mbstows is defined if dst is NULL and is defined to special cased if
dst is NULL so the fortify objsize check if incorrect in that case.
Tested on x86-64 linux.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Let's use LC_ALL=C as we do elsewhere for consistency.
Tested on s390x-ibm-linux-gnu.
See: 72bd208846
Signed-off-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Liebler <stli@linux.ibm.com>
We already check for it in root configure.ac with AC_CHECK_TOOL. Let's
use the result.
Tested on s390x-ibm-linux-gnu.
Signed-off-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Liebler <stli@linux.ibm.com>
commit c22eb807b0
Author: Noah Goldstein <goldstein.w.n@gmail.com>
Date: Thu Jun 16 15:07:12 2022 -0700
x86: Rename generic functions with unique postfix for clarity
Changed the names of the strspn-c, strcspn-c, and strpbrk-c files
in a general refactor. It didn't change the include paths for the
i386 files breaking the i386 build. This commit fixes that.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
No functions are changed. It just renames generic implementations from
'{func}_sse2' to '{func}_generic'. This is just because the postfix
"_sse2" was overloaded and was used for files that had hand-optimized
sse2 assembly implementations and files that just redirected back
to the generic implementation.
Full xcheck passed on x86_64.
The RTLD_BOOTSTRAP branch is used to relocate ld.so itself. It only
needs to handle RELATIVE, GLOB_DAT, and JUMP_SLOT. RELATIVE has been
handled (by _ELF_DYNAMIC_DO_RELOC due to DT_RELACOUNT, or RELR), so the
switch statement only needs to handle GLOB_DAT and JUMP_SLOT.
We can drop these `#if[n]def RTLD_BOOTSTRAP` and add a large
`# ifndef RTLD_BOOTSTRAP` instead.
The RTLD_BOOTSTRAP branch is used to relocate ld.so itself. It only
needs to handle RELATIVE, GLOB_DAT, and JUMP_SLOT.
TLSDESC/TLS_DTPMOD/TLS_DTPREL handling can be removed. Remove
`case AARCH64_R(RELATIVE)` as well as elf_machine_rela has checked it.
Tested on aarch64-linux-gnu.
The RTLD_BOOTSTRAP branch is used to relocate ld.so itself. It only
needs to handle RELATIVE, GLOB_DAT, and the symbolic relocation type
(R_RISCV_{32,64}). NONE and IRELATIVE can be removed.
The code relies on ld.so having DT_RELACOUNT so that the RTLD_BOOTSTRAP
branch does not need handle RELATIVE. Drop this minor size
optimization for clarity.
Acked-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@rivosinc.com>
1. Fix incorrect lower-bound threshold in L(large_memcpy_2x).
Previously was using `__x86_rep_movsb_threshold` and should
have been using `__x86_shared_non_temporal_threshold`.
2. Avoid reloading __x86_shared_non_temporal_threshold before
the L(large_memcpy_4x) bounds check.
3. Document the second bounds check for L(large_memcpy_4x)
more clearly.
The lower-bound (16448) and upper-bound (SIZE_MAX / 16) are assumed
by memmove-vec-unaligned-erms.
The lower-bound is needed because memmove-vec-unaligned-erms unrolls
the loop aggressively in the L(large_memset_4x) case.
The upper-bound is needed because memmove-vec-unaligned-erms
right-shifts the value of `x86_non_temporal_threshold` by
LOG_4X_MEMCPY_THRESH (4) which without a bound may overflow.
The lack of lower-bound can be a correctness issue. The lack of
upper-bound cannot.
If an executable has copy relocations for extern protected data, that
can only work if the library containing the definition is built with
assumptions (a) the compiler emits GOT-generating relocations (b) the
linker produces R_*_GLOB_DAT instead of R_*_RELATIVE. Otherwise the
library uses its own definition directly and the executable accesses a
stale copy. Note: the GOT relocations defeat the purpose of protected
visibility as an optimization, but allow rtld to make the executable and
library use the same copy when copy relocations are present, but it
turns out this never worked perfectly.
ELF_RTYPE_CLASS_EXTERN_PROTECTED_DATA has strange semantics when both
a.so and b.so define protected var and the executable copy relocates
var: b.so accesses its own copy even with GLOB_DAT. The behavior change
is from commit 62da1e3b00 (x86) and then
copied to nios2 (ae5eae7cfc) and arc
(0e7d930c4c).
Without ELF_RTYPE_CLASS_EXTERN_PROTECTED_DATA, b.so accesses the copy
relocated data like a.so.
There is now a warning for copy relocation on protected symbol since
commit 7374c02b68. It's extremely
unlikely anyone relies on the ELF_RTYPE_CLASS_EXTERN_PROTECTED_DATA
behavior, so let's remove it: this removes a check in the symbol lookup
code.
This has been missing since the the ifuncs where added.
The performance of SSE4.2 is preferable to to SSE2.
Measured on Tigerlake with N = 20 runs.
Geometric Mean of all benchmarks SSE4.2 / SSE2: 0.906
Move the setting of `rep_movsb_stop_threshold` to after the tunables
have been collected so that the `rep_movsb_stop_threshold` (which
is used to redirect control flow to the non_temporal case) will
use any user value for `non_temporal_threshold` (set using
glibc.cpu.x86_non_temporal_threshold)
Refine commit 349b0441da:
1. Copy relocations for extern protected data do not work properly,
regardless whether GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS is used.
It makes sense to produce a warning unconditionally.
2. Non-zero value of an undefined function symbol may break pointer
equality, but may be benign in many cases (many programs don't take the
address in the shared object then compare it with the address in the
executable). Reword the diagnostic to be clearer.
3. Remove the unneeded condition !(undef_map->l_1_needed &
GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS). If the executable does
not not have GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS (can only
occur in error cases), the diagnostic should be emitted as well.
When the defining shared object has
GNU_PROPERTY_1_NEEDED_INDIRECT_EXTERN_ACCESS, report an error to apply
the intended enforcement.
On s390x when compiling with GCC 12, I get this warning:
utf8-utf16-z9.c:
../iconv/loop.c: In function ‘__from_utf8_loop_etf3eh_single’:
../iconv/loop.c:445:22: error: writing 1 byte into a region of size 0 [-Werror=stringop-overflow=]
445 | bytebuf[inlen++] = *inptr++;
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~
../iconv/loop.c:381:17: note: at offset 4 into destination object ‘bytebuf’ of size 4
381 | unsigned char bytebuf[MAX_NEEDED_INPUT];
| ^~~~~~~
../iconv/loop.c:445:22: error: writing 1 byte into a region of size 0 [-Werror=stringop-overflow=]
445 | bytebuf[inlen++] = *inptr++;
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~
../iconv/loop.c:381:17: note: at offset 5 into destination object ‘bytebuf’ of size 4
381 | unsigned char bytebuf[MAX_NEEDED_INPUT];
| ^~~~~~~
This patch tells the compiler that inend is always behind inptr which
avoids the warning. Note that the SINGLE function is only used to
implement the mb*towc*() or wc*tomb*() functions. Those functions use
inptr and inend pointing to a variable on stack, compute the inend pointer
or explicitly check the arguments which always leads to inptr < inend.
Special notes for backporters (according to Siddhesh Poyarekar):
If someone wants to backport this patch to release branches, they should
also backport the following wcrtomb change. Otherwise the assumptions
assumed by this patch are not true.
commit 9bcd12d223
Author: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Date: Fri May 13 19:10:15 2022 +0530
wcrtomb: Make behavior POSIX compliant
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Add a proper bounds check to __libc_ifunc_impl_list. This makes MAX_IFUNC
redundant and fixes several targets that will write outside the array.
To avoid unnecessary large diffs, pass the maximum in the argument 'i' to
IFUNC_IMPL_ADD - 'max' can be used in new ifunc definitions and existing
ones can be updated if desired.
Passes buildmanyglibc.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Remove an unconditional RMW on flags2 in flockfile - we don't need to change
_IO_FLAGS2_NEED_LOCK since it isn't used in flockfile or funlockfile.
This fixes BZ #27842.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Optimizations are:
1. Reduce code size (-112 bytes).
2. Remove redundant move instructions.
3. Slightly improve instruction selection/scheduling where
possible.
4. Prefer registers which get short instruction encoding.
5. Reduce rodata size (-4k+ rodata is shared with avx2).
Result is roughly a 15-16% speedup:
Function, New Time, Old Time, New / Old
_ZGVbN4v_tanhf, 3.158, 3.749, 0.842
Optimizations are:
1. Reduce code size (-81 bytes).
2. Remove redundant move instructions.
3. Slightly improve instruction selection/scheduling where
possible.
4. Prefer registers which get short instruction encoding.
5. Reduce rodata size (-32 bytes).
Result is roughly a 17-18% speedup:
Function, New Time, Old Time, New / Old
_ZGVdN8v_tanhf, 1.977, 2.402, 0.823
tanhf-avx2 and tanhf-sse4 use the same data tables so we can save
over 4kb using a shared datatable. This does increase the memory
footprint of the sse4 version (as now all the targets are 32 bytes
instead of 16), generally it seems worth the code size save.
NB: This patch doesn't do anything itself, it is setup for future
patches.
Optimizations are:
1. Reduce code size (-67 bytes).
2. Remove redundant move instructions.
3. Slightly improve instruction selection/scheduling where
possible.
4. Reduce rodata usage (-448 bytes).
Result is roughly a 14% speedup:
Function, New Time, Old Time, New / Old
_ZGVeN16v_tanhf, 0.649, 0.752, 0.863
Improvements are:
1. Reduce code size (-62 bytes).
2. Remove redundant move instructions.
3. Slightly improve instruction selection/scheduling where
possible.
4. Prefer registers which get short instruction encoding.
5. Reduce rodata usage (-16 bytes).
The throughput improvement is not significant as the port 0 bottleneck
is unavoidable.
Function, New Time, Old Time, New / Old
_ZGVbN4v_atanhf, 8.821, 8.903, 0.991
Improvements are:
1. Reduce code size (-60 bytes).
2. Remove redundant move instructions.
3. Slightly improve instruction selection/scheduling where
possible.
4. Prefer registers which get short instruction encoding.
5. Shrink rodata usage (-32 bytes).
The throughput improvement is not that significant (3-5%) as the
port 0 bottleneck is unavoidable.
Function, New Time, Old Time, New / Old
_ZGVdN8v_atanhf, 2.799, 2.923, 0.958
Improvements are:
1. Reduce code size (-64 bytes).
2. Remove redundant move instructions.
3. Slightly improve instruction selection/scheduling where
possible.
4. Reduce rodata size ([-128, -188] bytes).
The throughput improvement is not significant as the port 0 bottleneck
is unavoidable.
Function, New Time, Old Time, New / Old
_ZGVeN16v_atanhf, 1.39, 1.408, 0.987
Skip the chroot test if the database isn't loaded
correctly (because the chroot test uses some
existing DB state).
The __stat64_time64 -> fstatat call can fail if
running under an (aggressive) seccomp filter,
like Firefox seems to use.
This manifested in a crash when using glib built
with FAM support with such a Firefox build.
Suggested-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
It's interesting if we have a null action list,
so an assert is worthwhile.
Suggested-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
commit 6dcbb7d95d
Author: Noah Goldstein <goldstein.w.n@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Jun 6 21:11:33 2022 -0700
x86: Shrink code size of memchr-avx2.S
Changed how the page cross case aligned string (rdi) in
rawmemchr. This was incompatible with how
`L(cross_page_continue)` expected the pointer to be aligned and
would cause rawmemchr to read data start started before the
beginning of the string. What it would read was in valid memory
but could count CHAR matches resulting in an incorrect return
value.
This commit fixes that issue by essentially reverting the changes to
the L(page_cross) case as they didn't really matter.
Test cases added and all pass with the new code (and where confirmed
to fail with the old code).
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Some nptl tests inadvertently use the host's gdb to verify
libthread_db.so, which is loaded with the host's runtime. This causes
a couple of test failures when the host glibc does not support DT_RELR.
The not correct, but simple, workaround is to build without DT_RELR
as this library is otherwise likely to load on glibc 2.17 and newer
today.
This allows tst-pthread-gdb-attach{,-static} to continue working
when testing on a gdb loaded with an older glibc.
This avoids a failure in tst-pthread-gdb-attach similar to:
Trying host libthread_db library: .../build/glibc/nptl_db/libthread_db.so.1.
dlopen failed: /lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_ABI_DT_RELR' not found (required by .../build/glibc/nptl_db/libthread_db.so.1).
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Give fall-through path to `vzeroupper` and taken-path to `vzeroall`.
Generally even on machines with RTM the expectation is the
string-library functions will not be called in transactions.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
This is not meant as a performance optimization. The previous code was
far to liberal in aligning targets and wasted code size unnecissarily.
The total code size saving is: 64 bytes
There are no non-negligible changes in the benchmarks.
Geometric Mean of all benchmarks New / Old: 1.000
Full xcheck passes on x86_64.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
This is not meant as a performance optimization. The previous code was
far to liberal in aligning targets and wasted code size unnecissarily.
The total code size saving is: 59 bytes
There are no major changes in the benchmarks.
Geometric Mean of all benchmarks New / Old: 0.967
Full xcheck passes on x86_64.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
The new code:
1. prioritizes smaller user-arg lengths more.
2. optimizes target placement more carefully
3. reuses logic more
4. fixes up various inefficiencies in the logic. The biggest
case here is the `lzcnt` logic for checking returns which
saves either a branch or multiple instructions.
The total code size saving is: 306 bytes
Geometric Mean of all benchmarks New / Old: 0.760
Regressions:
There are some regressions. Particularly where the length (user arg
length) is large but the position of the match char is near the
beginning of the string (in first VEC). This case has roughly a
10-20% regression.
This is because the new logic gives the hot path for immediate matches
to shorter lengths (the more common input). This case has roughly
a 15-45% speedup.
Full xcheck passes on x86_64.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
The new code:
1. prioritizes smaller user-arg lengths more.
2. optimizes target placement more carefully
3. reuses logic more
4. fixes up various inefficiencies in the logic. The biggest
case here is the `lzcnt` logic for checking returns which
saves either a branch or multiple instructions.
The total code size saving is: 263 bytes
Geometric Mean of all benchmarks New / Old: 0.755
Regressions:
There are some regressions. Particularly where the length (user arg
length) is large but the position of the match char is near the
beginning of the string (in first VEC). This case has roughly a
20% regression.
This is because the new logic gives the hot path for immediate matches
to shorter lengths (the more common input). This case has roughly
a 35% speedup.
Full xcheck passes on x86_64.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
The new code:
1. prioritizes smaller lengths more.
2. optimizes target placement more carefully.
3. reuses logic more.
4. fixes up various inefficiencies in the logic.
The total code size saving is: 394 bytes
Geometric Mean of all benchmarks New / Old: 0.874
Regressions:
1. The page cross case is now colder, especially re-entry from the
page cross case if a match is not found in the first VEC
(roughly 50%). My general opinion with this patch is this is
acceptable given the "coldness" of this case (less than 4%) and
generally performance improvement in the other far more common
cases.
2. There are some regressions 5-15% for medium/large user-arg
lengths that have a match in the first VEC. This is because the
logic was rewritten to optimize finds in the first VEC if the
user-arg length is shorter (where we see roughly 20-50%
performance improvements). It is not always the case this is a
regression. My intuition is some frontend quirk is partially
explaining the data although I haven't been able to find the
root cause.
Full xcheck passes on x86_64.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Add a second iteration for memrchr to set `pos` starting from the end
of the buffer.
Previously `pos` was only set relative to the beginning of the
buffer. This isn't really useful for memrchr because the beginning
of the search space is (buf + len).
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
The RTM vzeroupper mitigation has no way of replacing inline
vzeroupper not before a return.
This can be useful when hoisting a vzeroupper to save code size
for example:
```
L(foo):
cmpl %eax, %edx
jz L(bar)
tzcntl %eax, %eax
addq %rdi, %rax
VZEROUPPER_RETURN
L(bar):
xorl %eax, %eax
VZEROUPPER_RETURN
```
Can become:
```
L(foo):
COND_VZEROUPPER
cmpl %eax, %edx
jz L(bar)
tzcntl %eax, %eax
addq %rdi, %rax
ret
L(bar):
xorl %eax, %eax
ret
```
This code does not change any existing functionality.
There is no difference in the objdump of libc.so before and after this
patch.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
This patch does not touch any existing code and is only meant to be a
tool for future patches so that simple source files can more easily be
maintained to target multiple VEC classes.
There is no difference in the objdump of libc.so before and after this
patch.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
__strncpy_power9 initializes VR 18 with zeroes to be used throughout the
code, including when zero-padding the destination string. However, the
v18 reference was mistakenly being used for stxv and stxvl, which take a
VSX vector as operand. The code ended up using the uninitialized VSR 18
register by mistake.
Both occurrences have been changed to use the proper VSX number for VR 18
(i.e. VSR 50).
Tested on powerpc, powerpc64 and powerpc64le.
Signed-off-by: Kewen Lin <linkw@gcc.gnu.org>
Add an initial SVE memcpy implementation. Copies up to 32 bytes use SVE
vectors which improves the random memcpy benchmark significantly.
Cleanup the memcpy and memmove ifunc selectors.
Adding a 512-bit EVEX version of strstr. The algorithm works as follows:
(1) We spend a few cycles at the begining to peek into the needle. We
locate an edge in the needle (first occurance of 2 consequent distinct
characters) and also store the first 64-bytes into a zmm register.
(2) We search for the edge in the haystack by looking into one cache
line of the haystack at a time. This avoids having to read past a page
boundary which can cause a seg fault.
(3) If an edge is found in the haystack we first compare the first
64-bytes of the needle (already stored in a zmm register) before we
proceed with a full string compare performed byte by byte.
Benchmarking results: (old = strstr_sse2_unaligned, new = strstr_avx512)
Geometric mean of all benchmarks: new / old = 0.66
Difficult skiptable(0) : new / old = 0.02
Difficult skiptable(1) : new / old = 0.01
Difficult 2-way : new / old = 0.25
Difficult testing first 2 : new / old = 1.26
Difficult skiptable(0) : new / old = 0.05
Difficult skiptable(1) : new / old = 0.06
Difficult 2-way : new / old = 0.26
Difficult testing first 2 : new / old = 1.05
Difficult skiptable(0) : new / old = 0.42
Difficult skiptable(1) : new / old = 0.24
Difficult 2-way : new / old = 0.21
Difficult testing first 2 : new / old = 1.04
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>