x193(0, 0xff87ba30, [...]) = -1 ENOSYS (Function not implemented)
clock_gettime(CLOCK_BOOTTIME, {tv_sec=927082, tv_nsec=474382032}) = 0
clock_gettime(0x14 /* CLOCK_??? */, 0xff87b9f8) = -1 EINVAL (Invalid argument)
While on a kernel without vDSO support:
syscall_0x193(0, 0xbec95550, 0xb6ed2000, 0x1, 0xbec95550, 0) = -1 (errno 38)
clock_gettime(CLOCK_REALTIME, {tv_sec=1576615930, tv_nsec=638250162}) = 0
clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, {tv_sec=1665478, tv_nsec=638779620}) = 0
clock_gettime(CLOCK_BOOTTIME, {tv_sec=1675418, tv_nsec=292932704}) = 0
clock_gettime(0x14 /* CLOCK_??? */, 0xbec95530) = -1 EINVAL (Invalid argument)
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on 4.15 kernel and on a 5.3 kernel.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
No architecture currently defines the vDSO symbol. On architectures
with 64-bit time_t the HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME_VSYSCALL is renamed to
HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME64_VSYSCALL, it simplifies clock_gettime code.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
This patch moves the vDSO setup from libc to loader code, just after
the vDSO link_map setup. For static case the initialization
is moved to _dl_non_dynamic_init instead.
Instead of using the mangled pointer, the vDSO data is set as
attribute_relro (on _rtld_global_ro for shared or _dl_vdso_* for
static). It is read-only even with partial relro.
It fixes BZ#24967 now that the vDSO pointer is setup earlier than
malloc interposition is called.
Also, vDSO calls should not be a problem for static dlopen as
indicated by BZ#20802. The vDSO pointer would be zero-initialized
and the syscall will be issued instead.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, aarch64-linux-gnu,
arm-linux-gnueabihf, powerpc64le-linux-gnu, powerpc64-linux-gnu,
powerpc-linux-gnu, s390x-linux-gnu, sparc64-linux-gnu, and
sparcv9-linux-gnu. I also run some tests on mips.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
The IFUNC bypass to vDSO is used when USE_IFUNC_TIME is set.
Currently powerpc and x86 defines it. Otherwise the generic
implementation is used, which calls clock_gettime.
Checked on powerpc64le-linux-gnu, powerpc64-linux-gnu,
powerpc-linux-gnu-power4, x86_64-linux-gnu, and i686-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
The IFUNC bypass to vDSO is used when USE_IFUNC_GETTIMEOFDAY is set.
Currently aarch64, powerpc*, and x86 defines it. Otherwise the
generic implementation is used, which calls clock_gettime.
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu, powerpc64le-linux-gnu,
powerpc64-linux-gnu, powerpc-linux-gnu-power4, x86_64-linux-gnu,
and i686-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
The clock_getres is a new implementation added on Linux 5.4
(abed3d826f2f).
Checked with a build against mips-linux-gnu and mips64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Add the missing time and clock_getres vDSO symbol names on x86.
For time, the iFUNC already uses expected name so it affects only
the static build.
The clock_getres is a new implementation added on Linux 5.3
(f66501dc53e72).
Checked on x86-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
The auto-generated vDSO call shows some issues:
- It requires sync the auto-generated C file with current glibc
implementation;
- It still uses symbol redirections hacks where libc-symbols.h
provide macros that uses compiler builtins
(libc_ifunc_redirected for instance);
- It does not handle all required compiler handling
(inhibit_stack_protector on iFUNC resolver).
- No architecure uses it.
Checked with a build against all major ABIs.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
This is the only use of auto-generation syscall which uses a vDSO
plus IFUNC and the current x86 generic implementation already covers
the expected semantic.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu-x32.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
As indicated on libc-help [1] the ec138c67cb commit broke 32-bit
builds when configured with --enable-kernel=5.1 or higher. The
scenario 10 from [2] might also occur in this configuration and
INLINE_VSYSCALL will try to use the vDSO symbol and
HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME64_VSYSCALL does not set HAVE_VSYSCALL prior its
usage.
Also, there is no easy way to just enable the code to use one
vDSO symbol since the macro INLINE_VSYSCALL is redefined if
HAVE_VSYSCALL is set.
Instead of adding more pre-processor handling and making the code
even more convoluted, this patch removes the requirement of defining
HAVE_VSYSCALL before including sysdep-vdso.h to enable vDSO usage.
The INLINE_VSYSCALL is now expected to be issued inside a
HAVE_*_VSYSCALL check, since it will try to use the internal vDSO
pointers.
Both clock_getres and clock_gettime vDSO code for time64_t were
removed since there is no vDSO setup code for the symbol (an
architecture can not set HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME64_VSYSCALL).
Checked on i686-linux-gnu (default and with --enable-kernel=5.1),
x86_64-linux-gnu, aarch64-linux-gnu, and powerpc64le-linux-gnu.
I also checked against a build to mips64-linux-gnu and
sparc64-linux-gnu.
[1] https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-help/2019-12/msg00014.html
[2] https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2019-12/msg00142.html
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
The result of INTERNAL_SYSCALL_CANCEL should be checked with
macros INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ERROR_P and INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ERRNO instead
of comparing the result directly.
Checked on powerpc-linux-gnu.
This patch adds a new macro, libm_alias_finite, to define all _finite
symbol. It sets all _finite symbol as compat symbol based on its first
version (obtained from the definition at built generated first-versions.h).
The <fn>f128_finite symbols were introduced in GLIBC 2.26 and so need
special treatment in code that is shared between long double and float128.
It is done by adding a list, similar to internal symbol redifinition,
on sysdeps/ieee754/float128/float128_private.h.
Alpha also needs some tricky changes to ensure we still emit 2 compat
symbols for sqrt(f).
Passes buildmanyglibc.
Co-authored-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Since the switch away from auto-generated wrappers for these system
calls, the kludge is already included in the C source file of the
system call wrapper.
Use <arch-syscall.h> instead of <asm/unistd.h> to obtain the system
call numbers. A few direct includes of <asm/unistd.h> need to be
removed (if the system call numbers are already provided indirectly
by <sysdep.h>) or replaced with <sys/syscall.h>.
Current Linux headers for alpha define the required system call names,
so most of the _NR_* hacks are no longer needed. For the 32-bit arm
architecture, eliminate the INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ARM macro, now that we
have regular system call names for cacheflush and set_tls. There are
more such cleanup opportunities for other architectures, but these
cleanups are required to avoid macro redefinition errors during the
build.
For ia64, it is desirable to use <asm/break.h> directly to obtain
the break number for system calls (which is not a system call number
itself). This requires replacing __BREAK_SYSCALL with
__IA64_BREAK_SYSCALL because the former is defined as an alias in
<asm/unistd.h>, but not in <asm/break.h>.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
The new tables are currently only used for consistency checks
with the installed kernel headers and the architecture-independent
system call names table. They are based on Linux 5.4.
The goal is to use these architecture-specific tables to ensure
that system call wrappers are available irrespective of the version
of the installed kernel headers.
The tables are formatted in the form of C header files so that they
can be used directly in an #include directive, without external
preprocessing. (External preprocessing of a plain table file
would introduce cross-subdirectory dependency issues.) However,
the intent is that they can still be treated as tables and can be
processed by simple tools.
The irregular system call names on 32-bit arm add a complication.
The <fixup-asm-unistd.h> header is introduced to work around that,
and the system calls are listed under regular names in the
<arch-syscall.h> file.
A make target, update-syscalls-list, is added to patch the glibc
sources with data from the current kernel headers.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
I've updated copyright dates in glibc for 2020. This is the patch for
the changes not generated by scripts/update-copyrights and subsequent
build / regeneration of generated files. As well as the usual annual
updates, mainly dates in --version output (minus libc.texinfo which
previously had to be handled manually but is now successfully updated
by update-copyrights), there is a fix to
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/bits/termios-c_lflag.h where a typo in
the copyright notice meant it failed to be updated automatically.
Please remember to include 2020 in the dates for any new files added
in future (which means updating any existing uncommitted patches you
have that add new files to use the new copyright dates in them).
This adds _hurd_sigstate_set_global_rcv used by libpthread to enable
POSIX-confirming behavior of signals on a per-thread basis.
This also provides a sigstate destructor _hurd_sigstate_delete, and a
global process signal state, which needs to be locked and check when
global disposition is enabled, thus the addition of _hurd_sigstate_lock
_hurd_sigstate_actions _hurd_sigstate_pending _hurd_sigstate_unlock helpers.
This also updates all the glibc code accordingly.
This also drops support for get_int(INIT_SIGMASK), which did not make sense
any more since we do not have a single signal thread any more.
During fork/spawn, this also reinitializes the child global sigstate's
lock. That cures an issue that would very rarely cause a deadlock in the
child in fork, tries to unlock ss' critical section lock at the end of
fork. This will typically (always?) be observed in /bin/sh, which is not
surprising as that is the foremost caller of fork.
To reproduce an intermediate state, add an endless loop if
_hurd_global_sigstate is locked after __proc_dostop (cast through
volatile); that is, while still being in the fork's parent process.
When that triggers (use the libtool testsuite), the signal thread has
already locked ss (which is _hurd_global_sigstate), and is stuck at
hurdsig.c:685 in post_signal, trying to lock _hurd_siglock (which the
main thread already has locked and keeps locked until after
__task_create). This is the case that ss->thread == MACH_PORT_NULL, that
is, a global signal. In the main thread, between __proc_dostop and
__task_create is the __thread_abort call on the signal thread which would
abort any current kernel operation (but leave ss locked). Later in fork,
in the parent, when _hurd_siglock is unlocked in fork, the parent's
signal thread can proceed and will unlock eventually the global sigstate.
In the client, _hurd_siglock will likewise be unlocked, but the global
sigstate never will be, as the client's signal thread has been configured
to restart execution from _hurd_msgport_receive. Thus, when the child
tries to unlock ss' critical section lock at the end of fork, it will
first lock the global sigstate, will spin trying to lock it, which can
never be successful, and we get our deadlock.
Options seem to be:
* Move the locking of _hurd_siglock earlier in post_signal -- but that
may generally impact performance, if this locking isn't generally
needed anyway?
On the other hand, would it actually make sense to wait here until we
are not any longer in a critical section (which is meant to disable
signal delivery anyway (but not for preempted signals?))?
* Clear the global sigstate in the fork's child with the rationale that
we're anyway restarting the signal thread from a clean state. This
has now been implemented.
Why has this problem not been observed before Jérémie's patches? (Or has
it? Perhaps even more rarely?) In _S_msg_sig_post, the signal is now
posted to a *global receiver thread*, whereas previously it was posted to
the *designated signal-receiving thread*. The latter one was in a
critical section in fork, so didn't try to handle the signal until after
leaving the critical section? (Not completely analyzed and verified.)
Another question is what the signal is that is being received
during/around the time __proc_dostop executes.
Adapted from the Linux x86 functions.
Not thoroughly tested, but manual testing as well as glibc tests look fine, and
manual -lpthread testing also looks fine (within the given bounds for a new
stack to be used with makecontext).
This has also been in use in Debian since 2013.
Some compiler versions, e.g. GCC 7, complain when -mlong-double-128 is
used together with -mabi=ibmlongdouble or -mabi=ieeelongdouble,
producing the following error message:
cc1: error: ‘-mabi=ibmlongdouble’ requires ‘-mlong-double-128’
This patch removes -mlong-double-128 from the compilation lines that
explicitly request -mabi=*longdouble.
Tested for powerpc64le.
Reviewed-by: Tulio Magno Quites Machado Filho <tuliom@linux.ibm.com>
Some of the files that provide stdio.h and wchar.h functions have a
filename prefixed with 'io', such as 'iovsprintf.c'. On platforms that
imply ldbl-128ibm-compat, these files must be compiled with the flag
-mabi=ibmlongdouble. This patch adds this flag to their compilation.
Notice that this is not required for the other files that provide
similar functions, because filenames that are not prefixed with 'io'
have ldbl-128ibm-compat counterparts in the Makefile, which already adds
-mabi=ibmlongdouble to them.
Reviewed-by: Gabriel F. T. Gomes <gabrielftg@linux.ibm.com>
On platforms where long double has IEEE binary128 format as a third
option (initially, only powerpc64le), many exported functions are
redirected to their __*ieee128 equivalents. This redirection is
provided by installed headers such as stdio-ldbl.h, and is supposed to
work correctly with user code.
However, during the build of glibc, similar redirections are employed,
in internal headers, such as include/stdio.h, in order to avoid extra
PLT entries. These redirections conflict with the redirections to
__*ieee128, and must be avoided during the build. This patch protects
the second redirections with a test for __LONG_DOUBLE_USES_FLOAT128, a
new macro that is defined to 1 when functions that deal with long double
typed values reuses the _Float128 implementation (this is currently only
true for powerpc64le).
Tested for powerpc64le, x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py.
Co-authored-by: Gabriel F. T. Gomes <gabrielftg@linux.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
All architectures now uses the Linux generic implementation which
uses __NR_rt_sigprocmask.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, sparc64-linux-gnu, ia64-linux-gnu,
s390x-linux-gnu, and alpha-linux-gnu.
The functions do not fail regardless of the argument value. Also, for
Linux the return value is not correct on some platforms due the missing
usage of INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ERROR_P / INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ERRNO macros.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, and sparc64-linux-gnu.
On powerpc64le, the libm_alias_float128_other_r_ldbl macro is
used to create an alias between totalorderf128 and __totalorderlieee128,
as well as between the totalordermagf128 and __totalordermaglieee128.
However, the totalorder* and totalordermag* functions changed their
parameter type since commit ID 42760d7646 and got compat symbols for
their old versions. With this change, the aforementioned macro would
create two conflicting aliases for __totalorderlieee128 and
__totalordermaglieee128.
This patch avoids the creation of the alias between the IEEE long double
symbols (__totalorderl*ieee128) and the compat symbols, because the IEEE
long double functions have never been exported thus don't need such
compat symbol.
Tested for powerpc64le.
Reviewed-by: Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
This patch adds IEEE long double versions of q*cvt* functions for
powerpc64le. Unlike all other long double to/from string conversion
functions, these do not rely on internal functions that can take
floating-point numbers with different formats and act on them
accordingly, instead, the related files are rebuilt with the
-mabi=ieeelongdouble compiler flag set.
Having -mabi=ieeelongdouble passed to the compiler causes the object
files to be marked with a .gnu_attribute that is incompatible with the
.gnu_attribute in files built with -mabi=ibmlongdouble (the default).
The difference causes error messages similar to the following:
ld: libc_pic.a(s_isinfl.os) uses IBM long double,
libc_pic.a(ieee128-qefgcvt_r.os) uses IEEE long double.
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
make[2]: *** [../Makerules:649: libc_pic.os] Error 1
Although this warning is useful in other situations, the library
actually needs to have functions with different long double formats, so
.gnu_attribute generation is explicitly disabled for these files with
the use of -mno-gnu-attribute.
Tested for powerpc64le on the branch that actually enables the
sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm-compat for powerpc64le.
Reviewed-by: Paul E. Murphy <murphyp@linux.ibm.com>
Due to the branch prediction issue of Kunpeng processor, we found
memset_generic has poor performance on middle sizes setting, and so
we reconstructed the logic, expanded the loop by 4 times in set_long
to solve the problem, even when setting below 1K sizes have benefit.
Another change is that DZ_ZVA seems no work when setting zero, so we
discarded it and used set_long to set zero instead. Fewer branches and
predictions also make the zero case have slightly improvement.
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Wilco Dijkstra <Wilco.Dijkstra@arm.com>
Optimize the strlen implementation by using vector operations and
loop unrolling in main loop.Compared to __strlen_generic,it reduces
latency of cases in bench-strlen by 7%~18% when the length of src
is greater than 128 bytes, with gains throughout the benchmark.
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Wilco Dijkstra <Wilco.Dijkstra@arm.com>
Kunpeng processer is a 64-bit Arm-compatible CPU released by Huawei,
and we have already signed a copyright assignement with the FSF.
This patch adds its to cpu list, and related macro for IFUNC.
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <Szabolcs.Nagy@arm.com>
Considering the excellent performance of memchr.S on glibc 2.30, the
same algorithm is used to find chrin. Compared to memrchr.c, this
method with memrchr.S achieves an average performance improvement
of 58% based on benchtest and its extension cases.
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Wilco Dijkstra <Wilco.Dijkstra@arm.com>
Optimize the strlen implementation by using vector operations and
loop unrooling in main loop. Compared to aarch64/strnlen.S, it
reduces latency of cases in bench-strnlen by 11%~24% when the length
of src is greater than 64 bytes, with gains throughout the benchmark.
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Wilco Dijkstra <Wilco.Dijkstra@arm.com>
Optimize the strcpy implementation by using vector loads and operations
in main loop.Compared to aarch64/strcpy.S, it reduces latency of cases
in bench-strlen by 5%~18% when the length of src is greater than 64
bytes, with gains throughout the benchmark.
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Wilco Dijkstra <Wilco.Dijkstra@arm.com>
The loop body is expanded from a 16-byte comparison to a 64-byte
comparison, and the usage of ldp is replaced by the Post-index
mode to the Base plus offset mode. Hence, compare can faster 18%
around > 128 bytes in all.
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Wilco Dijkstra <Wilco.Dijkstra@arm.com>
If the wait4 syscall is not available (such as y2038 safe 32-bit
systems) waitid should be used instead. However prior Linux 5.4
waitid is not a full superset of other wait syscalls, since it
does not include support for waiting for the current process group.
It is possible to emulate wait4 by issuing an extra syscall to get
the current process group, but it is inherent racy: after the current
process group is received and before it is passed to waitid a signal
could arrive causing the current process group to change.
So waitid is used if wait4 is not defined iff the build is
enabled with a minimum kernel if 5.4+. The new assume
__ASSUME_WAITID_PID0_P_PGID is added and an error is issued if waitid
can not be implemented by either __NR_wait4 or
__NR_waitid && __ASSUME_WAITID_PID0_P_PGID.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
Co-authored-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
The POSIX implementation is used as default and both BSD and Linux
version are removed. It simplifies the implementation for
architectures that do not provide either __NR_waitpid or
__NR_wait4.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and powerpc64le-linux-gnu.
It enables and disables cancellation with pthread_setcancelstate
before calling the waitpid. It simplifies the waitpid implementation
for architectures that do not provide either __NR_waitpid or
__NR_wait4.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
The posix_spawn on sparc issues invalid sigprocmask calls:
rt_sigprocmask(0xffe5e15c /* SIG_??? */, ~[], 0xffe5e1dc, 8) = -1 EINVAL (Invalid argument)
Which make support/tst-support_capture_subprocess fails with random
output (due the child signal being wrongly captured by the parent).
Tracking the culprit it seems to be a wrong code generation in the
INTERNAL_SYSCALL due the automatic sigset_t used on
__libc_signal_block_all:
return INTERNAL_SYSCALL (rt_sigprocmask, err, 4, SIG_BLOCK, &SIGALL_SET,
set, _NSIG / 8);
Where SIGALL_SET is defined as:
((__sigset_t) { .__val = {[0 ... _SIGSET_NWORDS-1 ] = -1 } })
Building the expanded __libc_signal_block_all on sparc64 with recent
compiler (gcc 8.3.1 and 9.1.1):
#include <signal>
int
_libc_signal_block_all (sigset_t *set)
{
INTERNAL_SYSCALL_DECL (err);
return INTERNAL_SYSCALL (rt_sigprocmask, err, 4, SIG_BLOCK, &SIGALL_SET,
set, _NSIG / 8);
}
The first argument (SIG_BLOCK) is not correctly set on 'o0' register:
__libc_signal_block_all:
save %sp, -304, %sp
add %fp, 1919, %o0
mov 128, %o2
sethi %hi(.LC0), %o1
call memcpy, 0
or %o1, %lo(.LC0), %o1
add %fp, 1919, %o1
mov %i0, %o2
mov 8, %o3
mov 103, %g1
ta 0x6d;
bcc,pt %xcc, 1f
mov 0, %g1
sub %g0, %o0, %o0
mov 1, %g1
1: sra %o0, 0, %i0
return %i7+8
nop
Where if SIGALL_SET is defined a const object, gcc correctly sets the
expected kernel argument in correct register:
sethi %hi(.LC0), %o1
call memcpy, 0
or %o1, %lo(.LC0), %o1
-> mov 1, %o0
add %fp, 1919, %o1
Another possible fix is use a static const object. Although there
should not be a difference between a const compound literal and a static
const object, the gcc C99 status page [1] has a note stating that this
optimization is not implemented:
"const-qualified compound literals could share storage with each
other and with string literals, but currently don't.".
This patch fixes it by moving both sigset_t that represent the
signal sets to static const data object. It generates slight better
code where the object reference is used directly instead of a stack
allocation plus the content materialization.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, and sparc64-linux-gnu.
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/c99status.html
This patch adds the missing bits for powerpc and fixes both
tst-ifunc-fault-lazy and tst-ifunc-fault-bindnow failures on
powerpc-linux-gnu.
Checked on powerpc-linux-gnu and powerpc-linux-gnu-power4.
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Tulio Magno Quites Machado Filho <tuliom@linux.ibm.com>
After commit f7649d5780 ("dlopen: Do not
block signals"), the dynamic linker no longer uses sigprocmask, which
means that it does not have to be made available explicitly on hurd.
This reverts commit 892badc9bb
("hurd: Make __sigprocmask GLIBC_PRIVATE") and commit
d5ed9ba29a ("hurd: Fix ld.so link"),
but keeps the comment changes from the second commit.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/getrandom.c (__getrandom): Open the random source
with O_NONBLOCK when the GRND_NONBLOCK flag is provided.
Message-Id: <20191217182929.90989-1-jrtc27@jrtc27.com>
GCC 10 (PR 91233) won't silently allow registers that are not architecturally
available to be present in the clobber list anymore, resulting in build failure
for mips*r6 targets in form of:
...
.../sysdep.h:146:2: error: the register ‘lo’ cannot be clobbered in ‘asm’ for the current target
146 | __asm__ volatile ( \
| ^~~~~~~
This is because base R6 ISA doesn't define hi and lo registers w/o DSP extension.
This patch provides the alternative definitions of __SYSCALL_CLOBBERS for r6
targets that won't include those registers.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips32/sysdep.h (__SYSCALL_CLOBBERS): Exclude
hi and lo from the clobber list for __mips_isa_rev >= 6.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips64/n32/sysdep.h (__SYSCALL_CLOBBERS): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips64/n64/sysdep.h (__SYSCALL_CLOBBERS): Likewise.
In the format string for *scanf functions, the '%as', '%aS', and '%a[]'
modifiers behave differently depending on ISO C99 compatibility. When
_GNU_SOURCE is defined and -std=c89 is passed to the compiler, these
functions behave like ascanf, and the modifiers allocate memory for the
output. Otherwise, the ISO C99 compliant version of these functions is
used, and the modifiers consume a floating-point argument. This patch
adds the IEEE binary128 variant of ISO C99 compliant functions for the
third long double format on powerpc64le.
Tested for powerpc64le.
Reviewed-by: Paul E. Murphy <murphyp@linux.ibm.com>
Since commit
commit 03992356e6
Author: Zack Weinberg <zackw@panix.com>
Date: Sat Feb 10 11:58:35 2018 -0500
Use C99-compliant scanf under _GNU_SOURCE with modern compilers.
the selection of the GNU versions of scanf functions requires both
_GNU_SOURCE and -std=c89. This patch changes the tests in
ldbl-128ibm-compat so that they actually test the GNU versions (without
this change, the redirection to the ISO C99 version always happens, so
GNU versions of the new implementation (e.g. __scanfieee128) were left
untested).
Tested for powerpc64le.
Reviewed-by: Paul E. Murphy <murphyp@linux.ibm.com>
Not only libc/rtld use __close_nocancel_nostatus.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/Makefile [$(subdir) == io] (sysdep_routines): Add
close_nocancel_nostatus.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/Versions (libc): Add __close_nocancel_nostatus to
GLIBC_PRIVATE.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/not-cancel.h (__close_nocancel_nostatus): Declare
function instead of defining inline.
[IS_IN (libc) || IS_IN (rtld)] (__close_nocancel_nostatus): Make
function hidden.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/close_nocancel_nostatus.c: New file.
This patch implements roundtoint and convertoint for s390
by using the load-fp-integer and convert-to-fixed instructions.
Both functions are using "round to nearest with ties away from zero"
rounding mode and do not raise inexact exceptions.
This patch updates the s390 specific functions fegetround,
fesetround, feholdexcept, fesetenv, feupdateenv, fegetexceptflag,
fetestexcept, fesetexceptflag, fetestexceptflag.
Now those functions are using the libc_fe* macros if possible.
Furthermore fegetexceptflag is now returning the exception from
dxc field shifted to the usual exception-flags.
Thus a special fetestexceptflag implementation is not needed anymore.
This patch provides the s390 specific implementation for
libc_feholdexcept, libc_fesetround, libc_feholdexcept_setround,
libc_fetestexcept, libc_fesetenv, libc_feupdateenv_test,
libc_feupdateenv, libc_feholdsetround_ctx, libc_feresetround_ctx,
libc_feholdsetround_noex_ctx and libc_feresetround_noex_ctx.
If compiled with z196 zarch support, the convert-to-fixed instruction
is used to implement llround, llroundf, llroundl.
Otherwise the common-code implementation is used.
If compiled with z196 zarch support, the convert-to-fixed instruction
is used to implement lround, lroundf, lroundl.
Otherwise the common-code implementation is used.
If compiled with z196 zarch support, the convert-to-fixed instruction
is used to implement llrint, llrintf, llrintl.
Otherwise the common-code implementation is used.
If compiled with z196 zarch support, the convert-to-fixed instruction
is used to implement lrint, lrintf, lrintl.
Otherwise the common-code implementation is used.
If compiled with z196 zarch support, the load-fp-integer instruction
is used to implement roundeven, roundevenf, roundevenl.
Otherwise the common-code implementation is used.
This patch just adjusts the generic implementation regarding code style.
No functional change.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch just adjusts the generic implementation regarding code style.
No functional change.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch just adjusts the generic implementation regarding code style.
No functional change.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch just adjusts the generic implementation regarding code style.
No functional change.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch just adjusts the generic implementation regarding code style.
No functional change.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch is always using the corresponding GCC builtin for copysignf, copysign,
and is using the builtin for copysignl, copysignf128 if the USE_FUNCTION_BUILTIN
macros are defined to one in math-use-builtins.h.
Altough the long double version is enabled by default we still need
the macro and the alternative implementation as the _Float128 version
of the builtin is not available with all supported GCC versions.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch is using the corresponding GCC builtin for roundf, round,
roundl and roundf128 if the USE_FUNCTION_BUILTIN macros are defined to one
in math-use-builtins.h.
This is the case for s390 if build with at least --march=z196 --mzarch.
Otherwise the generic implementation is used. The code of the generic
implementation is not changed.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch is using the corresponding GCC builtin for truncf, trunc,
truncl and truncf128 if the USE_FUNCTION_BUILTIN macros are defined to one
in math-use-builtins.h.
This is the case for s390 if build with at least --march=z196 --mzarch.
Otherwise the generic implementation is used. The code of the generic
implementation is not changed.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch is using the corresponding GCC builtin for ceilf, ceil,
ceill and ceilf128 if the USE_FUNCTION_BUILTIN macros are defined to one
in math-use-builtins.h.
This is the case for s390 if build with at least --march=z196 --mzarch.
Otherwise the generic implementation is used. The code of the generic
implementation is not changed.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch is using the corresponding GCC builtin for floorf, floor,
floorl and floorf128 if the USE_FUNCTION_BUILTIN macros are defined to one
in math-use-builtins.h.
This is the case for s390 if build with at least --march=z196 --mzarch.
Otherwise the generic implementation is used. The code of the generic
implementation is not changed.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch is using the corresponding GCC builtin for rintf, rint,
rintl and rintf128 if the USE_FUNCTION_BUILTIN macros are defined to one
in math-use-builtins.h.
This is the case for s390 if build with at least --march=z196 --mzarch.
Otherwise the generic implementation is used. The code of the generic
implementation is not changed.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch is using the corresponding GCC builtin for nearbyintf, nearbyint,
nearbintl and nearbyintf128 if the USE_FUNCTION_BUILTIN macros are defined to one
in math-use-builtins.h.
This is the case for s390 if build with at least --march=z196 --mzarch.
Otherwise the generic implementation is used. The code of the generic
implementation is not changed.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch replaces s_round.c in sysdeps/dbl-64 with the one in
sysdeps/dbl-64/wordsize-64 and removes the latter one.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch replaces s_trunc.c in sysdeps/dbl-64 with the one in
sysdeps/dbl-64/wordsize-64 and removes the latter one.
The code is not changed except changes in code style.
Also adjusted the include path in x86_64 and sparc64 files.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch replaces s_ceil.c in sysdeps/dbl-64 with the one in
sysdeps/dbl-64/wordsize-64 and removes the latter one.
The code is not changed except changes in code style.
Also adjusted the include path in x86_64 and sparc64 files.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch replaces s_floor.c in sysdeps/dbl-64 with the one in
sysdeps/dbl-64/wordsize-64 and removes the latter one.
The code is not changed except changes in code style.
Also adjusted the include path in x86_64 and sparc64 files.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch replaces s_rint.c in sysdeps/dbl-64 with the one in
sysdeps/dbl-64/wordsize-64 and removes the latter one.
The code is not changed except changes in code style.
Also adjusted the include path in x86_64 file.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch replaces s_nearbyint.c in sysdeps/dbl-64 with the one in
sysdeps/dbl-64/wordsize-64 and removes the latter one.
The code is not changed except changes in code style.
Also adjusted the include path in x86_64 file.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/trampoline.c (_hurd_setup_sighandler): Always check
for interrupted code being with esp pointing at mach_msg arguments, even
when using an altstack. If we need to abort the RPC we will need
this.
This patch adds the missing __libpthread_version_placeholder for
GLIBC_2.2.6 version from the nanosleep implementation move from
libpthread to libc (79a547b162).
It also fixes the wrong compat symbol definitions added by changing
back the version used on vfork check and remove the
__libpthread_version_placeholder added on some ABI (4f4bb489e0).
The __libpthread_version_placeholder is also refactored to make it
simpler to add new compat_symbols by adding a new macro
compat_symbol_unique which uses the compiler extension __COUNTER__
to generate unique strong alias to be used with compat_symbol.
Checked with a updated-abi on the all affected abis of the nanosleep
move.
Change-Id: I347a4dbdc931bb42b359456932dd1e17aa4d4078
This patch provides new __timer_settime64 explicit 64 bit function for setting
flags, interval and value of specified timer.
Moreover, a 32 bit version - __timer_settime has been refactored to internally
use __timer_settime64.
The __timer_settime is now supposed to be used on systems still supporting 32
bit time (__TIMESIZE != 64) - hence the necessary conversion to 64 bit struct
__timespec64 from struct timespec (and opposite when old_value pointer is
provided).
The new __timer_settime64 syscall available from Linux 5.1+ has been used, when
applicable.
The original INLINE_SYSCALL() macro has been replaced with
INLINE_SYSCALL_CALL() to avoid explicit passing the number of arguments.
Build tests:
- The code has been tested on x86_64/x86 (native compilation):
make PARALLELMFLAGS="-j8" && make check PARALLELMFLAGS="-j8" && \\
make xcheck PARALLELMFLAGS="-j8"
- The glibc has been build tested (make PARALLELMFLAGS="-j8") for
x86 (i386), x86_64-x32, and armv7
Run-time tests:
- Run specific tests on ARM/x86 32bit systems (qemu):
https://github.com/lmajewski/meta-y2038 and run tests:
https://github.com/lmajewski/y2038-tests/commits/master
- Use of cross-test-ssh.sh for ARM (armv7):
make PARALLELMFLAGS="-j8" test-wrapper='./cross-test-ssh.sh root@192.168.7.2' xcheck
Linux kernel, headers and minimal kernel version for glibc build test
matrix:
- Linux v5.1 (with timer_settime64) and glibc build with v5.1 as
minimal kernel version (--enable-kernel="5.1.0")
The __ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS flag defined.
- Linux v5.1 and default minimal kernel version
The __ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS not defined, but kernel supports timer_settime64
syscall.
- Linux v4.19 (no timer_settime64 support) with default minimal kernel version
for contemporary glibc (3.2.0)
This kernel doesn't support timer_settime64 syscall, so the fallback to
timer_settime is tested.
Above tests were performed with Y2038 redirection applied as well as without
(so the __TIMESIZE != 64 execution path is checked as well).
No regressions were observed.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>