Commit Graph

36336 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lukasz Majewski
3f9705f1fc nptl: Provide proper spelling for 32 bit version of futex_abstimed_wait
This change provides proper spelling of 32 bit __futex_abstimed_wait_cancelable32
function

Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
2020-09-30 09:37:41 +02:00
Adhemerval Zanella
cef95fdc2e string: Fix strerrorname_np return value [BZ #26555]
It returns the string of the error constant, not its description (as
strerrordesc_np).  To handle the Hurd error mapping, the ERR_MAP was
removed from errlist.h to errlist.c.

Also, the testcase test-strerr (added on 325081b9eb) was not added
on the check build neither it builds correctly.  This patch also
changed it to decouple from errlist.h, the expected return values
are added explicitly for both both strerrorname_np and strerrordesc_np
directly.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.  I also run a make
check for i686-gnu.
2020-09-29 13:56:06 -03:00
H.J. Lu
dfb8e514cf Set tunable value as well as min/max values
Some tunable values and their minimum/maximum values must be determinted
at run-time.  Add TUNABLE_SET_WITH_BOUNDS and TUNABLE_SET_WITH_BOUNDS_FULL
to update tunable value together with minimum and maximum values.
__tunable_set_val is updated to set tunable value as well as min/max
values.
2020-09-29 09:03:47 -07:00
Vincent Mihalkovic
c670278934 ld.so: add an --argv0 option [BZ #16124] 2020-09-29 12:34:40 +02:00
Patrick McGehearty
d3c5702747 Reversing calculation of __x86_shared_non_temporal_threshold
The __x86_shared_non_temporal_threshold determines when memcpy on x86
uses non_temporal stores to avoid pushing other data out of the last
level cache.

This patch proposes to revert the calculation change made by H.J. Lu's
patch of June 2, 2017.

H.J. Lu's patch selected a threshold suitable for a single thread
getting maximum performance. It was tuned using the single threaded
large memcpy micro benchmark on an 8 core processor. The last change
changes the threshold from using 3/4 of one thread's share of the
cache to using 3/4 of the entire cache of a multi-threaded system
before switching to non-temporal stores. Multi-threaded systems with
more than a few threads are server-class and typically have many
active threads. If one thread consumes 3/4 of the available cache for
all threads, it will cause other active threads to have data removed
from the cache. Two examples show the range of the effect. John
McCalpin's widely parallel Stream benchmark, which runs in parallel
and fetches data sequentially, saw a 20% slowdown with this patch on
an internal system test of 128 threads. This regression was discovered
when comparing OL8 performance to OL7.  An example that compares
normal stores to non-temporal stores may be found at
https://vgatherps.github.io/2018-09-02-nontemporal/.  A simple test
shows performance loss of 400 to 500% due to a failure to use
nontemporal stores. These performance losses are most likely to occur
when the system load is heaviest and good performance is critical.

The tunable x86_non_temporal_threshold can be used to override the
default for the knowledgable user who really wants maximum cache
allocation to a single thread in a multi-threaded system.
The manual entry for the tunable has been expanded to provide
more information about its purpose.

	modified: sysdeps/x86/cacheinfo.c
	modified: manual/tunables.texi
2020-09-28 22:10:39 +00:00
Adhemerval Zanella
b16f282cb0 linux: Add time64 recvmmsg support
The wire-up syscall __NR_recvmmsg_time64 (for 32-bit) or
__NR_recvmmsg (for 64-bit) is used as default.  The 32-bit fallback
is used iff __ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS is not defined, which assumes the
kernel ABI provides either __NR_socketcall or __NR_recvmmsg
(32-bit time_t).

It does not handle the timestamps on ancillary data (SCM_TIMESTAMPING
records).

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

Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
2020-09-28 17:28:39 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
c3a020eedd linux: Add time64 support for nanosleep
It uses __clock_nanosleep64 and adds the __nanosleep64 symbol.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu (on 5.4 and on 4.15
kernel).

Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
2020-09-28 16:22:03 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
4af88f96de linux: Consolidate utimes
The generic version does not have time64 support and Linux default
uses utimensat.  With hppa version gone, __ASSUME_UTIMES is not used
anymore.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu (on 5.4 and on 4.15
kernel).

Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
2020-09-28 16:21:59 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
7c7671767e linux: Use 64-bit time_t syscall on clock_getcputclockid
The syscall __NR_clock_getres_time64 (for 32-bit) or __NR_clock_getres
(for 64-bit) is used as default.  The 32-bit fallback is used iff
__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS is not defined, which assumes the kernel ABI
provides either __NR_rt_sigtimedwait (32-bit time_t).

Since the symbol does not use any type which might be affected by the
time_t, there is no need to add a 64-bit variant.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu (on 5.4 and on 4.15
kernel).

Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
2020-09-28 16:21:55 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
94a83d8667 linux: Add time64 sigtimedwait support
The syscall __NR_sigtimedwait_time64 (for 32-bit) or __NR_sigtimedwait
(for 64-bit) is used as default.  The 32-bit fallback is used iff
__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS is not defined, which assumes the kernel ABI
provides either __NR_rt_sigtimedwait (32-bit time_t).

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

Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
2020-09-28 16:21:51 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
2433d39b69 linux: Add time64 select support
The syscall __NR_pselect6_time64 (32-bit) or __NR_pselect6 (64-bit)
is used as default.  For architectures with __ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS
the 32-bit fallback uses __NR_select/__NR__newselect or __NR_pselect6
(it should cover the microblaze case where older kernels do not
provide __NR_pselect6).

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu (on 5.4 and on 4.15
kernel).

Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
2020-09-28 16:21:48 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
50e19ddfcd nptl: Fix __futex_abstimed_wait_cancellable32
Similar to 64-bit time __futex_abstimed_wait_cancellable64, it should
check for overflow and convert to 32-bit timespec iff timeout is not
NULL.

It fixes some regression on i686-linux-gnu running on a 4.15 kernel.
2020-09-28 16:05:32 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
aaa12e9ff0 sysvipc: Fix semtimeop for !__ASSUME_DIRECT_SYSVIPC_SYSCALLS
The __NR_ipc syscall does not support 64-bit time operations.  It
fixes 7c437d3778.

Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a Linux 5.4.
2020-09-28 10:03:04 -03:00
Samuel Thibault
7424a0d009 hurd: add ST_RELATIME
sysdeps/mach/hurd/bits/statvfs.h (ST_RELATIME): New macro.
2020-09-27 18:23:27 +02:00
Arjun Shankar
7d4ec75e11 intl: Handle translation output codesets with suffixes [BZ #26383]
Commit 91927b7c76 (Rewrite iconv option parsing [BZ #19519]) did not
handle cases where the output codeset for translations (via the `gettext'
family of functions) might have a caller specified encoding suffix such as
TRANSLIT or IGNORE.  This led to a regression where translations did not
work when the codeset had a suffix.

This commit fixes the above issue by parsing any suffixes passed to
__dcigettext and adds two new test-cases to intl/tst-codeset.c to
verify correct behaviour.  The iconv-internal function __gconv_create_spec
and the static iconv-internal function gconv_destroy_spec are now visible
internally within glibc and used in intl/dcigettext.c.
2020-09-25 14:47:06 +02:00
H.J. Lu
06e95b93f0 bench-strcmp.c: Add workloads on page boundary
Add strcmp workloads on page boundary.
2020-09-24 10:46:38 -07:00
H.J. Lu
c4277ba234 bench-strncmp.c: Add workloads on page boundary
Add strncmp workloads on page boundary.
2020-09-24 10:46:30 -07:00
H.J. Lu
659c041188 strcmp: Add a testcase for page boundary
Add a strcmp testcase to cover cases where both strings end on the page
boundary.
2020-09-24 07:29:31 -07:00
H.J. Lu
f7e3f92b7c strncmp: Add a testcase for page boundary [BZ #25933]
Add a strncmp testcase to cover cases where one of strings ends on the
page boundary with the maximum string length less than the number bytes
of each AVX2 loop iteration and different offsets from page boundary.

The updated string/test-strncmp fails on Intel Core i7-8559U without

ommit 1c6432316bc434a72108d7b0c7cfbfdde64c3124
Author: Sunil K Pandey <skpgkp1@gmail.com>
Date:   Fri Jun 12 08:57:16 2020 -0700

    Fix avx2 strncmp offset compare condition check [BZ #25933]
2020-09-24 07:06:03 -07:00
Arjun Shankar
b3b0b6916a Set locale related environment variables in debugglibc.sh
Tests and binaries that use locale related functions need to run in the
correct locale environment when being debugged via debugglibc.sh.  This
commit sets up the environment, specifically: GCONV_PATH, LOCPATH, and
LC_ALL for such tests and binaries when they are being debugged outside
of a test container.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
2020-09-24 14:58:36 +02:00
Arjun Shankar
03e26098b1 benchtests: Run _Float128 tests only on architectures that support it
__float128 is a non-standard name and is not available on some architectures
(like aarch64 or s390x) even though they may support the standard _Float128
type.  Other architectures (like armv7) don't support quad-precision
floating-point operations at all.

This commit replaces benchtests references to __float128 with _Float128 and
runs the corresponding tests only on architectures that support it.
2020-09-23 16:11:57 +02:00
Raphael Moreira Zinsly
3322ecbfe2 powerpc: Protect dl_powerpc_cpu_features on INIT_ARCH() [BZ #26615]
dl_powerpc_cpu_features also needs to be protected by __GLRO to check
for the _rtld_global_ro realocation before accessing it.

Reviewed-by: Tulio Magno Quites Machado Filho <tuliom@linux.ibm.com>
2020-09-22 17:45:12 -03:00
Florian Weimer
681900d296 x86: Harden printf against non-normal long double values (bug 26649)
The behavior of isnan/__builtin_isnan on bit patterns that do not
correspond to something that the CPU would produce from valid inputs
is currently under-defined in the toolchain. (The GCC built-in and
glibc disagree.)

The isnan check in PRINTF_FP_FETCH in stdio-common/printf_fp.c
assumes the GCC behavior that returns true for non-normal numbers
which are not specified as NaN. (The glibc implementation returns
false for such numbers.)

At present, passing non-normal numbers to __mpn_extract_long_double
causes this function to produce irregularly shaped multi-precision
integers, triggering undefined behavior in __printf_fp_l.

With GCC 10 and glibc 2.32, this behavior is not visible because
__builtin_isnan is used, which avoids calling
__mpn_extract_long_double in this case.  This commit updates the
implementation of __mpn_extract_long_double so that regularly shaped
multi-precision integers are produced in this case, avoiding
undefined behavior in __printf_fp_l.
2020-09-22 19:07:49 +02:00
Florian Weimer
90ccfdf176 x86: Use one ldbl2mpn.c file for both i386 and x86_64 2020-09-22 17:58:39 +02:00
Jonathan Wakely
d445d9ca8d Define __THROW to noexcept for C++11 and later
The __THROW macro and friends expand to "throw ()" for C++ code, but
that syntax is deprecated in C++11 and no longer supported at all since
C++20. In order for glibc headers to be compatible with C++20,
"noexcept" should be used instead.

This patch uses "noexcept (true)" rather than just "noexcept", which is
semantically equivalent, but avoids any possibility of parsing
ambiguities if the next preprocessor token happens to be an opening
parenthesis. This is probably unnecessary, but it seems safer to be
cautious.
2020-09-22 11:54:38 +01:00
DJ Delorie
cdf645427d Update mallinfo2 ABI, and test
This patch adds the ABI-related bits to reflect the new mallinfo2
function, and adds a test case to verify basic functionality.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2020-09-17 18:49:30 -04:00
Alistair Francis
d38e1bbda0 Allow memset local PLT reference for RISC-V.
This is similar to commit a26e2e9fea
"Allow memset local PLT reference for powerpc soft-float.".

GCC 10.1 results in the localplt test failing for RISC-V.

From the original commit for power-pc:
    Since memset is documented as a function GCC may always implicitly
    generate calls to, it seems reasonable to allow that local PLT
    reference (just like those for libgcc functions that GCC implicitly
    generates calls to and that are also exported from libc.so), which
    this patch does.

Acked-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmerdabbelt@google.com>
2020-09-17 10:51:43 -07:00
Raphael Moreira Zinsly
07f3ecdba6 powerpc: fix ifunc implementation list for POWER9 strlen and stpcpy
__strlen_power9 and __stpcpy_power9 were added to their ifunc lists
using the wrong function names.
2020-09-17 11:00:42 -05:00
Andreas Schwab
5e74e6f858 nscd: bump GC cycle during cache pruning (bug 26130)
While nscd prunes a cache it becomes inconsistent temporarily, which is
visible to clients if that cache is shared.  Bump the GC cycle counter so
that the clients notice the modification window.

Uniformly use atomic_fetch_add to modify the GC cycle counter.
2020-09-17 17:59:11 +02:00
H.J. Lu
94cd37ebb2 x86: Use HAS_CPU_FEATURE with IBT and SHSTK [BZ #26625]
commit 04bba1e5d8
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date:   Wed Aug 5 13:51:56 2020 -0700

    x86: Set CPU usable feature bits conservatively [BZ #26552]

    Set CPU usable feature bits only for CPU features which are usable in
    user space and whose usability can be detected from user space, excluding
    features like FSGSBASE whose enable bit can only be checked in the kernel.

no longer turns on the usable bits of IBT and SHSTK since we don't know
if IBT and SHSTK are usable until much later.  Use HAS_CPU_FEATURE to
check if the processor supports IBT and SHSTK.
2020-09-17 05:18:36 -07:00
H.J. Lu
f2c679d4b2 <sys/platform/x86.h>: Add Intel Key Locker support
Add Intel Key Locker:

https://software.intel.com/content/www/us/en/develop/download/intel-key-locker-specification.html

support to <sys/platform/x86.h>.  Intel Key Locker has

1. KL: AES Key Locker instructions.
2. WIDE_KL: AES wide Key Locker instructions.
3. AESKLE: AES Key Locker instructions are enabled by OS.

Applications should use

if (CPU_FEATURE_USABLE (KL))

and

if (CPU_FEATURE_USABLE (WIDE_KL))

to check if AES Key Locker instructions and AES wide Key Locker
instructions are usable.
2020-09-16 05:56:10 -07:00
Andreas Schwab
a140ff9162 Fix handling of collating symbols in fnmatch (bug 26620)
The variable idx contains the index into the extra array, whereas wextra
points into the extra array at this index, containing the length of the
following collating sequence in the wide character representation.
2020-09-16 14:45:10 +02:00
H.J. Lu
4b564f347f pselect.c: Pass a pointer to SYSCALL_CANCEL [BZ #26606]
commit a92f4e6299
Author: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Date:   Mon Jul 6 13:27:12 2020 -0300

    linux: Add time64 pselect support

changed pselect.c to

     r = SYSCALL_CANCEL (pselect6_time64, nfds, readfds, writefds, exceptfds,
			  timeout,
			  ((__syscall_ulong_t[]){ (uintptr_t) sigmask,
						  __NSIG_BYTES }));

which doesn't work with x32's ARGIFY and data passed to syscall isn't
initialized with sigmask and __NSIG_BYTES.  Change to

     __syscall_ulong_t data[2] =
	{
	  (uintptr_t) sigmask, __NSIG_BYTES
	};
      r = SYSCALL_CANCEL (pselect6_time64, nfds, readfds, writefds, exceptfds,
			  timeout, data);

fixes [BZ #26606].
2020-09-15 04:28:54 -07:00
Lukasz Majewski
b8d3e8fbaa y2038: nptl: Convert sem_{clock|timed}wait to support 64 bit time
The sem_clockwait and sem_timedwait have been converted to support 64 bit time.

This change reuses futex_abstimed_wait_cancelable64 function introduced earlier.
The sem_{clock|timed}wait only accepts absolute time. Moreover, there is no
need to check for NULL passed as *abstime pointer to the syscalls as both calls
have exported symbols marked with __nonull attribute for abstime.

For systems with __TIMESIZE != 64 && __WORDSIZE == 32:
- Conversion from 32 bit time to 64 bit struct __timespec64 was necessary
- Redirection to __sem_{clock|timed}wait64 will provide support for 64 bit
  time

Build tests:
./src/scripts/build-many-glibcs.py glibcs

Run-time tests:
- Run specific tests on ARM/x86 32bit systems (qemu):
  https://github.com/lmajewski/meta-y2038 and run tests:
  https://github.com/lmajewski/y2038-tests/commits/master

Above tests were performed with Y2038 redirection applied as well as without
to test the proper usage of both __sem_{clock|timed}wait64 and
__sem_{clock|timed}wait.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2020-09-14 09:37:10 +02:00
H.J. Lu
13cd625885 hurd: Add __x86_get_cpu_features to ld.abilist
Add __x86_get_cpu_features to ld.abilist for <sys/platform/x86.h>.
2020-09-13 05:38:14 -07:00
H.J. Lu
9620398097 x86: Install <sys/platform/x86.h> [BZ #26124]
Install <sys/platform/x86.h> so that programmers can do

 #if __has_include(<sys/platform/x86.h>)
 #include <sys/platform/x86.h>
 #endif
 ...

   if (CPU_FEATURE_USABLE (SSE2))
 ...
   if (CPU_FEATURE_USABLE (AVX2))
 ...

<sys/platform/x86.h> exports only:

enum
{
  COMMON_CPUID_INDEX_1 = 0,
  COMMON_CPUID_INDEX_7,
  COMMON_CPUID_INDEX_80000001,
  COMMON_CPUID_INDEX_D_ECX_1,
  COMMON_CPUID_INDEX_80000007,
  COMMON_CPUID_INDEX_80000008,
  COMMON_CPUID_INDEX_7_ECX_1,
  /* Keep the following line at the end.  */
  COMMON_CPUID_INDEX_MAX
};

struct cpuid_features
{
  struct cpuid_registers cpuid;
  struct cpuid_registers usable;
};

struct cpu_features
{
  struct cpu_features_basic basic;
  struct cpuid_features features[COMMON_CPUID_INDEX_MAX];
};

/* Get a pointer to the CPU features structure.  */
extern const struct cpu_features *__x86_get_cpu_features
  (unsigned int max) __attribute__ ((const));

Since all feature checks are done through macros, programs compiled with
a newer <sys/platform/x86.h> are compatible with the older glibc binaries
as long as the layout of struct cpu_features is identical.  The features
array can be expanded with backward binary compatibility for both .o and
.so files.  When COMMON_CPUID_INDEX_MAX is increased to support new
processor features, __x86_get_cpu_features in the older glibc binaries
returns NULL and HAS_CPU_FEATURE/CPU_FEATURE_USABLE return false on the
new processor feature.  No new symbol version is neeeded.

Both CPU_FEATURE_USABLE and HAS_CPU_FEATURE are provided.  HAS_CPU_FEATURE
can be used to identify processor features.

Note: Although GCC has __builtin_cpu_supports, it only supports a subset
of <sys/platform/x86.h> and it is equivalent to CPU_FEATURE_USABLE.  It
doesn't support HAS_CPU_FEATURE.
2020-09-11 17:20:52 -07:00
Adhemerval Zanella
a92f4e6299 linux: Add time64 pselect support
The syscall __NR_pselect6_time64 (32-bit) or __NR_pselect6 (64-bit)
is used as default.  For architectures with __ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS
the 32-bit fallback uses __NR_pselec6.

To accomodate microblaze missing pselect6 support on kernel older
than 3.15 the fallback is moved to its own function to the microblaze
specific implementation can override it.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu (on 5.4 and on 4.15
kernel).

Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
2020-09-11 16:20:49 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
7c437d3778 linux: Add time64 semtimedop support
Either the __NR_semtimedop_time64 (for 32-bit) or the __NR_semtimedop
(for 64-bit) syscall is used as default.  The 32-bit fallback is used
iff __ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS is not defined, which assumes the kernel
ABI provides either __NR_ipc or __NR_semtimeop (for 32-bit time_t).

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu (on 5.4 and on 4.15
kernel).

Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
2020-09-11 14:42:05 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
60a2e28b34 linux: Add ppoll time64 optimization
It avoid continuing issue the __NR_ppoll_time64 syscall once the kernel
advertise it does not support it.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu (on 5.4 and on 4.15
kernel).

Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
2020-09-11 14:42:02 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
ecdcafa571 linux: Simplify clock_getres
With arch-syscall.h it can now assumes the existance of either
__NR_clock_getres or __NR_clock_getres_time64.  The 32-bit time_t
support is now only build for !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS.

It also uses the time64-support functions to simplify it further.

Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu (on 5.4 and on 4.15
kernel).

Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
2020-09-11 14:41:57 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
9efac04341 Update sparc libm-test-ulps 2020-09-11 14:39:03 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
04986243d1 Remove internal usage of extensible stat functions
It replaces the internal usage of __{f,l}xstat{at}{64} with the
__{f,l}stat{at}{64}.  It should not change the generate code since
sys/stat.h explicit defines redirections to internal calls back to
xstat* symbols.

Checked with a build for all affected ABIs.  I also check on
x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.

Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
2020-09-11 14:35:32 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
2315996215 Linux: Consolidate xmknod
The __NR_mknodat syscall is supported on all kernels, so the generic
implementation is used as default.

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

Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
2020-09-11 14:35:27 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
5f85cc2f47 linux: Consolidate fxstatat{64}
The LFS support is implemented on fxstat64.c, instead of fxstat.c for
64-bit architectures.  The fxstatat.c implements the non-LFS and it is
a no-op for !XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64.

The generic non-LFS implementation handles two cases:

  1. New kABIs which uses generic pre 64-bit time Linux ABI (csky and
     nios): it issues __NR_fstatat64 plus handle the overflow on st_ino,
     st_size, or st_blocks.  It only handles _STAT_VER_KERNEL.

  2. Old kABIs with old non-LFS support (arm, i386, hppa, m68k, mips32,
     microblaze, s390, sh, powerpc, and sparc32).  it issues
     __NR_fstatat64 and convert to non-LFS stat struct based on the
     version.

Also non-LFS mips64 is an outlier and it has its own implementation
since _STAT_VER_LINUX requires a different conversion function (it
uses the kernel_stat as the sysissues argument since its exported ABI
is different than the kernel one for both non-LFS and LFS
implementation).

The generic LFS implementation handles multiple cases:

  1. XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64 being 1:

    1.1. 64-bit kABI (aarch64, ia64, powerpc64*, s390x, riscv64, and
         x86_64): it issues __NR_newfstatat for _STAT_VER_KERNEL or
         _STAT_VER_LINUX.

    1.2. 64-bit kABI outlier (sparc64): it issuess fstatat64 with a
         temporary stat64 and convert to output stat64 based on the
         input version (and using a sparc64 specific __xstat32_conv).

    1.3. New 32-bit kABIs with only 64-bit time_t support (arc and
	 riscv32): it issues __NR_statx and covert to struct stat64.

  2. Old ABIs with XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64 being 0 (arm, csky, i386, hppa, m68k,
     microblaze, mips32, nios2, sh, powerpc32, and sparc32): it issues
     __NR_fstat64.

Also, two special cases requires specific implementations:

  1. alpha: it uses the __NR_fstatat64 syscall instead.

  2. mips64: as for non-LFS implementation its ABIs differ from
     glibc exported one, which requires an specific conversion
     function to handle the kernel_stat.

Checked with a build for all affected ABIs. I also checked on x86_64,
i686, powerpc, powerpc64le, sparcv9, sparc64, s390, and s390x.

Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
2020-09-11 14:35:24 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
5febe6a38f linux: Consolidate fxstat{64}
The LFS support is implemented on fxstat64.c, instead of fxstat.c for
64-bit architectures.  The fxstat.c implements the non-LFS and it is
a no-op for !XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64.

The generic non-LFS implementation handles two cases:

  1. New kABIs which uses generic pre 64-bit time Linux ABI (csky and
     nios): it issuess __NR_fstat64 plus handle the overflow on st_ino,
     st_size, or st_blocks.  It only handles _STAT_VER_KERNEL.

  2. Old KABIs with old non-LFS support (arm, i386, hppa, m68k,
     microblaze, s390, sh, powerpc, and sparc32).  For _STAT_VER_KERNEL
     it issues __NR_fstat, otherwise it calls __NR_fstat64 and convert
     to non-LFS stat struct and handle possible overflows on st_ino,
     st_size, or st_blocks.

Also non-LFS mips is an outlier and it has its own implementation since
_STAT_VER_LINUX requires a different conversion function (it uses the
kernel_stat as the sysissues argument since its exported ABI is
different than the kernel one for both non-LFS and LFS implementation).

The generic LFS implementation handles multiple cases:

  1. XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64 being 1:

    1.1. 64-bit kABI (aarch64, ia64, powerpc64*, s390x, riscv64, and
	 x86_64): it issuess __NR_fstat for _STAT_VER_KERNEL or
	 _STAT_VER_LINUX.

    1.2. Old 64-bit kABI with defines __NR_fstat64 instead of __NR_fstat
         (sparc64): it issues __NR_fstat for _STAT_VER_KERNEL or
         __NR_fstat64 and convert to struct stat64.

    1.3. New 32-bit kABIs with only 64-bit time_t support (arc and
	 riscv32): it issuess __NR_statx and covert to struct stat64.

  2. Old ABIs with XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64 being 0 (arm, csky, i386, hppa,
     m68k, microblaze, mips32, nios2, sh, powerpc32, and sparc32): it
     issues __NR_fstat64.

Also, two special cases requires specific implementations:

  1. alpha: it requires to handle _STAT_VER_KERNEL64 to issues
     __NR_fstat64 and use the kernel_stat with __NR_fstat otherwise.

  2. mips64: as for non-LFS implementation its ABIs differ from
     glibc exported one, which requires an specific conversion
     function to handle the kernel_stat.

Checked with a build for all affected ABIs. I also checked on x86_64,
i686, powerpc, powerpc64le, sparcv9, sparc64, s390, and s390x.

Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
2020-09-11 14:35:20 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
4f40e6adc4 linux: Consolidate lxstat{64}
The LFS support is implemented on lxstat64.c, instead of lxstat.c for
64-bit architectures.  The xstat.c implements the non-LFS and it is
a no-op for !XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64.

The generic non-LFS implementation handles two cases:

  1. New kABIs which uses generic pre 64-bit time Linux ABI (csky and
     nios): it issues __NR_fstat64 with AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW plus handles
     the possible overflow off st_ino, st_size, or st_blocks.  It only
     handles _STAT_VER_KERNEL.

  2. Old KABIs with old non-LFS support (arm, i386, hppa, m68k,
     microblaze, s390, sh, powerpc, and sparc32).  For _STAT_VER_KERNEL
     it issues __NR_lstat, otherwise it isseus __NR_lstat64 and convert
     to non-LFS stat struct and handle possible overflows on st_ino,
     st_size, or st_blocks.

Also non-LFS mips is an outlier and it has its own implementation since
_STAT_VER_LINUX requires a different conversion function (it uses the
kernel_stat as the syscall argument since its exported ABI is different
than the kernel one for both non-LFS and LFS implementation).

The generic LFS implementation handles multiple cases:

  1. XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64 being 1:

    1.1. Old 64-bit kABI (ia64, powerpc64*, s390x, sparc64, x86_64): it
         issues __NR_lstat for _STAT_VER_KERNEL or _STAT_VER_LINUX.

    1.2. Old 64-bit kABI with defines __NR_lstat64 instead of __NR_lstat
         (sparc64): it issues __NR_lstat for _STAT_VER_KERNEL or
         __NR_lstat64 and convert to struct stat64.

    1.3. New kABIs which uses generic 64-bit Linux ABI (aarch64 and
         riscv64): it issues __NR_newfstatat with AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW
	 and only for _STAT_VER_KERNEL.

    1.4. New 32-bit kABIs with only 64-bit time_t support (arc and
         riscv32): it issues __NR_statx and covert to struct stat64.

  2. Old ABIs with XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64 being 0:

    2.1. New kABIs which uses generic pre 64-bit time Linux ABI (csky
	 and nios2): it issues __NR_fstatat64 for _STAT_VER_KERNEL.

    2.2. Old kABIs with old non-LFS support (arm, i386, hppa, m68k,
	 microblaze, s390, sh, mips32, powerpc32, and sparc32): it
	 issues __NR_lstat64.

Also, two special cases requires specific LFS implementations:

  1. alpha: it requires to handle _STAT_VER_KERNEL64 to issue
     __NR_lstat64 and use the kernel_stat with __NR_lstat otherwise.

  2. mips64: as for non-LFS implementation its ABIs differ from
     glibc exported one, which requires a specific conversion
     function to handle the kernel_stat.

Checked with a build for all affected ABIs. I also checked on x86_64,
i686, powerpc, powerpc64le, sparcv9, sparc64, s390, and s390x.

Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
2020-09-11 14:35:15 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
71aadfb8ae linux: Consolidate xstat{64}
The LFS support is implemented on xstat64.c, instead of xstat.c for
64-bit architectures.  The xstat.c implements the non-LFS it is
no-op for !XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64.

The generic non-LFS implementation handle two cases:

  1. New kABIs which uses generic pre 64-bit time Linux ABI (csky and
     nios): it issues __NR_fstat64 plus handle the overflow on st_ino,
     st_size, or st_blocks.  It only handles _STAT_VER_KERNEL.

  2. Old KABIs with old non-LFS support (arm, i386, hppa, m68k,
     microblaze, s390, sh, powerpc, and sparc32).  For _STAT_VER_KERNEL
     it issues __NR_stat, otherwise it issues __NR_stat64 and convert
     to non-LFS stat struct handling possible overflows on st_ino,
     st_size, or st_blocks.

Also the non-LFS mips is an outlier and it has its own implementation
since _STAT_VER_LINUX requires a different conversion function (it uses
the kernel_stat as the syscall argument since its exported ABI is
different than the kernel one for both non-LFS and LFS implementation).

The generic LFS implementation handles multiple cases:

  1. XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64 being 1:

    1.1. Old 64-bit kABI (ia64, powerpc64*, s390x, x86_64): it
         issues __NR_stat for _STAT_VER_KERNEL or _STAT_VER_LINUX.

    1.2. Old 64-bit kABI with defines __NR_stat64 instead of __NR_stat
	 (sparc64): it issues __NR_stat for _STAT_VER_KERNEL or
	 __NR_stat64 and convert to struct stat64.

    1.3. New kABIs which uses generic 64-bit Linux ABI (aarch64 and
         riscv64): it issues __NR_newfstatat and only for
         _STAT_VER_KERNEL.

    1.4. New 32-bit kABIs with only 64-bit time_t support (arc and
	 riscv32): it issues __NR_statx and covert to struct stat64.

  2. Old ABIs with XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64 being 0:

    2.1. New kABIs which uses generic pre 64-bit time Linux ABI (csky
	 and nios2): it issues __NR_fstatat64 for _STAT_VER_KERNEL.

    2.2. Old kABIs with old non-LFS support (arm, i386, hppa, m68k,
	 microblaze, s390, sh, mips32, powerpc32, and sparc32): it
	 issues __NR_stat64.

Also, two special cases requires specific LFS implementations:

  1. alpha: it requires to handle _STAT_VER_KERNEL64 to call __NR_stat64
     or use the kernel_stat with __NR_stat otherwise.

  2. mips64: as for non-LFS implementation its ABIs differ from glibc
     exported one, which requires an specific conversion function to
     handle the kernel_stat.

Checked with a build for all affected ABIs. I also checked on x86_64,
i686, powerpc, powerpc64le, sparcv9, sparc64, s390, and s390x.

Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
2020-09-11 14:35:13 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
0b1c222cd0 linux: Define STAT64_IS_KERNEL_STAT64
It indicates that the glibc export stat64 is similar in size and
layout of the kernel stat64 used on the syscall.  It is not currently
used on stat implementation, but the idea is to indicate whether
to use the kernel_stat to issue on the syscall on the *stat*64
variant (more specifically on mips which its exported ABI does not
match the kernel).

Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
2020-09-11 14:35:11 -03:00
Adhemerval Zanella
90e1600f4f linux: Always define STAT_IS_KERNEL_STAT
It allows to check for its value instead of its existence.

Checked with a build for all affected ABIS.

Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
2020-09-11 14:35:07 -03:00
Matheus Castanho
c71d13a098 Update powerpc libm-test-ulps
Before this patch, the following tests were failing:

ppc and ppc64:
    FAIL: math/test-ldouble-j0

ppc64le:
    FAIL: math/test-float128-j0
    FAIL: math/test-float64x-j0
    FAIL: math/test-ibm128-j0
    FAIL: math/test-ldouble-j0
2020-09-10 15:52:01 -03:00