Commit Graph

1570 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Samuel Thibault
7685630b98 mach: Fix passing -ffreestanding when checking for gnumach headers
8b8c768e3c ("Force use of -ffreestanding when checking for gnumach
headers") was passing -ffreestanding to CFLAGS only, but headers checks are
performed with the preprocessor, so we rather need to pass it to CPPFLAGS.
2022-12-19 02:34:55 +01:00
Flavio Cruz
8b8c768e3c Force use of -ffreestanding when checking for gnumach headers
Without this ./configure assumes that we are in a fully hosted
environment, which might not be the case. After this patch, we can rely on
the freestanding header files provided by GCC such as stdint.h.
Message-Id: <Y5+0V9osFc/zXMq0@mars>
2022-12-19 01:49:30 +01:00
Sergey Bugaev
8fb923ddc3 hurd: Make getrandom cache the server port
Previously, getrandom would, each time it's called, traverse the file
system to find /dev/urandom, fetch some random data from it, then throw
away that port. This is quite slow, while calls to getrandom are
genrally expected to be fast.

Additionally, this means that getrandom can not work when /dev/urandom
is unavailable, such as inside a chroot that lacks one. User programs
expect calls to getrandom to work inside a chroot if they first call
getrandom outside of the chroot.

In particular, this is known to break the OpenSSH server, and in that
case the issue is exacerbated by the API of arc4random, which prevents
it from properly reporting errors, forcing glibc to abort on failure.
This causes sshd to just die once it tries to generate a random number.

Caching the random server port, in a manner similar to how socket
server ports are cached, both improves the performance and works around
the chroot issue.

Tested on i686-gnu with the following program:

pthread_barrier_t barrier;

void *worker(void*) {
    pthread_barrier_wait(&barrier);
    uint32_t sum = 0;
    for (int i = 0; i < 10000; i++) {
        sum += arc4random();
    }
    return (void *)(uintptr_t) sum;
}

int main() {
    pthread_t threads[THREAD_COUNT];

    pthread_barrier_init(&barrier, NULL, THREAD_COUNT);

    for (int i = 0; i < THREAD_COUNT; i++) {
        pthread_create(&threads[i], NULL, worker, NULL);
    }
    for (int i = 0; i < THREAD_COUNT; i++) {
        void *retval;
        pthread_join(threads[i], &retval);
        printf("Thread %i: %lu\n", i, (unsigned long)(uintptr_t) retval);
    }

In my totally unscientific benchmark, with this patch, this completes
in about 7 seconds, whereas previously it took about 50 seconds. This
program was also used to test that getrandom () doesn't explode if the
random server dies, but instead reopens the /dev/urandom anew. I have
also verified that with this patch, OpenSSH can once again accept
connections properly.

Signed-off-by: Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com>
Message-Id: <20221202135558.23781-1-bugaevc@gmail.com>
2022-12-02 22:33:49 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
19934d629e hurd: Add sigtimedwait and sigwaitinfo support
This simply needed to add the timeout parameter to mach_msg, and copy
information from struct hurd_signal_detail.
2022-11-07 21:16:26 +01:00
Florian Weimer
1f34a23288 elf: Introduce <dl-call_tls_init_tp.h> and call_tls_init_tp (bug 29249)
This makes it more likely that the compiler can compute the strlen
argument in _startup_fatal at compile time, which is required to
avoid a dependency on strlen this early during process startup.

Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
2022-11-03 17:28:03 +01:00
Florian Weimer
ee1ada1bdb elf: Rework exception handling in the dynamic loader [BZ #25486]
The old exception handling implementation used function interposition
to replace the dynamic loader implementation (no TLS support) with the
libc implementation (TLS support).  This results in problems if the
link order between the dynamic loader and libc is reversed (bug 25486).

The new implementation moves the entire implementation of the
exception handling functions back into the dynamic loader, using
THREAD_GETMEM and THREAD_SETMEM for thread-local data support.
These depends on Hurd support for these macros, added in commit
b65a82e4e7 ("hurd: Add THREAD_GET/SETMEM/_NC").

One small obstacle is that the exception handling facilities are used
before the TCB has been set up, so a check is needed if the TCB is
available.  If not, a regular global variable is used to store the
exception handling information.

Also rename dl-error.c to dl-catch.c, to avoid confusion with the
dlerror function.

Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
2022-11-03 09:39:31 +01:00
Florian Weimer
58548b9d68 Use PTR_MANGLE and PTR_DEMANGLE unconditionally in C sources
In the future, this will result in a compilation failure if the
macros are unexpectedly undefined (due to header inclusion ordering
or header inclusion missing altogether).

Assembler sources are more difficult to convert.  In many cases,
they are hand-optimized for the mangling and no-mangling variants,
which is why they are not converted.

sysdeps/s390/s390-32/__longjmp.c and sysdeps/s390/s390-64/__longjmp.c
are special: These are C sources, but most of the implementation is
in assembler, so the PTR_DEMANGLE macro has to be undefined in some
cases, to match the assembler style.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella  <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2022-10-18 17:04:10 +02:00
Florian Weimer
88f4b6929c Introduce <pointer_guard.h>, extracted from <sysdep.h>
This allows us to define a generic no-op version of PTR_MANGLE and
PTR_DEMANGLE.  In the future, we can use PTR_MANGLE and PTR_DEMANGLE
unconditionally in C sources, avoiding an unintended loss of hardening
due to missing include files or unlucky header inclusion ordering.

In i386 and x86_64, we can avoid a <tls.h> dependency in the C
code by using the computed constant from <tcb-offsets.h>.  <sysdep.h>
no longer includes these definitions, so there is no cyclic dependency
anymore when computing the <tcb-offsets.h> constants.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella  <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2022-10-18 17:03:55 +02:00
Joseph Myers
a878a1384c Regenerate sysdeps/mach/hurd/bits/errno.h
This addition to the list of source headers in
sysdeps/mach/hurd/bits/errno.h appears in the source tree after
build-many-glibcs.py runs, I'm guessing resulting from gnumach commit
c566ad85a2d6728ebc8ec0f461a3b35df300e96e.
2022-10-05 19:21:25 +00:00
Adhemerval Zanella
609c9d0951 malloc: Do not clobber errno on __getrandom_nocancel (BZ #29624)
Use INTERNAL_SYSCALL_CALL instead of INLINE_SYSCALL_CALL.  This
requires emulate the semantic for hurd call (so __arc4random_buf
uses the fallback).

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.

Reviewed-by: Wilco Dijkstra  <Wilco.Dijkstra@arm.com>
2022-09-30 15:25:15 -03:00
Samuel Thibault
d7f32c9958 hurd: Fix typo 2022-09-28 19:21:44 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
7de3f0a96c hurd: Increase SOMAXCONN to 4096
Notably fakeroot-tcp may introduce a lot of parallel connections.
2022-09-27 23:37:42 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
385f2ecda9 hurd: Fix SIOCADD/DELRT ioctls
The hurd network stack uses struct ifrtreq rather than ortentry.
2022-09-21 19:58:44 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
b84199eb18 hurd: Drop struct rtentry and in6_rtmsg
These were cargo-culted, they are not used at all in Hurd interfaces.
2022-09-21 19:58:44 +02:00
Damien Zammit
9ba0f010a6 hurd: Add _IOT_ifrtreq to <net/route.h>
So that we can use struct ifrtreq in ioctls.
2022-09-21 19:58:44 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
c0c9092f75 hurd: Use IF_NAMESIZE rather than IFNAMSIZ
The latter is not available without __USE_MISC.
2022-09-21 08:51:50 +02:00
Damien Zammit
ffd0b295d9 hurd: Add ifrtreq structure to net/route.h
As used by the hurdish route ioctls.
2022-09-21 00:42:13 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
7ae60af75b hurd: Factorize at/non-at functions
Non-at functions can be implemented by just calling the corresponding at
function with AT_FDCWD and zero at_flags.

In the linkat case, the at behavior is different (O_NOLINK), so this introduces
__linkat_common to pass O_NOLINK as appropriate.

lstat functions can also be implemented with fstatat by adding
__fstatat64_common which takes a flags parameter in addition to the at_flags
parameter,

In the end this factorizes chmod, chown, link, lstat64, mkdir, readlink,
rename, stat64, symlink, unlink, utimes.

This also makes __lstat, __lxstat64, __stat and __xstat64 directly use
__fstatat64_common instead of __lstat64 or __stat64.
2022-09-17 19:58:30 +00:00
Samuel Thibault
5652e12cce hurd: Make readlink* just reopen the file used for stat
9e5c991106 ("hurd: Fix readlink() hanging on fifo") separated opening
the file for the stat call from opening the file for the read call. That
however opened a small window for the file to change. Better make this
atomic by reopening the file with O_READ.
2022-09-15 21:53:57 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
9e5c991106 hurd: Fix readlink() hanging on fifo
readlink() opens the target with O_READ to be able to read the symlink
content. When the target is actually a fifo, that would hang waiting for a
writer (caught in the coreutils testsuite). We thus have to first lookup the
target without O_READ to perform io_stat and lookout for fifos, and only
after checking the symlink type, we can re-lookup with O_READ.
2022-09-14 18:57:44 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
063f7462da hurd: Fix vm_size_t incoherencies
In gnumach, 3e1702a65fb3 ("add rpc_versions for vm types") changed the type
of vm_size_t, making it always a unsigned long. This made it incompatible on
x86 with size_t. Even if we may want to revert it to unsigned int, it's
better to fix the types of parameters according to the .defs files.
2022-08-29 01:42:47 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
cb033e6b0c mach: Make xpg_strerror_r set a message on error
posix advises to have strerror_r fill a message even when we are returning
an error.

This makes mach's xpg_strerror_r do this, like the generic version does.

Spotted by the libunistring testsuite test-strerror_r
2022-08-27 14:56:35 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
03ad444e8e mach: Fix incoherency between perror and strerror
08d2024b41 ("string: Simplify strerror_r") inadvertently made
__strerror_r print unknown error system in decimal while the original
code was printing it in hexadecimal. perror was kept printing in
hexadecimal in 725eeb4af1 ("string: Use tls-internal on strerror_l"),
let us keep both coherent.

This also fixes a duplicate ':'

Spotted by the libunistring testsuite test-perror2
2022-08-27 14:36:18 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
af6b1cce98 hurd: Fix starting static binaries with stack protection enabled
gcc introduces gs:0x14 accesses in most functions, so we need some tcbhead
to be ready very early during initialization.  This configures a static area
which can be referenced by various protected functions, until proper TLS is
set up.
2022-08-22 22:34:31 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
4565083abc htl: Make pthread*_cond_timedwait register wref before releasing mutex
Otherwise another thread could be rightly trying to destroy the condition,
see e.g. tst-cond20.
2022-08-22 22:27:24 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
8bf0bc8350 htl: make __pthread_hurd_cond_timedwait_internal check mutex is held
Like __pthread_cond_timedwait_internal already does.
2022-08-22 22:25:27 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
f7b0fc5cc6 hurd: Assume non-suid during bootstrap
We do not have a hurd data block only when bootstrapping the system, in
which case we don't have a notion of suid yet anyway.

This is needed, otherwise init_standard_fds would check that standard
file descriptors are allocated, which is meaningless during bootstrap.
2022-08-19 02:26:21 +02:00
Arjun Shankar
9c443ac455 socket: Check lengths before advancing pointer in CMSG_NXTHDR
The inline and library functions that the CMSG_NXTHDR macro may expand
to increment the pointer to the header before checking the stride of
the increment against available space.  Since C only allows incrementing
pointers to one past the end of an array, the increment must be done
after a length check.  This commit fixes that and includes a regression
test for CMSG_FIRSTHDR and CMSG_NXTHDR.

The Linux, Hurd, and generic headers are all changed.

Tested on Linux on armv7hl, i686, x86_64, aarch64, ppc64le, and s390x.

[BZ #28846]

Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
2022-08-02 11:10:25 +02:00
Jason A. Donenfeld
eaad4f9e8f arc4random: simplify design for better safety
Rather than buffering 16 MiB of entropy in userspace (by way of
chacha20), simply call getrandom() every time.

This approach is doubtlessly slower, for now, but trying to prematurely
optimize arc4random appears to be leading toward all sorts of nasty
properties and gotchas. Instead, this patch takes a much more
conservative approach. The interface is added as a basic loop wrapper
around getrandom(), and then later, the kernel and libc together can
work together on optimizing that.

This prevents numerous issues in which userspace is unaware of when it
really must throw away its buffer, since we avoid buffering all
together. Future improvements may include userspace learning more from
the kernel about when to do that, which might make these sorts of
chacha20-based optimizations more possible. The current heuristic of 16
MiB is meaningless garbage that doesn't correspond to anything the
kernel might know about. So for now, let's just do something
conservative that we know is correct and won't lead to cryptographic
issues for users of this function.

This patch might be considered along the lines of, "optimization is the
root of all evil," in that the much more complex implementation it
replaces moves too fast without considering security implications,
whereas the incremental approach done here is a much safer way of going
about things. Once this lands, we can take our time in optimizing this
properly using new interplay between the kernel and userspace.

getrandom(0) is used, since that's the one that ensures the bytes
returned are cryptographically secure. But on systems without it, we
fallback to using /dev/urandom. This is unfortunate because it means
opening a file descriptor, but there's not much of a choice. Secondly,
as part of the fallback, in order to get more or less the same
properties of getrandom(0), we poll on /dev/random, and if the poll
succeeds at least once, then we assume the RNG is initialized. This is a
rough approximation, as the ancient "non-blocking pool" initialized
after the "blocking pool", not before, and it may not port back to all
ancient kernels, though it does to all kernels supported by glibc
(≥3.2), so generally it's the best approximation we can do.

The motivation for including arc4random, in the first place, is to have
source-level compatibility with existing code. That means this patch
doesn't attempt to litigate the interface itself. It does, however,
choose a conservative approach for implementing it.

Cc: Adhemerval Zanella Netto <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Cc: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Cc: Cristian Rodríguez <crrodriguez@opensuse.org>
Cc: Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu>
Cc: Mark Harris <mark.hsj@gmail.com>
Cc: Eric Biggers <ebiggers@kernel.org>
Cc: linux-crypto@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Jason A. Donenfeld <Jason@zx2c4.com>

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella  <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2022-07-27 08:58:27 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella Netto
6f4e0fcfa2 stdlib: Add arc4random, arc4random_buf, and arc4random_uniform (BZ #4417)
The implementation is based on scalar Chacha20 with per-thread cache.
It uses getrandom or /dev/urandom as fallback to get the initial entropy,
and reseeds the internal state on every 16MB of consumed buffer.

To improve performance and lower memory consumption the per-thread cache
is allocated lazily on first arc4random functions call, and if the
memory allocation fails getentropy or /dev/urandom is used as fallback.
The cache is also cleared on thread exit iff it was initialized (so if
arc4random is not called it is not touched).

Although it is lock-free, arc4random is still not async-signal-safe
(the per thread state is not updated atomically).

The ChaCha20 implementation is based on RFC8439 [1], omitting the final
XOR of the keystream with the plaintext because the plaintext is a
stream of zeros.  This strategy is similar to what OpenBSD arc4random
does.

The arc4random_uniform is based on previous work by Florian Weimer,
where the algorithm is based on Jérémie Lumbroso paper Optimal Discrete
Uniform Generation from Coin Flips, and Applications (2013) [2], who
credits Donald E. Knuth and Andrew C. Yao, The complexity of nonuniform
random number generation (1976), for solving the general case.

The main advantage of this method is the that the unit of randomness is not
the uniform random variable (uint32_t), but a random bit.  It optimizes the
internal buffer sampling by initially consuming a 32-bit random variable
and then sampling byte per byte.  Depending of the upper bound requested,
it might lead to better CPU utilization.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, aarch64-linux, and powerpc64le-linux-gnu.

Co-authored-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Yann Droneaud <ydroneaud@opteya.com>

[1] https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8439
[2] https://arxiv.org/pdf/1304.1916.pdf
2022-07-22 11:58:27 -03:00
Tom Honermann
8bcca1db3d stdlib: Implement mbrtoc8, c8rtomb, and the char8_t typedef.
This change provides implementations for the mbrtoc8 and c8rtomb
functions adopted for C++20 via WG21 P0482R6 and for C2X via WG14
N2653.  It also provides the char8_t typedef from WG14 N2653.

The mbrtoc8 and c8rtomb functions are declared in uchar.h in C2X
mode or when the _GNU_SOURCE macro or C++20 __cpp_char8_t feature
test macro is defined.

The char8_t typedef is declared in uchar.h in C2X mode or when the
_GNU_SOURCE macro is defined and the C++20 __cpp_char8_t feature
test macro is not defined (if __cpp_char8_t is defined, then char8_t
is a builtin type).

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella  <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2022-07-06 09:29:42 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
81e7fdd7cc elf: Remove _dl_skip_args
Now that no architecture uses it anymore.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2022-05-30 16:33:54 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
b3528b0048 linux: Add P_PIDFD
It was added on Linux 5.4 (3695eae5fee0605f316fbaad0b9e3de791d7dfaf)
to extend waitid to wait on pidfd.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2022-05-17 10:34:36 -03:00
Szabolcs Nagy
ad43cac44a rtld: Use generic argv adjustment in ld.so [BZ #23293]
When an executable is invoked as

  ./ld.so [ld.so-args] ./exe [exe-args]

then the argv is adujusted in ld.so before calling the entry point of
the executable so ld.so args are not visible to it.  On most targets
this requires moving argv, env and auxv on the stack to ensure correct
stack alignment at the entry point.  This had several issues:

- The code for this adjustment on the stack is written in asm as part
  of the target specific ld.so _start code which is hard to maintain.

- The adjustment is done after _dl_start returns, where it's too late
  to update GLRO(dl_auxv), as it is already readonly, so it points to
  memory that was clobbered by the adjustment. This is bug 23293.

- _environ is also wrong in ld.so after the adjustment, but it is
  likely not used after _dl_start returns so this is not user visible.

- _dl_argv was updated, but for this it was moved out of relro, which
  changes security properties across targets unnecessarily.

This patch introduces a generic _dl_start_args_adjust function that
handles the argument adjustments after ld.so processed its own args
and before relro protection is applied.

The same algorithm is used on all targets, _dl_skip_args is now 0, so
existing target specific adjustment code is no longer used.  The bug
affects aarch64, alpha, arc, arm, csky, ia64, nios2, s390-32 and sparc,
other targets don't need the change in principle, only for consistency.

The GNU Hurd start code relied on _dl_skip_args after dl_main returned,
now it checks directly if args were adjusted and fixes the Hurd startup
data accordingly.

Follow up patches can remove _dl_skip_args and DL_ARGV_NOT_RELRO.

Tested on aarch64-linux-gnu and cross tested on i686-gnu.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella  <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2022-05-17 10:14:03 +01:00
Adhemerval Zanella
6fad891dfd stdio: Remove the usage of $(fno-unit-at-a-time) for siglist.c
The siglist.c is built with -fno-toplevel-reorder to avoid compiler
to reorder the compat assembly directives due an assembler
issue [1] (fixed on 2.39).

This patch removes the compiler flags by split the compat symbol
generation in two phases.  First the __sys_siglist and __sys_sigabbrev
without any compat symbol directive is preprocessed to generate an
assembly source code.  This generate assembly is then used as input
on a platform agnostic siglist.S which then creates the compat
definitions.  This prevents compiler to move any compat directive
prior the _sys_errlist definition itself.

Checked on a make check run-built-tests=no on all affected ABIs.

Reviewed-by: Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
2022-05-13 10:54:41 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
900fa25736 stdio: Remove the usage of $(fno-unit-at-a-time) for errlist.c
The errlist.c is built with -fno-toplevel-reorder to avoid compiler to
reorder the compat assembly directives due an assembler issue [1]
(fixed on 2.39).

This patch removes the compiler flags by split the compat symbol
generation in two phases.  First the _sys_errlist_internal internal
without any compat symbol directive is preprocessed to generate an
assembly source code.  This generate assembly is then used as input
on a platform agnostic errlist-data.S which then creates the compat
definitions.  This prevents compiler to move any compat directive
prior the _sys_errlist_internal definition itself.

Checked on a make check run-built-tests=no on all affected ABIs.

[1] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29012
2022-05-13 10:54:41 -03:00
Samuel Thibault
eff158b75d hurd spawni: Fix reauthenticating closed fds
When an fd is closed, the port cell remains, but the port becomes
MACH_PORT_NULL, so we have to guard against it.
2022-05-05 02:14:43 +02:00
Fangrui Song
3e9acce8c5 elf: Remove __libc_init_secure
After 73fc4e28b9,
__libc_enable_secure_decided is always 0 and a statically linked
executable may overwrite __libc_enable_secure without considering
AT_SECURE.

The __libc_enable_secure has been correctly initialized in _dl_aux_init,
so just remove __libc_enable_secure_decided and __libc_init_secure.
This allows us to remove some startup_get*id functions from
22b79ed7f4.

Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
2022-04-19 15:52:27 -07:00
Adhemerval Zanella
592b6d00aa stdio: Split __get_errname definition from errlist.c
The loader does not need to pull all __get_errlist definitions
and its size is decreased:

Before:
$ size elf/ld.so
   text    data     bss     dec     hex filename
 197774   11024     456  209254   33166 elf/ld.so

After:
$ size elf/ld.so
   text    data     bss     dec     hex filename
 191510    9936     456  201902   314ae elf/ld.so

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
2022-04-15 09:37:57 -03:00
Samuel Thibault
45a8e05785 hurd: Define ELIBEXEC
So we can implement it in the exec server.
2022-04-12 22:16:40 +02:00
Adhemerval Zanella
6289d28d3c posix: Replace posix_spawnattr_tc{get,set}pgrp_np with posix_spawn_file_actions_addtcsetpgrp_np
The posix_spawnattr_tcsetpgrp_np works on a file descriptor (the
controlling terminal), so it would make more sense to actually fit
it on the file actions API.

Also, POSIX_SPAWN_TCSETPGROUP is not really required since it is
implicit by the presence of tcsetpgrp file action.

The posix/tst-spawn6.c is also fixed when TTY can is not present.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2022-02-02 08:34:16 -03:00
Samuel Thibault
355bc7f736 SET_RELHOOK: merge i386 and x86_64, and move to sysdeps/mach/hurd/x86
It is not Hurd-specific, but H.J. Lu wants it there.

Also, dc.a can be used to avoid hardcoding .long vs .quad and thus use
the same implementation for i386 and x86_64.
2022-02-01 20:08:25 +00:00
Florian Weimer
af121ae3e7 Fix glibc 2.34 ABI omission (missing GLIBC_2.34 in dynamic loader)
The glibc 2.34 release really should have added a GLIBC_2.34
symbol to the dynamic loader. With it, we could move functions such
as dlopen or pthread_key_create that work on process-global state
into the dynamic loader (once we have fixed a longstanding issue
with static linking).  Without the GLIBC_2.34 symbol, yet another
new symbol version would be needed because old glibc will fail to
load binaries due to the missing symbol version in ld.so that newly
linked programs will require.

Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
2022-01-27 18:52:05 +01:00
Adhemerval Zanella
604814121d hurd: Add posix_spawnattr_tc{get,set}pgrp_np on libc.abilist
Commit 342cc934a3 missed the update-abi for the ABI.
2022-01-26 16:22:54 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
342cc934a3 posix: Add terminal control setting support for posix_spawn
Currently there is no proper way to set the controlling terminal through
posix_spawn in race free manner [1].  This forces shell implementations
to keep using fork+exec when launching background process groups,
even when using posix_spawn yields better performance.

This patch adds a new GNU extension so the creating process can
configure the created process terminal group.  This is done with a new
flag, POSIX_SPAWN_TCSETPGROUP, along with two new attribute functions:
posix_spawnattr_tcsetpgrp_np, and posix_spawnattr_tcgetpgrp_np.
The function sets a new attribute, spawn-tcgroupfd, that references to
the controlling terminal.

The controlling terminal is set after the spawn-pgroup attribute, and
uses the spawn-tcgroupfd along with current creating process group
(so it is composable with POSIX_SPAWN_SETPGROUP).

To create a process and set the controlling terminal, one can use the
following sequence:

    posix_spawnattr_t attr;
    posix_spawnattr_init (&attr);
    posix_spawnattr_setflags (&attr, POSIX_SPAWN_TCSETPGROUP);
    posix_spawnattr_tcsetpgrp_np (&attr, tcfd);

If the idea is also to create a new process groups:

    posix_spawnattr_t attr;
    posix_spawnattr_init (&attr);
    posix_spawnattr_setflags (&attr, POSIX_SPAWN_TCSETPGROUP
				     | POSIX_SPAWN_SETPGROUP);
    posix_spawnattr_tcsetpgrp_np (&attr, tcfd);
    posix_spawnattr_setpgroup (&attr, 0);

The controlling terminal file descriptor is ignored if the new flag is
not set.

This interface is slight different than the one provided by QNX [2],
which only provides the POSIX_SPAWN_TCSETPGROUP flag.  The QNX
documentation does not specify how the controlling terminal is obtained
nor how it iteracts with POSIX_SPAWN_SETPGROUP.  Since a glibc
implementation is library based, it is more straightforward and avoid
requires additional file descriptor operations to request the caller
to setup the controlling terminal file descriptor (and it also allows
a bit less error handling by posix_spawn).

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.

[1] https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/issues/79
[2] https://www.qnx.com/developers/docs/7.0.0/index.html#com.qnx.doc.neutrino.lib_ref/topic/p/posix_spawn.html

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2022-01-25 14:07:53 -03:00
Samuel Thibault
8c86ba4463 htl: Fix cleaning the reply port
If any RPC fails, the reply port will already be deallocated.
__pthread_thread_terminate thus has to defer taking its name until the very last
__thread_terminate_release which doesn't reply a message.  But then we
have to read from the pthread structure.

This introduces __pthread_dealloc_finish() which does the recording of
the thread termination, so the slot can be reused really only just before
the __thread_terminate_release call. Only the real thread can set it, so
let's decouple this from the pthread_state by just removing the
PTHREAD_TERMINATED state and add a terminated field.
2022-01-22 02:17:19 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
41a11a5e83 hurd: optimize exec cleanup
When ports are nul we do not need to request their deallocation. It is
also useless to look for them in portnames.
2022-01-16 00:02:16 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
54dda2cdba hurd: Add __rtld_execve
It trivially execs with the same dtable, portarray and intarray, and only
has to take care of deallocating / destroying ports (file, notably).
2022-01-15 23:42:35 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
1bd7a06a95 htl: Hide __pthread_attr's __schedparam type [BZ #23088]
The content of the structure is only used internally, so we can make
__pthread_attr_getschedparam and __pthread_attr_setschedparam convert
between the public sched_param type and an internal __sched_param.

This allows to avoid to spuriously expose the sched_param type.

This fixes BZ #23088.
2022-01-15 21:31:08 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
c1105e34ac htl: Clear kernel_thread field before releasing the thread structure
Otherwise this is a use-after-free.
2022-01-15 21:31:08 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
2c040d0b90 hurd: Fix pthread_kill on exiting/ted thread
We have to drop the kernel_thread port from the thread structure, to
avoid pthread_kill's call to _hurd_thread_sigstate trying to reference
it and fail.
2022-01-15 15:11:54 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
dfb204d87f [hurd] Drop spurious #ifdef SHARED
The whole file is already #ifdef SHARED
2022-01-15 14:23:37 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
f05faf5f22 [hurd] Call _dl_sort_maps_init in _dl_sysdep_start
This follows 15a0c5730d ("elf: Fix slow DSO sorting behavior in
dynamic loader (BZ #17645)").
2022-01-15 14:21:53 +01:00
Paul Eggert
581c785bf3 Update copyright dates with scripts/update-copyrights
I used these shell commands:

../glibc/scripts/update-copyrights $PWD/../gnulib/build-aux/update-copyright
(cd ../glibc && git commit -am"[this commit message]")

and then ignored the output, which consisted lines saying "FOO: warning:
copyright statement not found" for each of 7061 files FOO.

I then removed trailing white space from math/tgmath.h,
support/tst-support-open-dev-null-range.c, and
sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/strlen-vec.S, to work around the following
obscure pre-commit check failure diagnostics from Savannah.  I don't
know why I run into these diagnostics whereas others evidently do not.

remote: *** 912-#endif
remote: *** 913:
remote: *** 914-
remote: *** error: lines with trailing whitespace found
...
remote: *** error: sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/statx_cp.c: trailing lines
2022-01-01 11:40:24 -08:00
Samuel Thibault
edb5ab841a hurd: Use __trivfs_server_name instead of trivfs_server_name
The latter violates namespace contraints
2022-01-01 17:51:18 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
35cf8a85ed hurd: Bump BRK_START to 0x20000000
By nowadays uses, 256MiB is not that large for the program+libraries.
Let's push the heap further to leave room for e.g. clang.
2021-12-31 18:25:49 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
8c0727af63 hurd: Avoid overzealous shared objects constraints
407765e9f2 ("hurd: Fix ELF_MACHINE_USER_ADDRESS_MASK value") switched
ELF_MACHINE_USER_ADDRESS_MASK from 0xf8000000UL to 0xf0000000UL to let
libraries etc. get loaded at 0x08000000. But
ELF_MACHINE_USER_ADDRESS_MASK is actually only meaningful for the main
program anyway, so keep it at 0xf8000000UL to prevent the program loader
from putting ld.so beyond 0x08000000. And conversely, drop the use of
ELF_MACHINE_USER_ADDRESS_MASK for shared objects, which don't need any
constraints since the program will have already be loaded by then.
2021-12-31 18:22:46 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
33e8e95cbd hurd: Make getrandom a stub inside the random translator
glibc uses /dev/urandom for getrandom(), and from version 2.34 malloc
initialization uses it. We have to detect when we are running the random
translator itself, in which case we can't read ourself.
2021-12-31 08:54:41 +01:00
Florian Weimer
5d28a8962d elf: Add _dl_find_object function
It can be used to speed up the libgcc unwinder, and the internal
_dl_find_dso_for_object function (which is used for caller
identification in dlopen and related functions, and in dladdr).

_dl_find_object is in the internal namespace due to bug 28503.
If libgcc switches to _dl_find_object, this namespace issue will
be fixed.  It is located in libc for two reasons: it is necessary
to forward the call to the static libc after static dlopen, and
there is a link ordering issue with -static-libgcc and libgcc_eh.a
because libc.so is not a linker script that includes ld.so in the
glibc build tree (so that GCC's internal -lc after libgcc_eh.a does
not pick up ld.so).

It is necessary to do the i386 customization in the
sysdeps/x86/bits/dl_find_object.h header shared with x86-64 because
otherwise, multilib installations are broken.

The implementation uses software transactional memory, as suggested
by Torvald Riegel.  Two copies of the supporting data structures are
used, also achieving full async-signal-safety.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella  <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2021-12-28 22:52:56 +01:00
Adhemerval Zanella
83b8d5027d malloc: Remove memusage.h
And use machine-sp.h instead.  The Linux implementation is based on
already provided CURRENT_STACK_FRAME (used on nptl code) and
STACK_GROWS_UPWARD is replaced with _STACK_GROWS_UP.
2021-12-28 14:57:57 -03:00
Samuel Thibault
ae49f218da hurd: Fix static-PIE startup
hurd initialization stages use RUN_HOOK to run various initialization
functions.  That is however using absolute addresses which need to be
relocated, which is done later by csu.  We can however easily make the
linker compute relative addresses which thus don't need a relocation.
The new SET_RELHOOK and RUN_RELHOOK macros implement this.
2021-12-28 10:28:22 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
2ce0481d26 hurd: let csu initialize tls
Since 9cec82de71 ("htl: Initialize later"), we let csu initialize
pthreads. We can thus let it initialize tls later too, to better align
with the generic order.  Initialization however accesses ports which
links/unlinks into the sigstate for unwinding.  We can however easily
skip that during initialization.
2021-12-28 10:15:52 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
7b358de1af hurd: Fix XFAIL-ing mallocfork2 tests
They are using setpshared but are outside the htl directory.
2021-12-27 22:21:08 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
1c6e6e52e5 hurd: XFAIL more tests that require setpshared support 2021-12-27 22:15:43 +01:00
Adhemerval Zanella
a4b4131355 Set default __TIMESIZE default to 64
This is expected size for newer ABIs.
2021-12-23 11:41:08 -03:00
Samuel Thibault
ec06717856 hurd: Do not set PIE_UNSUPPORTED
This is now supported.
2021-12-14 08:38:05 +01:00
Adhemerval Zanella
104d2005d5 math: Remove the error handling wrapper from hypot and hypotf
The error handling is moved to sysdeps/ieee754 version with no SVID
support.  The compatibility symbol versions still use the wrapper with
SVID error handling around the new code.  There is no new symbol version
nor compatibility code on !LIBM_SVID_COMPAT targets (e.g. riscv).

Only ia64 is unchanged, since it still uses the arch specific
__libm_error_region on its implementation.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, and aarch64-linux-gnu.
2021-12-13 10:08:46 -03:00
Siddhesh Poyarekar
23645707f1 Replace --enable-static-pie with --disable-default-pie
Build glibc programs and tests as PIE by default and enable static-pie
automatically if the architecture and toolchain supports it.

Also add a new configuration option --disable-default-pie to prevent
building programs as PIE.

Only the following architectures now have PIE disabled by default
because they do not work at the moment.  hppa, ia64, alpha and csky
don't work because the linker is unable to handle a pcrel relocation
generated from PIE objects.  The microblaze compiler is currently
failing with an ICE.  GNU hurd tries to enable static-pie, which does
not work and hence fails.  All these targets have default PIE disabled
at the moment and I have left it to the target maintainers to enable PIE
on their targets.

build-many-glibcs runs clean for all targets.  I also tested x86_64 on
Fedora and Ubuntu, to verify that the default build as well as
--disable-default-pie work as expected with both system toolchains.

Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2021-12-13 08:08:59 +05:30
Samuel Thibault
556a6126f8 hurd: Add rules for static PIE build
This fixes [BZ #28671].
2021-12-12 00:42:13 +01:00
Samuel Thibault
26803075e4 hurd: Fix gmon-static
We need to use crt0 for gmon-static too.
2021-12-12 00:42:12 +01:00
Florian Weimer
627f5ede70 Remove TLS_TCB_ALIGN and TLS_INIT_TCB_ALIGN
TLS_INIT_TCB_ALIGN is not actually used.  TLS_TCB_ALIGN was likely
introduced to support a configuration where the thread pointer
has not the same alignment as THREAD_SELF.  Only ia64 seems to use
that, but for the stack/pointer guard, not for storing tcbhead_t.
Some ports use TLS_TCB_OFFSET and TLS_PRE_TCB_SIZE to shift
the thread pointer, potentially landing in a different residue class
modulo the alignment, but the changes should not impact that.

In general, given that TLS variables have their own alignment
requirements, having different alignment for the (unshifted) thread
pointer and struct pthread would potentially result in dynamic
offsets, leading to more complexity.

hppa had different values before: __alignof__ (tcbhead_t), which
seems to be 4, and __alignof__ (struct pthread), which was 8
(old default) and is now 32.  However, it defines THREAD_SELF as:

/* Return the thread descriptor for the current thread.  */
# define THREAD_SELF \
  ({ struct pthread *__self;			\
	__self = __get_cr27();			\
	__self - 1;				\
   })

So the thread pointer points after struct pthread (hence __self - 1),
and they have to have the same alignment on hppa as well.

Similarly, on ia64, the definitions were different.  We have:

# define TLS_PRE_TCB_SIZE \
  (sizeof (struct pthread)						\
   + (PTHREAD_STRUCT_END_PADDING < 2 * sizeof (uintptr_t)		\
      ? ((2 * sizeof (uintptr_t) + __alignof__ (struct pthread) - 1)	\
	 & ~(__alignof__ (struct pthread) - 1))				\
      : 0))
# define THREAD_SELF \
  ((struct pthread *) ((char *) __thread_self - TLS_PRE_TCB_SIZE))

And TLS_PRE_TCB_SIZE is a multiple of the struct pthread alignment
(confirmed by the new _Static_assert in sysdeps/ia64/libc-tls.c).

On m68k, we have a larger gap between tcbhead_t and struct pthread.
But as far as I can tell, the port is fine with that.  The definition
of TCB_OFFSET is sufficient to handle the shifted TCB scenario.

This fixes commit 23c77f6018
("nptl: Increase default TCB alignment to 32").

Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
2021-12-09 23:47:49 +01:00
Adhemerval Zanella
456b3c08b6 io: Refactor close_range and closefrom
Now that Hurd implementis both close_range and closefrom (f2c996597d),
we can make close_range() a base ABI, and make the default closefrom()
implementation on top of close_range().

The generic closefrom() implementation based on __getdtablesize() is
moved to generic close_range().  On Linux it will be overriden by
the auto-generation syscall while on Hurd it will be a system specific
implementation.

The closefrom() now calls close_range() and __closefrom_fallback().
Since on Hurd close_range() does not fail, __closefrom_fallback() is an
empty static inline function set by__ASSUME_CLOSE_RANGE.

The __ASSUME_CLOSE_RANGE also allows optimize Linux
__closefrom_fallback() implementation when --enable-kernel=5.9 or
higher is used.

Finally the Linux specific tst-close_range.c is moved to io and
enabled as default.  The Linuxism and CLOSE_RANGE_UNSHARE are
guarded so it can be built for Hurd (I have not actually test it).

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, and with a i686-gnu
build.
2021-11-24 09:09:37 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
bc801b3a40 setjmp: Replace jmp_buf-macros.h with jmp_buf-macros.sym
It requires less boilerplate code for newer ports.  The _Static_assert
checks from internal setjmp are moved to its own internal test since
setjmp.h is included early by multiple headers (to generate
rtld-sizes.sym).

The riscv jmp_buf-macros.h check is also redundant, it is already
done by riscv configure.ac.

Checked with a build for the affected architectures.
2021-11-22 13:43:22 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
824dd3ec49 Fix build a chec failures after b05fae4d8e
The include cleanup on dl-minimal.c removed too much for some
targets.

Also for Hurd, __sbrk is removed from localplt.data now that
tunables allocated memory through mmap.

Checked with a build for all affected architectures.
2021-11-09 23:21:22 -03:00
Samuel Thibault
d41985b71e hurd: Remove unused __libc_close_range
That was just cargo-culted.
2021-11-07 16:23:51 +01:00
Sergey Bugaev
f2c996597d hurd: Implement close_range and closefrom
The close_range () function implements the same API as the Linux and
FreeBSD syscalls. It operates atomically and reliably. The specified
upper bound is clamped to the actual size of the file descriptor table;
it is expected that the most common use case is with last = UINT_MAX.

Like in the Linux syscall, it is also possible to pass the
CLOSE_RANGE_CLOEXEC flag to mark the file descriptors in the range
cloexec instead of acually closing them.

Also, add a Hurd version of the closefrom () function. Since unlike on
Linux, close_range () cannot fail due to being unuspported by the
running kernel, a fallback implementation is never necessary.

Signed-off-by: Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com>
Message-Id: <20211106153524.82700-1-bugaevc@gmail.com>
2021-11-07 16:16:11 +01:00
Noah Goldstein
44829b3ddb String: Add support for __memcmpeq() ABI on all targets
No bug.

This commit adds support for __memcmpeq() as a new ABI for all
targets. In this commit __memcmpeq() is implemented only as an alias
to the corresponding targets memcmp() implementation. __memcmpeq() is
added as a new symbol starting with GLIBC_2.35 and defined in string.h
with comments explaining its behavior. Basic tests that it is callable
and works where added in string/tester.c

As discussed in the proposal "Add new ABI '__memcmpeq()' to libc"
__memcmpeq() is essentially a reserved namespace for bcmp(). The means
is shares the same specifications as memcmp() except the return value
for non-equal byte sequences is any non-zero value. This is less
strict than memcmp()'s return value specification and can be better
optimized when a boolean return is all that is needed.

__memcmpeq() is meant to only be called by compilers if they can prove
that the return value of a memcmp() call is only used for its boolean
value.

All tests in string/tester.c passed. As well build succeeds on
x86_64-linux-gnu target.
2021-10-26 16:51:29 -05:00
Samuel Thibault
1d3decee99 hurd if_index: Explicitly use AF_INET for if index discovery
5bf07e1b3a ("Linux: Simplify __opensock and fix race condition [BZ #28353]")
made __opensock try NETLINK then UNIX then INET. On the Hurd, only INET
knows about network interfaces, so better actually specify that in
if_index.
2021-10-18 01:39:02 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
1d20f33ff4 hurd: Fix intr-msg parameter/stack kludge
INTR_MSG_TRAP was tinkering with esp to make it point to
_hurd_intr_rpc_mach_msg's parameters, and notably use (&msg)[-1] which is
meaningless in C.

Instead, just push the parameters on the stack, which also avoids leaving
local variables of _hurd_intr_rpc_mach_msg below esp. We now also
properly express that OPTION and TIMEOUT may be updated during the trap
call.
2021-10-18 00:50:41 +02:00
Joseph Myers
90f0ac10a7 Add fmaximum, fminimum functions
C2X adds new <math.h> functions for floating-point maximum and
minimum, corresponding to the new operations that were added in IEEE
754-2019 because of concerns about the old operations not being
associative in the presence of signaling NaNs.  fmaximum and fminimum
handle NaNs like most <math.h> functions (any NaN argument means the
result is a quiet NaN).  fmaximum_num and fminimum_num handle both
quiet and signaling NaNs the way fmax and fmin handle quiet NaNs (if
one argument is a number and the other is a NaN, return the number),
but still raise "invalid" for a signaling NaN argument, making them
exceptions to the normal rule that a function with a floating-point
result raising "invalid" also returns a quiet NaN.  fmaximum_mag,
fminimum_mag, fmaximum_mag_num and fminimum_mag_num are corresponding
functions returning the argument with greatest or least absolute
value.  All these functions also treat +0 as greater than -0.  There
are also corresponding <tgmath.h> type-generic macros.

Add these functions to glibc.  The implementations use type-generic
templates based on those for fmax, fmin, fmaxmag and fminmag, and test
inputs are based on those for those functions with appropriate
adjustments to the expected results.  The RISC-V maintainers might
wish to add optimized versions of fmaximum_num and fminimum_num (for
float and double), since RISC-V (F extension version 2.2 and later)
provides instructions corresponding to those functions - though it
might be at least as useful to add architecture-independent built-in
functions to GCC and teach the RISC-V back end to expand those
functions inline, which is what you generally want for functions that
can be implemented with a single instruction.

Tested for x86_64 and x86, and with build-many-glibcs.py.
2021-09-28 23:31:35 +00:00
Adhemerval Zanella
11a02b035b misc: Add __get_nprocs_sched
This is an internal function meant to return the number of avaliable
processor where the process can scheduled, different than the
__get_nprocs which returns a the system available online CPU.

The Linux implementation currently only calls __get_nprocs(), which
in tuns calls sched_getaffinity.

Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
2021-09-27 09:13:06 -03:00
Samuel Thibault
1cc205c510 htl: make pthread_sigstate read/write set/oset outside sigstate section
so that if a segfault occurs, the handler can run fine.
2021-09-26 01:04:13 +02:00
Joseph Myers
b3f27d8150 Add narrowing fma functions
This patch adds the narrowing fused multiply-add functions from TS
18661-1 / TS 18661-3 / C2X to glibc's libm: ffma, ffmal, dfmal,
f32fmaf64, f32fmaf32x, f32xfmaf64 for all configurations; f32fmaf64x,
f32fmaf128, f64fmaf64x, f64fmaf128, f32xfmaf64x, f32xfmaf128,
f64xfmaf128 for configurations with _Float64x and _Float128;
__f32fmaieee128 and __f64fmaieee128 aliases in the powerpc64le case
(for calls to ffmal and dfmal when long double is IEEE binary128).
Corresponding tgmath.h macro support is also added.

The changes are mostly similar to those for the other narrowing
functions previously added, especially that for sqrt, so the
description of those generally applies to this patch as well.  As with
sqrt, I reused the same test inputs in auto-libm-test-in as for
non-narrowing fma rather than adding extra or separate inputs for
narrowing fma.  The tests in libm-test-narrow-fma.inc also follow
those for non-narrowing fma.

The non-narrowing fma has a known bug (bug 6801) that it does not set
errno on errors (overflow, underflow, Inf * 0, Inf - Inf).  Rather
than fixing this or having narrowing fma check for errors when
non-narrowing does not (complicating the cases when narrowing fma can
otherwise be an alias for a non-narrowing function), this patch does
not attempt to check for errors from narrowing fma and set errno; the
CHECK_NARROW_FMA macro is still present, but as a placeholder that
does nothing, and this missing errno setting is considered to be
covered by the existing bug rather than needing a separate open bug.
missing-errno annotations are duly added to many of the
auto-libm-test-in test inputs for fma.

This completes adding all the new functions from TS 18661-1 to glibc,
so will be followed by corresponding stdc-predef.h changes to define
__STDC_IEC_60559_BFP__ and __STDC_IEC_60559_COMPLEX__, as the support
for TS 18661-1 will be at a similar level to that for C standard
floating-point facilities up to C11 (pragmas not implemented, but
library functions done).  (There are still further changes to be done
to implement changes to the types of fromfp functions from N2548.)

Tested as followed: natively with the full glibc testsuite for x86_64
(GCC 11, 7, 6) and x86 (GCC 11); with build-many-glibcs.py with GCC
11, 7 and 6; cross testing of math/ tests for powerpc64le, powerpc32
hard float, mips64 (all three ABIs, both hard and soft float).  The
different GCC versions are to cover the different cases in tgmath.h
and tgmath.h tests properly (GCC 6 has _Float* only as typedefs in
glibc headers, GCC 7 has proper _Float* support, GCC 8 adds
__builtin_tgmath).
2021-09-22 21:25:31 +00:00
Sergey Bugaev
c484da9087 elf: Remove THREAD_GSCOPE_IN_TCB
All the ports now have THREAD_GSCOPE_IN_TCB set to 1. Remove all
support for !THREAD_GSCOPE_IN_TCB, along with the definition itself.

Signed-off-by: Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com>
Message-Id: <20210915171110.226187-4-bugaevc@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@ens-lyon.org>
2021-09-16 01:04:20 +02:00
Sergey Bugaev
ed2f9aaf5e htl: Reimplement GSCOPE
This is a new implementation of GSCOPE which largely mirrors its NPTL
counterpart. Same as in NPTL, instead of a global flag shared between
threads, there is now a per-thread GSCOPE flag stored in each thread's
TCB. This makes entering and exiting a GSCOPE faster at the expense of
making THREAD_GSCOPE_WAIT () slower.

The largest win is the elimination of many redundant gsync_wake () RPC
calls; previously, even simplest programs would make dozens of fully
redundant gsync_wake () calls.

Signed-off-by: Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com>
Message-Id: <20210915171110.226187-3-bugaevc@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@ens-lyon.org>
2021-09-16 01:04:17 +02:00
Sergey Bugaev
166bb3eac3 htl: Move thread table to ld.so
The next commit is going to introduce a new implementation of
THREAD_GSCOPE_WAIT which needs to access the list of threads.
Since it must be usable from the dynamic laoder, we have to move
the symbols for the list of threads into the loader.

Signed-off-by: Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com>
Message-Id: <20210915171110.226187-2-bugaevc@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@ens-lyon.org>
2021-09-16 01:04:05 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
2444ce5421 mach lll_lock/unlock: Explicitly request private locking
0 was actually LLL_PRIVATE, so this does not actually change the code.
2021-09-15 01:36:08 +02:00
Joseph Myers
abd383584b Add narrowing square root functions
This patch adds the narrowing square root functions from TS 18661-1 /
TS 18661-3 / C2X to glibc's libm: fsqrt, fsqrtl, dsqrtl, f32sqrtf64,
f32sqrtf32x, f32xsqrtf64 for all configurations; f32sqrtf64x,
f32sqrtf128, f64sqrtf64x, f64sqrtf128, f32xsqrtf64x, f32xsqrtf128,
f64xsqrtf128 for configurations with _Float64x and _Float128;
__f32sqrtieee128 and __f64sqrtieee128 aliases in the powerpc64le case
(for calls to fsqrtl and dsqrtl when long double is IEEE binary128).
Corresponding tgmath.h macro support is also added.

The changes are mostly similar to those for the other narrowing
functions previously added, so the description of those generally
applies to this patch as well.  However, the not-actually-narrowing
cases (where the two types involved in the function have the same
floating-point format) are aliased to sqrt, sqrtl or sqrtf128 rather
than needing a separately built not-actually-narrowing function such
as was needed for add / sub / mul / div.  Thus, there is no
__nldbl_dsqrtl name for ldbl-opt because no such name was needed
(whereas the other functions needed such a name since the only other
name for that entry point was e.g. f32xaddf64, not reserved by TS
18661-1); the headers are made to arrange for sqrt to be called in
that case instead.

The DIAG_* calls in sysdeps/ieee754/soft-fp/s_dsqrtl.c are because
they were observed to be needed in GCC 7 testing of
riscv32-linux-gnu-rv32imac-ilp32.  The other sysdeps/ieee754/soft-fp/
files added didn't need such DIAG_* in any configuration I tested with
build-many-glibcs.py, but if they do turn out to be needed in more
files with some other configuration / GCC version, they can always be
added there.

I reused the same test inputs in auto-libm-test-in as for
non-narrowing sqrt rather than adding extra or separate inputs for
narrowing sqrt.  The tests in libm-test-narrow-sqrt.inc also follow
those for non-narrowing sqrt.

Tested as followed: natively with the full glibc testsuite for x86_64
(GCC 11, 7, 6) and x86 (GCC 11); with build-many-glibcs.py with GCC
11, 7 and 6; cross testing of math/ tests for powerpc64le, powerpc32
hard float, mips64 (all three ABIs, both hard and soft float).  The
different GCC versions are to cover the different cases in tgmath.h
and tgmath.h tests properly (GCC 6 has _Float* only as typedefs in
glibc headers, GCC 7 has proper _Float* support, GCC 8 adds
__builtin_tgmath).
2021-09-10 20:56:22 +00:00
Siddhesh Poyarekar
30891f35fa Remove "Contributed by" lines
We stopped adding "Contributed by" or similar lines in sources in 2012
in favour of git logs and keeping the Contributors section of the
glibc manual up to date.  Removing these lines makes the license
header a bit more consistent across files and also removes the
possibility of error in attribution when license blocks or files are
copied across since the contributed-by lines don't actually reflect
reality in those cases.

Move all "Contributed by" and similar lines (Written by, Test by,
etc.) into a new file CONTRIBUTED-BY to retain record of these
contributions.  These contributors are also mentioned in
manual/contrib.texi, so we just maintain this additional record as a
courtesy to the earlier developers.

The following scripts were used to filter a list of files to edit in
place and to clean up the CONTRIBUTED-BY file respectively.  These
were not added to the glibc sources because they're not expected to be
of any use in future given that this is a one time task:

https://gist.github.com/siddhesh/b5ecac94eabfd72ed2916d6d8157e7dc
https://gist.github.com/siddhesh/15ea1f5e435ace9774f485030695ee02

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-09-03 22:06:44 +05:30
Samuel Thibault
60dfb30976 hurd msync: Drop bogus test
MS_SYNC is actually 0, so we cannot test that both MS_SYNC and MS_ASYNC
are set.
2021-08-31 19:41:02 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
e2930d8777 hurd: Fix typo in msync
== has higher priority than &
2021-08-31 14:55:25 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
c5e4c0dd0f hurd: Remove old test-err_np.c file
This is not referenced any more and includes a non-existing file.
2021-08-23 19:05:58 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
cbb2aa337b hurd: Drop fmh kludge
Gnumach's 0650a4ee30e3 implements support for high bits being set in the
mask parameter of vm_map. This allows to remove the fmh kludge that was
masking away the address range by mapping a dumb area there.
2021-08-16 11:20:38 +02:00
Sergey Bugaev
5a5358b749 hurd mmap: Reduce the requested max vmprot
When the memory object is read-only, the kernel would be right in
refusing max vmprot containing VM_PROT_WRITE.

Reviewed-by: Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@ens-lyon.org>
2021-08-11 18:39:51 +02:00
Sergey Bugaev
08fc6df294 hurd mmap: Factorize MAP_SHARED flag check
Reviewed-by: Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@ens-lyon.org>
2021-08-11 18:39:51 +02:00
Samuel Thibault
de2f68c3c7 hurd: _Fork: unlock malloc before calling fork child hooks
The setitimer fork hook, fork_itimer, needs to call malloc inside
__mach_setup_tls, so we need to unlock malloc before calling it.
2021-07-27 02:03:01 +02:00
Siddhesh Poyarekar
0552fd2c7d Move malloc_{g,s}et_state to libc_malloc_debug
These deprecated functions are only safe to call from
__malloc_initialize_hook and as a result, are not useful in the
general case.  Move the implementations to libc_malloc_debug so that
existing binaries that need it will now have to preload the debug DSO
to work correctly.

This also allows simplification of the core malloc implementation by
dropping all the undumping support code that was added to make
malloc_set_state work.

One known breakage is that of ancient emacs binaries that depend on
this.  They will now crash when running with this libc.  With
LD_BIND_NOW=1, it will terminate immediately because of not being able
to find malloc_set_state but with lazy binding it will crash in
unpredictable ways.  It will need a preloaded libc_malloc_debug.so so
that its initialization hook is executed to allow its malloc
implementation to work properly.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-22 18:38:10 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
b5bd5bfe88 glibc.malloc.check: Wean away from malloc hooks
The malloc-check debugging feature is tightly integrated into glibc
malloc, so thanks to an idea from Florian Weimer, much of the malloc
implementation has been moved into libc_malloc_debug.so to support
malloc-check.  Due to this, glibc malloc and malloc-check can no
longer work together; they use altogether different (but identical)
structures for heap management.  This should not make a difference
though since the malloc check hook is not disabled anywhere.
malloc_set_state does, but it does so early enough that it shouldn't
cause any problems.

The malloc check tunable is now in the debug DSO and has no effect
when the DSO is not preloaded.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-22 18:38:08 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
9dad716d4d mtrace: Wean away from malloc hooks
Wean mtrace away from the malloc hooks and move them into the debug
DSO.  Split the API away from the implementation so that we can add
the API to libc.so as well as libc_malloc_debug.so, with the libc
implementations being empty.

Update localplt data since memalign no longer has any callers after
this change.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-22 18:38:06 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
c142eb253f mcheck: Wean away from malloc hooks [BZ #23489]
Split the mcheck implementation into the debugging hooks and API so
that the API can be replicated in libc and libc_malloc_debug.so.  The
libc APIs always result in failure.

The mcheck implementation has also been moved entirely into
libc_malloc_debug.so and with it, all of the hook initialization code
can now be moved into the debug library.  Now the initialization can
be done independently of libc internals.

With this patch, libc_malloc_debug.so can no longer be used with older
libcs, which is not its goal anyway.  tst-vfork3 breaks due to this
since it spawns shell scripts, which in turn execute using the system
glibc.  Move the test to tests-container so that only the built glibc
is used.

This move also fixes bugs in the mcheck version of memalign and
realloc, thus allowing removal of the tests from tests-mcheck
exclusion list.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2021-07-22 18:38:02 +05:30