grp.h declares endgrent and getgrent if __USE_XOPEN2K8 (i.e. 2008
edition of POSIX, non-XSI). However, the 2013 Technical Corrigendum
corrected the grp.h specification to XSI-shade these functions as in
previous editions (see <http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=24>),
so they should not be declared for non-XSI POSIX. This patch corrects
the conditions - using __USE_MISC || __USE_XOPEN_EXTENDED to match
setgrent - and the conform/ test expectations for this header, thereby
fixing the conform tests for this header for XPG3 (where the
expectations were wrong) and the linknamespace tests for it for
POSIX2008 (where the header bug meant it was wrongly considered a
problem for endgrent to bring in a reference to setgrent).
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that installed stripped
shared libraries are unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #18528]
* grp/grp.h (endgrent): Condition on [__USE_MISC ||
__USE_XOPEN_EXTENDED], not [__USE_XOPEN_EXTENDED ||
__USE_XOPEN2K8].
(getgrent): Likewise.
* conform/data/grp.h-data [XPG3 || POSIX2008] (getgrent): Do not
expect.
[XPG3 || POSIX2008] (endgrent): Likewise.
[XPG3] (setgrent): Likewise.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XPG3/grp.h/conform): Remove
variable.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/grp.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
Various functions in XPG4 bring in references to getlogin_r, which is
not in XPG4; this is also a bug for some older POSIX versions which
aren't yet covered by the linknamespace tests. This patch fixes this
by making getlogin_r into a weak alias for __getlogin_r and using
__getlogin_r as needed.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that disassembly of
installed stripped shared libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #18527]
* login/getlogin_r.c (getlogin_r): Rename to __getlogin_r and
define as weak alias of __getlogin_r. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/getlogin_r.c (getlogin_r): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/getlogin_r.c (getlogin_r): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/getlogin_r.c (getlogin_r): Likewise.
* include/unistd.h (__getlogin_r): Declare. Use
libc_hidden_proto.
* posix/glob.c (glob): Call __getlogin_r instead of getlogin_r.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XPG3/glob.h/linknamespace): Remove
variable.
(test-xfail-XPG3/wordexp.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XPG4/glob.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XPG4/wordexp.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
a non-standard directory specified by the prefix make variable
fails with an error. Since this is an unsupported use case,
this change makes make install fail early and with a descriptive
error message when either the prefix or the exec_prefix make
variable is overridden on the command line.
aio_* bring in references to pread, which isn't in all the standards
containing aio_* (as a reference from one library to another, this is
a bug for dynamic as well as static linking). This patch fixes this
by using __libc_pread instead, exporting that function from libc at
symbol version GLIBC_PRIVATE; the code, with conditionals that may
call either __pread64 or __libc_pread, becomes exactly analogous to
that elsewhere in the same file that may call either __pwrite64 or
__libc_pwrite.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and comparison of disassembly of
installed shared libraries). libc changes because of the PLT entry
for the newly exported __libc_pread; librt changes because of
assertion line numbers and PLT rearrangement; other stripped installed
shared libraries do not change.
[BZ #18519]
* posix/Versions (libc): Export __libc_pread at version
GLIBC_PRIVATE.
* sysdeps/pthread/aio_misc.c (handle_fildes_io): Call __libc_pread
instead of pread.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-POSIX/aio.h/linknamespace): Remove
variable.
The functions ecvt, fcvt and gcvt, in some standards, bring in
references to ecvt_r and fcvt_r, which aren't in any of those
standards. The calls are correctly to __ecvt_r and __fcvt_r, but then
the names ecvt_r and fcvt_r are defined as strong aliases; this patch
changes them to weak aliases.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that disassembly of
installed stripped shared libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #18522]
* misc/efgcvt_r.c
[LONG_DOUBLE_COMPAT (libc, GLIBC_2_0) && !LONG_DOUBLE_CVT]
(cvt_symbol): Use weak_alias instead of strong_alias.
[LONG_DOUBLE_COMPAT (libc, GLIBC_2_0)] (cvt_symbol): Likewise.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XPG4/stdlib.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/stdlib.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/stdlib.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
The 2008 edition of POSIX removed h_errno, but some functions still
bring in references to the h_errno external symbol. As this symbol is
not a part of the public ABI (only __h_errno_location is), this patch
fixes this by renaming the GLIBC_PRIVATE TLS symbol to __h_errno.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and comparison of installed
shared libraries). Disassembly of all shared libraries using h_errno
changes because of the renaming (and changes to associated TLS / GOT
offsets in some cases); disassembly of libpthread on x86_64 changes
more substantially because the enlargement of .dynsym affects
subsequent addresses.
[BZ #18520]
* inet/herrno.c (h_errno): Rename to __h_errno.
(__libc_h_errno): Define as alias of __h_errno not h_errno.
* include/netdb.h [IS_IN_LIB && !IS_IN (libc)] (h_errno): Define
to __h_errno instead of h_errno.
* nptl/herrno.c (h_errno): Rename to __h_errno.
(__h_errno_location): Refer to __h_errno not h_errno.
* resolv/Versions (h_errno): Rename to __h_errno.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/grp.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/pwd.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
Here is implementation of vectorized sin containing SSE, AVX,
AVX2 and AVX512 versions according to Vector ABI
<https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/x86-64-abi/LmppCfN1rZ4>.
* bits/libm-simd-decl-stubs.h: Added stubs for sin.
* math/bits/mathcalls.h: Added sin declaration with __MATHCALL_VEC.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/libmvec.abilist: New versions added.
* sysdeps/x86/fpu/bits/math-vector.h: SIMD declaration for sin.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/Makefile (libmvec-support): Added new files.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/Versions: New versions added.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/Makefile (libmvec-sysdep_routines): Added
build of SSE, AVX2 and AVX512 IFUNC versions.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_sin2_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_sin2_core_sse4.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_sin4_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_sin4_core_avx2.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_sin8_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_sin8_core_avx512.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_sin2_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_sin4_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_sin4_core_avx.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_sin8_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_sin_data.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_sin_data.h: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/test-double-vlen2-wrappers.c: Added vector sin test.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/test-double-vlen2.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/test-double-vlen4-avx2-wrappers.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/test-double-vlen4-avx2.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/test-double-vlen4-wrappers.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/test-double-vlen4.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/test-double-vlen8-wrappers.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/test-double-vlen8.c: Likewise.
* NEWS: Mention addition of x86_64 vector sin.
In commit 02657da2cf, .interp section
was removed from libpthread.so. This led to an error:
$ /lib64/libpthread.so.0
Native POSIX Threads Library by Ulrich Drepper et al
Copyright (C) 2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.
There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Forced unwind support included.
Segmentation fault
(gdb) bt
#0 0x00000000000055a6 in _exit@plt ()
Unfortunately, there is no way to add a regression test for the bug
because .interp specifies the path to dynamic linker of the target
system.
[BZ #18479]
* nptl/pt-interp.c: New file.
* nptl/Makefile (libpthread-routines, libpthread-shared-only-routines):
Add pt-interp.
[$(build-shared) = yes] ($(objpfx)pt-interp.os): Depend on
$(common-objpfx)runtime-linker.h.
regcomp brings in references to wcscoll, which isn't in all the
standards that contain regcomp. In turn, wcscoll brings in references
to wcscmp, also not in all those standards. This patch fixes this by
making those functions into weak aliases of __wcscoll and __wcscmp and
calling those names instead as needed.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that disassembly of
installed shared libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #18497]
* wcsmbs/wcscmp.c [!WCSCMP] (WCSCMP): Define as __wcscmp instead
of wcscmp.
(wcscmp): Define as weak alias of WCSCMP.
* wcsmbs/wcscoll.c (STRCOLL): Define as __wcscoll instead of
wcscoll.
(USE_HIDDEN_DEF): Define.
[!USE_IN_EXTENDED_LOCALE_MODEL] (wcscoll): Define as weak alias of
__wcscoll. Don't use libc_hidden_weak.
* wcsmbs/wcscoll_l.c (STRCMP): Define as __wcscmp instead of
wcscmp.
* sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/wcscmp-c.c
[SHARED] (libc_hidden_def): Define __GI___wcscmp instead of
__GI_wcscmp.
(weak_alias): Undefine and redefine.
* sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/wcscmp.S (wcscmp): Rename to
__wcscmp and define as weak alias of __wcscmp.
* sysdeps/x86_64/wcscmp.S (wcscmp): Likewise.
* include/wchar.h (__wcscmp): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
(__wcscoll): Likewise.
(wcscmp): Don't use libc_hidden_proto.
(wcscoll): Likewise.
* posix/regcomp.c (build_range_exp): Call __wcscoll instead of
wcscoll.
* posix/regexec.c (check_node_accept_bytes): Likewise.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XPG3/regex.h/linknamespace): Remove
variable.
(test-xfail-XPG4/regex.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX/regex.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
pathconf uses __statvfs64, and fpathconf uses __fstatvfs64. On
systems using sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wordsize-64, __statvfs64 then
brings in the strong symbol statvfs, and __fstatvfs64 brings in the
strong symbol fstatvfs, which are not in all the standards that have
pathconf and fpathconf. This patch fixes this by making those symbols
into weak aliases.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that disassembly of
installed shared libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #18507]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/fstatvfs.c (fstatvfs): Rename to
__fstatvfs and define as weak alias of __fstatvfs. Use
libc_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/statvfs.c (statvs): Rename to __statvfs
and define as weak alias of __statvfs. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wordsize-64/fstatvfs.c (__fstatvfs64):
Define as alias of __fstatvfs, not fstatvfs.
(fstatvfs64): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wordsize-64/statvfs.c (__statvfs64):
Define as alias of __statvfs, not statvfs.
(statvfs64): Likewise.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-POSIX/unistd.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
Here is implementation of vectorized cosf containing SSE, AVX,
AVX2 and AVX512 versions according to Vector ABI
<https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/x86-64-abi/LmppCfN1rZ4>.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/Makefile (libmvec-support): Added new files.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/Versions: New versions added.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_s_cosf4_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_s_cosf4_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_s_cosf4_core_sse4.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_s_cosf8_core_avx.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_s_cosf8_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_s_cosf8_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_s_cosf8_core_avx2.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_s_cosf16_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_s_cosf16_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_s_cosf16_core_avx512.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_s_wrapper_impl.h: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_s_cosf_data.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_s_cosf_data.h: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/Makefile (libmvec-sysdep_routines): Added
build of SSE, AVX2 and AVX512 IFUNC versions.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/libmvec.abilist: New versions added.
* sysdeps/x86/fpu/bits/math-vector.h: Added SIMD declaration for cosf.
* NEWS: Mention addition of x86_64 vector cosf.
Here is implementation of cos containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and AVX512
versions according to Vector ABI which had been discussed in
<https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/x86-64-abi/LmppCfN1rZ4>.
Vector math library build and ABI testing enabled by default for x86_64.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/Makefile: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/Versions: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_cos_data.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_cos_data.h: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_cos2_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_cos4_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_cos4_core_avx.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_cos8_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/svml_d_wrapper_impl.h: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_cos2_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_cos2_core_sse4.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_cos4_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_cos4_core_avx2.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_cos8_core.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/svml_d_cos8_core_avx512.S: New file.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/Makefile (libmvec-sysdep_routines): Added
build of SSE, AVX2 and AVX512 IFUNC versions.
* sysdeps/x86/fpu/bits/math-vector.h: Added SIMD declaration for cos.
* math/bits/mathcalls.h: Added cos declaration with __MATHCALL_VEC.
* sysdeps/x86_64/configure.ac: Options for libmvec build.
* sysdeps/x86_64/configure: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/x86_64/sysdep.h (cfi_offset_rel_rsp): New macro.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/libmvec.abilist: New file.
* manual/install.texi (Configuring and compiling): Document
--disable-mathvec.
* INSTALL: Regenerated.
* NEWS: Mention addition of libmvec and x86_64 vector cos.
open_memstream is new in the 2008 edition of POSIX. However, the
older functions getopt, closelog and fmtmsg all bring in references to
it. This patch fixes this in the usual way, making open_memstream
into a weak alias of __open_memstream and calling __open_memstream
from the relevant places.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that disassembly of
installed shared libraries is unchanged by the patch). 32-bit builds
produce an XPASS for conform/POSIX/unistd.h/linknamespace after this
patch (because the only cause of failure left there now is 64-bit
specific); that will disappear once the 64-bit failure is resolved and
the XFAIL removed at that time.
[BZ #18498]
* libio/memstream.c (open_memstream): Rename to __open_memstream
and define as weak alias of __open_memstream.
* include/stdio.h (__open_memstream): Declare. Use
libc_hidden_proto.
(open_memstream): Don't use libc_hidden_proto.
* misc/syslog.c (__vsyslog_chk): Call __open_memstream instead of
open_memstream.
* posix/getopt.c (_getopt_internal_r): Likewise.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XPG3/stdio.h/linknamespace): Remove
variable.
(test-xfail-XPG4/stdio.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/stdio.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/unistd.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
The regex code brings in references to wcrtomb, which isn't in all the
standards that contain regex. This patch makes it call __wcrtomb
instead (in fact some places already called __wcrtomb, so this patch
makes it internally consistent about which name is used).
Tested for x86_64 and x86 that installed stripped shared libraries are
unchanged by the patch.
[BZ #18496]
* posix/regex_internal.c (build_wcs_upper_buffer): Call __wcrtomb
instead of wcrtomb.
signal.h declares psignal and psiginfo if __USE_XOPEN2K - that is, for
the 2001 edition of POSIX. These functions were actually added in the
2008 edition (as indicated in the header comments). This patch fixes
the header conditionals. This fixes some linknamespace test failures
because psiginfo uses fmemopen, which is also new in the 2008 edition,
so before the header fix this appeared to the linknamespace tests as a
2001 function bringing in references to a 2008 function. The problem
also appeared in conformtest header namespace test results (the
conformtest data has correct conditionals for when these functions
should be visible), but the affected headers still have other
namespace problems so this doesn't fix any of those XFAILs.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that installed stripped
shared libraries are unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #18483]
* signal/signal.h [__USE_XOPEN2K] (psignal): Change condition to
[__USE_XOPEN2K8]. Remove redundant #endif.
[__USE_XOPEN2K] (psiginfo): Change condition to [__USE_XOPEN2K8].
Remove redundant #if.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XOPEN2K/signal.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/sys/wait.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/ucontext.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
regcomp brings in references to various wctype functions that aren't
in all the standards including regcomp. This patch fixes this in the
usual way by using the __* versions of these functions (which already
exist, but some didn't have libc_hidden_proto / libc_hidden_def
before).
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that installed stripped
shared libraries are unchanged by the patch). (Other wide character
function references from the regex code mean that this patch by itself
doesn't fix any XFAILed linknamespace test failures; further patches
will be needed for that.)
[BZ #18495]
* wctype/wcfuncs.c (__iswalnum): Use libc_hidden_def.
(__iswlower): Likewise.
* include/wctype.h (__iswalnum): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
(__iswlower): Likewise.
* posix/regcomp.c (re_compile_fastmap_iter): Call __towlower
instead of towlower.
* posix/regex_internal.c (build_wcs_upper_buffer): Call __iswlower
instead of iswlower. Call __towupper instead of towupper.
* posix/regex_internal.h (IS_WIDE_WORD_CHAR): Call __iswalnum
instead of iswalnum.
This adds wake-ups that would be missing if assuming that for a
non-writer-preferring rwlock, if one thread has acquired a rdlock and
does not release it, another thread will eventually acquire a rdlock too
despite concurrent write lock acquisition attempts. BZ 14958 is about
supporting this assumption. Strictly speaking, this isn't a valid
test case, but nonetheless worth supporting (see comment 7 of BZ 14958).
If we set up a rwlock to prefer writers (and disallow recursive rdlock
acquisitions), then readers will block for writers that are blocked to
acquire the lock (otherwise, readers could constantly enter and exit,
and the writer would never get the lock). However, the existing
implementation did not wake such readers when the writer timed out.
This patch adds the missing wake-up.
There's no similar case for writers being blocked on readers.
fnmatch brings in references to strnlen, which isn't in all the
standards that contain fnmatch (not added until the 2008 edition of
POSIX), resulting in linknamespace test failures. (This is contrary
to glibc conventions, rather than a standards conformance issue,
because of the str* reservation.) This patch fixes this in the usual
way, using __strnlen instead of strnlen.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that installed stripped
shared libraries are unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #18470]
* posix/fnmatch.c (fnmatch) [_LIBC]: Call __strnlen instead of
strnlen.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XPG3/fnmatch.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-XPG4/fnmatch.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX/fnmatch.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX/glob.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX/wordexp.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/fnmatch.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/glob.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/wordexp.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/fnmatch.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/glob.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/wordexp.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
fnmatch brings in references to wmemchr, which isn't in all the
standards that contain fnmatch, resulting in linknamespace test
failures. This patch fixes this in the usual way, making wmemchr into
a weak alias for __wmemchr.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that disassembly of
installed shared libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #18468]
* wcsmbs/wmemchr.c (wmemchr): Rename to __wmemchr and define as
weak alias of __wmemchr. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* include/wchar.h (__wmemchr): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
* posix/fnmatch.c [HANDLE_MULTIBYTE] (MEMCHR): Use __wmemchr
instead of wmemchr.
fnmatch brings in references to towlower (and thereby towupper), which
isn't in all the standards that contain fnmatch, resulting in
linknamespace test failures. (This is contrary to glibc conventions,
rather than a standards conformance issue, because of the to*
reservation.) This patch fixes this in the usual way, making those
functions into weak aliases.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that disassembly of
installed shared libraries is unchanged by the patch). This is on top
of <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2015-06/msg00019.html>, but
the two patches should be independent.
(The __attribute_pure__ on the declarations in include/wctype.h comes
from GCC's built-in attributes for towlower and towupper, and is
needed to get the same code generation for fnmatch before and after
the patch. It seems likely there are cases where the declaration of
__foo in the internal headers is missing attributes from foo in the
public headers, built-in to GCC or both, but I don't know a good way
to detect such missing attributes.)
[BZ #18469]
* wctype/wcfuncs.c (towlower): Rename to __towlower and define as
weak alias of __towlower. Use libc_hidden_weak.
(towupper): Rename to __towupper and define as weak alias of
__towupper. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* include/wctype.h (__towlower): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
(__towupper): Likewise.
* posix/fnmatch.c [HANDLE_MULTIBYTE && _LIBC] (FOLD): Use
__towlower instead of towlower.
PLT relocations aren't required when -z now used. Linker on master with:
commit 25070364b0ce33eed46aa5d78ebebbec6accec7e
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date: Sat May 16 07:00:21 2015 -0700
Don't generate PLT relocations for now binding
There is no need for PLT relocations with -z now. We can use GOT
relocations, which take less space, instead and replace 16-byte .plt
entres with 8-byte .plt.got entries.
bfd/
* elf32-i386.c (elf_i386_check_relocs): Create .plt.got section
for now binding.
(elf_i386_allocate_dynrelocs): Use .plt.got section for now
binding.
* elf64-x86-64.c (elf_x86_64_check_relocs): Create .plt.got
section for now binding.
(elf_x86_64_allocate_dynrelocs): Use .plt.got section for now
binding.
won't generate PLT relocations with -z now. elf/tst-audit2.c expect
certain order of execution in ld.so. With PLT relocations, the GOTPLT
entry of calloc is update to calloc defined in tst-audit2:
(gdb) bt
skip_ifunc=<optimized out>, reloc_addr_arg=<optimized out>,
version=<optimized out>, sym=<optimized out>, map=<optimized out>)
at ../sysdeps/i386/dl-machine.h:329
out>,
nrelative=<optimized out>, relsize=<optimized out>,
reladdr=<optimized out>, map=<optimized out>) at do-rel.h:137
reloc_mode=reloc_mode@entry=0,
consider_profiling=1, consider_profiling@entry=0) at dl-reloc.c:258
user_entry=0xffffcf1c, auxv=0xffffd0a8) at rtld.c:2133
start_argptr=start_argptr@entry=0xffffcfb0,
dl_main=dl_main@entry=0xf7fda6f0 <dl_main>) at
../elf/dl-sysdep.c:249
from /export/build/gnu/glibc-32bit/build-i686-linux/elf/ld.so
(gdb)
and then calloc is called:
(gdb) c
Continuing.
Breakpoint 4, calloc (n=n@entry=20, m=4) at tst-audit2.c:18
18 {
(gdb) bt
reloc_mode=reloc_mode@entry=0, consider_profiling=1,
consider_profiling@entry=0) at dl-reloc.c:272
user_entry=0xffffcf1c, auxv=0xffffd0a8) at rtld.c:2133
start_argptr=start_argptr@entry=0xffffcfb0,
dl_main=dl_main@entry=0xf7fda6f0 <dl_main>) at
../elf/dl-sysdep.c:249
from /export/build/gnu/glibc-32bit/build-i686-linux/elf/ld.so
(gdb)
With GOT relocation, calloc in ld.so is called first:
(gdb) bt
consider_profiling=1) at dl-reloc.c:272
user_entry=0xffffcf0c, auxv=0xffffd098) at rtld.c:2074
start_argptr=start_argptr@entry=0xffffcfa0,
dl_main=dl_main@entry=0xf7fda6c0 <dl_main>) at
../elf/dl-sysdep.c:249
from /export/build/gnu/glibc-32bit-test/build-i686-linux/elf/ld.so
(gdb)
and then the GOT entry of calloc is updated:
(gdb) bt
skip_ifunc=<optimized out>, reloc_addr_arg=<optimized out>,
version=<optimized out>, sym=<optimized out>, map=<optimized out>)
at ../sysdeps/i386/dl-machine.h:329
out>,
nrelative=<optimized out>, relsize=<optimized out>,
reladdr=<optimized out>, map=<optimized out>) at do-rel.h:137
reloc_mode=reloc_mode@entry=0,
consider_profiling=1, consider_profiling@entry=0) at dl-reloc.c:258
user_entry=0xffffcf0c, auxv=0xffffd098) at rtld.c:2133
start_argptr=start_argptr@entry=0xffffcfa0,
dl_main=dl_main@entry=0xf7fda6c0 <dl_main>) at
../elf/dl-sysdep.c:249
from /export/build/gnu/glibc-32bit-test/build-i686-linux/elf/ld.so
(gdb)
After that, since calloc isn't called from ld.so nor any other modules,
magic in tst-audit2 isn't updated. Both orders are correct. This patch
makes sure that calloc in tst-audit2.c is called at least once from ld.so.
[BZ #18422]
* Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-audit2): Depend on $(libdl).
($(objpfx)tst-audit2.out): Also depend on
$(objpfx)tst-auditmod9b.so.
* elf/tst-audit2.c: Include <dlfcn.h>.
(calloc_called): New.
(calloc): Allow to be called more than once.
(do_test): dllopen/dlclose $ORIGIN/tst-auditmod9b.so.
In the introduction for the official orthography rules for Ukrainian
language (http://spelling.ulif.org.ua/peredmova.htm) there's a note
that only apostrophe does not affect order of the words when sorting.
As could be seen from the official alphabet the soft sign
(U+044C/U+042C) has its hard position and thus affects the order and
also letters "е" and "є" (CYR-IE: U+0435/U+0415 and UKR-IE:
U+0454/U+0404) have their own positions and should have separate place
when sorting.
This also corresponds to official Unicode collation chart for these
letters: http://unicode.org/charts/collation/chart_Cyrillic.html
On 21/05/15 05:29, Siddhesh Poyarekar wrote:
> On Wed, May 20, 2015 at 06:55:02PM +0100, Szabolcs Nagy wrote:
>> i guess it's ok for consistency if i fix struct stat64
>> too to use __USE_XOPEN2K8.
>>
>> i will run some tests and come back with a patch
>
> I also think it would be appropriate to change this code in other
> architectures (microblaze and nacl IIRC) to make all of them
> consistent. It is a mechanical enough change IMO that all arch
> maintainer acks is not necessary.
>
here is the patch with consistent __USE_XOPEN2K8
ok to commit?
2015-05-21 Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
[BZ #18234]
* conform/data/sys/stat.h-data (struct stat): Add tests for st_atim,
st_mtim and st_ctim members.
* sysdeps/nacl/bits/stat.h (struct stat, struct stat64): Make
st_atim, st_ctim, st_mtim visible under __USE_XOPEN2K8 only.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/generic/bits/stat.h (struct stat,):
(struct stat64): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ia64/bits/stat.h (struct stat,):
(struct stat64): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/bits/stat.h (struct stat,):
(struct stat64): Likewise.
A shared object doesn't need PLT if there are no PLT relocations. It
shouldn't be an error if DT_PLTRELSZ is missing.
[BZ #18410]
* elf/dl-reloc.c (_dl_relocate_object): Don't issue an error
for missing DT_PLTRELSZ.
[BZ #18412]
* intl/locale.alias: Remove obsolete aliases "bokmål" and "français"
which caused 'locale -a' to output Latin-1 data in UTF-8 locales,
breaking some applications that use 'locale -a' output.
Change the encoding of this file from Latin-1 to ASCII to avoid
other potential problems with people grepping this file.
My review of conformtest expectations for POSIX showed up that the
_POSIX2_C_VERSION macro, required by POSIX and XPG standards before
2001, was missing in unistd.h, having been removed on 2003-04-03
despite those standards still being supported. This patch adds it
back. As it's in the implementation namespace, there's no need for it
to be conditional, and other such macros aren't conditional in this
header either.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite). Note that this *does* change
the installed libraries, because it affects the sysconf support
(present all along) for _SC_2_C_VERSION.
[BZ #438]
* posix/unistd.h (_POSIX2_C_VERSION): New macro.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-POSIX/unistd.h/conform): Remove
variable.
pathconf (sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/pathconf.c) uses basename. But
pathconf is in POSIX back to 1990 while basename is only reserved with
external linkage in those standards including XPG functions. This
patch fixes this namespace issue in the usual way, renaming basename
to __basename and making it into a weak alias.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that disassembly of
installed shared libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #18444]
* string/basename.c (basename): Rename to __basename and define as
weak alias of __basename. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* include/string.h (__basename): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/pathconf.c (distinguish_extX): Call
__basename instead of basename.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-POSIX2008/unistd.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/unistd.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
Remove use of ext.nsmap member of struct __res_state and always use
an identity mapping betwen the nsaddr_list array and the ext.nsaddrs
array. The fact that a nameserver has an IPv6 address is signalled by
setting nsaddr_list[].sin_family to zero.
ldbl-96 remquol wrongly handles the case where the first argument is
finite and the second infinite, because the check for the second
argument being a NaN fails to disregard the explicit high mantissa bit
and so wrongly interprets an infinity as being a NaN. This patch
fixes this by masking off that bit, and improves test coverage for
both remainder and remquo (various cases were missing tests, or, as in
the case of the bug, were tested only for one of the two functions).
Tested for x86_64 and x86.
[BZ #18244]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/s_remquol.c (__remquol): Ignore explicit
high mantissa bit when testing whether P is a NaN.
* math/libm-test.inc (remainder_test_data): Add more tests.
(remquo_test_data): Likewise.
The i386 implementation of atanhl, for small arguments, does a
calculation that involves computing twice the square of the argument,
resulting in spurious underflows for some arguments. This patch fixes
this by just returning the argument when its exponent is below -32,
with underflow being forced as needed for subnormal arguments.
Tested for x86 and x86_64.
[BZ #18049]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_atanhl.S (__ieee754_atanhl): For exponents
below -32, return the argument, with underflow if subnormal.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of atanh.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
[BZ #17581] The checking chain of unused chunks was terminated by a hash of
the block pointer, which was sometimes confused with the chunk length byte.
We now avoid using a length byte equal to the magic byte.
When the malloc subsystem detects some kind of memory corruption,
depending on the configuration it prints the error, a backtrace, a
memory map and then aborts the process. In this process, the
backtrace() call may result in a call to malloc, resulting in
various kinds of problematic behavior.
In one case, the malloc it calls may detect a corruption and call
backtrace again, and a stack overflow may result due to the infinite
recursion. In another case, the malloc it calls may deadlock on an
arena lock with the malloc (or free, realloc, etc.) that detected the
corruption. In yet another case, if the program is linked with
pthreads, backtrace may do a pthread_once initialization, which
deadlocks on itself.
In all these cases, the program exit is not as intended. This is
avoidable by marking the arena that malloc detected a corruption on,
as unusable. The following patch does that. Features of this patch
are as follows:
- A flag is added to the mstate struct of the arena to indicate if the
arena is corrupt.
- The flag is checked whenever malloc functions try to get a lock on
an arena. If the arena is unusable, a NULL is returned, causing the
malloc to use mmap or try the next arena.
- malloc_printerr sets the corrupt flag on the arena when it detects a
corruption
- free does not concern itself with the flag at all. It is not
important since the backtrace workflow does not need free. A free
in a parallel thread may cause another corruption, but that's not
new
- The flag check and set are not atomic and may race. This is fine
since we don't care about contention during the flag check. We want
to make sure that the malloc call in the backtrace does not trip on
itself and all that action happens in the same thread and not across
threads.
I verified that the test case does not show any regressions due to
this patch. I also ran the malloc benchmarks and found an
insignificant difference in timings (< 2%).
* malloc/Makefile (tests): New test case tst-malloc-backtrace.
* malloc/arena.c (arena_lock): Check if arena is corrupt.
(reused_arena): Find a non-corrupt arena.
(heap_trim): Pass arena to unlink.
* malloc/hooks.c (malloc_check_get_size): Pass arena to
malloc_printerr.
(top_check): Likewise.
(free_check): Likewise.
(realloc_check): Likewise.
* malloc/malloc.c (malloc_printerr): Add arena argument.
(unlink): Likewise.
(munmap_chunk): Adjust.
(ARENA_CORRUPTION_BIT): New macro.
(arena_is_corrupt): Likewise.
(set_arena_corrupt): Likewise.
(sysmalloc): Use mmap if there are no usable arenas.
(_int_malloc): Likewise.
(__libc_malloc): Don't fail if arena_get returns NULL.
(_mid_memalign): Likewise.
(__libc_calloc): Likewise.
(__libc_realloc): Adjust for additional argument to
malloc_printerr.
(_int_free): Likewise.
(malloc_consolidate): Likewise.
(_int_realloc): Likewise.
(_int_memalign): Don't touch corrupt arenas.
* malloc/tst-malloc-backtrace.c: New test case.
Similar to various other bugs in this area, some atanh implementations
do not raise the underflow exception for subnormal arguments, when the
result is tiny and inexact. This patch forces the exception in a
similar way to previous fixes. (No change in this regard is needed
for the i386 implementation; special handling to force underflows in
these cases will only be needed there when the spurious underflows,
bug 18049, get fixed.)
Tested for x86_64, x86, powerpc and mips64.
[BZ #16352]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_atanh.S (dbl_min): New object.
(__ieee754_atanh): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_atanhf.S (flt_min): New object.
(__ieee754_atanhf): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/e_atanh.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_atanh): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/e_atanhf.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_atanhf): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/e_atanhl.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_atanhl): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/e_atanhl.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_atanhl): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/e_atanhl.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_atanhl): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Do not allow missing underflow
exceptions from atanh.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
The flt-32 implementation of tanf produces spurious underflow
exceptions for some small arguments, through computing values on the
order of x^5. This patch fixes this by adjusting the threshold for
returning x (or, as applicable, +/- 1/x) to 2**-13 (the next term in
the power series being x^3/3).
Tested for x86_64 and x86.
[BZ #18221]
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/k_tanf.c (__kernel_tanf): Use 2**-13 not
2**-28 as threshold for returning x or +/- 1/x.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of tan.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
The flt-32 implementation of lgammaf produces spurious underflow
exceptions for some large arguments, because of calculations involving
x^-2 multiplied by small constants. This patch fixes this by
adjusting the threshold for a simpler computation to 2**26 (the error
in the simpler computation is on the order of 0.5 * log (x), for a
result on the order of x * log (x)).
Tested for x86_64 and x86.
[BZ #18220]
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/e_lgammaf_r.c (__ieee754_lgammaf_r): Use
2**26 not 2**58 as threshold for returning x * (log (x) - 1).
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add another test of lgamma.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
The flt-32 implementation of erfcf produces spurious underflow
exceptions for some arguments close to 0, because of calculations
squaring the argument and then multiplying by small constants. This
patch fixes this by adjusting the threshold for arguments for which
the result is so close to 1 that 1 - x will give the right result from
2**-56 to 2**-26. (If 1 - x * 2/sqrt(pi) were used, the errors would be
on the order of x^3 and a much larger threshold could be used.)
Tested for x86_64 and x86.
[BZ #18217]
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_erff.c (__erfcf): Use 2**-26 not 2**-56
as threshold for returning 1 - x.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of erfc.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
The sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32 version of atanf produces spurious
underflow exceptions for some large arguments, because of computations
that compute x^-4. This patch fixes this by adjusting the threshold
for large arguments (for which +/- pi/2 can just be returned, the
correct result being roughly +/- pi/2 - 1/x) from 2^34 to 2^25.
Tested for x86_64 and x86.
[BZ #18196]
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_atanf.c (__atanf): Use 2^25 not 2^34 as
threshold for large arguments.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add another test of atan.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
Similar to various other bugs in this area, some log1p implementations
do not raise the underflow exception for subnormal arguments, when the
result is tiny and inexact. This patch forces the exception in a
similar way to previous fixes. (The ldbl-128ibm implementation
doesn't currently need any change as it already generates this
exception, albeit through code that would generate spurious exceptions
in other cases; special code for this issue will only be needed there
when fixing the spurious exceptions.)
Tested for x86_64, x86, powerpc and mips64.
[BZ #16339]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/s_log1p.S (dbl_min): New object.
(__log1p): Force underflow exception for results with small
absolute value.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/s_log1pf.S (flt_min): New object.
(__log1pf): Force underflow exception for results with small
absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/s_log1p.c: Include <float.h>.
(__log1p): Force underflow exception for results with small
absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_log1pf.c: Include <float.h>.
(__log1pf): Force underflow exception for results with small
absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/s_log1pl.c: Include <float.h>.
(__log1pl): Force underflow exception for results with small
absolute value.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Do not allow missing underflow
exceptions from log1p.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
Programs are supposed to be able to define the __fpu_control variable,
overriding the library's version to cause the floating-point control
word to be set to the chosen value at startup.
This is broken for mips16 for static linking because the library's
__fpu_control variable is in the same object file as the helper
functions used by fpu_control.h for mips16, so test-fpucw-ieee-static
fails to link with multiple definitions of __fpu_control.
This patch fixes this by putting the helpers in a separate file rather
than overriding fpu_control.c. Tested for mips16 that this fixes the
link failure and the ABI tests still pass.
[BZ #18397]
* sysdeps/mips/mips32/fpu/fpu_control.c: Move to ....
* sysdeps/mips/mips32/fpu/fpucw-helpers.c: ... here. Include
<fpu_control.h> instead of <math/fpu_control.c>.
* sysdeps/mips/mips32/fpu/Makefile: New file.
There appears to be a discrepancy among the implementations
of setcontext with regards to the function called once the last
linked-to context has finished executing via setcontext.
The POSIX standard says:
~~~
If the uc_link member of the ucontext_t structure pointed to by
the ucp argument is equal to 0, then this context is the main
context, and the thread will exit when this context returns.
~~~
It says "exit" not "exit immediately" nor "exit without running
functions registered with atexit or on_exit."
Therefore the AArch64, ARM, hppa and NIOS II implementations are
wrong and no test detects it.
It is questionable if this should even be fixed or just documented
that the above 4 targets are wrong. The functions are deprecated
and nobody should be using them, but at the same time it silly to
have cross-target differences that make it hard to port old
applications from say x86_64 to AArch64.
Therefore I will ix the 4 arches, and checkin a regression
test to prevent it from changing again.
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2015-03/msg00720.html
Robin Hack discovered Samba would enter an infinite loop processing
certain quota-related requests. We eventually tracked this down to a
glibc issue.
Running a (simplified) test case under strace shows that /etc/passwd
is continuously opened and closed:
…
open("/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR) = 0
read(3, "root❌0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash\n"..., 4096) = 2717
lseek(3, 2717, SEEK_SET) = 2717
close(3) = 0
open("/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR) = 0
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_SET) = 0
read(3, "root❌0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash\n"..., 4096) = 2717
lseek(3, 2717, SEEK_SET) = 2717
close(3) = 0
open("/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR) = 0
…
The lookup function implementation in
nss/nss_files/files-XXX.c:DB_LOOKUP has code to prevent that. It is
supposed skip closing the input file if it was already open.
/* Reset file pointer to beginning or open file. */ \
status = internal_setent (keep_stream); \
\
if (status == NSS_STATUS_SUCCESS) \
{ \
/* Tell getent function that we have repositioned the file pointer. */ \
last_use = getby; \
\
while ((status = internal_getent (result, buffer, buflen, errnop \
H_ERRNO_ARG EXTRA_ARGS_VALUE)) \
== NSS_STATUS_SUCCESS) \
{ break_if_match } \
\
if (! keep_stream) \
internal_endent (); \
} \
keep_stream is initialized from the stayopen flag in internal_setent.
internal_setent is called from the set*ent implementation as:
status = internal_setent (stayopen);
However, for non-host database, this flag is always 0, per the
STAYOPEN magic in nss/getXXent_r.c.
Thus, the fix is this:
- status = internal_setent (stayopen);
+ status = internal_setent (1);
This is not a behavioral change even for the hosts database (where the
application can specify the stayopen flag) because with a call to
sethostent(0), the file handle is still not closed in the
implementation of gethostent.
The implementation of roundl for ldbl-128 involves undefined behavior
for arguments with exponents from 31 to 47 inclusive, from the shift:
u_int64_t i = -1ULL >> (j0 - 48);
For example, on mips64, this means roundl (0xffffffffffff.8p0L)
wrongly returns its argument, which is not an integer. A condition
checking for exponents < 31 should actually be checking for exponents
< 48, and this patch makes it do so. (That condition is for whether
the bit representing 0.5 is in the high 64-bit half of the
floating-point number. The value 31 might have arisen from an
incorrect conversion of the ldbl-96 version to handle ldbl-128.)
This was originally reported as a GCC libquadmath bug
<https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=65757>.
Tested for mips64; also tested for x86_64 and x86 to make sure the new
tests pass there.
[BZ #18346]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/s_roundl.c (__roundl): Handle all
exponents less than 48 as cases where high part of mantissa needs
examining to determine whether argument is integral.
* math/libm-test.inc (round_test_data): Add more tests.
add_temp_file now makes a copy which is freed by delete_temp_files.
Callers to create_temp_file can now free the returned file name to
avoid the memory leak. These changes do not affect the leak behavior
of existing code.
Also address a NULL pointer derefence in tzset after a memoru allocation
failure, found during testing.
This patch adds support to query cache information on s390
via sysconf() function - e.g. with _SC_LEVEL1_ICACHE_SIZE.
The attributes size, linesize and assoc can be queried
for cache level 1 - 4 via "extract cpu attribute" instruction,
which was first available with z10.
* NEWS: Mention sysconf() cache information support for s390.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/sysconf.c: New File.
[BZ #18206]
* wcsmbs/wcsncmp.c (wcsncmp): Compare as wchar_t, not wint_t.
Use signed comparision instead of substraction to avoid
overflow bug.
* localedata/tests-mbwc/tst_wcsncmp.c (tst_wcsncmp):
Take the sign of ret.
* localedata/tests-mbwc/dat_wcsncmp.c (tst_wcsncmp_loc):
Do not expect precise return values. Only the sign matters.
* wcsmbs/Makefile (strop-tests): Add wcsncmp.
* wcsmbs/test-wcsncmp.c: New File.
* string/test-strncmp.c: Add wcsncmp support.
According to bug 6792, errno is not set to ERANGE/EDOM
by calling log1p/log1pf/log1pl with x = -1 or x < -1.
This patch adds a wrapper which sets errno in those cases
and returns the value of the existing __log1p function.
The log1p is now an alias to the wrapper function
instead of __log1p.
The files in sysdeps are reflecting these changes.
The ia64 implementation sets errno by itself,
thus the wrapper-file is empty.
The libm-test is adjusted for log1p-tests to check errno.
[BZ #6792]
* math/w_log1p.c: New file.
* math/w_log1pf.c: Likewise.
* math/w_log1pl.c: Likewise.
* math/Makefile (libm-calls): Add w_log1p.
* math/s_log1pl.c (log1pl): Remove weak_alias.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/s_log1p.S (log1p): Likewise.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/s_log1pf.S (log1pf): Likewise.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/s_log1pl.S (log1pl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/s_log1pl.S (log1pl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/s_log1p.c (log1p): Likewise.
[NO_LONG_DOUBLE] (log1pl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_log1pf.c (log1pf): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/s_log1pl.c (log1pl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-64-128/s_log1pl.c
(log1p): Remove long_double_symbol.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_log1pl.c (log1pl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-64-128/w_log1pl.c: New file.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/w_log1pl.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/m68k/m680x0/fpu/s_log1p.c: Define empty weak_alias to
remove weak_alias for corresponding log1p function.
* sysdeps/m68k/m680x0/fpu/s_log1pf.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/m68k/m680x0/fpu/s_log1pl.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/ia64/fpu/w_log1p.c: New file.
* sysdeps/ia64/fpu/w_log1pf.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/ia64/fpu/w_log1pl.c: Likewise.
* math/libm-test.inc (log1p_test_data): Add errno expectations.
Bug 18247 is an off-by-one error in strtof's determination of a
decimal exponent such that any value with that decimal exponent is at
most half the least subnormal and so the appropriate underflowing
value for the rounding mode can be determined with no
multiple-precision computations. (Whether the value is in fact safe
despite the off-by-one depends on the floating-point format in
question. It's wrong for float and for m68k ldbl-96 but not for other
supported formats.) This patch corrects the computation of the
exponent in question to be safe in general, adding a comment
explaining the new computation.
Tested for x86_64.
[BZ #18247]
* stdlib/strtod_l.c (____STRTOF_INTERNAL): Decrease minimum
decimal exponent by 1.
* stdlib/tst-strtod-round-data: Add more tests.
* stdlib/tst-strtod-round.c (tests): Regenerated.
The dbl-64 implementation of atan2 does computations that expect to
run in round-to-nearest mode, and in other modes the errors can
accumulate to more than the maximum accepted 9ulp. This patch makes
it use FE_TONEAREST internally, similar to other functions with such
issues. Tests that previously produced large errors are added for
atan2 and the closely related carg, clog and clog10 functions.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 and ulps updated accordingly.
[BZ #18210]
[BZ #18211]
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/e_atan2.c: Include <fenv.h>.
(__ieee754_atan2): Set FE_TONEAREST mode for internal
computations.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of atan2, carg, clog and
clog10.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Likewise.
The dbl-64 implementation of atan does computations that expect to run
in round-to-nearest mode, and in other modes the errors can accumulate
to more than the maximum accepted 9ulp. This patch makes it use
FE_TONEAREST internally, similar to other functions with such issues.
Tested for x86_64 and x86; no ulps updates needed.
[BZ #18197]
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/s_atan.c: Include <fenv.h>.
(atan): Set FE_TONEAREST mode for internal computations.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of atan.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
Trimming heaps is a balance between saving memory and the system overhead
required to update page tables and discard allocated pages. The malloc
option M_TRIM_THRESHOLD is a tunable that users are meant to use to decide
where this balance point is but it is only applied to the main arena.
For scalability reasons, glibc malloc has per-thread heaps but these are
shrunk with madvise() if there is one page free at the top of the heap.
In some circumstances this can lead to high system overhead if a thread
has a control flow like
while (data_to_process) {
buf = malloc(large_size);
do_stuff();
free(buf);
}
For a large size, the free() will call madvise (pagetable teardown, page
free and TLB flush) every time followed immediately by a malloc (fault,
kernel page alloc, zeroing and charge accounting). The kernel overhead
can dominate such a workload.
This patch allows the user to tune when madvise gets called by applying
the trim threshold to the per-thread heaps and using similar logic to the
main arena when deciding whether to shrink. Alternatively if the dynamic
brk/mmap threshold gets adjusted then the new values will be obeyed by
the per-thread heaps.
Bug 17195 was a test case motivated by a problem encountered in scientific
applications written in python that performance badly due to high page fault
overhead. The basic operation of such a program was posted by Julian Taylor
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2015-02/msg00373.html
With this patch applied, the overhead is eliminated. All numbers in this
report are in seconds and were recorded by running Julian's program 30
times.
pyarray
glibc madvise
2.21 v2
System min 1.81 ( 0.00%) 0.00 (100.00%)
System mean 1.93 ( 0.00%) 0.02 ( 99.20%)
System stddev 0.06 ( 0.00%) 0.01 ( 88.99%)
System max 2.06 ( 0.00%) 0.03 ( 98.54%)
Elapsed min 3.26 ( 0.00%) 2.37 ( 27.30%)
Elapsed mean 3.39 ( 0.00%) 2.41 ( 28.84%)
Elapsed stddev 0.14 ( 0.00%) 0.02 ( 82.73%)
Elapsed max 4.05 ( 0.00%) 2.47 ( 39.01%)
glibc madvise
2.21 v2
User 141.86 142.28
System 57.94 0.60
Elapsed 102.02 72.66
Note that almost a minutes worth of system time is eliminted and the
program completes 28% faster on average.
To illustrate the problem without python this is a basic test-case for
the worst case scenario where every free is a madvise followed by a an alloc
/* gcc bench-free.c -lpthread -o bench-free */
static int num = 1024;
void __attribute__((noinline,noclone)) dostuff (void *p)
{
}
void *worker (void *data)
{
int i;
for (i = num; i--;)
{
void *m = malloc (48*4096);
dostuff (m);
free (m);
}
return NULL;
}
int main()
{
int i;
pthread_t t;
void *ret;
if (pthread_create (&t, NULL, worker, NULL))
exit (2);
if (pthread_join (t, &ret))
exit (3);
return 0;
}
Before the patch, this resulted in 1024 calls to madvise. With the patch applied,
madvise is called twice because the default trim threshold is high enough to avoid
this.
This a more complex case where there is a mix of frees. It's simply a different worker
function for the test case above
void *worker (void *data)
{
int i;
int j = 0;
void *free_index[num];
for (i = num; i--;)
{
void *m = malloc ((i % 58) *4096);
dostuff (m);
if (i % 2 == 0) {
free (m);
} else {
free_index[j++] = m;
}
}
for (; j >= 0; j--)
{
free(free_index[j]);
}
return NULL;
}
glibc 2.21 calls malloc 90305 times but with the patch applied, it's
called 13438. Increasing the trim threshold will decrease the number of
times it's called with the option of eliminating the overhead.
ebizzy is meant to generate a workload resembling common web application
server workloads. It is threaded with a large working set that at its core
has an allocation, do_stuff, free loop that also hits this case. The primary
metric of the benchmark is records processed per second. This is running on
my desktop which is a single socket machine with an I7-4770 and 8 cores.
Each thread count was run for 30 seconds. It was only run once as the
performance difference is so high that the variation is insignificant.
glibc 2.21 patch
threads 1 10230 44114
threads 2 19153 84925
threads 4 34295 134569
threads 8 51007 183387
Note that the saving happens to be a concidence as the size allocated
by ebizzy was less than the default threshold. If a different number of
chunks were specified then it may also be necessary to tune the threshold
to compensate
This is roughly quadrupling the performance of this benchmark. The difference in
system CPU usage illustrates why.
ebizzy running 1 thread with glibc 2.21
10230 records/s 306904
real 30.00 s
user 7.47 s
sys 22.49 s
22.49 seconds was spent in the kernel for a workload runinng 30 seconds. With the
patch applied
ebizzy running 1 thread with patch applied
44126 records/s 1323792
real 30.00 s
user 29.97 s
sys 0.00 s
system CPU usage was zero with the patch applied. strace shows that glibc
running this workload calls madvise approximately 9000 times a second. With
the patch applied madvise was called twice during the workload (or 0.06
times per second).
2015-02-10 Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
[BZ #17195]
* malloc/arena.c (free): Apply trim threshold to per-thread heaps
as well as the main arena.
Silvermont and Knights Landing have a modular system design with two cores
sharing an L2 cache. If more than 2 cores are detected to shared L2 cache,
it should be adjusted for Silvermont and Knights Landing.
[BZ #18185]
* sysdeps/x86_64/cacheinfo.c (init_cacheinfo): Limit threads
sharing L2 cache to 2 for Silvermont/Knights Landing.
This patch is glibc support for a PowerPC TLS optimization, inspired
by Alexandre Oliva's TLS optimization for other processors,
http://www.lsd.ic.unicamp.br/~oliva/writeups/TLS/RFC-TLSDESC-x86.txt
In essence, this optimization uses a zero module id in the tls_index
GOT entry to indicate that a TLS variable is allocated space in the
static TLS area. A special plt call linker stub for __tls_get_addr
checks for such a tls_index and if found, returns the offset
immediately. The linker communicates the fact that the special
__tls_get_addr stub is used by setting a bit in the dynamic tag
DT_PPC64_OPT/DT_PPC_OPT. glibc communicates to the linker that this
optimization is available by the presence of __tls_get_addr_opt.
tst-tlsmod2.so is built with -Wl,--no-tls-get-addr-optimize for
tst-tls-dlinfo, which otherwise would fail since it tests that no
static tls is allocated. The ld option --no-tls-get-addr-optimize has
been available since binutils-2.20 so doesn't need a configure test.
* NEWS: Advertise TLS optimization.
* elf/elf.h (R_PPC_TLSGD, R_PPC_TLSLD, DT_PPC_OPT, PPC_OPT_TLS): Define.
(DT_PPC_NUM): Increment.
* elf/dynamic-link.h (HAVE_STATIC_TLS): Define.
(CHECK_STATIC_TLS): Use here.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/dl-machine.h (elf_machine_rela): Optimize
TLS descriptors.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/dl-machine.h (elf_machine_rela): Likewise.
* sysdeps/powerpc/dl-tls.c: New file.
* sysdeps/powerpc/Versions: Add __tls_get_addr_opt.
* sysdeps/powerpc/tst-tlsopt-powerpc.c: New tls test.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/Makefile: Add new test.
Build tst-tlsmod2.so with --no-tls-get-addr-optimize.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc32/ld.abilist: Update.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/ld.abilist: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/ld-le.abilist: Likewise.
sem_timedwait converts absolute timeouts to relative to pass them to
the futex syscall. (Before the recent reimplementation, on x86_64 it
used FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME, but not on other architectures.)
Correctly implementing POSIX requirements, however, requires use of
FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME; passing a relative timeout to the kernel does
not conform to POSIX. The POSIX specification for sem_timedwait says
"The timeout shall be based on the CLOCK_REALTIME clock.". The POSIX
specification for clock_settime says "If the value of the
CLOCK_REALTIME clock is set via clock_settime(), the new value of the
clock shall be used to determine the time of expiration for absolute
time services based upon the CLOCK_REALTIME clock. This applies to the
time at which armed absolute timers expire. If the absolute time
requested at the invocation of such a time service is before the new
value of the clock, the time service shall expire immediately as if
the clock had reached the requested time normally.". If a relative
timeout is passed to the kernel, it is interpreted according to the
CLOCK_MONOTONIC clock, and so fails to meet that POSIX requirement in
the event of clock changes.
This patch makes sem_timedwait use lll_futex_timed_wait_bitset with
FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME when possible, as done in some other places in
NPTL. FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME is always available for supported Linux
kernel versions; unavailability of lll_futex_timed_wait_bitset is only
an issue for hppa (an issue noted in
<https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/PortStatus>, and fixed by the
unreviewed
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-12/msg00655.html> that
removes the hppa lowlevellock.h completely).
In the FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME case, the glibc code still needs to check
for negative tv_sec and handle that as timeout, because the Linux
kernel returns EINVAL not ETIMEDOUT for that case, so resulting in
failures of nptl/tst-abstime and nptl/tst-sem13 in the absence of that
check. If we're trying to distinguish between Linux-specific and
generic-futex NPTL code, I suppose having this in an nptl/ file isn't
ideal, but there doesn't seem to be any better place at present.
It's not possible to add a testcase for this issue to the testsuite
because of the requirement to change the system clock as part of a
test (this is a case where testing would require some form of
container, with root in that container, and one whose CLOCK_REALTIME
is isolated from that of the host; I'm not sure what forms of
containers, short of a full virtual machine, provide that clock
isolation).
Tested for x86_64. Also tested for powerpc with the testcase included
in the bug.
[BZ #18138]
* nptl/sem_waitcommon.c: Include <kernel-features.h>.
(futex_abstimed_wait)
[__ASSUME_FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME && lll_futex_timed_wait_bitset]:
Use lll_futex_timed_wait_bitset with FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME instead
of lll_futex_timed_wait.
If xports is NULL in xprt_register we malloc it but if sock >
_rpc_dtablesize() that memory does not get initialised and may in theory
contain any value. Later we make a conditional jump in svc_getreq_common
based on the uninitialised memory and this caused a general protection
fault in rpc.statd on an older version of glibc but this code has not
changed since that version.
Following is the valgrind warning.
==26802== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
==26802== at 0x5343A25: svc_getreq_common (in /lib64/libc-2.5.so)
==26802== by 0x534357B: svc_getreqset (in /lib64/libc-2.5.so)
==26802== by 0x10DE1F: ??? (in /sbin/rpc.statd)
==26802== by 0x10D0EF: main (in /sbin/rpc.statd)
==26802== Uninitialised value was created by a heap allocation
==26802== at 0x4C2210C: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==26802== by 0x53438BE: xprt_register (in /lib64/libc-2.5.so)
==26802== by 0x53450DF: svcudp_bufcreate (in /lib64/libc-2.5.so)
==26802== by 0x10FE32: ??? (in /sbin/rpc.statd)
==26802== by 0x10D13E: main (in /sbin/rpc.statd)
for ChangeLog
[BZ #17090]
[BZ #17620]
[BZ #17621]
[BZ #17628]
* NEWS: Update.
* elf/dl-tls.c (_dl_update_slotinfo): Clean up outdated DTV
entries with Static TLS too. Skip entries past the end of the
allocated DTV, from Alan Modra.
(tls_get_addr_tail): Update to glibc_likely/unlikely. Move
Static TLS DTV entry set up from...
(_dl_allocate_tls_init): ... here (fix modid assertion), ...
* elf/dl-reloc.c (_dl_nothread_init_static_tls): ... here...
* nptl/allocatestack.c (init_one_static_tls): ... and here...
* elf/dlopen.c (dl_open_worker): Drop l_tls_modid upper bound
for Static TLS.
* elf/tlsdeschtab.h (map_generation): Return size_t. Check
that the slot we find is associated with the given map before
using its generation count.
* nptl_db/db_info.c: Include ldsodefs.h.
(rtld_global, dtv_slotinfo_list, dtv_slotinfo): New typedefs.
* nptl_db/structs.def (DB_RTLD_VARIABLE): New macro.
(DB_MAIN_VARIABLE, DB_RTLD_GLOBAL_FIELD): Likewise.
(link_map::l_tls_offset): New struct field.
(dtv_t::counter): Likewise.
(rtld_global): New struct.
(_rtld_global): New rtld variable.
(dl_tls_dtv_slotinfo_list): New rtld global field.
(dtv_slotinfo_list): New struct.
(dtv_slotinfo): Likewise.
* nptl_db/td_symbol_list.c: Drop gnu/lib-names.h include.
(td_lookup): Rename to...
(td_mod_lookup): ... this. Use new mod parameter instead of
LIBPTHREAD_SO.
* nptl_db/td_thr_tlsbase.c: Include link.h.
(dtv_slotinfo_list, dtv_slotinfo): New functions.
(td_thr_tlsbase): Check DTV generation. Compute Static TLS
addresses even if the DTV is out of date or missing them.
* nptl_db/fetch-value.c (_td_locate_field): Do not refuse to
index zero-length arrays.
* nptl_db/thread_dbP.h: Include gnu/lib-names.h.
(td_lookup): Make it a macro implemented in terms of...
(td_mod_lookup): ... this declaration.
* nptl_db/db-symbols.awk (DB_RTLD_VARIABLE): Override.
(DB_MAIN_VARIABLE): Likewise.
In bug 14906 the user complains that the inotify support in nscd
is not sufficient when it comes to detecting changes in the
configurationfiles that should be watched for the various databases.
The current nscd implementation uses inotify to watch for changes in
the configuration files, but adds watches only for IN_DELETE_SELF and
IN_MODIFY. These watches are insufficient to cover even the most basic
uses by a system administrator. For example using emacs or vim to edit
a configuration file should trigger a reload but it might not if
the editors use move to atomically update the file. This atomic update
changes the inode and thus removes the notification on the file (as
inotify is based on inodes). Thus the inotify support in nscd for
configuration files is insufficient to account for the average use
cases of system administrators and users.
The inotify support is significantly enhanced and described here:
https://www.sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2015-02/msg00504.html
Tested on x86_64 with and without inotify support.
ldconfig is using an aux-cache to speed up the ld.so.cache update. It
is read by mmaping the file to a structure which contains data offsets
used as pointers. As they are not checked, it is not hard to get
ldconfig to segfault with a corrupted file. This happens for instance if
the file is truncated, which is common following a filesystem check
following a system crash.
This can be reproduced for example by truncating the file to roughly
half of it's size.
There is already some code in elf/cache.c (load_aux_cache) to check
for a corrupted aux cache, but it happens to be broken and not enough.
The test (aux_cache->nlibs >= aux_cache_size) compares the number of
libs entry with the cache size. It's a non sense, as it basically
assumes that each library entry is a 1 byte... Instead this commit
computes the theoretical cache size using the headers and compares it
to the real size.
The function feupdateenv has been fixed to correctly handle FE_DFL_ENV
and FE_NOMASK_ENV.
The fesetexceptflag function has been fixed to correctly handle setting
the new flags instead of just OR-ing the existing flags.
This fixes the test-fenv-return and test-fenvinline failures on hppa.
The constraints in the inline assembly in feholdexcept and fesetenv
are incorrect. The assembly modifies the buffer pointer, but doesn't
express that in the constraints. The simple fix is to remove the
modification of the buffer pointer which is no longer required by
the existing code, and adjust the one constraint that did express
the modification of bufptr.
The change fixes test-fenv when glibc is compiled with recent gcc.
This patch fixes the inline feraiseexcept and feclearexcept macros for
powerpc by casting the input argument to integer before operation on it.
It fixes BZ#17776.
Since 2014-11-24 binutils git commit bb4d2ac2, readelf has appended
the symbol version to symbols shown in reloc dumps.
[BZ #16512]
* scripts/localplt.awk: Strip off symbol version.
* NEWS: Mention bug fix.
__ASSUME_PRLIMIT64 is defined in kernel-features.h for kernels 2.6.36
and later, but hppa, microblaze and sh did not add the prlimit64
syscall until 2.6.37. This patch adds corresponding undefines of
__ASSUME_PRLIMIT64 to those architectures' kernel-features.h files.
(This concludes the kernel-features.h fixes arising out of the review
- limited to macros defined in the architecture-independent
kernel-features.h file - I did in connection with the move to 2.6.32
minimum kernel version. For that subset of macros - I didn't check
any purely architecture-specific macros - I think they are now defined
for the correct kernel versions on each architecture after this
patch.)
[BZ #17779]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION < 0x020625] (__ASSUME_PRLIMIT64):
Undefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION < 0x020625] (__ASSUME_PRLIMIT64):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sh/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION < 0x020625] (__ASSUME_PRLIMIT64):
Likewise.
Protocted symbol in shared library can only be accessed from PIE
or shared library. Linker in binutils 2.26 enforces it. We must
compile vismain with -fPIE and link it with -pie.
[BZ #17711]
* elf/Makefile (tests): Add vismain only if PIE is enabled.
(tests-pie): Add vismain.
(CFLAGS-vismain.c): New.
* elf/vismain.c: Add comments for PIE requirement.
The threshold in ldbl-96 atanhl for when to return the argument,
0x1p-28, is a bit too big, and that in ldbl-128ibm atanhl is much too
big (the relevant condition being x^3/3 being < 0.5ulp of x),
resulting in errors a bit above the limits of those considered
acceptable in glibc in the ldbl-96 case, and in large errors in the
ldbl-128ibm case. This patch changes those implementations to use
more appropriate thresholds and adds tests around the thresholds for
various formats.
Tested for x86_64, x86 and powerpc. x86_64 and x86 ulps updated
accordingly.
[BZ #18046]
[BZ #18047]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/e_atanhl.c (__ieee754_atanhl): Use
0x1p-56L as threshold for just returning the argument.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/e_atanhl.c (__ieee754_atanhl): Use
0x1p-32L as threshold for just returning the argument.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of atanh.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulp: Likewise.
The ldbl-128 and ldbl-128ibm implementations of acosl have similar
bugs, using a threshold of 0x1p-57L to determine when they just return
pi/2. Since the result pi/2 - asinl (x) is roughly pi/2 - x for small
x, the relevant cut-off is actually x being < 0.5ulp of 1. This patch
fixes the implementations to use that cut-off and adds tests of small
acos arguments.
Tested for powerpc and mips64. Also tested for x86_64 and x86; no
ulps updates needed.
[BZ #18038]
[BZ #18039]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/e_acosl.c (__ieee754_acosl): Only
return pi/2 for arguments below 0x1p-113L.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/e_acosl.c (__ieee754_acosl): Only
return pi/2 for arguments below 0x1p-106L.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of acos.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
Similar to various other bugs in this area, some asin implementations
do not raise the underflow exception for subnormal arguments, when the
result is tiny and inexact. This patch forces the exception in a
similar way to previous fixes.
Tested for x86_64, x86, powerpc and mips64.
[BZ #16351]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_asin.S (dbl_min): New object.
(MO): New macro.
(__ieee754_asin): Force underflow exception for results with small
absolute value.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_asinf.S (flt_min): New object.
(MO): New macro.
(__ieee754_asinf): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/e_asin.c: Include <float.h> and <math.h>.
(__ieee754_asin): Force underflow exception for results with small
absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/e_asinf.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_asinf): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/e_asinl.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_asinl): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/e_asinl.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_asinl): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/e_asinl.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_asinl): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/e_asin.c [HAVE_FMA4_SUPPORT]:
Include <math.h>.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Do not mark underflow exceptions as
possibly missing for bug 16351.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
The ldbl-128ibm implementation of logbl produces incorrect results
when the high part of the argument is a power of 2 and the low part a
nonzero number with the opposite sign (and so the returned exponent
should be 1 less than that of the high part). For example, logbl
(0x1.ffffffffffffffp1L) returns 2 but should return 1. (This is
similar to (fixed) bug 16740 for frexpl, and (fixed) bug 18029 for
ilogbl.) This patch adds checks for that case.
Tested for powerpc.
[BZ #18030]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_logbl.c (__logbl): Adjust exponent
of power of 2 down when low part has opposite sign.
* math/libm-test.inc (logb_test_data): Add more tests.
The ldbl-128ibm implementation of ilogbl produces incorrect results
when the high part of the argument is a power of 2 and the low part a
nonzero number with the opposite sign (and so the returned exponent
should be 1 less than that of the high part). For example, ilogbl
(0x1.ffffffffffffffp1L) returns 2 but should return 1. (This is
similar to (fixed) bug 16740 for frexpl, and bug 18030 for logbl.)
This patch adds checks for that case.
Tested for powerpc.
[BZ #18029]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/e_ilogbl.c (__ieee754_ilogbl):
Adjust exponent of power of 2 down when low part has opposite
sign.
* math/libm-test.inc (ilogb_test_data): Add more tests.
If a locale alias is defined in locale.alias but not in an archive,
and the referenced locale is only present in the archive, setlocale
will fail if given the alias name. This is unintuitive. This patch
fixes it, arranging for the locale archive to be searched again after
alias expansion.
for ChangeLog
[BZ #15969]
* locale/findlocale.c (_nl_find_locale): Retry archive search
after alias expansion.
The ldbl-128ibm implementation of asinhl uses cut-offs of 0x1p28 and
0x1p-29 to determine when to use simpler formulas that avoid possible
overflow / underflow. Both those cut-offs are inappropriate for this
format, resulting in large errors. This patch changes the code to use
more appropriate cut-offs of 0x1p56 and 0x1p-56, adding tests around
the cut-offs for various floating-point formats.
Tested for powerpc. Also tested for x86_64 and x86 and updated ulps.
[BZ #18020]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_asinhl.c (__asinhl): Use 2**56 and
2**-56 not 2**28 and 2**-29 as thresholds for simpler formulas.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of asinh.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Likewise.
The ldbl-128ibm implementation of acoshl uses a cut-off of 0x1p28 to
determine when to use log(x) + log(2) as a formula. That cut-off is
too small for this format, resulting in large errors. This patch
changes it to a more appropriate cut-off of 0x1p56, adding tests
around the cut-offs for various floating-point formats.
Tested for powerpc. Also tested for x86_64 and x86 and updated ulps.
[BZ #18019]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/e_acoshl.c (__ieee754_acoshl): Use
2**56 not 2**28 as threshold for log (2x) formula.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of acosh.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Likewise.
Various x86 / x86_64 versions of scalb / scalbf / scalbl produce
spurious "invalid" exceptions for (qNaN, -Inf) arguments, because this
is wrongly handled like (+/-Inf, -Inf) which *should* raise such an
exception. (In fact the NaN case of the code determining whether to
quietly return a zero or a NaN for second argument -Inf was
accidentally dead since the code had been made to return a NaN with
exception.) This patch fixes the code to do the proper test for an
infinity as distinct from a NaN.
(Since the existing code does nothing to distinguish qNaNs and sNaNs
here, this patch doesn't either. If in future we systematically
implement proper sNaN semantics following TS 18661-1:2014, there will
be lots of bugs to address - Thomas found lots of issues with his
patch <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-ports/2013-04/msg00008.html> to
add SNaN tests (which never went in and would now require significant
reworking).)
Tested for x86_64 and x86. Committed.
[BZ #16783]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_scalb.S (__ieee754_scalb): Do not handle
arguments (NaN, -Inf) the same as (+/-Inf, -Inf).
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_scalbf.S (__ieee754_scalbf): Likewise.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_scalbl.S (__ieee754_scalbl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/e_scalbl.S (__ieee754_scalbl): Likewise.
* math/libm-test.inc (scalb_test_data): Add more tests.
Both open and openat load their last argument 'mode' lazily, using
va_arg() only if O_CREAT is found in oflag. This is wrong, mode is also
necessary if O_TMPFILE is in oflag.
By chance on x86_64, the problem wasn't evident when using O_TMPFILE
with open, as the 3rd argument of open, even when not loaded with
va_arg, is left untouched in RDX, where the syscall expects it.
However, openat was not so lucky, and O_TMPFILE couldn't be used: mode
is the 4th argument, in RCX, but the syscall expects its 4th argument in
a different register than the glibc wrapper, in R10.
Introduce a macro __OPEN_NEEDS_MODE (oflag) to test if either O_CREAT or
O_TMPFILE is set in oflag.
Tested on Linux x86_64.
[BZ #17523]
* io/fcntl.h (__OPEN_NEEDS_MODE): New macro.
* io/bits/fcntl2.h (open): Use it.
(openat): Likewise.
* io/open.c (__libc_open): Likewise.
* io/open64.c (__libc_open64): Likewise.
* io/open64_2.c (__open64_2): Likewise.
* io/open_2.c (__open_2): Likewise.
* io/openat.c (__openat): Likewise.
* io/openat64.c (__openat64): Likewise.
* io/openat64_2.c (__openat64_2): Likewise.
* io/openat_2.c (__openat_2): Likewise.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/open.c (__libc_open): Likewise.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/openat.c (__openat): Likewise.
* sysdeps/posix/open64.c (__libc_open64): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/dl-openat64.c (openat64): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/generic/open.c (__libc_open): Likewise.
(__open_nocancel): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/generic/open64.c (__libc_open64): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/open64.c (__libc_open64): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/openat.c (__OPENAT): Likewise.
DNSSEC defines a number of response types that one me expect when the
DO bit is set. We don't process any of them, but since we do allow
setting the DO bit, skip them without logging an error since it is
only a nuisance.
Tested on x86_64.
[BZ #14841]
* resolv/gethnamaddr.c (getanswer): Skip logging if
RES_USE_DNSSEC is set.
* resolv/nss_dns/dns-host.c (getanswer_r): Likewise.
We compile gcrt1.o with -fPIC to support both "gcc -pg" and "gcc -pie -pg".
[BZ #17836]
* csu/Makefile (extra-objs): Add gmon-start.o if not builing
shared library. Add gmon-start.os otherwise.
($(objpfx)g$(start-installed-name)): Use $(objpfx)S%
$(objpfx)gmon-start.os if builing shared library.
($(objpfx)g$(static-start-installed-name)): Likewise.
for localedata/ChangeLog
[BZ #17588]
[BZ #13064]
[BZ #14094]
[BZ #17998]
* unicode-gen/Makefile: New.
* unicode-gen/unicode-license.txt: New, from Unicode.
* unicode-gen/UnicodeData.txt: New, from Unicode.
* unicode-gen/DerivedCoreProperties.txt: New, from Unicode.
* unicode-gen/EastAsianWidth.txt: New, from Unicode.
* unicode-gen/gen_unicode_ctype.py: New generator, from Mike
FABIAN <mfabian@redhat.com>.
* unicode-gen/ctype_compatibility.py: New verifier, from
Pravin Satpute <psatpute@redhat.com> and Mike FABIAN.
* unicode-gen/ctype_compatibility_test_cases.py: New verifier
module, from Mike FABIAN.
* unicode-gen/utf8_gen.py: New generator, from Pravin Satpute
and Mike FABIAN.
* unicode-gen/utf8_compatibility.py: New verifier, from Pravin
Satpute and Mike FABIAN.
* charmaps/UTF-8: Update.
* locales/i18n: Update.
* gen-unicode-ctype.c: Remove.
* tst-ctype-de_DE.ISO-8859-1.in: Adjust, islower now returns
true for ordinal indicators.
The POSIX function scandir calls scandirat, which is not a POSIX
function. This patch fixes this by making it use __scandirat and
making scandirat a weak alias. There are no changes for scandir64 /
scandirat64 because those are both _GNU_SOURCE-only functions so no
namespace issue arises for them.
Tested for x86_64 that the disassembly of installed shared libraries
is unchanged by this patch.
[BZ #17999]
* dirent/scandir.c [!SCANDIR] (SCANDIRAT): Define to __scandirat
instead of scandirat.
* dirent/scandirat.c [!SCANDIRAT] (SCANDIRAT): Likewise.
[!SCANDIRAT] (SCANDIRAT_WEAK_ALIAS): Define.
[SCANDIRAT_WEAK_ALIAS] (scandirat): Define as weak alias of
__scandirat.
* include/dirent.h (scandirat): Do not use libc_hidden_proto.
(__scandirat): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-POSIX2008/dirent.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/dirent.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
This patch fixes bug 15319, missing underflows from atan / atan2 when
the result of atan is very close to its small argument (or that of
atan2 is very close to the ratio of its arguments, which may be an
exact division).
The usual approach of doing an underflowing computation if the
computed result is subnormal is followed. For 32-bit x86, there are
extra complications: the inline __ieee754_atan2 in bits/mathinline.h
needs to be disabled for float and double because other libm functions
using it generally rely on getting proper underflow exceptions from
it, while the out-of-line functions have to remove excess range and
precision from the underflowing result so as to return an exact 0 in
the case where errno should be set for underflow to 0. (The failures
I saw without that are similar to those Carlos reported for other
functions, where I haven't seen a response to
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2015-01/msg00485.html>
confirming if my diagnosis is correct. Arguably all libm functions
with float and double returns should remove excess range and
precision, but that's a separate matter.)
The x86_64 long double case reported in a comment in bug 15319 is not
a bug (it's an argument of LDBL_MIN, and x86_64 is an after-rounding
architecture so the correct IEEE result is not to raise underflow in
the given rounding mode, in addition to treating the result as an
exact LDBL_MIN being within the newly clarified documentation of
accuracy goals). I'm presuming that the fpatan instruction can be
trusted to raise appropriate exceptions when the (long double) result
underflows (after rounding) and so no changes are needed for x86 /
x86_64 long double functions here; empirically this is the case for
the cases covered in the testsuite, on my system.
Tested for x86_64, x86, powerpc and mips64. Only 32-bit x86 needs
ulps updates (for the changes to inlines meaning some functions no
longer get excess precision from their __ieee754_atan2* calls).
[BZ #15319]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_atan2.S (dbl_min): New object.
(MO): New macro.
(__ieee754_atan2): For results with small absolute value, force
underflow exception and remove excess range and precision from
return value.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_atan2f.S (flt_min): New object.
(MO): New macro.
(__ieee754_atan2f): For results with small absolute value, force
underflow exception and remove excess range and precision from
return value.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/s_atan.S (dbl_min): New object.
(MO): New macro.
(__atan): For results with small absolute value, force underflow
exception and remove excess range and precision from return value.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/s_atanf.S (flt_min): New object.
(MO): New macro.
(__atanf): For results with small absolute value, force underflow
exception and remove excess range and precision from return value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/e_atan2.c: Include <float.h> and
<math.h>.
(__ieee754_atan2): Force underflow exception for results with
small absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/s_atan.c: Include <float.h> and
<math_private.h>.
(atan): Force underflow exception for results with small absolute
value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_atanf.c: Include <float.h>.
(__atanf): Force underflow exception for results with small
absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/s_atanl.c: Include <float.h> and
<math.h>.
(__atanl): Force underflow exception for results with small
absolute value.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_atanl.c: Include <float.h>.
(__atanl): Force underflow exception for results with small
absolute value.
* sysdeps/x86/fpu/bits/mathinline.h
[!__SSE2_MATH__ && !__x86_64__ && __LIBC_INTERNAL_MATH_INLINES]
(__ieee754_atan2): Only define inline for long double.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/e_atan2.c
[HAVE_FMA4_SUPPORT || HAVE_AVX_SUPPORT]: Include <math.h>.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Do not mark underflow exceptions as
possibly missing for bug 15319. Add more tests of atan2.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
* math/libm-test.inc (casin_test_data): Do not mark underflow
exceptions as possibly missing for bug 15319.
(casinh_test_data): Likewise.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
The implementation of the (XSI POSIX) functions hsearch / hcreate /
hdestroy uses hsearch_r / hcreate_r / hdestroy_r, which are not POSIX
functions. This patch makes those into weak aliases for __*_r and
uses those names for the calls within libc.
Tested for x86_64 that the disassembly of installed shared libraries
is unchanged by this patch.
[BZ #17996]
* include/search.h (hcreate_r): Don't use libc_hidden_proto.
(hdestroy_r): Likewise.
(hsearch_r): Likewise.
(__hcreate_r): Declare and use libc_hidden_proto.
(__hdestroy_r): Likewise.
(__hsearch_r): Likewise.
* misc/hsearch.c (hsearch): Call __hsearch_r instead of hsearch_r.
(hcreate): Call __hcreate_r instead of hcreate_r.
(__hdestroy): Call __hdestroy_r instead of hdestroy_r.
* misc/hsearch_r.c (hcreate_r): Rename to __hcreate_r and define
as weak alias of __hcreate_r.
(hdestroy_r): Rename to __hdestroy_r and define as weak alias of
__hdestroy_r.
(hsearch_r): Rename to __hsearch_r and define as weak alias of
__hsearch_r.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XPG3/search.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-XPG4/search.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/search.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/search.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/search.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
posix_spawn (a standard POSIX function) brings in a use of getrlimit64
(not a standard POSIX function). This patch fixes this by using
__getrlimit64 and making getrlimit64 a weak alias.
This is more complicated than some such changes because of files that
define getrlimit64 in their own way using symbol versioning after
including the main sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/getrlimit64.c with a
getrlimit macro defined. There are various existing patterns for such
cases in glibc; the one I've used here is that a getrlimit64 macro
disables the weak_alias / libc_hidden_weak calls, leaving it to the
including file to define the getrlimit64 name in whatever way is
appropriate.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 that installed stripped shared libraries are
unchanged by this patch.
[BZ #17991]
* include/sys/resource.h (__getrlimit64): Declare. Use
libc_hidden_proto.
* resource/getrlimit64.c (getrlimit64): Rename to __getrlimit64
and define as weak alias of __getrlimit64. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/posix/spawni.c (__spawni): Call __getrlimit64 instead of
getrlimit64.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/getrlimit64.c (getrlimit64): Rename to
__getrlimit64.
[!getrlimit64] (getrlimit64): Define as weak alias of
__getrlimit64. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/getrlimit64.c (getrlimit64): Define
using __getrlimit64 not __new_getrlimit64.
(__GI_getrlimit64): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/getrlimit64.c (getrlimit64):
Likewise.
(__GI_getrlimit64): Likewise.
(__old_getrlimit64): Use __getrlimit64 not __new_getrlimit64.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/syscalls.list
(getrlimit): Add __getrlimit64 alias.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wordsize-64/syscalls.list (getrlimit):
Likewise.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XOPEN2K/spawn.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/spawn.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/spawn.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
Various remquo implementations produce a zero remainder with the wrong
sign (a zero remainder should always have the sign of the first
argument, as specified in IEEE 754) in round-downward mode, resulting
from the sign of 0 - 0. This patch checks for zero results and fixes
their sign accordingly.
Tested for x86_64, x86, mips64 and powerpc.
[BZ #17987]
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/s_remquo.c (__remquo): Ensure sign of
zero result does not depend on the sign resulting from
subtraction.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/wordsize-64/s_remquo.c (__remquo):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_remquof.c (__remquof): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/s_remquol.c (__remquol): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_remquol.c (__remquol): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/s_remquol.c (__remquol): Likewise.
* math/libm-test.inc (remquo_test_data): Add more tests.
Various remquo implementations, when computing the last three bits of
the quotient, have spurious overflows when 4 times the second argument
to remquo overflows. These overflows can in turn cause bad results in
rounding modes where that overflow results in a finite value. This
patch adds tests to avoid the problem multiplications in cases where
they would overflow, similar to those that control an earlier
multiplication by 8.
Tested for x86_64, x86, mips64 and powerpc.
[BZ #17978]
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/s_remquo.c (__remquo): Do not form
products 4 * y and 2 * y where those would overflow.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/wordsize-64/s_remquo.c (__remquo):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_remquof.c (__remquof): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/s_remquol.c (__remquol): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_remquol.c (__remquol): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/s_remquol.c (__remquol): Likewise.
* math/libm-test.inc (remquo_test_data): Add more tests.
Remove IA64 PAGE_SIZE related macros as PAGE_SIZE is not defined.
Also remove macros that are only used for BFD's trad-core support
which is not relavant for IA64 according to the thread starting
here:
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-ports/2013-11/msg00028.html
This patch is neither built nor tested but is equivalent to a MIPS
patch for the same fix.
The dbl-64/wordsize-64 remquo implementation follows similar logic to
various other implementations, but where that logic computes some
absolute values, it wrongly uses a previously computed bit-pattern for
the absolute value of the first argument, where actually it needs the
absolute value of the first argument mod 8 times the second. This
patch fixes it to compute the correct absolute value.
The integer quotient result of remquo is only specified mod 8
(including its sign); architecture-specific versions may well vary in
what results they give for higher bits of that result (and indeed bug
17569 gives an example correct result from __builtin_remquo giving 9
for that result, where the particular glibc implementation used in
that bug report would give 1 after this fix). Thus, this patch adapts
the tests of remquo to test that result only mod 8, to allow for such
variation when tests with higher quotient are included.
Tested for x86_64 and x86.
[BZ #17569]
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/wordsize-64/s_remquo.c (__remquo):
Compute absolute value of x as modified by fmod, not original
value of x.
* math/libm-test.inc (RUN_TEST_ffI_f1): Rename to
RUN_TEST_ffI_f1_mod8. Check extra return value mod 8.
(RUN_TEST_LOOP_ffI_f1): Rename to RUN_TEST_LOOP_ffI_f1_mod8. Call
RUN_TEST_ffI_f1_mod8.
(remquo_test_data): Add more tests.
Similarly to sqrt in
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2015-02/msg00353.html>, the
powerpc sqrtf implementation for when _ARCH_PPCSQ is not defined also
relies on a * b + c being contracted into a fused multiply-add.
Although this contraction is not explicitly disabled for e_sqrtf.c, it
still seems appropriate to make the file explicit about its
requirements by using __builtin_fmaf; this patch does so.
Furthermore, it turns out that doing so fixes the observed inaccuracy
and missing exceptions (that is, that without explicit __builtin_fmaf
usage, it was not being compiled as intended).
Tested for powerpc32 (hard float).
[BZ #17967]
* sysdeps/powerpc/fpu/e_sqrtf.c (__slow_ieee754_sqrtf): Use
__builtin_fmaf instead of relying on contraction of a * b + c.
As Adhemerval noted in
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2015-01/msg00451.html>, the
powerpc sqrt implementation for when _ARCH_PPCSQ is not defined is
inaccurate in some cases.
The problem is that this code relies on fused multiply-add, and relies
on the compiler contracting a * b + c to get a fused operation. But
sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/Makefile disables contraction for e_sqrt.c,
because the implementation in that directory relies on *not* having
contracted operations.
While it would be possible to arrange makefiles so that an earlier
sysdeps directory can disable the setting in
sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/Makefile, it seems a lot cleaner to make the
dependence on fused operations explicit in the .c file. GCC 4.6
introduced support for __builtin_fma on powerpc and other
architectures with such instructions, so we can rely on that; this
patch duly makes the code use __builtin_fma for all such fused
operations.
Tested for powerpc32 (hard float).
2015-02-12 Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
[BZ #17964]
* sysdeps/powerpc/fpu/e_sqrt.c (__slow_ieee754_sqrt): Use
__builtin_fma instead of relying on contraction of a * b + c.
The tv_sec is of type time_t in both struct timeval and struct timespec.
This matches the implementation and also the relevant standard (checked
C11 for timespec and opengroup for timeval).
This patch fixes the remaining part of bug 16560, spurious underflows
from exp2 of arguments close to 0 (when the result is close to 1, so
should not underflow), by just using 1+x instead of a more complicated
calculation when the argument is sufficiently small.
Tested for x86_64, x86 and mips64.
[BZ #16560]
* math/e_exp2l.c [LDBL_MANT_DIG == 106] (LDBL_EPSILON): Undefine
and redefine.
(__ieee754_exp2l): Do not multiply small fractional parts by
M_LN2l.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_exp2l.S (__ieee754_exp2l): Just add 1 to
small argument.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/e_exp2.c (__ieee754_exp2): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/e_exp2f.c (__ieee754_exp2f): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/e_exp2l.S (__ieee754_exp2l): Likewise.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of exp2.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
pthread_mutexattr_settype adds PTHREAD_MUTEX_NO_ELISION_NP to kind,
which is an internal flag that pthread_mutexattr_gettype shouldn't
expose, since pthread_mutexattr_settype wouldn't accept it.
This patch makes sincos set errno to EDOM when passed an infinity,
similarly to sin and cos.
Tested for x86_64, x86, powerpc and mips64. I don't know if the
architecture-specific implementations for ia64 and m68k might need
corresponding fixes.
2015-02-11 Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
[BZ #15467]
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/s_sincos.c: Include <errno.h>.
(__sincos): Set errno to EDOM for infinite argument.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_sincosf.c: Include <errno.h>.
(SINCOSF_FUNC): Set errno to EDOM for infinite argument.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/s_sincosl.c: Include <errno.h>.
(__sincosl): Set errno to EDOM for infinite argument.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_sincosl.c: Include <errno.h>.
(__sincosl): Set errno to EDOM for infinite argument.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/s_sincosl.c: Include <errno.h>.
(__sincosl): Set errno to EDOM for infinite argument.
* math/libm-test.inc (sincos_test_data): Test errno setting.
soft-fp's _FP_FMA fails to set the result's exponent for cases where
the result of the multiplication is 0, yielding incorrect (arbitrary,
depending on uninitialized values) results for those cases. This
affects libm for architectures using soft-fp to implement fma. This
patch adds the exponent setting and tests for this case.
Tested for ARM soft-float (which uses soft-fp fma), x86_64 and x86 (to
verify not introducing new libm test failures there).
(This bug showed up in testing my patch to move the Linux kernel to
current soft-fp. math/Makefile has "override CFLAGS +=
-Wno-uninitialized" which would have stopped compiler warnings from
showing up this problem, although I wouldn't be surprised if removing
that shows spurious warnings from this code, if the compiler fails to
follow that various cases where the exponent is uninitialized don't
need it initialized because the class is set to a value meaning the
uninitialized exponent isn't used.)
[BZ #17932]
* soft-fp/op-common.h (_FP_FMA): Set exponent of result in case
where multiplication results in zero and third argument is finite
and nonzero.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of fma.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
BZ #16618
Under certain conditions wscanf can allocate too little memory for the
to-be-scanned arguments and overflow the allocated buffer. The
implementation now correctly computes the required buffer size when
using malloc.
A regression test was added to tst-sscanf.
memcpy with unaligned 256-bit AVX register loads/stores are slow on older
processorsl like Sandy Bridge. This patch adds bit_AVX_Fast_Unaligned_Load
and sets it only when AVX2 is available.
[BZ #17801]
* sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/init-arch.c (__init_cpu_features):
Set the bit_AVX_Fast_Unaligned_Load bit for AVX2.
* sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/init-arch.h (bit_AVX_Fast_Unaligned_Load):
New.
(index_AVX_Fast_Unaligned_Load): Likewise.
(HAS_AVX_FAST_UNALIGNED_LOAD): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/memcpy.S (__new_memcpy): Check the
bit_AVX_Fast_Unaligned_Load bit instead of the bit_AVX_Usable bit.
* sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/memcpy_chk.S (__memcpy_chk): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/mempcpy.S (__mempcpy): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/mempcpy_chk.S (__mempcpy_chk): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/memmove.c (__libc_memmove): Replace
HAS_AVX with HAS_AVX_FAST_UNALIGNED_LOAD.
* sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/memmove_chk.c (__memmove_chk): Likewise.
The padding bytes in the statsdata struct are not initialized, due to
which valgrind throws a warning:
==11384== Memcheck, a memory error detector
==11384== Copyright (C) 2002-2012, and GNU GPL'd, by Julian Seward et al.
==11384== Using Valgrind-3.8.1 and LibVEX; rerun with -h for copyright info
==11384== Command: nscd -d
==11384==
Fri 25 Apr 2014 10:34:53 AM CEST - 11384: handle_request: request received (Version = 2) from PID 11396
Fri 25 Apr 2014 10:34:53 AM CEST - 11384: GETSTAT
==11384== Thread 6:
==11384== Syscall param socketcall.sendto(msg) points to uninitialised byte(s)
==11384== at 0x4E4ACDC: send (in /lib64/libpthread-2.12.so)
==11384== by 0x11AF6B: send_stats (in /usr/sbin/nscd)
==11384== by 0x112F75: nscd_run_worker (in /usr/sbin/nscd)
==11384== by 0x4E439D0: start_thread (in /lib64/libpthread-2.12.so)
==11384== by 0x599AB6C: clone (in /lib64/libc-2.12.so)
==11384== Address 0x15708395 is on thread 6's stack
Fix the warning by initializing the structure.
This patch fixes a bug introduced by 18f2945ae9, where it optimizes
the FPSCR set by just issuing a mtfs instruction if new flag is different
from older one. The issue is a typo, where the new flag should the the
new value, instead of the old one.
It fixes BZ#17885.
Some powerpc64 processors (e5500 core for instance) does not provide the
fsqrt instruction, however current check to use in math_private.h is
__WORDSIZE and _ARCH_PWR4 (ISA 2.02). This is patch change it to use
the compiler flag _ARCH_PPCSQ (which is the same condition GCC uses to
decide whether to generate fsqrt instruction).
It fixes BZ#16576.
GLIBC memset optimization for POWER8 uses the '.machine power8'
directive, which is only supported officially on binutils 2.24+. This
causes a build failure on older binutils.
Since the requirement of .machine power8 is to correctly assembly the
'mtvsrd' instruction and it is already handled by the MTVSRD_V1_R4
macro, there is no really needed of using it.
The patch replaces the power8 with power7 for .machine directive.
It fixes BZ#17869.
This patch fix the elf/ifuncmain6pie failure when building with GCC
4.9+. For some reason, the compiler removes the branch taken code at
resolve_ifunc (sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/dl-machine.h) as dead-code
and thus the testcase fails because the ifunc resolves branches to an
invalid memory location. It fixes by explicit adding a dependency of
value based on odp variable to avoid compiler optimization.
It fixes BZ#17868.
This patch replaces unsigned long int and 1UL with uint64_t and
(uint64_t) 1 to support ILP32 targets like x32.
[BZ #17870]
* nptl/sem_post.c (__new_sem_post): Replace unsigned long int
with uint64_t.
* nptl/sem_waitcommon.c (__sem_wait_cleanup): Replace 1UL with
(uint64_t) 1.
(__new_sem_wait_slow): Replace unsigned long int with uint64_t.
Replace 1UL with (uint64_t) 1.
* sysdeps/nptl/internaltypes.h (new_sem): Replace unsigned long
int with uint64_t.
This patch fix powerpc __get_clockfreq racy and cancel-safe issues by
dropping internal static cache and by using nocancel file operations.
The vDSO failure check is also removed, since kernel code does not
return an error (it cleans cr0.so bit on function return) and the static
code (to read value /proc) now uses non-cancellable calls.
The ability to recursively call dlopen is useful for malloc
implementations that wish to load other dynamic modules that
implement reentrant/AS-safe functions to use in their own
implementation.
Given that a user malloc implementation may be called by an
ongoing dlopen to allocate memory the user malloc
implementation interrupts dlopen and if it calls dlopen again
that's a reentrant call.
This patch fixes the issues with the ld.so.cache mapping
and the _r_debug assertion which prevent this from working
as expected.
See:
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-12/msg00446.html
This commit fixes semaphore destruction by either using 64b atomic
operations (where available), or by using two separate fields when only
32b atomic operations are available. In the latter case, we keep a
conservative estimate of whether there are any waiting threads in one
bit of the field that counts the number of available tokens, thus
allowing sem_post to atomically both add a token and determine whether
it needs to call futex_wake.
See:
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-12/msg00155.html
This patch adds an optimized POWER8 strncmp. The implementation focus
on speeding up unaligned cases follwing the ideas of power8 strcmp.
The algorithm first check the initial 16 bytes, then align the first
function source and uses unaligned loads on second argument only.
Aditional checks for page boundaries are done for unaligned cases
(where sources alignment are different).
This patch adds an optimized POWER8 strcmp using unaligned accesses.
The algorithm first check the initial 16 bytes, then align the first
function source and uses unaligned loads on second argument only.
Aditional checks for page boundaries are done for unaligned cases
This patch adds an optimized POWER8 st{r,p}ncpy using unaligned accesses.
It shows 10%-80% improvement over the optimized POWER7 one that uses
only aligned accesses, specially on unaligned inputs.
The algorithm first read and check 16 bytes (if inputs do not cross a 4K
page size). The it realign source to 16-bytes and issue a 16 bytes read
and compare loop to speedup null byte checks for large strings. Also,
different from POWER7 optimization, the null pad is done inline in the
implementation using possible unaligned accesses, instead of realying on
a memset call. Special case is added for page cross reads.
This patch adds an optimized POWER8 strcpy using unaligned accesses.
For strings up to 16 bytes the implementation first calculate the
string size, like strlen, and issues a memcpy. For larger strings,
source is first aligned to 16 bytes and then tested over a loop that
reads 16 bytes am combine the cmpb results for speedup. Special case is
added for page cross reads.
It shows 30%-60% improvement over the optimized POWER7 one that uses
only aligned accesses.
[Modified from the original email by Siddhesh Poyarekar]
This patch solves bug #16009 by implementing an additional path in
strxfrm that does not depend on caching the weight and rule indices.
In detail the following changed:
* The old main loop was factored out of strxfrm_l into the function
do_xfrm_cached to be able to alternativly use the non-caching version
do_xfrm.
* strxfrm_l allocates a a fixed size array on the stack. If this is not
sufficiant to store the weight and rule indices, the non-caching path is
taken. As the cache size is not dependent on the input there can be no
problems with integer overflows or stack allocations greater than
__MAX_ALLOCA_CUTOFF. Note that malloc-ing is not possible because the
definition of strxfrm does not allow an oom errorhandling.
* The uncached path determines the weight and rule index for every char
and for every pass again.
* Passing all the locale data array by array resulted in very long
parameter lists, so I introduced a structure that holds them.
* Checking for zero src string has been moved a bit upwards, it is
before the locale data initialization now.
* To verify that the non-caching path works correct I added a test run
to localedata/sort-test.sh & localedata/xfrm-test.c where all strings
are patched up with spaces so that they are too large for the caching path.
The ldbl-96 implementation of scalblnl (used for x86_64 and ia64) uses
a condition k <= -63 to determine when a standard underflowing result
tiny*__copysignl(tiny,x) should be returned. However, that condition
corresponds to values with exponent -16446 or less, and in the case of
-16446, the correct result for round-to-nearest depends on whether the
value is exactly 0x1p-16446 (half the least subnormal) or more than
that. This patch fixes the bug by changing the condition to k <= -64
and accordingly adjusting the exponent by 64 not 63 when converting to
a normal value.
Tested for x86_64.
[BZ #17803]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/s_scalblnl.c (twom63): Rename to
twom64. Adjust value to 0x1p-64L.
(__scalblnl): Only return standard underflowing result for K <=
-64 not K <= -63; adjust exponent for underflowing result by 64
not 63.
* math/libm-test.inc (scalbn_test_data): Add more tests.
(scalbln_test_data): Likewise.
The ldbl-96 implementation of scalblnl (used for x86_64 and ia64) is
incorrect for subnormal arguments (this is a separate bug from bug
17803, which is about underflowing results). There are two problems
with the adjustments of subnormal arguments: the "two63" variable
multiplied by is actually 0x1p52L not 0x1p63L, so is insufficient to
make values normal, and then GET_LDOUBLE_EXP(es,x), used to extract
the new exponent, extracts it into a variable that isn't used, while
the value taken to by the new exponent is wrongly taken from the high
part of the mantissa before the adjustment (hx). This patch fixes
both those problems and adds appropriate tests.
Tested for x86_64.
[BZ #17834]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/s_scalblnl.c (two63): Change value to
0x1p63L.
(__scalblnl): Get new exponent of adjusted subnormal value from ES
not HX.
* math/libm-test.inc (scalbn_test_data): Add more tests.
(scalbln_test_data): Likewise.
This patch adds support for lock elision using ISA 2.07 hardware
transactional memory instructions for pthread_mutex primitives.
Similar to s390 version, the for elision logic defined in
'force-elision.h' is only enabled if ENABLE_LOCK_ELISION is defined.
Also, the lock elision code should be able to be built even with
a compiler that does not provide HTM support with builtins.
However I have noted the performance is sub-optimal due scheduling
pressures.
Microblaze apparently has a variable page size (see thread below) and
should not hard-code any page-size related macros.
Also remove macros that are only used for BFD's trad-core support
which is not relavant for microblaze also according to the thread
starting here:
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-ports/2013-11/msg00028.html
This patch is neither built nor tested but mirrors a MIPS patch that
fixes the same issue.
Thanks,
Matthew
* sysdepsysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/sys/user.h
(PAGE_SHIFT, PAGE_SIZE, PAGE_MASK, NBPG, UPAGES): Remove.
(HOST_TEXT_START_ADDR, HOST_STACK_END_ADDR): Remove.
Signed-off-by: David Holsgrove <david.holsgrove@xilinx.com>
Concluding the fixes for C90 libm functions calling C99 fe* functions,
this patch fixes the case of feupdateenv by making it a weak alias for
__feupdateenv and making the affected code call __feupdateenv.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that installed stripped shared
libraries are unchanged by the patch). Also tested for ARM
(soft-float) that the math.h linknamespace tests now pass.
[BZ #17748]
* include/fenv.h (__feupdateenv): Use libm_hidden_proto.
* math/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Use libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/aarch64/fpu/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Rename to
__feupdateenv and define as weak alias of __feupdateenv. Use
libm_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/alpha/fpu/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Use
libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/arm/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Rename to __feupdateenv
and define as weak alias of __feupdateenv. Use libm_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/hppa/fpu/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Use
libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/ia64/fpu/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Rename to
__feupdateenv and define as weak alias of __feupdateenv. Use
libm_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/m68k/fpu/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Use
libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/mips/fpu/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Rename to
__feupdateenv and define as weak alias of __feupdateenv. Use
libm_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/powerpc/fpu/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Use
libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/powerpc/nofpu/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/e500/nofpu/feupdateenv.c
(__feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/fpu/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Rename to
__feupdateenv and define as weak alias of __feupdateenv. Use
libm_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/sh/sh4/fpu/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/sparc/fpu/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Use
libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/tile/math_private.h (__feupdateenv): New inline
function.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Use
libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/generic/math_private.h (default_libc_feupdateenv): Call
__feupdateenv instead of feupdateenv.
(default_libc_feupdateenv_test): Likewise.
(libc_feresetround_ctx): Likewise.
glibc maintains a binary tree of environment strings it malloc()ed
itself. However, it's possible for it to malloc() a string, then find
that an identical string is already in the tree. In this case, the
memory is leaked and is not freed if the application later calls
__libc_freeres(). Fix this by freeing 'new_value' when it's unneeded.
Test case:
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
int main()
{
char *p = calloc(100000, 1);
memset(p, 'A', 99999);
setenv("TESTVAR", p, 1);
setenv("TESTVAR", p, 1);
free(p);
}
Leak that was reported by valgrind:
100,008 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1 of 1
at 0x4C29F90: malloc (in /usr/lib/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
by 0x4E6B3D4: __add_to_environ (setenv.c:176)
by 0x4C31B8F: setenv (in /usr/lib/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
by 0x400642: main (in /mnt/tmpfs/a.out)
When mount entry contains only four fields and have more then one space or
tab at the and, mp.mnt_freq and mp.mnt_passno will be set to some specific
values as side effect from parsing of previus mount entry. It is because
sscanf(""," %d %d ", &a, &b) returns -1, but this case is unprocessed.
Values of mp.mnt_freq and mp.mnt_passno stays unchanged. This patch is
attempt to fix described issue by removing trailing tabs and spaces.
C99 specifies that CLOCKS_PER_SEC is an expression with the type clock_t.
This patch adds a generic <bits/time2.h> to define CLOCKS_PER_SEC and
provides the Linux/x86-64 version of <bits/time2.h> to support x32.
[BZ #17797]
* bits/time.h (CLOCKS_PER_SEC): Changed to ((clock_t) 1000000).
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/bits/time.h (CLOCKS_PER_SEC): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/clock.c (clock): _Static_assert
CLOCKS_PER_SEC == 1000000.
* time/clocktest.c (main): Replace %ld with %jd and cast to
intmax_t.
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips64/n64/posix_fadvise.c defines
posix_fadvise64 as a strong alias for posix_fadvise (for
!SHLIB_COMPAT(libc, GLIBC_2_2, GLIBC_2_3_3) - i.e., for static
linking, which is the case when this matters), but it should be a weak
alias. This patch makes it a weak alias.
Tested for MIPS that this fixes the observed linknamespace test
failures.
[BZ #17796]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips64/n64/posix_fadvise.c
[!SHLIB_COMPAT(libc, GLIBC_2_2, GLIBC_2_3_3)] (posix_fadvise64):
Define as weak alias not strong alias.
ARM posix_fadvise calls __posix_fadvise64_l64, to which
posix_fadvise64 is a strong alias, but posix_fadvise is a POSIX
function and posix_fadvise64 isn't. This patch changes it into a weak
alias.
Tested for ARM that this fixes the corresponding linknamespace test
failures.
[BZ #17793]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/posix_fadvise64.c (posix_fadvise64):
Define as weak alias not strong alias.
Use of isblank brings in isascii and toascii, but isblank is a C99
function and the other two aren't; similarly, isascii and toascii are
UNIX98 functions and bring in isblank, which isn't. (Not a
conformance issue because of the is* and to* reservation, but still
contrary to glibc practice.) This patch fixes this by splitting
isblank out of ctype-extn.c to a separate ctype-c99.c. isblank_l is
also moved to a separate file, ctype-c99_l.c (non-XSI POSIX.1-2008 has
isblank_l, but isascii / toascii are marked OB XSI). (In principle
all these functions could go in separate files - that's optimal for
static linking - but they are also all very small, and splitting them
all out is not needed to fix the present bug.)
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that installed stripped shared
libraries are unchanged by the patch - the ordering in which new and
existing sources are listed in ctype/Makefile is arranged so functions
go in the same order so that this comparison works).
[BZ #17635]
* ctype/ctype-c99.c: New file. isblank implementation moved from
...
* ctype/ctype-extn.c: ... here.
(__isblank_l): Move to ...
* ctype/ctype-c99_l.c: ... here. New file.
* ctype/Makefile (routines): Add ctype-c99 and ctype-c99_l.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-ISO99/ctype.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-ISO11/ctype.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XPG3/ctype.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XPG4/ctype.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/ctype.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/ctype.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
On systems using sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wordsize-64, posix_fadvise64
and posix_fallocate64 (non-POSIX) are strong aliases for posix_fadvise
and posix_fallocate (POSIX), meaning references to the latter wrongly
bring in definitions of the former. They should be weak aliases; this
patch makes them so.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17777]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wordsize-64/posix_fadvise.c
(posix_fadvise64): Define as weak alias not strong alias.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wordsize-64/posix_fallocate.c
(posix_fallocate64): Likewise.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XOPEN2K/fcntl.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/mqueue.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/fcntl.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/mqueue.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/fcntl.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/mqueue.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
MIPS supports a variable page size but glibc defines a constant.
This causes at least two glibc tests to fail when the page size
does not match the hard-coded size:
inet/test-ifaddrs
inet/test_ifindex
[BZ #16191]
* NEWS: Mention bug fix.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/sys/user.h (PAGE_SHIFT): Remove.
(PAGE_SIZE, PAGE_MASK, NBPG, UPAGES): Likewise.
(HOST_TEXT_START_ADDR, HOST_DATA_START_ADDR): Likewise.
(HOST_STACK_END_ADDR): Likewise.
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/bits/termios.h defines TIOCSER_TEMT
unconditionally, but it's in the user's namespace. This patch
conditions it on __USE_MISC, as on powerpc. I've filed bug 17783 for
the residual inconsistency in conditions on this macro (sparc defines
it for __USE_GNU only).
[BZ #17782]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/bits/termios.h (TIOCSER_TEMT):
Condition macro definition on [__USE_MISC].
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/bits/sigaction.h gives sa_flags type
unsigned int, but POSIX says it should be signed int. This patch
gives it the correct type (the layout is unchanged, so there are no
ABI issues involved).
[BZ #17781]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/bits/sigaction.h
(struct sigaction): Change type of sa_flags field to int.
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/bits/fcntl.h has a structure field called
pad, which is in the user's namespace. This patch changes it to
__glibc_reserved0.
[BZ #17780]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/bits/fcntl.h (struct flock)
[!__USE_FILE_OFFSET64 && _MIPS_SIM != _ABI64]: Rename pad field to
__glibc_reserved0.
PI_STATIC_AND_HIDDEN is always defined for i386. There is no need to
check PI_STATIC_AND_HIDDEN in sysdeps/i386/dl-machine.h.
[BZ #17775]
* sysdeps/i386/dl-machine.h (PI_STATIC_AND_HIDDEN): Removed.
(elf_machine_dynamic) [!PI_STATIC_AND_HIDDEN]: Likewise.
(elf_machine_load_address) [!PI_STATIC_AND_HIDDEN]: Likewise.
Various C90 and UNIX98 libm functions call feraiseexcept, which is not
in those standards. This causes linknamespace test failures - except
on x86 / x86_64, where feraiseexcept is inline (for the relevant
constant arguments) in bits/fenv.h.
This patch fixes this by making those functions call __feraiseexcept
instead. All changes are applied to all architectures rather than
considering the possibility that some might not be needed in some
cases (e.g. x86) as it seems most maintainable to keep architectures
consistent.
Where __feraiseexcept does not exist, it is added, with feraiseexcept
made a weak alias; where it is a strong alias, it is made weak.
libm_hidden_def / libm_hidden_proto are used with __feraiseexcept
(this might in some cases improve code generation for existing calls
to __feraiseexcept in some code on some architectures). Where there
are dummy feraiseexcept macros (on architectures without
floating-point exceptions support, to avoid compile errors from
references to undefined FE_* macros), corresponding dummy
__feraiseexcept macros are added. And on x86, to ensure
__feraiseexcept calls still get inlined, the inline function in
bits/fenv.h is refactored so that most of it can be reused in an
inline __feraiseexcept in a separate include/bits/fenv.h.
Calls are changed in C90/UNIX98 functions, but generally not in
functions missing from those standards. They are also changed in
libc_fe* functions (on the basis that those might be used in any libm
function), and in feupdateenv (on the same basis - may be used, via
default libc_*, in any libm function - of course feupdateenv will need
changing to __feupdateenv in a subsequent patch to make that fully
namespace-clean).
No __feraiseexcept is added corresponding to the feraiseexcept in
powerpc bits/fenvinline.h, because that macro definition is
conditional on !defined __NO_MATH_INLINES, and glibc libm is built
with -D__NO_MATH_INLINES, so changing internal calls to use
__feraiseexcept should make no difference.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite; the only change in disassembly of
installed shared libraries is a slight code reordering in clog10, of
no apparent significance). Also tested for MIPS, where (in the
configuration tested) it eliminates math.h linknamespace failures for
n32 and n64 (some for o32 remain because of other issues).
[BZ #17723]
* include/fenv.h (__feraiseexcept): Use libm_hidden_proto.
* math/fraiseexcpt.c (__feraiseexcept): Use libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/aarch64/fpu/fraiseexcpt.c (feraiseexcept): Rename to
__feraiseexcept and define as weak alias of __feraiseexcept. Use
libm_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/arm/fraiseexcpt.c (feraiseexcept): Likewise.
* sysdeps/hppa/fpu/fraiseexcpt.c (feraiseexcept): Likewise.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/fraiseexcpt.c (__feraiseexcept): Use
libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/ia64/fpu/fraiseexcpt.c (feraiseexcept): Rename to
__feraiseexcept and define as weak alias of __feraiseexcept. Use
libm_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/m68k/coldfire/fpu/fraiseexcpt.c (feraiseexcept):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/microblaze/math_private.h (__feraiseexcept): New macro.
* sysdeps/mips/fpu/fraiseexcpt.c (feraiseexcept): Rename to
__feraiseexcept and define as weak alias of __feraiseexcept. Use
libm_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/powerpc/fpu/fraiseexcpt.c (__feraiseexcept): Use
libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/powerpc/nofpu/fraiseexcpt.c (__feraiseexcept): Likewise.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/e500/nofpu/fraiseexcpt.c
(__feraiseexcept): Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/fpu/fraiseexcpt.c (feraiseexcept): Rename to
__feraiseexcept and define as weak alias of __feraiseexcept. Use
libm_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/sh/sh4/fpu/fraiseexcpt.c (feraiseexcept): Likewise.
* sysdeps/sparc/fpu/fraiseexcpt.c (__feraiseexcept): Use
libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/tile/math_private.h (__feraiseexcept): New macro.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/fraiseexcpt.S (__feraiseexcept):
Use libm_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/fraiseexcpt.c (__feraiseexcept): Use
libm_hidden_def.
(feraiseexcept): Define as weak not strong alias. Use
libm_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/x86/fpu/bits/fenv.h (__feraiseexcept_invalid_divbyzero):
New inline function. Factored out of ...
(feraiseexcept): ... here. Use __feraiseexcept_invalid_divbyzero.
* sysdeps/x86/fpu/include/bits/fenv.h: New file.
* math/e_scalb.c (invalid_fn): Call __feraiseexcept instead of
feraiseexcept.
* math/w_acos.c (__acos): Likewise.
* math/w_asin.c (__asin): Likewise.
* math/w_ilogb.c (__ilogb): Likewise.
* math/w_j0.c (y0): Likewise.
* math/w_j1.c (y1): Likewise.
* math/w_jn.c (yn): Likewise.
* math/w_log.c (__log): Likewise.
* math/w_log10.c (__log10): Likewise.
* sysdeps/aarch64/fpu/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/aarch64/fpu/math_private.h
(libc_feupdateenv_test_aarch64): Likewise.
* sysdeps/alpha/fpu/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/arm/fenv_private.h (libc_feupdateenv_test_vfp): Likewise.
* sysdeps/arm/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ia64/fpu/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/m68k/fpu/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/mips/fpu/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/powerpc/fpu/e_sqrt.c (__slow_ieee754_sqrt): Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/fpu/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/sh/sh4/fpu/feupdateenv.c (feupdateenv): Likewise.
* sysdeps/sparc/fpu/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Likewise.
[BZ #17746]
The __builtin_expect() truncated a uint64_t to a 32-bit long
in ILP32 mode, discarding the high 32 bits, and potentially
missing the NUL terminator that we were searching for with SIMD
operations. Explicitly compare to zero to fix the problem.
Bug 17724 reports references to fesetround being brought in by
ldbl-128ibm rintl via references to __rintl from __kernel_standard_l.
Because all three __kernel_standard* functions are in the same file,
this gets brought in even though only the long double version
__kernel_standard_l needs __rintl, and the C90 functions use only
__kernel_standard.
This patch fixes this by splitting the three versions into separate
files; it's fine for long double functions to refer to fe* functions
directly, unless they get called by C90 double functions.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite; the reordering of code means disassembly
of shared libraries can't usefully be compared). Tested for powerpc
that the relevant issue disappears from the linknamespace test
output.
[BZ #17724]
* sysdeps/ieee754/k_standard.c: Don't include <float.h>.
(__kernel_standard_f): Remove. Moved to k_standardf.c.
(__kernel_standard_l): Remove. Moved to k_standardl.c with
(char *) casts added.
* sysdeps/ieee754/k_standardf.c: New file.
* sysdeps/ieee754/k_standardl.c: Likewise.
* math/Makefile (libm-support): Remove k_standard.
(libm-calls): Add k_standard.
On Linux architectures using socketcall, the resolver ends up bringing
in strong symbols for bind and getsockname, which are not in
POSIX.1-1996. This causes linknamespace test failures:
FAIL: conform/POSIX/pthread.h/linknamespace
FAIL: conform/POSIX/sched.h/linknamespace
FAIL: conform/POSIX/time.h/linknamespace
These functions are defined as strong symbols with __bind and
__getsockname as weak aliases. This patch switches this to the other
way round by removing the NO_WEAK_ALIAS definitions and so letting the
default case in socket.S act; I see no reason for the existing
arrangements.
Tested for x86 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17733]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/bind.S (NO_WEAK_ALIAS): Do not define.
(__bind): Do not define as weak alias.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/getsockname.S (NO_WEAK_ALIAS): Do not
define.
(__getsockname): Do not define as weak alias.
On ARM, where profil_counter is not static, it is brought in by
references to various standard functions, as noted in
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-11/msg00890.html>, although
it is not a standard function itself. I don't know if this also
causes test failures on SPARC, although I see no reason for it not to
do so.
This patch fixes this namespace issue. profil_counter is renamed to
__profil_counter and made a weak alias on ARM and SPARC. Because of
the uses in profil.c / sprofil.c it seems simplest to make the rename
globally, including on the other architectures for which
profil_counter was static and so the change is of no substance. The
variant names profil_counter_* used in sprofil.c are also renamed to
start with __ so that undesired function names do not get exported in
static libc.
As I noted in bug 17726, profil_counter should probably be a compat
symbol on ARM and SPARC, so it wouldn't exist at all in static libc
even as a weak alias. Since defining a compat symbol still requires
an internal name as a target of an alias, this patch still seems
reasonable as an intermediate step towards that goal: it wouldn't be
possible for the function simply to be static profil_counter on ARM
and SPARC with profil_counter also being the exported compat symbol
name, so profil.c / sprofil.c would still need to be prepared to call
the function under another name (here, __profil_counter).
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that stripped installed shared
libraries are unchanged by the patch) and ARM (ABI and linknamespace
tests - this patch reduces the number of linknamespace failures I see
on ARM from 227 to 5, the residue being math.h failures for fe*
functions and for j0l/j1n/jnl/y0l/y1l/ynl aliases).
2014-12-17 Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
[BZ #17725]
* sysdeps/generic/profil-counter.h (profil_counter): Rename to
__profil_counter.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/profil-counter.h (profil_counter):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/profil-counter.h (profil_counter):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ia64/profil-counter.h (profil_counter):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/s390-32/profil-counter.h
(profil_counter): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/s390-64/profil-counter.h
(profil_counter): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sh/profil-counter.h (profil_counter):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/profil-counter.h (profil_counter):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/profil-counter.h
(profil_counter): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/profil-counter.h (profil_counter):
Likewise.
[!__profil_counter] (profil_counter): Define as weak alias of
__profil_counter.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sparc32/profil-counter.h
(profil_counter): Rename to __profil_counter.
[!__profil_counter] (profil_counter): Define as weak alias of
__profil_counter.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sparc64/profil-counter.h
(profil_counter): Rename to __profil_counter.
[!__profil_counter] (profil_counter): Define as weak alias of
__profil_counter.
* sysdeps/posix/profil.c: Update comment referring to
profil_counter.
(__profil): Use __profil_counter instead of profil_counter.
* sysdeps/posix/sprofil.c (profil_counter): Rename to
__profil_counter. Use __profil_counter_ushort and
__profil_counter_uint in definitions.
(__sprofil): Use __profil_counter_uint and __profil_counter_ushort
instead of profil_counter_uint and profil_counter_ushort.
Parts of the resolver brought in by pthreads (at least) use inet_*
functions that aren't in the 1995/6 edition of POSIX that introduced
pthreads (or in one case, use __inet_aton which is then defined in the
same file as non-weak inet_addr). This patch fixes this by making the
affected functions into weak alias for __inet_* and using those names
in the problematic resolver code.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17722]
* inet/inet_mkadr.c (inet_makeaddr): Rename to __inet_makeaddr and
define as weak alias of __inet_makeaddr.
* resolv/inet_addr.c (inet_addr): Rename to __inet_addr and define
as weak alias of __inet_addr.
* resolv/inet_pton.c (inet_pton): Rename to __inet_pton and define
as weak alias of __inet_pton. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* include/arpa/inet.h (__inet_pton): Declare. Use
libc_hidden_proto.
(inet_makeaddr): Don't use libc_hidden_proto.
(__inet_makeaddr): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
* resolv/res_init.c (__res_vinit): Use __inet_pton instead of
inet_pton. Use __inet_makeaddr instead of inet_makeaddr.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-POSIX/pthread.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-POSIX/sched.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX/time.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
On x86_64, memrchr (not a standard function) is defined as a strong
symbol, instead of a weak alias of __memrchr as on other
architectures. This results in linknamespace test failures from the
use of __memrchr from dirname. (Not a conformance issue because of
the mem* reservation, but contrary to glibc conventions.) This patch
makes x86_64 follow other architectures by defining memrchr as a weak
alias.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17719]
* sysdeps/x86_64/memrchr.S (memrchr): Rename to __memrchr and
define as weak alias of __memrchr.
(__memrchr): Do not define as strong alias of memrchr.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XPG4/libgen.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/libgen.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/libgen.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/libgen.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
Resolver code, brought in by pthreads (at least), uses if_* interfaces
that weren't in POSIX before 2001, resulting in linknamespace
failures. This patch changes those interfaces to be weak aliases of
__if_* and makes the resolver use __if_* directly.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by this patch).
[BZ #17717]
* inet/if_index.c (if_nametoindex): Rename to __if_nametoindex and
define as weak alias of __if_nametoindex. Use libc_hidden_weak.
(if_indextoname): Rename to __if_indextoname and define as weak
alias of __if_indextoname. Use libc_hidden_weak.
(if_freenameindex): Rename to __if_freenameindex and define as
weak alias of __if_freenameindex.
(if_nameindex): Rename to __if_nameindex and define as weak alias
of __if_nameindex.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/if_index.c (if_nametoindex): Rename to
__if_nametoindex and define as weak alias of __if_nametoindex.
Use libc_hidden_weak.
(if_freenameindex): Rename to __if_freenameindex and define as
weak alias of __if_freenameindex.
(if_nameindex): Rename to __if_nameindex and define as weak alias
of __if_nameindex.
(if_indextoname): Rename to __if_indextoname and define as weak
alias of __if_indextoname. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/if_index.c (if_nametoindex): Rename to
__if_nametoindex and define as weak alias of __if_nametoindex.
Use libc_hidden_weak.
(if_freenameindex): Rename to __if_freenameindex and define as
weak alias of __if_freenameindex. Use libc_hidden_weak.
(if_nameindex_netlink): Use __if_freenameindex instead of
if_freenameindex.
(if_nameindex): Rename to __if_nameindex and define as weak alias
of __if_nameindex. Use libc_hidden_weak.
(if_indextoname): Rename to __if_indextoname and define as weak
alias of __if_indextoname. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* include/net/if.h [!_ISOMAC] (__if_nametoindex): Declare and use
libc_hidden_proto.
[!_ISOMAC] (__if_freenameindex): Likewise.
* resolv/res_init.c (__res_vinit): Use __if_nametoindex instead of
if_nametoindex.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XPG4/grp.h/linknamespace): Remove
variable.
(test-xfail-XPG4/pwd.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/aio.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/grp.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/pthread.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/pwd.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/sched.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/time.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
This patch merges the latest release of gettext into the intl
subdirectory. The initial motivation was to include the plural.y
changes which enable building with bison 3.0, but the majority
of the other changes are merely cosmetic so it seemed like merging
the whole directory was simpler than trying to take it piecemeal.
The merge was done by copying across the latext gettext code and
adding in a few small glibc changes that have been added over the
years that seemed beneficial, as well as a couple of small build
fixes that should be merged back to gettext. I also reverted the
gettext commit:
commit 279b57fc367251666f00e8e2b599b83703451afb
Author: Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>
Date: Fri Jun 14 12:03:49 2002 +0000
Make absolute pathnames inside $LANGUAGE work.
As it caused localedata/tst-setlocale3 to fail and it wasn't clear
that glibc wanted that behaviour.
The merge has dropped many uses of __glibc_likely/unlikely. This is
intentional given that it eases merging. It seems to me that the cost
of continually rewriting these lines when merging and the risk of adding
bugs when doing so outweighs the benefits of using these macros when
code is shared with another project.
Tested with make check on x86_64.
ChangeLog:
2014-12-11 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
Merge gettext 0.19.3 into intl/.
This involves a number of cosmetic changes to comments
and ANSI function definitions and prototypes throughout
all the files. The gettext copyright header is used but
with the date ranges taken from the glibc copy.
* NEWS: Add gettext merge to 2.21.
* intl/bindtextdom.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
Use gl_* locking primitives rather than __libc_* ones.
Use __builtin_expect rather than __glibc_likely/unlikely.
* intl/dcgettext.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
* intl/dcigettext.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
(INTDIV0_RAISES_SIGFPE): New define.
Use gl_* locking primitives rather than __libc_* ones.
Include eval-plural.h instead of plural-eval.c.
Use __builtin_expect rather than __glibc_likely/unlikely.
* intl/dcngettext.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
* intl/dgettext.c: Likewise.
* intl/dngettext.c: Likewise.
* intl/plural-eval.c: Renamed to...
* intl/eval-plural.h: ...this.
* intl/explodename.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
(_nl_explode_name): Use strchr instead of __rawmemchr.
* intl/finddomain.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
Use gl_* locking primitives rather than __libc_* ones.
(_nl_find_domain): Use malloc rather than alloca for
allocation of temporary locale name.
* intl/gettext.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
* intl/gettextP.h: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
Use gl_* locking primitives rather than __libc_* ones.
* intl/gmo.h: Switch to gettext copyright.
(struct sysdep_string): Move struct segment_pair outside of
struct definition.
* intl/hash-string.c: Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
* intl/hash-string.h: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
* intl/l10nflist.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
(_nl_normalize_codeset): Avoid integer overflow.
* intl/loadinfo.h: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
(LIBINTL_DLL_EXPORTED): New define.
(PATH_SEPARATOR): New define.
* intl/loadmsgcat.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
* intl/localealias.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
(_nl_expand_alias): Use PATH_SEPARATOR.
* intl/ngettext.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
* intl/plural-exp.c: Likewise.
* intl/plural-exp.h: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
(struct expression): Move definition of enum operator outside
of struct definition.
* intl/plural.c: Regenerate.
* intl/plural.y: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
Port to bison 3.0.
* intl/textdomain.c: Switch to gettext copyright.
Use ANSI definitions and prototypes.
Use gl_* locking primitives rather than __libc_* ones.
Use of strftime, a C90 function, ends up bringing in wcschr, which is
not a C90 function. Although not a conformance bug (C90 reserves
wcs*), this is still contrary to glibc practice of avoiding relying on
those reservations; this patch arranges for the internal uses to use
__wcschr instead, with wcschr being a weak alias. This is more
complicated than some such patches because of the various IFUNC
definitions of wcschr (which include code redefining libc_hidden_def
in a way that involves creating __GI_wcschr manually and so also needs
to create __GI___wcschr after the change of internal uses to use
__wcschr).
Tested for x86_64 and 32-bit x86 (testsuite, and that disassembly of
installed shared libraries is unchanged by the patch).
2014-12-10 Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
Adhemerval Zanella <azanella@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
[BZ #17634]
* wcsmbs/wcschr.c [!WCSCHR] (wcschr): Define as __wcschr.
Undefine after defining function. Define as weak alias of
__wcschr. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* include/wchar.h (__wcschr): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
* sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/wcschr-c.c [IS_IN (libc) && SHARED]
(libc_hidden_def): Also define __GI___wcschr alias.
* sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/wcschr.S (wcschr): Rename to
__wcschr and define as weak alias of __wcschr.
* sysdeps/powerpc/power6/wcschr.c [!WCSCHR] (WCSCHR): Define as
__wcschr.
[!WCSCHR] (DEFAULT_WCSCHR): Define.
[DEFAULT_WCSCHR] (__wcschr): Use libc_hidden_def.
[DEFAULT_WCSCHR] (wcschr): Define as weak alias of __wcschr. Use
libc_hidden_weak. Do not use libc_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/multiarch/wcschr-ppc32.c
[IS_IN (libc) && SHARED] (libc_hidden_def): Also define
__GI___wcschr alias.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/multiarch/wcschr.c
[IS_IN (libc)] (wcschr): Define as macro expanding to
__redirect_wcschr.
[IS_IN (libc)] (__wcschr_ppc): Use __redirect_wcschr in typeof.
[IS_IN (libc)] (__wcschr_power6): Likewise.
[IS_IN (libc)] (__wcschr_power7): Likewise.
[IS_IN (libc)] (__libc_wcschr): New. Define with libc_ifunc
instead of wcschr.
[IS_IN (libc)] (wcschr): Undefine and define as weak alias of
__libc_wcschr.
[!IS_IN (libc)] (libc_hidden_def): Do not undefine and redefine.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/multiarch/wcschr.c (wcschr): Rename to
__wcschr and define as weak alias of __wcschr. Use
libc_hidden_builtin_def.
* sysdeps/x86_64/wcschr.S (wcschr): Rename to __wcschr and define
as weak alias of __wcschr. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* time/alt_digit.c (_nl_get_walt_digit): Use __wcschr instead of
wcschr.
* time/era.c (_nl_init_era_entries): Likewise.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-ISO/time.h/linknamespace): Remove
variable.
(test-xfail-XPG3/time.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XPG4/time.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
Under certain conditions on the size of the array and its items,
qsort() may fall back to an in-place quicksort if it cannot allocate
memory for a temporary array with malloc(). This algorithm is not a
stable sort even if the comparison function is written in the
described manner.
Fixes#10672.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
As discussed starting at
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-11/msg00323.html>, this
patch makes the glibc build use -Werror by default to avoid
accidentally adding new warnings to the build. The configure option
--disable-werror can be used to disable this.
-Wno-error=undef is temporarily used because the build isn't clean
regarding -Wundef warnings. The idea is that once the remaining
-Wundef warnings have been cleaned up (in at least one configuration),
-Wno-error=undef will be removed.
I get a clean build and test on x86_64 (GCC 4.9 branch) with this
patch. The expectation is that this may well break the build for some
other configurations, and people seeing such breakage should make
appropriate fixes to fix or suppress the warnings for their
configurations. In some cases that may involve using pragmas as the
right fix (I think that will be right for the -Wno-inline issue for
MIPS I referred to in
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2012-11/msg00798.html>, for
example), in some cases -Wno-error in sysdeps makefiles (__restore_rt
in MIPS sigaction, for example), in some cases substantive fixes for
the warnings.
Note that if, with a view to listing all the warnings then fixing them
all, you just look for "warning:" in output from building and testing
with --disable-werror, you'll see lots of warnings from the linker
about functions such as tmpnam. Those warnings can be ignored - only
compiler warnings are relevant to -Werror, not linker warnings.
* configure.ac (--disable-werror): New configure option.
(enable_werror): New AC_SUBST.
* configure: Regenerated.
* config.make.in (enable-werror): New variable.
* Makeconfig [$(enable-werror) = yes] (+gccwarn): Add -Werror
-Wno-error=undef.
(+gccwarn-c): Do not use -Werror=implicit-function-declaration.
* manual/install.texi (Configuring and compiling): Document
--disable-werror.
* INSTALL: Regenerated.
* debug/Makefile (CFLAGS-tst-chk1.c): Add -Wno-error.
(CFLAGS-tst-chk2.c): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-tst-chk3.c): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-tst-chk4.cc): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-tst-chk5.cc): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-tst-chk6.cc): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-tst-lfschk1.c): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-tst-lfschk2.c): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-tst-lfschk3.c): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-tst-lfschk4.cc): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-tst-lfschk5.cc): Likewise.
(CFLAGS-tst-lfschk6.cc): Likewise.
Some pthreads functions use getrlimit and gettimeofday, but these
functions are XSI, not base POSIX; this is a namespace issue for
dynamic linking as well as static linking. This patch makes them use
__getrlimit and __gettimeofday instead - the former needed to be newly
exported from libc.so at GLIBC_PRIVATE (and so now needs
libc_hidden_proto / libc_hidden_def), the latter was already exported.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17682]
* resource/Versions (libc): Add __getrlimit at GLIBC_PRIVATE.
* resource/getrlimit.c (__getrlimit): Use libc_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/getrlimit.c (__getrlimit): Likewise.
* include/sys/resource.h (__getrlimit): Use libc_hidden_proto.
* nptl/nptl-init.c (__pthread_initialize_minimal_internal): Use
__getrlimit instead of getrlimit.
* nptl/pthread_cond_timedwait.c (__pthread_cond_timedwait): Use
__gettimeofday instead of gettimeofday.
* nptl/pthread_rwlock_timedrdlock.c (pthread_rwlock_timedrdlock):
Likewise.
* nptl/pthread_rwlock_timedwrlock.c (pthread_rwlock_timedwrlock):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/pthread/aio_misc.c (handle_fildes_io): Likewise.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-POSIX2008/aio.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/pthread.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/time.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
POSIX allows applications to switch file handles when a read results
in an end of file. Unset the cached offset at this point so that it
is queried again.
Currently we seek to end of file if there are unflushed writes or the
stream is in write mode, to get the current offset for writing in
append mode, which is the end of file. The latter case (i.e. stream
is in write mode, but no unflushed writes) is unnecessary since it
will only happen when the stream has just been flushed, in which case
the recorded offset ought to be reliable.
Removing that case lets ftell give the correct offset when it follows
an ftruncate. The latter truncates the file, but does not change the
file position, due to which it is permissible to call ftell without an
intervening fseek call.
Tested on x86_64 to verify that the added test case fails without the
patch and succeeds with it, and that there are no additional
regressions due to it.
[BZ #17647]
* libio/fileops.c (do_ftell): Seek only when there are
unflushed writes.
* libio/wfileops.c (do_ftell_wide): Likewise.
* libio/tst-ftell-active-handler.c (do_ftruncate_test): New
test case.
(do_one_test): Call it.
Various objects in glibc bring in ifaddrs.o (via references to
__netlink_*) and thereby getifaddrs and freeifaddrs, which are not
part of any standard supported by glibc. These should be weak aliases
of __getifaddrs and __freeifaddrs; this patch makes them so.
(The path by which these functions are brought in is Linux-specific,
but it seems less confusing to make all versions of these functions
weak aliases rather than only the Linux-specific versions that
definitely need it.)
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by this patch).
[BZ #17668]
* inet/ifaddrs.c (getifaddrs): Rename to __getifaddrs and define
as weak alias of __getifaddrs. Use libc_hidden_weak.
(freeifaddrs): Rename to __freeifaddrs and define as weak alias of
__freeifaddrs. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/gnu/ifaddrs.c (getifaddrs): Rename to __getifaddrs and
define as weak alias of __getifaddrs. Use libc_hidden_weak.
(freeifaddrs): Rename to __freeifaddrs and define as weak alias of
__freeifaddrs. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ifaddrs.c (getifaddrs): Rename to
__getifaddrs and define as weak alias of __getifaddrs. Use
libc_hidden_weak.
(freeifaddrs): Rename to __freeifaddrs and define as weak alias of
__freeifaddrs. Use libc_hidden_weak.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XOPEN2K/net/if.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/net/if.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/net/if.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
Since __libc_start_main may not be in the same 256MB-aligned region as
the function __start, replace use of jal instruction with la/jalr.
This fixes linker issue reported in:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17601
[BZ #17601]
* sysdeps/mips/start.S (__start): Use indirect jump to call
__libc_start_main.
For XPG3/XPG4 (defined __USE_XOPEN && !defined __USE_UNIX98), unistd.h
declares many functions that should only be declared for __USE_MISC
(none of them are in XPG3/XPG4): sethostname sethostid getdomainname
setdomainname vhangup revoke profil acct getusershell endusershell
setusershell daemon. The whole block with the [__USE_MISC ||
(__USE_XOPEN && !__USE_UNIX98)] conditional contains only functions
that are not in XPG3/XPG4, so this patch simply changes the
conditional.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that installed stripped shared
libraries are unchanged by this patch).
[BZ #17665]
* posix/unistd.h [__USE_MISC || (__USE_XOPEN && !__USE_UNIX98)]:
Change conditional to [__USE_MISC].
Various POSIX functions bring in res_init.o, res_hconf.o or
mntent_r.o, which use fgets_unlocked, which is not a POSIX function.
This patch arranges for them to use __fgets_unlocked instead. (The
IS_IN (libc) conditional in rec_hconf.c is needed because that file is
also used in nscd.)
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by the patch except for an assertion line
number). Note that most of the linknamespace tests that failed
because of fgets_unlocked from the resolver also fail because of other
symbols brought in by the resolver, so the number of XFAILs this
removes is limited. Also note that fgets_unlocked failures for
unistd.h for XPG3/XPG4 showed up that actually unistd.h is declaring
too much for XPG3/XPG4 (bug 17665) - there is no actual need to make
getusershell.c use __fgets_unlocked (at least as regards formal
standards are concerned; maybe it should still change for
namespace-cleanness of _DEFAULT_SOURCE) because the functions there
aren't actually in any of the supported standards; the correct fix for
those failures will be to stop the *usershell* functions appearing in
unistd.h for XPG3/XPG4.
[BZ #17664]
* misc/mntent_r.c (__getmntent_r): Use __fgets_unlocked instead of
fgets_unlocked.
* resolv/res_hconf.c [IS_IN (libc)] (fgets_unlocked): Define to
__fgets_unlocked.
* resolv/res_init.c (__res_vinit): Use __fgets_unlocked instead of
fgets_unlocked.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-XPG4/sys/statvfs.h/linknamespace):
Remove variable.
(test-xfail-POSIX/sys/mman.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/sys/mman.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/sys/statvfs.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/sys/mman.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/sys/statvfs.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/sys/mman.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/sys/statvfs.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/sys/mman.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/sys/statvfs.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
[BZ #17581] The checking chain of unused chunks was terminated by a hash of
the block pointer, which was sometimes confused with the chunk length byte.
The chain is now terminated by a NULL byte.
This patch fixes bugs in ldbl-128ibm frexpl for 32-bit systems shown
up by warnings:
../sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_frexpl.c:82:4: warning: left shift count >= width of type
../sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_frexpl.c:129:5: warning: left shift count >= width of type
This did in fact show up in test-ldouble.out (alongside all the other
problems there ... maybe we should again consider running the libm
tests at finer granularity from the makefiles) as already covered by
the testsuite after the previous patch that fixed these bugs for
64-bit systems. The fix is simply using 1LL instead of 1L when
shifting by 52.
Tested for powerpc32 (soft float).
[BZ #16619]
[BZ #16740]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_frexpl.c (__frexpl): Use 1LL << 52
instead of 1L << 52.
perror, an ISO C function, uses fileno, which is not an ISO C
function. This patch makes it use __fileno instead. (The nearby call
to fdopen is not a problem because that's #defined to _IO_new_fdopen.)
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that installed stripped shared
libraries are unchanged by this patch).
[BZ #17633]
* stdio-common/perror.c (perror): Call __fileno instead of fileno.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-ISO/stdio.h/linknamespace): Remove
variable.
(test-xfail-ISO99/stdio.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-ISO11/stdio.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
If we drop it here, we will fail to detect a duplicate trailing dot
later on. Retaining, OTOH, has no ill effects whatsoever, and it even
saves us the trouble of copying the domain name minus the trailing
dot, like we used to do.
for ChangeLog
[BZ #16469]
* NEWS: Update.
* resolv/res_query.c (__libc_res_nquerydomain): Retain
trailing dot.
* posix/tst-getaddrinfo5.c: New.
* posix/Makefile (tests): Add it.
nss_db uses nss_files code for services, but a continue on protocol
mismatch that doesn't affect nss_files skipped the code that advanced
to the next db entry. Any one of these changes would suffice to fix
it, but fixing both makes them both safer to reuse elsewhere.
for ChangeLog
[BZ #14498]
* NEWS: Fixed.
* nss/nss_db/db-XXX.c (_nss_db_get##name##_r): Update hidx
after parsing line but before break_if_match.
* nss/nss_files/files-service (DB_LOOKUP): Don't "continue;"
if there is a protocol mismatch.
The function wordexp() fails to properly handle the WRDE_NOCMD
flag when processing arithmetic inputs in the form of "$((... ``))"
where "..." can be anything valid. The backticks in the arithmetic
epxression are evaluated by in a shell even if WRDE_NOCMD forbade
command substitution. This allows an attacker to attempt to pass
dangerous commands via constructs of the above form, and bypass
the WRDE_NOCMD flag. This patch fixes this by checking for WRDE_NOCMD
in exec_comm(), the only place that can execute a shell. All other
checks for WRDE_NOCMD are superfluous and removed.
We expand the testsuite and add 3 new regression tests of roughly
the same form but with a couple of nested levels.
On top of the 3 new tests we add fork validation to the WRDE_NOCMD
testing. If any forks are detected during the execution of a wordexp()
call with WRDE_NOCMD, the test is marked as failed. This is slightly
heuristic since vfork might be used in the future, but it provides a
higher level of assurance that no shells were executed as part of
command substitution with WRDE_NOCMD in effect. In addition it doesn't
require libpthread or libdl, instead we use the public implementation
namespace function __register_atfork (already part of the public ABI
for libpthread).
Tested on x86_64 with no regressions.
libm uses symbols mpone and mptwo for internal purposes. This patch
moves them to the implementation namespace (__mpone and __mptwo).
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that installed stripped shared
libraries are unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17616]
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/mpa.c (mpone): Rename to __mpone.
(mptwo): Rename to __mptwo.
(__inv): Use __mptwo instead of mptwo.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/mpa.h (mpone): Rename to __mpone.
(mptwo): Rename to __mptwo.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/mpatan.c (__mpatan): Use __mpone instead
of mpone and __mptwo instead of mptwo.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/mpatan2.c (__mpatan2): Use __mpone
instead of mpone.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/mpexp.c (__mpexp): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/mplog.c (__mplog): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/sincos32.c (__c32): Use __mpone instead
of mpone and __mptwo instead of mptwo.
(__mpranred): Use __mpone instead of mpone.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-ISO/math.h/linknamespace): Remove
variable.
(test-xfail-ISO99/complex.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-ISO99/math.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-ISO99/tgmath.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-ISO11/complex.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-ISO11/math.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-ISO11/tgmath.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XPG3/math.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XPG4/math.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX/math.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-UNIX98/math.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/complex.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/math.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K/tgmath.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/complex.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/math.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-POSIX2008/tgmath.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/complex.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/math.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
(test-xfail-XOPEN2K8/tgmath.h/linknamespace): Likewise.
As discussed in the thread starting at
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-10/msg00792.html>, and
continuing into November, this patch increases the minimum GCC version
for building glibc to 4.6 (there seemed to be no clear consensus for
4.7). In particular, this allows us to use #pragma GCC diagnostic for
fine-grained warning control with -Werror (subject to establishing a
suitable policy for that use). The documentation has a statement, as
requested, about the most recent GCC version tested for building
glibc, and I've updated <https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/Release> to
refer to updating that statement. A NEWS entry is added for this
change, although previous such changes didn't get them.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that installed shared libraries are
unchanged by this patch).
* configure.ac (libc_cv_compiler_ok): Require GCC 4.6 or later.
* configure: Regenerated.
* manual/install.texi (Tools for Compilation): Document a
requirement of GCC 4.6 or later and that GCC 4.9 is the newest
compiler verified to work.
* INSTALL: Regenerated.
For 32-bit platforms, strtoll and strtoull are strong symbols in libc,
but they are not in ISO C90, and are brought in by references to
__strtoll_internal / __strtoull_internal from scanf. (For 64-bit
platforms, they are properly weak.) This patch makes them weak for
32-bit (it has a side-effect of making other symbols weak that don't
need to be weak, such as strtol, but that's harmless).
Tested for x86 (testsuite, and that the disassembly of installed
shared libraries is unchanged by the patch). This fixes all 120
unXFAILed FAILs of the new linknamespace tests seen for x86 (in fact,
there are now seven XPASSes of those tests for x86
XPASS: conform/POSIX2008/fcntl.h/linknamespace
XPASS: conform/UNIX98/libgen.h/linknamespace
XPASS: conform/XOPEN2K/fcntl.h/linknamespace
XPASS: conform/XOPEN2K/libgen.h/linknamespace
XPASS: conform/XOPEN2K8/fcntl.h/linknamespace
XPASS: conform/XOPEN2K8/libgen.h/linknamespace
XPASS: conform/XPG4/libgen.h/linknamespace
so suggesting that the failures seen for those on x86_64 are in some
way architecture-specific or 64-bit-specific).
[BZ #17594]
* stdlib/strtol.c (SYM__): New macro.
(SYM__1): Likewise.
(__strtol): Likewise.
(strtol): Rename to __strtol and define as weak alias of
__strtol. Use libc_hidden_weak.
intl/localealias.c is brought in by ISO C functions, but uses
fgets_unlocked, which is not an ISO C function. This patch changes
this to use __fgets_unlocked.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that stripped installed shared
libraries are unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17589]
* intl/localealias.c [_LIBC] (FGETS): Use __fgets_unlocked instead
of fgets_unlocked.
Locale code, brought in by ISO C functions, calls memmem, which is not
an ISO C function. This isn't an ISO C conformance bug, because all
mem* names are reserved, but glibc practice is not to rely on that
reservation (thus, memmem is only declared in string.h if __USE_GNU
even though ISO C would allow it to be declared unconditionally, for
example). This patch changes that code to use __memmem.
Note: there are uses of memmem elsewhere in glibc that I didn't
change, although it may turn out some of those also need to use
__memmem.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by this patch).
[BZ #17585]
* string/memmem.c [!_LIBC] (__memmem): Define to memmem.
(memmem): Rename to __memmem and define as weak alias of
__memmem. Use libc_hidden_weak.
(__memmem): Use libc_hidden_def.
* include/string.h (__memmem): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
* locale/findlocale.c (valid_locale_name): Use __memmem instead of
memmem.
__get_nprocs is called from malloc code, but calls fgets_unlocked,
which is not an ISO C or POSIX function. This patch fixes it to call
a new __fgets_unlocked name instead.
Note: there are various other uses of fgets_unlocked in glibc's
libraries, and I haven't yet investigated which others might also be
problematic (called directly or indirectly from standard functions)
and so need to change to use __fgets_unlocked.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17582]
* libio/iofgets.c [weak_alias && !_IO_MTSAFE_IO]
(__fgets_unlocked): Add alias of _IO_fgets. Use libc_hidden_def.
* libio/iofgets_u.c (fgets_unlocked): Rename to __fgets_unlocked
and define as weak alias of __fgets_unlocked. Use
libc_hidden_weak.
(__fgets_unlocked): Use libc_hidden_def.
* include/stdio.h (__fgets_unlocked): Declare. Use
libc_hidden_proto.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/getsysstats.c (phys_pages_info): Use
__fgets_unlocked instead of fgets_unlocked.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/getsysstats.c
(GET_NPROCS_CONF_PARSER): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/getsysstats.c
(GET_NPROCS_CONF_PARSER): Likewise.
__printf_fp calls wmemset, but that is not an ISO C90 function. This
patch fixes it to call a new __wmemset name instead (with wmemset
being a weak alias).
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17574]
* wcsmbs/wmemset.c (wmemset): Rename to __wmemset and define as
weak alias of __wmemset. Use libc_hidden_weak.
(__wmemset): Use libc_hidden_def.
* include/wchar.h (__wmemset): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
* stdio-common/printf_fp.c (___printf_fp): Call __wmemset instead
of wmemset.
Various glibc functions call __stpcpy and __mempcpy for namespace
reasons instead of plain stpcpy and mempcpy. But __stpcpy and
__mempcpy are macros that call __builtin_stpcpy and __builtin_mempcpy,
and unless GCC optimizes the calls, they end up calling the C
functions stpcpy and mempcpy.
For calls from within shared libc, libc_hidden_builtin_proto ensures
that calls to those C functions are in turn mapped to call __GI_stpcpy
and __GI_mempcpy. However, for static libc, and for calls from shared
libraries other than libc, the ELF symbols stpcpy and mempcpy end up
getting called, breaking the ISO C namespace (in the case of stpcpy)
or glibc conventions about not relying on the "future library
directions" reservations (in the case of mempcpy).
This patch fixes this by adding declarations of these functions to
include/string.h, under an appropriate condition, with __asm__ used to
change the assembler name used for calls (the mempcpy case was
previously discussed, and the approach for the fix is as I suggested
in <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2013-02/msg00063.html>).
Tested for x86_64 with the testsuite; also checked that dcigettext.o
(an example previously noted of undesired calls to stpcpy and mempcpy)
now calls __stpcpy and __mempcpy instead, as do non-libc shared
libraries (__stpcpy and __mempcpy were already exported from shared
libc). Disassembly of installed shared libraries isn't easy to
compare because of reordered PLT entries resulting from the change in
functions called (libnsl, libnss_compat, libnss_dns, libnss_files,
libnss_hesiod, libnss_nis, libnss_nisplus, libpthread, librt all have
such changes).
[BZ #17573]
* include/string.h [NOT_IN_libc || !SHARED] (mempcpy): Declare
with asm name __mempcpy.
[NOT_IN_libc || !SHARED] (stpcpy): Declare with asm name __stpcpy.
rawmemchr is not an ISO C function, but __rawmemchr is called from ISO
C functions, so rawmemchr should be a weak alias. On most
architecture it is, but x86_64 defines the function as rawmemchr with
__rawmemchr as a strong alias. This patch makes x86_64 follow the
same arrangements as other architectures.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17572]
* sysdeps/x86_64/rawmemchr.S (rawmemchr): Rename to __rawmemchr
and define as weak alias of __rawmemchr.
(__rawmemchr): Do not define as strong alias of rawmemchr.
qsort_r is defined in the same file as qsort, but is not an ISO C
function, so should be a weak alias for __qsort_r. The uses in
getaddrinfo should also call __qsort_r, since getaddrinfo is a POSIX
function and qsort_r isn't. This patch implements this. Because nscd
uses the getaddrinfo sources outside libc, as do the tst-rfc3484
tests, a #define of __qsort_r to qsort_r is added there alongside the
similar defines for other libc-internal symbols used in getaddrinfo.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17571]
* stdlib/msort.c (qsort_r): Rename to __qsort_r and define as weak
alias of __qsort_r.
(qsort): Call __qsort_r instead of qsort_r.
* include/stdlib.h (qsort_r): Do not call libc_hidden_proto.
(__qsort_r): Declare. Call libc_hidden_proto.
* sysdeps/posix/getaddrinfo.c (getaddrinfo): Call __qsort_r
instead of qsort_r.
* nscd/gai.c (__qsort_r): Define to qsort_r.
* posix/tst-rfc3484.c (__qsort_r): Likewise.
* posix/tst-rfc3484-2.c (__qsort_r): Likewise.
* posix/tst-rfc3484-3.c (__qsort_r): Likewise.
malloc_info is defined in the same file as malloc and free, but is not
an ISO C function, so should be a weak symbol. This patch makes it
so.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by the patch).
[BZ #17570]
* malloc/malloc.c (malloc_info): Rename to __malloc_info and
define as weak alias of __malloc_info.
__getcwd is called from dcigettext.o (brought in by various ISO C
functionality), but calls rewinddir, which is not an ISO C function.
This patch makes __getcwd call __rewinddir instead and makes rewinddir
a weak alias for __rewinddir.
Since getcwd.c is shared with gnulib (albeit not merged in either
direction for a long time, and omitted from gnulib's
config/srclist.txt list of shared files) I put in a #ifndef _LIBC
define of __rewinddir to rewinddir, although a future merged version
of getcwd could end up looking significantly different.
Tested for x86_64 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed shared
libraries is unchanged by this patch).
[BZ #17584]
* dirent/rewinddir.c (rewinddir): Rename to __rewinddir and define
as weak alias of __rewinddir. Don't use libc_hidden_def.
(__rewinddir): Use libc_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/rewinddir.c: Rename to __rewinddir and define
as weak alias of __rewinddir. Don't use libc_hidden_def.
(__rewinddir): Use libc_hidden_def.
* sysdeps/posix/rewinddir.c: Rename to __rewinddir and define as
weak alias of __rewinddir. Don't use libc_hidden_def.
(__rewinddir): Use libc_hidden_def.
* include/dirent.h (rewinddir): Don't use libc_hidden_proto.
(__rewinddir): Use libc_hidden_proto.
* sysdeps/posix/getcwd.c [!_LIBC] (__rewinddir): Define to
rewinddir.
(__getcwd): Use __rewinddir instead of rewinddir.
tzfile.c is brought in by various ISO C functions, but calls fileno,
fread_unlocked and ftello, which are not ISO C functions. This patch
adds names __fileno, __fread_unlocked and __ftello for those
functions, making tzfile.c use those new names.
Note: there are various uses of fileno elsewhere in glibc that I
didn't change, although it may turn out that some of those also need
to use __fileno.
Tested for x86_64 with the glibc testsuite. Changed line numbers in
tzfile.c cause changes in assertions, and for some reason this ends up
with different instruction choice and register allocation, affecting
the size of __tzfile_read and so making comparison of disassembly for
libc.so problematic.
[BZ #17583]
* libio/fileno.c (fileno): Rename to __fileno and define as weak
alias of __fileno. Use libc_hidden_weak.
(__fileno): Use libc_hidden_def.
[weak_alias] (fileno_unlocked): Define as weak alias of __fileno.
* libio/ftello.c (ftello): Rename to __ftello and define as weak
alias of __ftello.
[__OFF_T_MATCHES_OFF64_T] (ftello64): Define as weak alias of
__ftello.
* libio/iofread.c [weak_alias && !_IO_MTSAFE_IO]
(__fread_unlocked): Define as strong alias of _IO_fread. Use
libc_hidden_def.
(fread_unlocked): Don't use libc_hidden_ver.
* libio/iofread_u.c (fread_unlocked): Rename to __fread_unlocked
and define as weak alias of __fread_unlocked. Don't use
libc_hidden_def.
(__fread_unlocked): Use libc_hidden_def.
* include/stdio.h (__fileno): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
(ftello): Don't use libc_hidden_proto.
(__ftello): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
(fread_unlocked): Don't use libc_hidden_proto.
(__fread_unlocked): Declare. Use libc_hidden_proto.
* time/tzfile.c (__tzfile_read): Use __fileno, __fread_unlocked
and __ftello instead of fileno, fread_unlocked and ftello.
Modifies the test examination in test-skeleton.c so that a test can be
successful if it is interrupted or it returns uninterrupted with the
expected status. For this both EXPECTED_SIGNAL and EXPECTED_STATUS
have to be set, as is done in tst-strcoll-overflow.c.
Completing the removal of the obsolete INTDEF / INTUSE mechanism, this
patch removes the final use - that for _dl_starting_up - replacing it
by rtld_hidden_def / rtld_hidden_proto. Having removed the last use,
the mechanism itself is also removed.
Tested for x86_64 that installed stripped shared libraries are
unchanged by the patch. (This is not much of a test since this
variable is only defined and used in the !HAVE_INLINED_SYSCALLS case.)
[BZ #14132]
* include/libc-symbols.h (INTUSE): Remove macro.
(INTDEF): Likewise.
(INTVARDEF): Likewise.
(_INTVARDEF): Likewise.
(INTDEF2): Likewise.
(INTVARDEF2): Likewise.
* elf/rtld.c [!HAVE_INLINED_SYSCALLS] (_dl_starting_up): Use
rtld_hidden_def instead of INTVARDEF.
* sysdeps/generic/ldsodefs.h [IS_IN_rtld]
(_dl_starting_up_internal): Remove declaration.
(_dl_starting_up): Use rtld_hidden_proto.
* elf/dl-init.c [!HAVE_INLINED_SYSCALLS] (_dl_starting_up): Remove
declaration.
[!HAVE_INLINED_SYSCALLS] (_dl_starting_up_internal): Likewise.
(_dl_init) [!HAVE_INLINED_SYSCALLS]: Don't use INTUSE with
_dl_starting_up.
* elf/dl-writev.h (_dl_writev): Likewise.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/dl-machine.h [!HAVE_INLINED_SYSCALLS]
(DL_STARTING_UP_DEF): Use __GI__dl_starting_up instead of
_dl_starting_up_internal.
Here is an optimized implementation of __strchrnul. The
simplification that we don't have to track precisely why the loop
terminates (match or end-of-string) means we have to do less work in
both setup and the core inner loop. That means this should never be
slower than strchr.
As with strchr, the use of LD1 means we do not need different versions
for big-/little-endian.
Concluding the move of syscall definitions to syscalls.list, where the
removal of support for old kernel versions has made this possible,
this patch removes C definitions of pread, pread64, pwrite and
pwrite64 for powerpc64. As far as I can tell, the existing
syscalls.list definitions in
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wordsize-64/syscalls.list should suffice to
produce results equivalent to what these C files do.
[BZ #14138]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/pread.c: Remove file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/pread64.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/pwrite.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/pwrite64.c: Likewise.
In the Linux kernel version 3.17 the signal numbers were rearranged in
order to make hppa like every other arch. Previously we started
__SIGRTMIN at 37, and that meant several pieces of important software,
including systemd, would fail to build. To support systemd we removed
SIGEMT and SIGLOST, and rearranged the others according to expected
values. This is technically an ABI incompatible change, but because
zero applications use SIGSTKFLT, SIGXCPU, SIGXFSZ and SIGSYS nothing
broke. Nothing uses SIGEMT and SIGLOST, and they were present for
HPUX compatibility which is no longer supported. Thus because nothing
breaks we don't do any compatibility work here.
Upstream kernel commit is 1f25df2eff5b25f52c139d3ff31bc883eee9a0ab.
Signed-off-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@systemhalted.org>
Signed-off-by: Helge Deller <deller@gmx.de>
2014-10-23 Carlos O'Donell <carlos@systemhalted.org>
Helge Deller <deller@gmx.de>
[BZ #17508]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/bits/signum.h: Remove SIGEMT.
Define SIGSTKFLT as 7. Define SIGSYS as 31. Define SIGXCPU as 12.
Remove SIGLOST. Define SIGXFSZ as 30. Define __SIGRTMIN as 32.
This satisfies a symbol reference created with:
.symver __libc_vfork, vfork@GLIBC_2.0
where `__libc_vfork' has not been defined or referenced. In this case
the `vfork@GLIBC_2.0' reference is supposed to be discarded, however a
bug present in GAS since forever causes an undefined symbol table entry
to be created. This in turn triggers a problem in the linker that can
manifest itself by link errors such as:
ld: libpthread.so: invalid string offset 2765592330 >= 5154 for section `.dynstr'
The GAS and linker bugs need to be resolved, but we can avoid them too
by providing a `__libc_vfork' definition just like our other platforms.
[BZ #17485]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/vfork.S (__libc_vfork): Define.
this is a path that should solve bug 15884. It complains about the performance
of strcoll(). It was found out that the runtime of strcoll() is actually bound
to strlen which is needed for calculating the size of a cache that was
installed to improve the comparison performance.
The idea for this patch was that the cache is only useful in rare cases
(strings of same length and same first-level-chars) and that it would be
better to avoid memory allocation at all. To prove this I wrote a performance
test bench-strcoll.c with test data in benchtests-strcoll.tar.gz. Also
modifications in benchtests/Makefile and localedata/Makefile are necessary to
make it work.
After removing the cache the strcoll method showed the predicted behavior
(getting slightly faster) in all but the test case for hindi word sorting.
This was due the hindi text having much more equal words than the other ones.
For equal strings the performance was worse since all comparison levels were
run through and from the second level on the cache improved the comparison
performance of the original version.
Therefore I added a bytewise test via strcmp iff the first level comparison
found that both strings did match because in this case it is very likely that
equal strings are compared. This solved the problem with the hindi test case
and improved the performance of the others.
Performance comparison:
glibc files -33.77%
vi_VN.UTF-8 -34.12%
en_US.UTF-8 -42.42%
ar_SA.UTF-8 -27.49%
zh_CN.UTF-8 +07.90%
cs_CZ.UTF-8 -29.67%
en_GB.UTF-8 -28.50%
da_DK.UTF-8 -36.57%
pl_PL.UTF-8 -39.31%
fr_FR.UTF-8 -28.57%
pt_PT.UTF-8 -22.82%
el_GR.UTF-8 -26.77%
ru_RU.UTF-8 -35.81%
iw_IL.UTF-8 -35.34%
es_ES.UTF-8 -34.46%
hi_IN.UTF-8 -00.38%
sv_SE.UTF-8 -36.99%
hu_HU.UTF-8 -16.35%
tr_TR.UTF-8 -27.80%
is_IS.UTF-8 -33.24%
it_IT.UTF-8 -24.39%
sr_RS.UTF-8 -37.55%
ja_JP.UTF-8 +02.84%
The recvmsg could return 0 under some conditions and cause the
make_request function to be stuck in an infinite loop.
Thank you Jim King <jim.king@simplivity.com> for posting Paul's patch
on the list.
During auditing or profiling modes the dynamic loader
builds a cache of the relocated PLT entries in order
to reuse them when called again through the same PLT
entry. This way the PLT entry is never completed and
the call into the resolver always results in profiling
or auditing code running.
The problem is that the PLT relocation cache size
is not computed correctly. The size of the cache
should be "Size of a relocation result structure"
x "Number of PLT-related relocations". Instead the
code erroneously computes "Size of a relocation
result" x "Number of bytes worth of PLT-related
relocations". I can only assume this was a mistake
in the understanding of the value of DT_PLTRELSZ
which is the number of bytes of PLT-related relocs.
We do have a DT_RELACOUNT entry, which is a count
for dynamic relative relocs, but we have no
DT_PLTRELCOUNT and thus we need to compute it.
This patch corrects the computation of the size of the
relocation table used by the glibc profiling code.
For more details see:
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-09/msg00513.html
[BZ #17411]
* elf/dl-reloc.c (_dl_relocate_object): Allocate correct amount for
l_reloc_result.
This patch eliminates the mixture of SONAME information in
shlib-versions files and SONAME information used to generate
gnu/lib-names.h in makefiles, with the information in the makefiles
being removed so all this information comes from the shlib-versions
files.
So that gnu/lib-names.h supports multiple ABIs, it is changed to be
generated on the same basis as gnu/stubs.h: when there are multiple
ABIs, gnu/lib-names.h is a wrapper header (the same header installed
whatever ABI is being built) and separate headers such as
gnu/lib-names-64.h contain the substantive contents (only one such
header being installed by any glibc build).
The rules for building gnu/lib-names.h were moved from Makeconfig to
Makerules because they need to come after sysdeps makefiles are
included (now that "ifndef abi-variants" is a toplevel conditional on
the rules rather than $(abi-variants) being evaluated later inside the
commands for a rule).
Tested for x86_64 and x86 that the installed shared libraries are
unchanged by this patch, and examined the installed gnu/lib-names*.h
headers by hand. Also tested the case of a single ABI (where there is
just a single header installed, again like stubs.h) by hacking
abi-variants to empty for x86_64.
[BZ #14171]
* Makeconfig [$(build-shared) = yes]
($(common-objpfx)soversions.mk): Don't handle SONAMEs specified in
makefiles.
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t]
($(common-objpfx)gnu/lib-names.h): Remove rule.
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t]
($(common-objpfx)gnu/lib-names.stmp): Likewise. Split and moved
to Makerules.
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t]
(before-compile): Don't append $(common-objpfx)gnu/lib-names.h
here.
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t]
(common-generated): Don't append gnu/lib-names.h and
gnu/lib-names.stmp here.
* Makerules [$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t]
(lib-names-h-abi): New variable.
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t]
(lib-names-stmp-abi): Likewise.
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t &&
abi-variants] (before-compile): Append
$(common-objpfx)$(lib-names-h-abi).
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t &&
abi-variants] (common-generated): Append gnu/lib-names.h.
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t &&
abi-variants] (install-others-nosubdir): Depend on
$(inst_includedir)/$(lib-names-h-abi).
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t &&
abi-variants] ($(common-objpfx)gnu/lib-names.h): New rule.
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t]
($(common-objpfx)$(lib-names-h-abi)): New rule.
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t]
($(common-objpfx)$(lib-names-stmp-abi)): Likewise.
[$(build-shared) = yes && $(soversions.mk-done) = t]
(common-generated): Append $(lib-names-h-abi) and
$(lib-names-stmp-abi).
* scripts/lib-names.awk: Do not handle multi being set.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/Makefile (abi-lp64-ld-soname):
Remove variable.
(abi-lp64_be-ld-soname): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/Makefile (abi-soft-ld-soname):
Likewise.
(abi-hard-ld-soname): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/shlib-versions: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/Makefile (abi-o32_soft-ld-soname):
Remove variable.
(abi-o32_hard-ld-soname): Likewise.
(abi-o32_soft_2008-ld-soname): Likewise.
(abi-o32_hard_2008-ld-soname): Likewise.
(abi-n32_soft-ld-soname): Likewise.
(abi-n32_hard-ld-soname): Likewise.
(abi-n32_soft_2008-ld-soname): Likewise.
(abi-n32_hard_2008-ld-soname): Likewise.
(abi-n64_soft-ld-soname): Likewise.
(abi-n64_hard-ld-soname): Likewise.
(abi-n64_soft_2008-ld-soname): Likewise.
(abi-n64_hard_2008-ld-soname): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/Makefile (abi-64-v1-ld-soname):
Likewise.
(abi-64-v2-ld-soname): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/shlib-versions: Add
ld.so entries.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/Makefile (abi-64-ld-soname): Remove
variable.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/s390-64/shlib-versions: Add ld.so
entry.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86/Makefile (abi-32-ld-soname): Remove
variable.
(abi-64-ld-soname): Likewise.
(abi-x32-ld-soname): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/64/shlib-versions: Add ld.so
entry.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/x32/shlib-versions: Likewise.
This patch removes the --enable-oldest-abi configure option, which has
long been bitrotten (as reported in bug 6652). The principle of
removing this option was agreed in the thread starting at
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2013-07/msg00174.html>.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 that the installed shared libraries other
than libc.so are unchanged by this patch and that libc.so disassembly
and symbol versions are unchanged (debug info changes because of
changed line numbers in csu/version.c).
[BZ #6652]
* Makeconfig (soversions-default-setname): Remove variable.
($(common-objpfx)soversions.i): Don't pass default_setname to
soversions.awk.
* Makerules ($(common-objpfx)abi-versions.h): Don't pass
oldest_abi to abi-versions.awk.
* config.h.in (GLIBC_OLDEST_ABI): Remove macro undefine.
* config.make.in (oldest-abi): Remove variable.
* configure.ac (--enable-oldest-abi): Remove configure option.
* configure: Regenerated.
* csu/version.c (banner) [GLIBC_OLDEST_ABI]: Remove conditional
text.
* scripts/abi-versions.awk: Do not handle oldest_abi variable.
* scripts/soversions.awk: Do not handle default_setname variable.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/configure.ac: Do not handle oldest_abi
variable.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/configure: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure.ac: Do not handle oldest_abi
variable.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure: Regenerated.
The netgroups lookup code fails when one of the groups in the search
tree is empty. In such a case it only returns the leaves of the tree
after the blank netgroup. This is because the line parser returns a
NOTFOUND status when the netgroup exists but is empty. The
__getnetgrent_internal implementation needs to be fixed to try
remaining groups if the current group is entry. This patch implements
this fix. Tested on x86_64.
[BZ #17363]
* inet/getnetgrent_r.c (__internal_getnetgrent_r): Try next
group if the current group is empty.
Some types of relocations technically need to be signed rather than
unsigned: in particular ones that are used with moveli or movei,
or for jump and branch. This is almost never a problem. Jump and
branch opcodes are pretty much uniformly resolved by the static linker
(unless you omit -fpic for a shared library, which is not recommended).
The moveli and movei opcodes that need to be sign-extended generally
are for positive displacements, like the construction of the address of
main() from _start(). However, tst-pie1 ends up with main below _start
(in a different module) and the test failed due to signedness issues in
relocation handling.
This commit treats the value as signed when shifting (to preserve the
high bit) and also sign-extends the value generated from the updated
bundle when comparing with the desired bundle, which we do to make sure
no overflow occurred. As a result, the tst-pie1 test now passes.
TLS_INIT_TP in sysdeps/i386/nptl/tls.h uses some hand written asm to
generate a set_thread_area that might result in exchanging ebx and esp
around the syscall causing introspection tools like valgrind to loose
track of the user stack. Just use INTERNAL_SYSCALL which makes sure
esp isn't changed arbitrarily.
Before the patch the code would generate:
mov $0xf3,%eax
movl $0xfffff,0x8(%esp)
movl $0x51,0xc(%esp)
xchg %esp,%ebx
int $0x80
xchg %esp,%ebx
Using INTERNAL_SYSCALL instead will generate:
movl $0xfffff,0x8(%esp)
movl $0x51,0xc(%esp)
xchg %ecx,%ebx
mov $0xf3,%eax
int $0x80
xchg %ecx,%ebx
Thanks to Florian Weimer for analysing why the original code generated
the bogus esp usage:
_segdescr.desc happens to be at the top of the stack, so its address
is in %esp. The asm statement says that %3 is an input, so its value
will not change, and GCC can use %esp as the input register for the
expression &_segdescr.desc. But the constraints do not fully describe
the asm statement because the %3 register is actually modified, albeit
only temporarily.
[BZ #17319]
* sysdeps/i386/nptl/tls.h (TLS_INIT_TP): Use INTERNAL_SYSCALL
to call set_thread_area instead of hand written asm.
(__NR_set_thread_area): Removed define.
(TLS_FLAG_WRITABLE): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SET_THREAD_AREA): Remove check.
(TLS_EBX_ARG): Remove define.
(TLS_LOAD_EBX): Likewise.
In my powerpc32 testing I've observed misc/test-gettimebasefreq
failing.
This is a glibc build (soft-float, though that's not relevant here)
without any --with-cpu and without any special configuration of the
default CPU for GCC either. In particular, it's one not using
sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/hp-timing.h (although in fact the
processor I'm using for testing is POWER4-based), so hp_timing_t is
32-bit not 64-bit. But the VDSO call being used by
INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_NO_SYSCALL_FALLBACK is generating a 64-bit result
(high part in r3, low part in r4). The code extracting that result,
however, expects a result of the type hp_timing_t as passed to
INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_NO_SYSCALL_FALLBACK, meaning that only r3 (= 0) is
used and the value in r4 is ignored. This patch fixes this by always
using uint64_t as the type in INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_NO_SYSCALL_FALLBACK -
reflecting the actual ABI (unconditional in the kernel) of that VDSO
call. This is the minimal change for this issue - no check for
overflow, no change of the type of the timebase_freq variable or the
return type of __get_clockfreq to something other than hp_timing_t
(such a change would simply move the implicit conversions to the over
callers of that function), no change to hp_timing_t itself.
Tested for powerpc32 soft float.
[BZ #17263]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/get_clockfreq.c: Include
<stdint.h>.
(__get_clockfreq): Use uint64_t instead of hp_timing_t in
INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_NO_SYSCALL_FALLBACK call.
Since:
commit 409e00bd69
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Jan 29 07:51:41 2014 -0800
Disable x87 inline functions for SSE2 math
When i386 and x86-64 mathinline.h was merged into a single mathinline.h,
"gcc -m32" enables x87 inline functions on x86-64 even when -mfpmath=sse
and SSE2 is enabled. It is a regression on x86-64. We should check
__SSE2_MATH__ instead of __x86_64__ when disabling x87 inline functions.
gcc-3.2 is unable to correctly compile x86_64 routines for llrint
since it gets redefined. This is because gcc 3.2 does not set
__SSE2_MATH__ for x86_64, thus exposing the duplicate definition.
The correct fix ought to be to check for both __SSE2_MATH__ and
__x86_64__ and enable those bits only when neither are defined.
Tested fix with the reproducer for
409e00bd69 as well as with gcc-3.2.
The compiler doesn't know that the cpuid asm statement in intel_check_word
will trash RBX. We are lucky that it doesn't cause any problems since
RBX is also used by compiler for other purposes so that RBX is saved and
restored. This patch replaces it with __cpuid_count.
[BZ #17259]
* sysdeps/x86_64/cacheinfo.c (intel_check_word): Replace cpuid
asm statement with __cpuid_count.
On powerpc, floating-point environment macros are defined as pointers
to constants in the library that contain the bit-patterns of the
desired environment, instead of being magic constants cast to pointer
type.
For soft-float, the bit-patterns used for fenv_t are not laid out the
same as for hard-float. (e500 has a third layout used; that's not an
ABI issue because these values are only meaningful within a single
process, all of whose glibc libraries must come from the same build of
glibc.) While the __fe_dfl_env value for soft-float was appropriate
for the soft-float fenv_t representation, the other two constants had
the same bit-patterns as for hard-float. Those bit patterns had the
effect of having exceptions already raised, causing
math/test-fenv-return to fail; this patch fixes the patterns used.
(__fe_nonieee_env also had exceptions unmasked, though they should be
masked to match hard-float semantics. Since there is no separate
non-IEEE mode for soft-float, it's most appropriate for
__fe_nonieee_env to be the same as __fe_dfl_env; this patch makes it
an alias.)
Tested for powerpc-nofpu.
[BZ #17261]
* sysdeps/powerpc/nofpu/fenv_const.c (__fe_enabled_env): Change
value to 0.
(__fe_nonieee_env): Define as an alias for __fe_dfl_env.
Open file description locks have been merged into the Linux kernel for
v3.15. Add the appropriate command-value definitions and an update to
the manual that describes their usage.
This is a change to the dynamic linker to add prelinker support for the
R_ARM_TLS_DESC relocation. Two cases can be considered here, the usual
one where lazy binding is in use and the less frequent one, where
immediate binding is requested via the use of the DF_BIND_NOW dynamic
flag (e.g. by using the GNU linker's "-z now" option).
This change only handles the first case. In this scenario the prelinker
does what the dynamic linker would do, that is it preinitialises
R_ARM_TLS_DESC relocations with a pointer to the lazy specialization as
provided with the DT_TLSDESC_PLT dynamic tag. A conflict is
additionally created and in the conflict resolution path the dynamic
linker complements the work by initialising the object's pointer as
indicated by the DT_TLSDESC_GOT dynamic tag to the linker's internal
lazy specialization worker function and also providing the associated
link map in the second entry of the GOT. This step is required, because
if prelinking is successful at the run time, then the dynamic linker's
elf_machine_runtime_setup() function isn't called that would normally do
so.
The second case remains unresolved, because support for that scenario
has not been implemented in the prelinker. In this case the lazy
specialization is unavailable and the DT_TLSDESC_PLT dynamic tag is not
present.
The prelinker could assume the common case of static specialization and
resolve the relocation, but that would require the exposure of dynamic
linker's specialization worker function. Furthermore the dynamic linker
would have to handle the relocation in the conflict resolution path and
see if the dynamic specialization should be used instead. This however
would require access to data structures currently not made available to
the conflict resolution path and therefore a redesign of this part of
the dynamic linker.
Alternatively the prelinker could defer all processing to the dynamic
linker's conflict resolution path, but that would require similar access
to the said data structures.
Therefore the prelinker issues an error instead and the dynamic linker
has assertions to check that DT_TLSDESC_PLT and DT_TLSDESC_GOT are in
use in its conflict resolution path.
This change resolves all TLS failures in the prelinker testsuite, as
noted in the bug report, as well as the small test case provided there.
Unfortunately we don't seem to have any hooks to factor in the prelinker
(if present on a system) to testing, so at this time this fix has to
rely on using the prelinker test suite and enabling TLS descriptors
there for coverage.
[BZ #17078]
* sysdeps/arm/dl-machine.h (elf_machine_rela)
[RESOLVE_CONFLICT_FIND_MAP]: Handle R_ARM_TLS_DESC relocation.
(elf_machine_lazy_rel): Handle prelinked R_ARM_TLS_DESC entries.
This patch fixes bug 17088, fallback fesetenv and feupdateenv not
giving an error for an FE_NOMASK_ENV argument when it requires traps
to be enabled. (This is the bug tested for by test-fenv-return.c.)
Tested mips64 soft-float.
[BZ #17088]
* math/fesetenv.c (__fesetenv)
[FE_NOMASK_ENV && FE_ALL_EXCEPT != 0]: Return 1 for FE_NOMASK_ENV.
* math/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv)
[FE_NOMASK_ENV && FE_ALL_EXCEPT != 0]: Likewise.
If a call to the set*id functions fails in a multi-threaded program,
the abort introduced in commit 13f7fe35ae
was triggered.
We address by checking that all calls to set*id on all threads give
the same result, and only abort if we see success followed by failure
(or vice versa).
Here's an updated patch to fix the crash in bug-ga2 when the system
has no configured ipv6 address. I have taken a different approach of
using libc_freeres_fn instead of the libc_freeres_ptr since the former
gives better control over what is freed; we need that since cache may
or may not be allocated using malloc.
Verified that bug-ga2 works correctly in both cases and does not have
memory leaks in either of them.
This patch fixes bug 17097, ldbl-128 powl producing overflowing /
underflowing results with positive sign when the result should have
been negative. This was shown up by the tests in non-default rounding
modes added by my patch for bug 16315, but isn't actually limited to
non-default rounding modes: rather, when rounding to nearest the
wrappers produced a result with the correct sign and so always hid the
bug unless -lieee was used to disable the wrappers. The problem is
that in the cases where Y is large enough that the result overflows or
underflows for X not very close to 1, but not large enough to overflow
or underflow for all X != +/- 1 (in the latter case Y is always an
even integer), a positive overflowing / underflowing result is always
returned, rather than one with the correct sign. This patch moves the
relevant part of computation of the sign earlier and returns a result
of the correct sign.
Tested for mips64.
[BZ #17097]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/e_powl.c (__ieee754_powl): Return
result with correct sign in case of exponents that produce
overflow except for X very close to 1.
The nscd parent process returns the result of a `wait' call rather
than the exit status of the child it waits for. These two aren't
exactly the same. In my case (and probably on most machines), the exit
status is in the 2nd LSB of the result of `wait', and so:
e.g. if the nscd child process returns 1, the parent returns 1 << 8,
which Bash happily reports as 0.
This patch fixes bugs 16561 and 16562, bad results of yn in overflow
cases in non-default rounding modes, both because an intermediate
overflow in the recurrence does not get detected if the result is not
an infinity and because an overflowing result may occur in the wrong
sign. The fix is to set FE_TONEAREST mode internally for the parts of
the function where such overflows can occur (which includes the call
to y1 - where yn is used to compute a Bessel function of order -1,
negating the result of y1 isn't correct for overflowing results in
directed rounding modes) and then compute an overflowing value in the
original rounding mode if the to-nearest result was an infinity.
Tested x86_64 and x86 and ulps updated accordingly. Also tested for
mips64 and powerpc32 to test the ldbl-128 and ldbl-128ibm changes.
(The tests for these bugs were added in my previous y1 patch, so the
only thing this patch has to do with the testsuite is enable yn
testing in all rounding modes.)
[BZ #16561]
[BZ #16562]
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/e_jn.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_yn): Set FE_TONEAREST mode internally and then
recompute overflowing results in original rounding mode.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/e_jnf.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_ynf): Set FE_TONEAREST mode internally and then
recompute overflowing results in original rounding mode.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/e_jnl.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_ynl): Set FE_TONEAREST mode internally and then
recompute overflowing results in original rounding mode.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/e_jnl.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_ynl): Set FE_TONEAREST mode internally and then
recompute overflowing results in original rounding mode.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/e_jnl.c: Include <float.h>.
(__ieee754_ynl): Set FE_TONEAREST mode internally and then
recompute overflowing results in original rounding mode.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/fenv_private.h [!__SSE2_MATH__]
(libc_feholdsetround_ctx): New macro.
* math/libm-test.inc (yn_test): Use ALL_RM_TEST.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulps : Likewise.
This patch updates README to remove a mention of the ports directory.
It also adds a NEWS item for the merge of ports into the main sysdeps
tree (I think it's NEWS-worthy, although not strictly a user-visible
feature).
Other remaining ports references to resolve: a comment in
manual/signal.texi (not giving a literal path, but maybe should change
anyway); a comment in config.h.in (path should be updated);
scripts/list-sources.sh (appears to date back to ports being a
separate repository).
* README: Do not mention ports directory.
This patch fixes bug 16539, spurious underflow exceptions from x86 /
x86-64 expm1l. The problem is that the computation of a base-2
exponent with extra precision involves spurious underflows for
arguments that are small but not subnormal, so a check is added to
just return the argument in those cases. (If the argument *is*
subnormal, underflowing is correct and the existing code will always
underflow, so it suffices to keep using the existing code in that
case; some expm1 implementations have a bug (bug 16353) with missing
underflow exceptions, but I don't think there's such a bug in this
particular version.)
Tested x86_64 and x86; no ulps updates needed.
(auto-libm-test-out diffs omitted below.)
[BZ #16539]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_expl.S (IEEE754_EXPL) [USE_AS_EXPM1L]: Just
return the argument for normal arguments with exponent below -64.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/e_expl.S (IEEE754_EXPL) [USE_AS_EXPM1L]:
Likewise.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add another test of expm1.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
This patch fixes bug 16287, spurious underflows from ldbl-128 erfl
arising from it calling erfcl for arguments with absolute value at
least 1.0, although for large positive arguments erfcl correctly
underflows but erfl shouldn't. The fix is simply to avoid calling
erfcl, and just return 1, for arguments above a cut-off large enough
that erfl correctly rounds to-nearest as 1 but not so large that erfcl
underflows.
Tested mips64. Also tested x86_64 and x86 to confirm the new tests
(taken from the tests of erfc) don't cause any problems there; no ulps
updates needed.
[BZ #16287]
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/s_erfl.c (__erfl): Return 1 without
calling __erfcl for arguments at least 16.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of erf.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
This patch fixes bug 16354, spurious underflows from cosh when a tiny
argument is passed to expm1 and expm1 correctly underflows although
the final result of cosh should be 1. As noted in that bug, some
cases are latent because of expm1 implementations not raising
underflow (bug 16353), but all the implementations are fixed
similarly. They already contained checks for tiny arguments, but the
checks were too late to avoid underflow from expm1 (although they
would avoid underflow from subsequent squaring of the result of
expm1); they are moved before the expm1 calls.
The thresholds used for considering arguments tiny are not
particularly consistent in how they relate to the precision of the
floating-point format in question. They are, however, all sufficient
to ensure that the round-to-nearest result of cosh is indeed 1 below
the threshold (although sometimes they are smaller than necessary).
But the previous logic did not return 1, but the previously computed 1
+ expm1(abs(x)) value. And the thresholds in the ldbl-128 and
ldbl-128ibm code (0x1p-71L - I suspect 0x3f8b was intended in the code
instead of 0x3fb8 - and (roughly) 0x1p-55L) are not sufficient for
that value to be 1. So by moving the test for tiny arguments, and
consequently returning 1 directly now the expm1 value hasn't been
computed by that point, this patch also fixes bug 17061, the (large
number of ulps) inaccuracy for small arguments in those
implementations. Tests for that bug are duly added.
Tested x86_64 and x86 and ulps updated accordingly. Also tested for
mips64 and powerpc32 to validate the ldbl-128 and ldbl-128ibm changes.
[BZ #16354]
[BZ #17061]
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/e_cosh.c (__ieee754_cosh): Check for
small arguments before calling __expm1.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/e_coshf.c (__ieee754_coshf): Check for
small arguments before calling __expm1f.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/e_coshl.c (__ieee754_coshl): Check for
small arguments before calling __expm1l.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/e_coshl.c (__ieee754_coshl):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/e_coshl.c (__ieee754_coshl): Likewise.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more cosh tests. Do not allow
spurious underflow for some cosh tests.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
This patch fixes bug 17050, missing errno setting for y1 overflow (for
small positive arguments). An appropriate check is added for overflow
directly in the __ieee754_y1 implementation, similar to the check
present for yn (doing it there rather than in the wrapper also avoids
yn needing to repeat the check when called for order 1 or -1 and it
uses __ieee754_y1).
Tested x86_64 and x86; no ulps update needed. Also tested for mips64
to verify the ldbl-128 fix (the ldbl-128ibm code just #includes the
ldbl-128 file).
[BZ #17050]
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/e_j1.c: Include <errno.h>.
(__ieee754_y1): Set errno if return value overflows.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/e_j1f.c: Include <errno.h>.
(__ieee754_y1f): Set errno if return value overflows.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/e_j1l.c: Include <errno.h>.
(__ieee754_y1l): Set errno if return value overflows.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/e_j1l.c: Include <errno.h>.
(__ieee754_y1l): Set errno if return value overflows.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of y0, y1 and yn.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
This patch fixes bug 16315, bad pow handling of overflow/underflow in
non-default rounding modes. Tests of pow are duly converted to
ALL_RM_TEST to run all tests in all rounding modes.
There are two main issues here. First, various implementations
compute a negative result by negating a positive result, but this
yields inappropriate overflow / underflow values for directed
rounding, so either overflow / underflow results need recomputing in
the correct sign, or the relevant overflowing / underflowing operation
needs to be made to have a result of the correct sign. Second, the
dbl-64 implementation sets FE_TONEAREST internally; in the overflow /
underflow case, the result needs recomputing in the original rounding
mode.
Tested x86_64 and x86 and ulps updated accordingly.
[BZ #16315]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_pow.S (__ieee754_pow): Ensure possibly
overflowing or underflowing operations take place with sign of
result.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_powf.S (__ieee754_powf): Likewise.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_powl.S (__ieee754_powl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/e_pow.c: Include <math.h>.
(__ieee754_pow): Recompute overflowing and underflowing results in
original rounding mode.
* sysdeps/x86/fpu/powl_helper.c: Include <stdbool.h>.
(__powl_helper): Allow negative argument X and scale negated value
as needed. Avoid passing value outside [-1, 1] to f2xm1.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/e_powl.S (__ieee754_powl): Ensure possibly
overflowing or underflowing operations take place with sign of
result.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/multiarch/e_pow.c [HAVE_FMA4_SUPPORT]:
Include <math.h>.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of pow.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
* math/libm-test.inc (pow_test): Use ALL_RM_TEST.
(pow_tonearest_test_data): Remove.
(pow_test_tonearest): Likewise.
(pow_towardzero_test_data): Likewise.
(pow_test_towardzero): Likewise.
(pow_downward_test_data): Likewise.
(pow_test_downward): Likewise.
(pow_upward_test_data): Likewise.
(pow_test_upward): Likewise.
(main): Don't call removed functions.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Likewise.
This fixes the calculation of R_ARM_TLS_DESC relocations for lazy global
symbol references, i.e. created with `-z lazy' in effect with the static
linker, where immediate resolution is requested with LD_BIND_NOW.
Errno is not set and the testcases will fail.
Now the scalbln-aliases are removed in i386/m68
and the wrappers are used when calling the scalbln-functions.
On ia64 only scalblnf has its own implementation.
For scalbln and scalblnl the ieee754/dbl-64 and ieee754/ldbl-96 are used, thus
the wrappers are needed, too.
Implementation of strchr for AArch64. Speedups taken from micro-bench
show the improvements relative to the standard C code.
The use of LD1 means we have identical code for both big- and
little-endian systems.
This patch fixes __ieee754_logl (-LDBL_MAX) on x86_64 and x86 not to
subtract 1 from its argument and so cause spurious overflow in
FE_DOWNWARD mode. (For any argument strictly less than -1, it doesn't
matter whether or not 1 is subtracted before computing log1p, as long
as the result doesn't overflow to -Inf.)
Tested x86_64 and x86. (This particular case lacks test coverage,
since the testsuite doesn't cover -lieee, but it will be covered by
tests after the following patch to test pow in all rounding modes,
which was the context in which this bug was found.)
[BZ #17022]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_logl.S (__ieee754_logl): Do not subtract 1
from arguments -2 or below.
* sysdeps/i386/i686/fpu/e_logl.S (__ieee754_logl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/e_logl.S (__ieee754_logl): Likewise.
This patch fixes few failures in nearbyintl() where the fraction part is
close to 0.5.i The new tests added report few extra failures in
nearbyint_downward and nearbyint_towardzero which is a known issue.
Fixes#17031.
The implementation of __get_nprocs uses a stactic variable to cache
the value of the current number of processors. The caching breaks when
'time (NULL) == 0':
$ cat nproc.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
time_t t;
struct timeval tv = {0, 0};
printf("settimeofday({0, 0}, NULL) = %d\n", settimeofday(&tv, NULL));
t = time(NULL);
printf("Time: %d, CPUs: %d\n", (unsigned int)t, get_nprocs());
return 0;
}
$ gcc -O3 nproc.c
$ ./a.out
settimeofday({0, 0}, NULL) = -1
Time: 1401311578, CPUs: 4
$ sudo ./a.out
settimeofday({0, 0}, NULL) = 0
Time: 0, CPUs: 0
The problem is with the condition used to check whether a cached
value should be returned or not:
static int cached_result;
static time_t timestamp;
time_t now = time (NULL);
time_t prev = timestamp;
atomic_read_barrier ();
if (now == prev)
return cached_result;
This patch fixes the problem by ensuring that 'cached_result' has
been set at least once before returning it.
POSIX requires that we make a copy, so we allocate a new string
and free it in posix_spawn_file_actions_destroy.
Reported by David Reid, Alex Gaynor, and Glyph Lefkowitz. This bug
may have security implications.
As with other issues of this kind, bug 17042 is log2 (1) wrongly
returning -0 instead of +0 in round-downward mode because of
implementations effectively in terms of log1p (x - 1). This patch
fixes the issue in the same way used for log and log10.
Tested x86_64 and x86 and ulps updated accordingly. Also tested for
mips64 to confirm a fix was needed for ldbl-128 and to validate that
fix (also applied to ldbl-128ibm since that version of log2l is
essentially the same as the ldbl-128 one).
[BZ #17042]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_log2.S (__ieee754_log2): Take absolete value
when x - 1 is zero.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_log2f.S (__ieee754_log2f): Likewise.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_log2l.S (__ieee754_log2l): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/e_log2l.c (__ieee754_log2l): Return
0.0L for an argument of 1.0L.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/e_log2l.c (__ieee754_log2l):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/e_log2l.S (__ieee754_log2l): Take absolute
value when x - 1 is zero.
* math/libm-test.inc (log2_test): Use ALL_RM_TEST.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Likewise.
The current code for handling concurrent resolution says that the
ABI for _dl_tlsdesc_resolve_hold is the same as that of
_dl_tlsdesc_lazy_resolver. However _dl_tlsdesc_resolve_hold is
called from the trampoline directly rather than the lazy resolver
stub so, for example, r2 has not been pushed so does not needed
to be restored.
This fixes an intermittent failure in nptl/tst-tls3 when building
glibc for arm-linux-gnueabihf with -mtls-dialect=gnu2.
ChangeLog:
2014-05-27 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
[BZ #16990]
* sysdeps/arm/dl-tlsdesc.S (_dl_tlsdesc_resolve_hold): Save
and restore r2 rather than just restoring.
The offset computation in write mode uses the fact that _IO_read_end
is kept in sync with the external file offset. This however is not
true when O_APPEND is in effect since switching to write mode ought to
send the external file offset to the end of file without making the
necessary adjustment to _IO_read_end.
Hence in append mode, offset computation when writing should only
consider the effect of unflushed writes, i.e. from _IO_write_base to
_IO_write_ptr.
The wiki has a detailed document that describes the rationale for
offsets returned by ftell in various conditions:
https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/File%20offsets%20in%20a%20stdio%20stream%20and%20ftell
This fixes a variety of testsuite failures for me:
tststatic.out Error 1
tststatic2.out Error 1
tst-tls9-static.out Error 1
tst-audit8.out Error 127
tst-audit9.out Error 127
tst-audit1.out Error 127
and also has the added benefit of making LD_AUDIT/sotruss work on
AArch64.
Otherwise, we bail out early in _dl_try_allocate_static_tls as the
alignment requirement of the PT_TLS section in libc is 16.
The netgroups nss modules in the glibc tree use NSS_STATUS_UNAVAIL
(with errno as ERANGE) when the supplied buffer does not have
sufficient space for the result. This is wrong, because the canonical
way to indicate insufficient buffer is to set the errno to ERANGE and
the status to NSS_STATUS_TRYAGAIN, as is used by all other modules.
This fixes nscd behaviour when the nss_ldap module returns
NSS_STATUS_TRYAGAIN to indicate that a netgroup entry is too long to
fit into the supplied buffer.
As noted in bug 16978, older POSIX versions include
in the specified contents of <tar.h>, with only the 2001 edition
introducing the notion of XSI-conditional definitions and conditioning
that definition. Thus, this macro should be defined for
!__USE_XOPEN2K as well as for __USE_XOPEN, and this patch duly defines
it in that case. Tested x86_64.
[BZ #16978]
* posix/tar.h [!__USE_XOPEN2K] (TSVTX): Define macro.
* conform/Makefile (test-xfail-POSIX/tar.h/conform): Remove
variable.
As with various other issues of this kind, bug 16977 is log10 (1)
wrongly returning -0 rather than +0 in round-downward mode because of
an implementation effectively in terms of log1p (x - 1). This patch
fixes the issue in the same way used for log.
Tested x86_64 and x86 and ulps updated accordingly. Also tested for
mips64 to confirm a fix was needed for ldbl-128 and to validate that
fix (also applied to ldbl-128ibm since that version of logl is
essentially the same as the ldbl-128 one).
[BZ #16977]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_log10.S (__ieee754_log10): Take absolute
value when x - 1 is zero.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_log10f.S (__ieee754_log10f): Likewise.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_log10l.S (__ieee754_log10l): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/e_log10l.c (__ieee754_log10l): Return
0.0L for an argument of 1.0L.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/e_log10l.c (__ieee754_log10l):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/e_log10l.S (__ieee754_log10l): Take absolute
value when x - 1 is zero.
* math/libm-test.inc (log10_test): Use ALL_RM_TEST.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Likewise.
This patch fixes an issue observed running the tst-strtod-round test on
32 bit sparc. In some conditions, strtold calls round_and_return, which in
turn calls __mpn_rshift with cnt = 0, while stdlib/rshift.c explicitly says
that cnts should satisfy 0 < CNT < BITS_PER_MP_LIMB. In this case, the code
end up doing a logical shift right of the same amount than the register,
which is undefined in the C standard.
Due to this bug, 32-bit sparc does not correctly convert the value
"0x1p-16446", but it is likely that other architectures are also
affected for other input values.
For static linking the locale code avoids linking code and data for
unused categories. However for nl_langinfo we know only at runtime which
categories are used, so direct reference to every nl_current_CATEGORY
symbol should be done.
This was broken by commit bc3e1c1273 where
nl_langinfo_l and nl_langinfo have been merged and some code has been
lost in the process.
In order to detect locales issues with static linking, compile a version
of tst-langinfo with static linking.
Note: this is Debian bug#747103 reported by Raphael <raphael.astier@eliot-sa.com>
Using the default header instead. This matches the kernel, which also
uses the generic header. Fixes the sys/wait.h conform issue, where
si_band had the wrong type.
prlimit and prlimit64 have been added in the main <bits/resource.h>, but
not in the SPARC specific version. Fix that.
Note: this is Debian bug#703559, reported by Emilio Pozuelo Monfort
<pochu@debian.org>
If the fd refers to a terminal device, but not a pty master, the
TIOCGPTN ioctl returns with ENOTTY. This error is not caught, and the
possibly undefined buffer passed to ptsname_r is sent directly to the
stat64 syscall.
Fix this by using a fallback to the old method only if the TIOCGPTN
ioctl fails with EINVAL. This also fix the return value in that specific
case (it return ENOENT without this patch).
Also add tests to the ptsname_r function (and ptsname at the same time).
Note: this is Debian bug#741482, reported by Jakub Wilk <jwilk@debian.org>
getaddrinfo correctly returns EAI_AGAIN for AF_INET and AF_INET6
queries. For AF_UNSPEC however, an older change
(a682a1bf55) broke the check and due to
that the returned error was EAI_NONAME.
This patch fixes the check so that a non-authoritative not-found is
returned as EAI_AGAIN to the user instead of EAI_NONAME.
Bug 16564 is spurious overflow of log1pl (LDBL_MAX) in FE_UPWARD mode,
resulting from log1pl adding 1 to its argument (for arguments not
close to 0), which overflows in that mode. This patch fixes this by
avoiding adding 1 to large arguments (precisely what counts as large
depends on the floating-point format).
Tested x86_64 and x86, and spot-checked log1pl tests on mips64 and
powerpc64.
[BZ #16564]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/s_log1pl.S (__log1pl): Do not add 1 to positive
arguments with exponent 65 or above.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/s_log1pl.c (__log1pl): Do not add 1 to
arguments 0x1p113L or above.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_log1pl.c (__log1pl): Do not add 1
to arguments 0x1p107L or above.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/s_log1pl.S (__log1pl): Do not add 1 to
positive arguments with exponent 65 or above.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of log1p.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
According to C99/C11 Annex G, cacos applied to a value with real part
+Inf and finite imaginary part should produce a result with real part
+0. glibc wrongly produces a result with real part -0 in FE_DOWNWARD
mode. This patch fixes this by checking for zero results in the
relevant case of non-finite arguments (where there should never be a
result with -0 real part), and converts the tests of cacos to
ALL_RM_TEST.
Tested x86_64 and x86 and ulps updated accordingly.
[BZ #16928]
* math/s_cacos.c (__cacos): Ensure zero real part of result from
non-finite arguments is +0.
* math/s_cacosf.c (__cacosf): Likewise.
* math/s_cacosl.c (__cacosl): Likewise.
* math/libm-test.inc (cacos_test): Use ALL_RM_TEST.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Likewise.
According to C99 and C11 Annex F, acosh (1) should be +0 in all
rounding modes. However, some implementations in glibc wrongly return
-0 in round-downward mode (which is what you get if you end up
computing log1p (-0), via 1 - 1 being -0 in round-downward mode).
This patch fixes the problem implementations, by correcting the test
for an exact 1 value in the ldbl-96 implementation to allow for the
explicit high bit of the mantissa, and by inserting fabs instructions
in the i386 implementations; tests of acosh are duly converted to
ALL_RM_TEST. I believe all the other sysdeps/ieee754 implementations
are already OK (I haven't checked the ia64 versions, but if buggy then
that will be obvious from the results of test runs after this patch is
in).
Tested x86_64 and x86 and ulps updated accordingly.
[BZ #16927]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_acosh.S (__ieee754_acosh): Use fabs on x-1
value.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_acoshf.S (__ieee754_acoshf): Likewise.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/e_acoshl.S (__ieee754_acoshl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/e_acoshl.c (__ieee754_acoshl): Correct
for explicit high bit of mantissa when testing for argument equal
to 1.
* math/libm-test.inc (acosh_test): Use ALL_RM_TEST.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Update.
* sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Likewise.
Bug 16516 reports spurious underflows from erf (for all floating-point
types), when the result is close to underflowing but does not actually
underflow.
erf (x) is about (2/sqrt(pi))*x for x close to 0, so there are
subnormal arguments for which it does not underflow. The various
implementations do (x + efx*x) (for efx = 2/sqrt(pi) - 1), for greater
accuracy than if just using a single multiplication by an
approximation to 2/sqrt(pi) (effectively, this way there are a few
more bits in the approximation to 2/sqrt(pi)). This can introduce
underflows when efx*x underflows even though the final result does
not, so a scaled calculation with 8*efx is done in these cases - but 8
is not a big enough scale factor to avoid all such underflows. 16 is
(any underflows with a scale factor of 16 would only occur when the
final result underflows), so this patch changes the code to use that
factor. Rather than recomputing all the values of the efx8 variable,
it is removed, leaving it to the compiler's constant folding to
compute 16*efx. As such scaling can also lose underflows when the
final scaling down happens to be exact, appropriate checks are added
to ensure underflow exceptions occur when required in such cases.
Tested x86_64 and x86; no ulps updates needed. Also spot-checked for
powerpc32 and mips64 to verify the changes to the ldbl-128ibm and
ldbl-128 implementations.
[BZ #16516]
* sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/s_erf.c (efx8): Remove variable.
(__erf): Scale by 16 instead of 8 in potentially underflowing
case. Ensure exception if result actually underflows.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_erff.c (efx8): Remove variable.
(__erff): Scale by 16 instead of 8 in potentially underflowing
case. Ensure exception if result actually underflows.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128/s_erfl.c: Include <float.h>.
(efx8): Remove variable.
(__erfl): Scale by 16 instead of 8 in potentially underflowing
case. Ensure exception if result actually underflows.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-128ibm/s_erfl.c: Include <float.h>.
(efx8): Remove variable.
(__erfl): Scale by 16 instead of 8 in potentially underflowing
case. Ensure exception if result actually underflows.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/s_erfl.c: Include <float.h>.
(efx8): Remove variable.
(__erfl): Scale by 16 instead of 8 in potentially underflowing
case. Ensure exception if result actually underflows.
* math/auto-libm-test-in: Add more tests of erf.
* math/auto-libm-test-out: Regenerated.
This patch fixes bug 16064, i386 fenv_t not including SSE state, using
the technique suggested there of storing the state in the existing
__eip field of fenv_t to avoid needing to increase the size of fenv_t
and add new symbol versions. The included testcase, which previously
failed for i386 (but passed for x86_64), illustrates how the previous
state was buggy.
This patch causes the SSE state to be included *to the extent it is on
x86_64*. Where some state should logically be included but isn't for
x86_64 (see bug 16068), this patch does not cause it to be included
for i386 either. The idea is that any patch fixing that bug should
fix it for both x86_64 and i386 at once.
Tested i386 and x86_64. (I haven't tested the case of a CPU without
SSE2 disabling the test.)
[BZ #16064]
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/fegetenv.c: Include <unistd.h>, <ldsodefs.h>
and <dl-procinfo.h>.
(__fegetenv): Save SSE state in envp->__eip if supported.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/feholdexcpt.c (feholdexcept): Save SSE state in
envp->__eip if supported.
* sysdeps/i386/fpu/fesetenv.c: Include <unistd.h>, <ldsodefs.h>
and <dl-procinfo.h>.
(__fesetenv): Always set __eip, __cs_selector, __opcode,
__data_offset and __data_selector in environment to 0. Set SSE
state if supported.
* sysdeps/x86/fpu/Makefile [$(subdir) = math] (tests): Add
test-fenv-sse.
[$(subdir) = math] (CFLAGS-test-fenv-sse.c): Add -msse2
-mfpmath=sse.
* sysdeps/x86/fpu/test-fenv-sse.c: New file.
Added support for TX lock elision of pthread mutexes on s390 and
s390x. This may improve lock scaling of existing programs on TX
capable systems. The lock elision code is only built with
--enable-lock-elision=yes and then requires a GCC version supporting
the TX builtins. With lock elision default mutexes are elided via
__builtin_tbegin, if the cpu supports transactions. By default lock
elision is not enabled and the elision code is not built.
Add an optimized implementation of strcmp for ARMv7-A cores. This
implementation is significantly faster than the current generic C
implementation, particularly for strings of 16 bytes and longer.
Tested with the glibc string tests for arm-linux-gnueabihf and
armeb-linux-gnueabihf.
The code was written by ARM, who have agreed to assign the copyright
to the FSF for integration into glibc.
ChangeLog:
2014-05-09 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* sysdeps/arm/armv7/strcmp.S: New file.
* NEWS: Mention addition of ARMv7 optimized strcmp.
This patch fixes what I believe to be a bug in the handling of
R_ARM_IRELATIVE RELA relocations. At present, these are handled the
same as REL relocations: i.e. the addend is loaded from the relocation
address. Most of the time this isn't a problem because RELA relocations
aren't used on ARM (GNU/Linux at least) anyway, but it causes problems
with prelink, which uses RELA on all targets for its conflict table.
(Support for ifunc prelinking requires a prelink patch, not yet posted.)
Anyway, this patch works, though I'm not 100% sure if it is correct: I
notice that this code path received attention last year:
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-ports/2013-07/msg00000.html
I'm not sure under what circumstances that patch would have had an
effect, nor if my patch conflicts with that case.
No regressions using Mentor's usual glibc cross-testing infrastructure.
[BZ #16888]
* sysdeps/arm/dl-machine.h (elf_machine_rela): Fix R_ARM_IRELATIVE
handling.
This patch increases the minimum Linux kernel version for glibc to
2.6.32, as discussed in the thread starting at
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-01/msg00511.html>.
This patch just does the minimal change to arch_minimum_kernel
settings (and LIBC_LINUX_VERSION, which determines the minimum kernel
headers version, as it doesn't make sense for that to be older than
the minimum kernel that can be used at runtime). Followups would be
expected to do, roughly and not necessarily precisely in this order:
* Remove __LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION checks in kernel-features.h files
where those checks are always true / always false for kernels 2.6.32
and above.
* Otherwise simplify/improve conditionals in those files (for example,
where defining once in the main file then undefining in
architecture-specific files makes things clearer than having lots of
separate definitions of the same macro), possibly fixing in the
process cases where a macro should optimally have been defined for a
given architecture but wasn't. (In the review in preparation for
this version increase I checked what the right conditions should be
for all macros in the main kernel-features.h whose definitions there
would have been affected by the increase - but I only fixed that
subset of the issues found where --enable-kernel=2.6.32 would have
caused a kernel feature to be wrongly assumed to be present, not any
cases where a feature is not assumed but could be assumed.)
* Remove conditionals on __ASSUME_* where they can now be taken to be
always-true, and the definitions when the macros are only used in
Linux-specific files.
* Split more architectures out of the main kernel-features.h (like
ex-ports architectures), once various of the architecture
conditionals there have been eliminated so the new
architecture-specific files are no larger than actually necessary.
Tested x86_64.
2014-03-27 Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
[BZ #9894]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure.ac (LIBC_LINUX_VERSION):
Change to 2.6.32.
(arch_minimum_kernel): Change all 2.6.16 settings to 2.6.32.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/configure.ac: Remove file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/configure: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/configure.ac: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/configure: Likewise.
* README: Update reference to required Linux kernel version.
* manual/install.texi (Linux): Update reference to required Linux
kernel headers version.
* INSTALL: Regenerated.
The datahead structure has an unused padding field that remains
uninitialized. Valgrind prints out a warning for it on querying a
netgroups entry. This is harmless, but is a potential data leak since
it would result in writing out an uninitialized byte to the cache
file. Besides, this happens only when there is a cache miss, so we're
not adding computation to any fast path.
[Fixes BZ #14308, #12994, #13651]
AF_UNSPEC results in sending two queries in parallel, one for the A
record and the other for the AAAA record. If one of these is a
referral, then the query fails, which is wrong. It should return at
least the one successful response.
The fix has two parts. The first part makes the referral fall back to
the SERVFAIL path, which results in using the successful response.
There is a bug in that path however, due to which the second part is
necessary. The bug here is that if the first response is a failure
and the second succeeds, __libc_res_nsearch does not detect that and
assumes a failure. The case where the first response is a success and
the second fails, works correctly.
This condition is produced by buggy routers, so here's a crude
interposable library that can simulate such a condition. The library
overrides the recvfrom syscall and modifies the header of the packet
received to reproduce this scenario. It has two key variables:
mod_packet and first_error.
The mod_packet variable when set to 0, results in odd packets being
modified to be a referral. When set to 1, even packets are modified
to be a referral.
The first_error causes the first response to be a failure so that a
domain-appended search is performed to test the second part of the
__libc_nsearch fix.
The driver for this fix is a simple getaddrinfo program that does an
AF_UNSPEC query. I have omitted this since it should be easy to
implement.
I have tested this on x86_64.
The interceptor library source:
/* Override recvfrom and modify the header of the first DNS response to make it
a referral and reproduce bz #845218. We have to resort to this ugly hack
because we cannot make bind return the buggy response of a referral for the
AAAA record and an authoritative response for the A record. */
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <endian.h>
#include <dlfcn.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
/* Lifted from resolv/arpa/nameser_compat.h. */
typedef struct {
unsigned id :16; /*%< query identification number */
#if BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN
/* fields in third byte */
unsigned qr: 1; /*%< response flag */
unsigned opcode: 4; /*%< purpose of message */
unsigned aa: 1; /*%< authoritive answer */
unsigned tc: 1; /*%< truncated message */
unsigned rd: 1; /*%< recursion desired */
/* fields
* in
* fourth
* byte
* */
unsigned ra: 1; /*%< recursion available */
unsigned unused :1; /*%< unused bits (MBZ as of 4.9.3a3) */
unsigned ad: 1; /*%< authentic data from named */
unsigned cd: 1; /*%< checking disabled by resolver */
unsigned rcode :4; /*%< response code */
#endif
#if BYTE_ORDER == LITTLE_ENDIAN || BYTE_ORDER == PDP_ENDIAN
/* fields
* in
* third
* byte
* */
unsigned rd :1; /*%< recursion desired */
unsigned tc :1; /*%< truncated message */
unsigned aa :1; /*%< authoritive answer */
unsigned opcode :4; /*%< purpose of message */
unsigned qr :1; /*%< response flag */
/* fields
* in
* fourth
* byte
* */
unsigned rcode :4; /*%< response code */
unsigned cd: 1; /*%< checking disabled by resolver */
unsigned ad: 1; /*%< authentic data from named */
unsigned unused :1; /*%< unused bits (MBZ as of 4.9.3a3) */
unsigned ra :1; /*%< recursion available */
#endif
/* remaining
* bytes
* */
unsigned qdcount :16; /*%< number of question entries */
unsigned ancount :16; /*%< number of answer entries */
unsigned nscount :16; /*%< number of authority entries */
unsigned arcount :16; /*%< number of resource entries */
} HEADER;
static int done = 0;
/* Packets to modify. 0 for the odd packets and 1 for even packets. */
static const int mod_packet = 0;
/* Set to true if the first request should result in an error, resulting in a
search query. */
static bool first_error = true;
static ssize_t (*real_recvfrom) (int sockfd, void *buf, size_t len, int flags,
struct sockaddr *src_addr, socklen_t *addrlen);
void
__attribute__ ((constructor))
init (void)
{
real_recvfrom = dlsym (RTLD_NEXT, "recvfrom");
if (real_recvfrom == NULL)
{
printf ("Failed to get reference to recvfrom: %s\n", dlerror ());
printf ("Cannot simulate test\n");
abort ();
}
}
/* Modify the second packet that we receive to set the header in a manner as to
reproduce BZ #845218. */
static void
mod_buf (HEADER *h, int port)
{
if (done % 2 == mod_packet || (first_error && done == 1))
{
printf ("(Modifying header)");
if (first_error && done == 1)
h->rcode = 3;
else
h->rcode = 0; /* NOERROR == 0. */
h->ancount = 0;
h->aa = 0;
h->ra = 0;
h->arcount = 0;
}
done++;
}
ssize_t
recvfrom (int sockfd, void *buf, size_t len, int flags,
struct sockaddr *src_addr, socklen_t *addrlen)
{
ssize_t ret = real_recvfrom (sockfd, buf, len, flags, src_addr, addrlen);
int port = htons (((struct sockaddr_in *) src_addr)->sin_port);
struct in_addr addr = ((struct sockaddr_in *) src_addr)->sin_addr;
const char *host = inet_ntoa (addr);
printf ("\n*** From %s:%d: ", host, port);
mod_buf (buf, port);
printf ("returned %zd\n", ret);
return ret;
}
The current implementation of setcontext uses rt_sigreturn to restore
the contents of registers. This contrasts with the way most other
architectures implement setcontext:
powerpc64, mips, tile:
Call rt_sigreturn if context was created by a call to a signal handler,
otherwise restore in user code.
powerpc32:
Call swapcontext system call and don't call sigreturn or rt_sigreturn.
x86_64, sparc, hppa, sh, ia64, m68k, s390, arm:
Only support restoring "synchronous" contexts, that is contexts
created by getcontext, and restoring in user code and don't call
sigreturn or rt_sigreturn.
alpha:
Call sigreturn (but not rt_sigreturn) in all cases to do the restore.
The text of the setcontext manpage suggests that the requirement to be
able to restore a signal handler created context has been dropped from
SUSv2:
If the context was obtained by a call to a signal handler, then old
standard text says that "program execution continues with the program
instruction following the instruction interrupted by the signal".
However, this sentence was removed in SUSv2, and the present verdict
is "the result is unspecified".
Implementing setcontext by calling rt_sigreturn unconditionally causes
problems when used with sigaltstack as in BZ #16629. On this basis it
seems that aarch64 is broken and that new ports should only support
restoring contexts created with getcontext and do not need to call
rt_sigreturn at all.
This patch re-implements the aarch64 setcontext function to restore
the context in user code in a similar manner to x86_64 and other ports.
ChangeLog:
2014-04-17 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
[BZ #16629]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/setcontext.S (__setcontext):
Re-implement to restore registers in user code and avoid
rt_sigreturn system call.
We initialize _r_debug for static binaries to allows debug
agents to treat static binaries a little more like dyanmic
ones. This simplifies the work a debug agent has to do to
access TLS in a static binary via libthread_db.
Tested on x86_64.
See:
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-04/msg00183.html
[BZ #16831]
* csu/libc-start.c (LIBC_START_MAIN) [!SHARED]: Call
_dl_debug_initialize.
pathconf(_PC_NAME_MAX) was implemented on top of statfs(). The 32bit
version therefore fails EOVERFLOW if the filesystem blockcount is
sufficiently large.
Most pathconf() queries use statvfs64(), which avoids this issue. This
patch modifies pathconf(_PC_NAME_MAX) to do likewise.
This patch fixes the powerpc32 optimized nearbyint/nearbyintf bogus
results for FE_DOWNWARD rounding mode. This is due wrong instructions
sequence used in the rounding calculation (two subtractions instead of
adition and a subtraction).
Fixes BZ#16815.