The configure check for CAN_USE_REGISTER_ASM_EBP tried to compile a
simple function that uses %ebp as an inline assembly operand. If
compilation failed, CAN_USE_REGISTER_ASM_EBP was set 0, which
eventually had these consequences:
(1) %ebx was avoided as an inline assembly operand, with an
assembler macro hack to avoid unnecessary register moves.
(2) %ebp was avoided as an inline assembly operand, using an
out-of-line syscall function for 6-argument system calls.
(1) is no longer needed for any GCC version that is supported for
building glibc. %ebx can be used directly as a register operand.
Therefore, this commit removes the %ebx avoidance completely. This
avoids the assembler macro hack, which turns out to be incompatible
with the current Systemtap probe macros (which switch to .altmacro
unconditionally).
(2) is still needed in many build configurations. The existing
configure check cannot really capture that because the simple function
succeeds to compile, while the full glibc build still fails.
Therefore, this commit removes the check, the CAN_USE_REGISTER_ASM_EBP
macro, and uses the out-of-line syscall function for 6-argument system
calls unconditionally.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
The __convert_scm_timestamps() only updates the control message last
pointer for SOL_SOCKET type, so if the message control buffer contains
multiple ancillary message types the converted timestamp one might
overwrite a valid message.
The test check if the extra ancillary space is correctly handled
by recvmsg/recvmmsg, where if there is no extra space for the 64-bit
time_t converted message the control buffer should be marked with
MSG_TRUNC. It also check if recvmsg/recvmmsg handle correctly multiple
ancillary data.
Checked on x86_64-linux and on i686-linux-gnu on both 5.11 and
4.15 kernel.
Co-authored-by: Fabian Vogt <fvogt@suse.de>
Indicates the availability of enhanced counter virtualization extension
of armv8.6-a with self-synchronized virtual counter CNTVCTSS_EL0 usable
in userspace.
Trapping SIGSEGV within the process is error-prone, adds security
issues, and modern analysis design tends to happen out of the
process (either by attaching a debugger or by post-mortem analysis).
The libSegfault also has some design problems, it uses non
async-signal-safe function (backtrace) on signal handler.
There are multiple alternatives if users do want to use similar
functionality, such as sigsegv gnulib module or libsegfault.
Here we define the minumum linux kernel version at 5.4.0, as that is the
long term support version where 32-bit architectures start to support
64-bit time API's. The OpenRISC kernel had some bugs up until version 5.8
which caused issues with glibc fork/clone, they have been backported to
5.4 but not previous versions.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
I've updated copyright dates in glibc for 2022. This is the patch for
the changes not generated by scripts/update-copyrights and subsequent
build / regeneration of generated files. As well as the usual annual
updates, mainly dates in --version output (minus csu/version.c which
previously had to be handled manually but is now successfully updated
by update-copyrights), there is a small change to the copyright notice
in NEWS which should let NEWS get updated automatically next year.
Please remember to include 2022 in the dates for any new files added
in future (which means updating any existing uncommitted patches you
have that add new files to use the new copyright dates in them).
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
Commit a4b4131355 changed default __TIMESIZE to 64, however
it added sub-architecture timesize.h for powerpc, s390, and
sparc.
Also simplify mips by removing _MIPS_SIM usage (which would require
to add sgidefs inclusion.
When running tests on OpenRISC which has 32-bit wordsize but 64-bit
timesize it was found that O_LARGEFILE is not being set when calling
open64. For 64-bit architectures the O_LARGEFILE flag is generally
implied by the kernel according to force_o_largefile. However, for
32-bit architectures this is not done.
For this patch we unconditionally now set the O_LARGEFILE flag for
open64 class syscalls as there is no harm in doing so.
Tested on the OpenRISC the build works and timezone/tst-tzset passes
which was failing before. I would expect this also would fix arc.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Implement vectorized tan/tanf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector tan/tanf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized erfc/erfcf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector erfc/erfcf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized asinh/asinhf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector asinh/asinhf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized tanh/tanhf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector tanh/tanhf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized erf/erff containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector erf/erff with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized acosh/acoshf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector acosh/acoshf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized atanh/atanhf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector atanh/atanhf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized log1p/log1pf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector log1p/log1pf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized log2/log2f containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector log2/log2f with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized log10/log10f containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector log10/log10f with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized atan2/atan2f containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector atan2/atan2f with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized cbrt/cbrtf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector cbrt/cbrtf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized sinh/sinhf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector sinh/sinhf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized expm1/expm1f containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector expm1/expm1f with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized cosh/coshf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector cosh/coshf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized exp10/exp10f containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector exp10/exp10f with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized exp2/exp2f containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector exp2/exp2f with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized hypot/hypotf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector hypot/hypotf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized asin/asinf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector asin/asinf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Implement vectorized atan/atanf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector atan/atanf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
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>
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.
In commit a92f4e6299 ("linux: Add time64
pselect support"), a Microblaze specific implementation of
__pselect32() was added to cover the case of kernels < 3.15 which lack
the pselect6 system call.
This new file sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/pselect32.c takes
precedence over the default implementation
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/pselect32.c.
However sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/pselect32.c provides an implementation
of __pselect32() which is needed when __ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS is not
defined. On Microblaze, which is a 32-bit architecture,
__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS is only true for kernels >= 5.1.
Due to sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/pselect32.c taking
precedence over sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/pselect32.c, it means that
when we are with a kernel >= 3.15 but < 5.1, we need a __pselect32()
implementation, but sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/pselect32.c
doesn't provide it, and sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/pselect32.c which
would provide it is not compiled in.
This causes the following build failure on Microblaze with for example
Linux kernel headers 4.9:
[...]/build/libc_pic.os: in function `__pselect64':
(.text+0x120b44): undefined reference to `__pselect32'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Implement vectorized acos/acosf containing SSE, AVX, AVX2 and
AVX512 versions for libmvec as per vector ABI. It also contains
accuracy and ABI tests for vector acos/acosf with regenerated ulps.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
When the clock_id is CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID or CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID,
on the 5.10 kernel powerpc 32-bit, the 32-bit vDSO is executed successfully (
because the __kernel_clock_gettime in arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/gettimeofday.S
does not support these two IDs, the 32-bit time_t syscall will be used),
but tp32.tv_sec is equal to 0, causing the 64-bit time_t syscall to continue to be used,
resulting in two system calls.
Fix commit 72e84d1db2.
Signed-off-by: maminjie <maminjie2@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Add the constant ARPHRD_MCTP, from Linux 5.15, to net/if_arp.h, along
with ARPHRD_CAN which was added to Linux in version 2.6.25 (commit
cd05acfe65ed2cf2db683fa9a6adb8d35635263b, "[CAN]: Allocate protocol
numbers for PF_CAN") but apparently missed for glibc at the time.
Tested for x86_64.
The RISC-V ABI [1] mandates that "the stack pointer shall be aligned to
a 128-bit boundary upon procedure entry". This as not the case in clone.
This fixes the misc/tst-misalign-clone-internal and
misc/tst-misalign-clone tests.
Fixes bug 28702.
[1] https://github.com/riscv-non-isa/riscv-elf-psabi-doc
The syscall function does not allocate the extra stack frame for scv like other
assembly syscalls using DO_CALL_SCV. So after commit d120fb9941 changed the
offset that is used to save LR, syscall ended up using an invalid offset,
causing regressions on powerpc64. So make sure the extra stack frame is
allocated in syscall.S as well to make it consistent with other uses of
DO_CALL_SCV and avoid similar issues in the future.
Tested on powerpc, powerpc64, and powerpc64le (with and without scv)
Reviewed-by: Raphael M Zinsly <rzinsly@linux.ibm.com>
Due to PIE-by-default, PIC is now defined in more cases. libc.a
does not have _rtld_global_ro, and statically linking setcontext
fails. SHARED is the right condition to use, so that libc.a
references _dl_hwcap instead of _rtld_global_ro.
For static PIE support, the !SHARED case would still have to be made
PIC. This patch does not achieve that.
Fixes commit 23645707f1
("Replace --enable-static-pie with --disable-default-pie").
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
With the morecore hook removed, there is not easy way to provide huge
pages support on with glibc allocator without resorting to transparent
huge pages. And some users and programs do prefer to use the huge pages
directly instead of THP for multiple reasons: no splitting, re-merging
by the VM, no TLB shootdowns for running processes, fast allocation
from the reserve pool, no competition with the rest of the processes
unlike THP, no swapping all, etc.
This patch extends the 'glibc.malloc.hugetlb' tunable: the value
'2' means to use huge pages directly with the system default size,
while a positive value means and specific page size that is matched
against the supported ones by the system.
Currently only memory allocated on sysmalloc() is handled, the arenas
still uses the default system page size.
To test is a new rule is added tests-malloc-hugetlb2, which run the
addes tests with the required GLIBC_TUNABLE setting. On systems without
a reserved huge pages pool, is just stress the mmap(MAP_HUGETLB)
allocation failure. To improve test coverage it is required to create
a pool with some allocated pages.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
Linux Transparent Huge Pages (THP) current supports three different
states: 'never', 'madvise', and 'always'. The 'never' is
self-explanatory and 'always' will enable THP for all anonymous
pages. However, 'madvise' is still the default for some system and
for such case THP will be only used if the memory range is explicity
advertise by the program through a madvise(MADV_HUGEPAGE) call.
To enable it a new tunable is provided, 'glibc.malloc.hugetlb',
where setting to a value diffent than 0 enables the madvise call.
This patch issues the madvise(MADV_HUGEPAGE) call after a successful
mmap() call at sysmalloc() with sizes larger than the default huge
page size. The madvise() call is disable is system does not support
THP or if it has the mode set to "never" and on Linux only support
one page size for THP, even if the architecture supports multiple
sizes.
To test is a new rule is added tests-malloc-hugetlb1, which run the
addes tests with the required GLIBC_TUNABLE setting.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
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.
Remove the LD_PREFER_MAP_32BIT_EXEC environment variable support since
the first PT_LOAD segment is no longer executable due to defaulting to
-z separate-code.
This fixes [BZ #28656].
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
The relationship between the thread pointer and the rseq area
is made explicit. The constant offset can be used by JIT compilers
to optimize rseq access (e.g., for really fast sched_getcpu).
Extensibility is provided through __rseq_size and __rseq_flags.
(In the future, the kernel could request a different rseq size
via the auxiliary vector.)
Co-Authored-By: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
This tunable allows applications to register the rseq area instead
of glibc.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
The rseq area is placed directly into struct pthread. rseq
registration failure is not treated as an error, so it is possible
that threads run with inconsistent registration status.
<sys/rseq.h> is not yet installed as a public header.
Co-Authored-By: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Programs without dynamic dependencies and without a program
interpreter are now run via execve.
Previously, the dynamic linker either crashed while attempting to
read a non-existing dynamic segment (looking for DT_AUDIT/DT_DEPAUDIT
data), or the self-relocated in the static PIE executable crashed
because the outer dynamic linker had already applied RELRO protection.
<dl-execve.h> is needed because execve is not available in the
dynamic loader on Hurd.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
The syscall pipe2 was added in linux 2.6.27 and glibc requires linux
3.2.0. The patch removes the arch-specific implementation for alpha,
ia64, mips, sh, and sparc which requires a different kernel ABI
than the usual one.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and with a build for the affected ABIs.
Variadic function calls in syscalls.list does not work for all ABIs
(for instance where the argument are passed on the stack instead of
registers) and might have underlying issues depending of the variadic
type (for instance if a 64-bit argument is used).
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
The LFS prlimit64 requires a arch-specific implementation in
syscalls.list. Instead add a generic one that handles the
required symbol alias for __RLIM_T_MATCHES_RLIM64_T.
HPPA is the only outlier which requires a different default
symbol.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and with build for the affected ABIs.
Passing 64-bit arguments on syscalls.list is tricky: it requires
to reimplement the expected kernel abi in each architecture. This
is way to better to represent in C code where we already have
macros for this (SYSCALL_LL64).
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
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.
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.
This patch updates the kernel version in the test tst-mman-consts.py
to 5.15. (There are no new MAP_* constants covered by this test in
5.15 that need any other header changes.)
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py.
Linux 5.15 has one new syscall, process_mrelease (and also enables the
clone3 syscall for RV32). It also has a macro __NR_SYSCALL_MASK for
Arm, which is not a syscall but matches the pattern used for syscall
macro names.
Add __NR_SYSCALL_MASK to the names filtered out in the code dealing
with syscall lists, update syscall-names.list for the new syscall and
regenerate the arch-syscall.h headers with build-many-glibcs.py
update-syscalls.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py.
Compiling mmap_internal fails to compile when we use -1 for MMAP2_PAGE_UNIT
on 32 bit architectures. The error is as follows:
../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mmap_internal.h:30:8: error: unknown type
name 'uint64_t'
|
30 | static uint64_t page_unit;
|
| ^~~~~~~~
Fix by adding including stdint.h.
A non-local STV_DEFAULT defined symbol is by default preemptible in a
shared object. j/jal cannot target a preemptible symbol. On other
architectures, such a jump instruction either causes PLT [BZ #18822], or
if short-ranged, sometimes rejected by the linker (but not by GNU ld's
riscv port [ld PR/28509]).
Use HIDDEN_JUMPTARGET to target a non-preemptible symbol instead.
With this patch, ld.so and libc.so can be linked with LLD if source
files are compiled/assembled with -mno-relax/-Wa,-mno-relax.
Acked-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@dabbelt.com>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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.
When LIBC_LINKER_FEATURE is used to check a linker option with the equal
sign, it will likely fail because the LD -v --help output may look like
`-z lam-report=[none|warning|error]` while the needle is something like
`-z lam-report=warning`.
The LD -v --help filter doesn't save much time, so just remove it.
According to C11 6.6p6, `const int` as an operand may not make up a
constant expression. GCC -O0 errors:
../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/opendir.c:107:19: error: static_assert expression is not an integral constant expression
_Static_assert (allocation_size >= sizeof (struct dirent64),
-O2 -Wpedantic has a similar warning.
See https://gcc.gnu.org/PR102502 for GCC's inconsistency.
Use enum which is guaranteed to be a constant expression.
This also makes the file compilable with Clang.
Fixes: 4b962c9e85 ("linux: Simplify opendir buffer allocation")
The powerpc optimization to provide a fast stacktrace requires some
ad-hoc code to handle Linux signal frames and the change is fragile
once the kernel decides to slight change its execution sequence [1].
The generic implementation work as-is and it should be future proof
since the kernel provides the expected CFI directives in vDSO shared
page.
Checked on powerpc-linux-gnu, powerpc64le-linux-gnu, and
powerpc64-linux-gnu.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/libc-alpha/2021-January/122027.html
This was found when testing the OpenRISC port I am working on. These
two tests fail with SIGSEGV:
FAIL: misc/tst-ntp_gettime
FAIL: misc/tst-ntp_gettimex
This was found to be due to the kernel overwriting the stack space
allocated by the timex structure. The reason for the overwrite being
that the kernel timex has 64-bit fields and user space code only
allocates enough stack space for timex with 32-bit fields.
On 32-bit systems with TIMESIZE=64 __USE_TIME_BITS64 is not defined.
This causes the timex structure to use 32-bit fields with type
__syscall_slong_t.
This patch adjusts the ifdef condition to allow 32-bit systems with
TIMESIZE=64 to use the 64-bit long long timex definition.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The 4af6982e4c fix does not fully handle RTLD_BOOTSTRAP usage on
rtld.c due two issues:
1. RTLD_BOOTSTRAP is also used on dl-machine.h on various
architectures and it changes the semantics of various machine
relocation functions.
2. The elf_get_dynamic_info() change was done sideways, previously
to 490e6c62aa get-dynamic-info.h was included by the first
dynamic-link.h include *without* RTLD_BOOTSTRAP being defined.
It means that the code within elf_get_dynamic_info() that uses
RTLD_BOOTSTRAP is in fact unused.
To fix 1. this patch now includes dynamic-link.h only once with
RTLD_BOOTSTRAP defined. The ELF_DYNAMIC_RELOCATE call will now have
the relocation fnctions with the expected semantics for the loader.
And to fix 2. part of 4af6982e4c is reverted (the check argument
elf_get_dynamic_info() is not required) and the RTLD_BOOTSTRAP
pieces are removed.
To reorganize the includes the static TLS definition is moved to
its own header to avoid a circular dependency (it is defined on
dynamic-link.h and dl-machine.h requires it at same time other
dynamic-link.h definition requires dl-machine.h defitions).
Also ELF_MACHINE_NO_REL, ELF_MACHINE_NO_RELA, and ELF_MACHINE_PLT_REL
are moved to its own header. Only ancient ABIs need special values
(arm, i386, and mips), so a generic one is used as default.
The powerpc Elf64_FuncDesc is also moved to its own header, since
csu code required its definition (which would require either include
elf/ folder or add a full path with elf/).
Checked on x86_64, i686, aarch64, armhf, powerpc64, powerpc32,
and powerpc64le.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
Building for nios2-linux-gnu has recently started showing a localplt
test failure, arising from a reference to __floatunsidf from
getloadavg after commit b5c8a3aa82
("Linux: implement getloadavg(3) using sysinfo(2)") (this is an
architecture with soft-fp in libc). Add this as a permitted local PLT
reference in localplt.data.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py for nios2-linux-gnu.
Both new HWCAPs were introduced in these kernel commits:
- 7e8403ecaf884f307b627f3c371475913dd29292
"s390: add HWCAP_S390_PCI_MIO to ELF hwcaps"
- 7e82523f2583e9813e4109df3656707162541297
"s390/hwcaps: make sie capability regular hwcap"
Also note that the kernel commit 511ad531afd4090625def4d9aba1f5227bd44b8e
"s390/hwcaps: shorten HWCAP defines" has shortened the prefix of the macros
from "HWCAP_S390_" to "HWCAP_". For compatibility reasons, we do not
change the prefix in public glibc header file.
Linux v5.14.0 introduced a new futex operation called FUTEX_LOCK_PI2.
This kernel feature can be used to implement
pthread_mutex_clocklock(MONOTONIC)/PI.
Signed-off-by: Kurt Kanzenbach <kurt@linutronix.de>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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.
AF_NETLINK support is not quite optional on modern Linux systems
anymore, so it is likely that the first attempt will always succeed.
Consequently, there is no need to cache the result. Keep AF_UNIX
and the Internet address families as a fallback, for the rare case
that AF_NETLINK is missing. The other address families previously
probed are totally obsolete be now, so remove them.
Use this simplified version as the generic implementation, disabling
Netlink support as needed.
The use of sched_getaffinity on get_nproc and
sysconf (_SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN) done in 903bc7dcc2 (BZ #27645)
breaks the top command in common hypervisor configurations and also
other monitoring tools.
The main issue using sched_getaffinity changed the symbols semantic
from system-wide scope of online CPUs to per-process one (which can
be changed with kernel cpusets or book parameters in VM).
This patch reverts mostly of the 903bc7dcc2, with the
exceptions:
* No more cached values and atomic updates, since they are inherent
racy.
* No /proc/cpuinfo fallback, since /proc/stat is already used and
it would require to revert more arch-specific code.
* The alloca is replace with a static buffer of 1024 bytes.
So the implementation first consult the sysfs, and fallbacks to procfs.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
This patch simplifies the memory allocation code and uses the sched
routines instead of reimplement it. This still uses a stack
allocation buffer, so it can be used on malloc initialization code.
Linux currently supports at maximum of 4096 cpus for most architectures:
$ find -iname Kconfig | xargs git grep -A10 -w NR_CPUS | grep -w range
arch/alpha/Kconfig- range 2 32
arch/arc/Kconfig- range 2 4096
arch/arm/Kconfig- range 2 16 if DEBUG_KMAP_LOCAL
arch/arm/Kconfig- range 2 32 if !DEBUG_KMAP_LOCAL
arch/arm64/Kconfig- range 2 4096
arch/csky/Kconfig- range 2 32
arch/hexagon/Kconfig- range 2 6 if SMP
arch/ia64/Kconfig- range 2 4096
arch/mips/Kconfig- range 2 256
arch/openrisc/Kconfig- range 2 32
arch/parisc/Kconfig- range 2 32
arch/riscv/Kconfig- range 2 32
arch/s390/Kconfig- range 2 512
arch/sh/Kconfig- range 2 32
arch/sparc/Kconfig- range 2 32 if SPARC32
arch/sparc/Kconfig- range 2 4096 if SPARC64
arch/um/Kconfig- range 1 1
arch/x86/Kconfig-# [NR_CPUS_RANGE_BEGIN ... NR_CPUS_RANGE_END] range.
arch/x86/Kconfig- range NR_CPUS_RANGE_BEGIN NR_CPUS_RANGE_END
arch/xtensa/Kconfig- range 2 32
With x86 supporting 8192:
arch/x86/Kconfig
976 config NR_CPUS_RANGE_END
977 int
978 depends on X86_64
979 default 8192 if SMP && CPUMASK_OFFSTACK
980 default 512 if SMP && !CPUMASK_OFFSTACK
981 default 1 if !SMP
So using a maximum of 32k cpu should cover all cases (and I would
expect once we start to have many more CPUs that Linux would provide
a more straightforward way to query for such information).
A test is added to check if sched_getaffinity can successfully return
with large buffers.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
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>
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).
Linux 5.14 adds constants MADV_POPULATE_READ and MADV_POPULATE_WRITE
(with the same values on all architectures). Add these to glibc's
bits/mman-linux.h.
Tested for x86_64.
This patch updates the kernel version in the test tst-mman-consts.py
to 5.14. (There are no new MAP_* constants covered by this test in
5.14 that need any other header changes.)
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py.
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).
Linux 5.14 has two new syscalls, memfd_secret (on some architectures
only) and quotactl_fd. Update syscall-names.list and regenerate the
arch-syscall.h headers with build-many-glibcs.py update-syscalls.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py.
{f,l,}xstat stub for MIPS is using INTERNAL_SYSCALL
to do xstat syscall for glibc ver, However it leaves
errno untouched and thus giving bad errno output.
Setup errno properly when syscall returns non-zero.
Signed-off-by: Jiaxun Yang <jiaxun.yang@flygoat.com>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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/b5ecac94eabfd72ed2916d6d8157e7dchttps://gist.github.com/siddhesh/15ea1f5e435ace9774f485030695ee02
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
In "mips: align stack in clone [BZ #28223]"
(commit 1f51cd9a86) I made a mistake: I
misbelieved one "word" was 2-byte and "doubleword" should be 4-byte.
But in MIPS ABI one "word" is defined 32-bit (4-byte), so "doubleword" is
8-byte [1], and "quadword" is 16-byte [2].
[1]: "System V Application Binary Interface: MIPS(R) RISC Processor
Supplement, 3rd edition", page 3-31
[2]: "MIPSpro(TM) 64-Bit Porting and Transition Guide", page 23
The MIPS O32 ABI requires 4 byte aligned stack, and the MIPS N64 and N32
ABI require 8 byte aligned stack. Previously if the caller passed an
unaligned stack to clone the the child misbehaved.
Fixes bug 28223.
Linux 5.13 adds a PTRACE_GET_RSEQ_CONFIGURATION constant, with an
associated ptrace_rseq_configuration structure.
Add this constant to the various sys/ptrace.h headers in glibc, with
the structure in bits/ptrace-shared.h (named struct
__ptrace_rseq_configuration in glibc, as with other such structures).
Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py.
Helper thread frees copied attribute on NOTIFY_REMOVED message
received from the OS kernel. Unfortunately, it fails to check whether
copied attribute actually exists (data.attr != NULL). This worked
earlier because free() checks passed pointer before actually
attempting to release corresponding memory. But
__pthread_attr_destroy assumes pointer is not NULL.
So passing NULL pointer to __pthread_attr_destroy will result in
segmentation fault. This scenario is possible if
notification->sigev_notify_attributes == NULL (which means default
thread attributes should be used).
Signed-off-by: Nikita Popov <npv1310@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
__REDIRECT and __THROW are not compatible with C++ due to the ordering of the
__asm__ alias and the throw specifier. __REDIRECT_NTH has to be used
instead.
Fixes commit 8a40aff86b ("io: Add time64 alias
for fcntl"), commit 82c395d91e ("misc: Add
time64 alias for ioctl"), commit b39ffab860
("Linux: Add time64 alias for prctl").
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
It turned that the generic implementation of brk() does not work
for sparc, since on failure kernel will just return the previous
input value without setting the conditional register.
This patches adds back a sparc32 and sparc64 implementation removed
by 720480934a.
Checked on sparc64-linux-gnu and sparcv9-linux-gnu.
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>
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>
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>
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>
Remove all malloc hook uses from core malloc functions and move it
into a new library libc_malloc_debug.so. With this, the hooks now no
longer have any effect on the core library.
libc_malloc_debug.so is a malloc interposer that needs to be preloaded
to get hooks functionality back so that the debugging features that
depend on the hooks, i.e. malloc-check, mcheck and mtrace work again.
Without the preloaded DSO these debugging features will be nops.
These features will be ported away from hooks in subsequent patches.
Similarly, legacy applications that need hooks functionality need to
preload libc_malloc_debug.so.
The symbols exported by libc_malloc_debug.so are maintained at exactly
the same version as libc.so.
Finally, static binaries will no longer be able to use malloc
debugging features since they cannot preload the debugging DSO.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
This switches to public symbols without __ prefixes, due to improved
namespace management in glibc.
The script was used with --no-new-version to move the symbols
__res_nquery, __res_nquerydomain, __res_nsearch, __res_query,
__res_querydomain, __res_search, res_query, res_querydomain,
res_search. The public symbols res_nquery, res_nquerydomain,
res_nsearch, res_ownok, res_query, res_querydomain, res_search
were added with make update-all-abi.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
This switches to public symbols without __ prefixes, due to improved
namespace management in glibc.
The symbols res_mkquery, __res_mkquery, __res_nmkquery were
moved with the script (using --no-new-version).
res_mkquery@@GLIBC_2.34, res_nmkquery@@GLIBC_2.34 were added using
make update-all-abi.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Switch to public symbols without __ prefix (due to improved
namespace management).
__res_send, __res_nsend were moved using the script (with
--no-new-version). res_send@@GLIBC_2.34 and res_nsend@@GLIBC_2.34
were added using make update-all-abi.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
This reflects what the remaining functions in the file do.
The __res_dnok, __res_hnok, __res_mailok, __res_ownok were moved
with the script, using --no-new-version, and turned into compat
symbols. __libc_res_dnok@@GLIBC_PRIVATE and
__libc_res_hnok@@GLIBC_PRIVATE are added for internal use, to avoid
accidentally binding to compatibility symbols. The new public
symbols res_dnok, res_hnok, res_mailok, res_ownok were added using
make update-all-abi.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
And reformat it to GNU style.
dn_skipname is used outside glibc, so do not deprecate it,
and export it as dn_skipname (not __dn_skipname). Due to internal
users, provide a __libc_dn_skipname alias, and keep __dn_skipname
as a pure compatibility symbol.
__dn_skipname@GLIBC_2.0 was moved using the script, and
dn_skipname@@GLIBC_2.34 was added using make update-all-abi.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
And reformat it to GNU style.
dn_comp is used in various programs, so keep it as a non-deprecated
symbol. Switch to dn_comp (not __dn_comp) for the ABI name. There
are no internal users, so interposition is not a problem.
The __dn_comp symbol was moved with scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py
--no-new-version. dn_comp@@GLIBC_2.34 was added with
make update-all-abi.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
And reformat to GNU style.
This switches back to the dn_expand name for the ABI symbol and turns
__dn_expand into a compatibility symbol. With the improved namespace
management in current glibc, it is no longer necessary to use a
private namespace symbol. To avoid old code binding to a
GLIBC_PRIVATE symbol by accident, use __libc_dn_expand for the
internal symbol name.
The symbols dn_expand, __dnexpand were moved using
scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py, followed by an adjustment to make
dn_expand the only GLIBC_2.34 symbol.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
And reformat to GNU style.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
And reformat to GNU style, and eliminate the labellen function.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
And reformat to GNU style, and eliminate the digits variable.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
And reformat to GNU style. Check for negative error returns
(instead of -1).
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
And reformat to GNU style. Avoid out-of-bounds pointer arithmetic.
This also results in a fix of bug 28091 due to the additional packet
length checks.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@systemhalted.org>
Reformat to GNU style. Avoid out-of-bounds buffer arithmetic.
Eliminate the labellen function.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Reformat to GNU style. Avoid out-of-bounds pointer arithmetic
(e.g., use eom - dn < 2 instead of dn + 1 >= eom). Inline the
labellen function and fold the compression pointer check into
the length check (l >= 64). Assume ASCII encoding.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The clone3 system call (since Linux 5.3) provides a superset of the
functionality of clone and clone2. It also provides a number of API
improvements, including the ability to specify the size of the child's
stack area which can be used by kernel to compute the shadow stack size
when allocating the shadow stack. Add:
extern int __clone_internal (struct clone_args *__cl_args,
int (*__func) (void *__arg), void *__arg);
to provide an abstract interface for clone, clone2 and clone3.
1. Simplify stack management for thread creation by passing both stack
base and size to create_thread.
2. Consolidate clone vs clone2 differences into a single file.
3. Call __clone3 if HAVE_CLONE3_WAPPER is defined. If __clone3 returns
-1 with ENOSYS, fall back to clone or clone2.
4. Use only __clone_internal to clone a thread. Since the stack size
argument for create_thread is now unconditional, always pass stack size
to create_thread.
5. Enable the public clone3 wrapper in the future after it has been
added to all targets.
NB: Sandbox will return ENOSYS on clone3 in both Chromium:
The following revision refers to this bug:
218438259d
commit 218438259dd795456f0a48f67cbe5b4e520db88b
Author: Matthew Denton <mpdenton@chromium.org>
Date: Thu Jun 03 20:06:13 2021
Linux sandbox: return ENOSYS for clone3
Because clone3 uses a pointer argument rather than a flags argument, we
cannot examine the contents with seccomp, which is essential to
preventing sandboxed processes from starting other processes. So, we
won't be able to support clone3 in Chromium. This CL modifies the
BPF policy to return ENOSYS for clone3 so glibc always uses the fallback
to clone.
Bug: 1213452
Change-Id: I7c7c585a319e0264eac5b1ebee1a45be2d782303
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/2936184
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Matthew Denton <mpdenton@chromium.org>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#888980}
[modify] https://crrev.com/218438259dd795456f0a48f67cbe5b4e520db88b/sandbox/linux/seccomp-bpf-helpers/baseline_policy.cc
and Firefox:
https://hg.mozilla.org/integration/autoland/rev/ecb4011a0c76
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The previous approach defeats the vDSO optimization on older kernels
because a failing clock_gettime64 system call is performed on every
function call. It also results in a clobbered errno value, exposing
an OpenJDK bug (JDK-8270244).
This patch fixes by open-code INLINE_VSYSCALL macro and replace all
INLINE_SYSCALL_CALL with INTERNAL_SYSCALL_CALLS. Now for
__clock_gettime64x, the 64-bit vDSO is used and the 32-bit vDSO is
tried before falling back to 64-bit syscalls.
The previous code preferred 64-bit syscall for the case where the kernel
provides 64-bit time_t syscalls *and* also a 32-bit vDSO (in this case
the *64-bit* syscall should be preferable over the vDSO). All
architectures that provides 32-bit vDSO (i386, mips, powerpc, s390)
modulo sparc; but I am not sure if some kernels versions do provide
only 32-bit vDSO while still providing 64-bit time_t syscall.
Regardless, for such cases the 64-bit time_t syscall is used if the
vDSO returns overflowed 32-bit time_t.
Tested on i686-linux-gnu (with a time64 and non-time64 kernel),
x86_64-linux-gnu. Built with build-many-glibcs.py.
Co-authored-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
<limits.h> used to be a header file with no declarations.
GCC's libgomp includes it in a #pragma GCC visibility hidden block.
Including <unistd.h> from <limits.h> (indirectly) declares everything
in <unistd.h> with hidden visibility, resulting in linker failures.
This commit avoids C declarations in assembler mode and only declares
__sysconf in <limits.h> (and not the entire contents of <unistd.h>).
The __sysconf symbol is already part of the ABI. PTHREAD_STACK_MIN
is no longer defined for __USE_DYNAMIC_STACK_SIZE && __ASSEMBLER__
because there is no possible definition.
Additionally, PTHREAD_STACK_MIN is now defined by <pthread.h> for
__USE_MISC because this is what developers expect based on the macro
name. It also helps to avoid libgomp linker failures in GCC because
libgomp includes <pthread.h> before its visibility hacks.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The constant PTHREAD_STACK_MIN may be too small for some processors.
Rename _SC_SIGSTKSZ_SOURCE to _DYNAMIC_STACK_SIZE_SOURCE. When
_DYNAMIC_STACK_SIZE_SOURCE or _GNU_SOURCE are defined, define
PTHREAD_STACK_MIN to sysconf(_SC_THREAD_STACK_MIN) which is changed
to MIN (PTHREAD_STACK_MIN, sysconf(_SC_MINSIGSTKSZ)).
Consolidate <bits/local_lim.h> with <bits/pthread_stack_min.h> to
provide a constant target specific PTHREAD_STACK_MIN value.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
As a result, is not necessary to specify __attribute__ ((nocommon))
on individual definitions.
GCC 10 defaults to -fno-common on all architectures except ARC,
but this change is compatible with older GCC versions and ARC, too.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
This patch adds a way to close a range of file descriptors on
posix_spawn as a new file action. The API is similar to the one
provided by Solaris 11 [1], where the file action causes the all open
file descriptors greater than or equal to input on to be closed when
the new process is spawned.
The function posix_spawn_file_actions_addclosefrom_np is safe to be
implemented by iterating over /proc/self/fd, since the Linux spawni.c
helper process does not use CLONE_FILES, so its has own file descriptor
table and any failure (in /proc operation) aborts the process creation
and returns an error to the caller.
I am aware that this file action might be redundant to the current
approach of POSIX in promoting O_CLOEXEC in more interfaces. However
O_CLOEXEC is still not the default and for some specific usages, the
caller needs to close all possible file descriptors to avoid them
leaking. Some examples are CPython (discussed in BZ#10353) and OpenJDK
jspawnhelper [2] (where OpenJDK spawns a helper process to exactly
closes all file descriptors). Most likely any environment which calls
functions that might open file descriptor under the hood and aim to use
posix_spawn might face the same requirement.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu on kernel 5.11 and 4.15.
[1] https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E36784_01/html/E36874/posix-spawn-file-actions-addclosefrom-np-3c.html
[2] https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/blob/master/src/java.base/unix/native/libjava/childproc.c#L82
The function closes all open file descriptors greater than or equal to
input argument. Negative values are clamped to 0, i.e, it will close
all file descriptors.
As indicated by the bug report, this is a common symbol provided by
different systems (Solaris, OpenBSD, NetBSD, FreeBSD) and, although
its has inherent issues with not taking in consideration internal libc
file descriptors (such as syslog), this is also a common feature used
in multiple projects [1][2][3][4][5].
The Linux fallback implementation iterates over /proc and close all
file descriptors sequentially. Although it was raised the questioning
whether getdents on /proc/self/fd might return disjointed entries
when file descriptor are closed; it does not seems the case on my
testing on multiple kernel (v4.18, v5.4, v5.9) and the same strategy
is used on different projects [1][2][3][5].
Also, the interface is set a fail-safe meaning that a failure in the
fallback results in a process abort.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu on kernel 5.11 and 4.15.
[1] 5238e95759/src/basic/fd-util.c (L217)
[2] ddf4b77e11/src/lxc/start.c (L236)
[3] 9e4f2f3a6b/Modules/_posixsubprocess.c (L220)
[4] 5f47c0613e/src/libstd/sys/unix/process2.rs (L303-L308)
[5] https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/blob/master/src/java.base/unix/native/libjava/childproc.c#L82
It was added on Linux 5.9 (278a5fbaed89) with CLOSE_RANGE_CLOEXEC
added on 5.11 (582f1fb6b721f). Although FreeBSD has added the same
syscall, this only adds the symbol on Linux ports. This syscall is
required to provided a fail-safe way to implement the closefrom
symbol (BZ #10353).
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu on kernel 5.11 and 4.15.
This patch updates the kernel version in the test tst-mman-consts.py
to 5.13. (There are no new MAP_* constants covered by this test in
5.13 that need any other header changes.)
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py.
Now that there are no internal users anymore, these new symbol
versions can be removed from the public ABI. The compatibility
symbols remain.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This patch consolidates the setsockopt implementation on
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/getsockopt.c. The changes are:
1. Remove it from auto-generation syscalls.list on all architectures.
2. Add __ASSUME_SETSOCKOPT_SYSCALL as default and undef if for
specific kernel versions on some architectures.
This also fix a potential issue where 32-bit time_t ABI should use the
linux setsockopt which overrides the underlying SO_* constants used for
socket timestamping for _TIME_BITS=64.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
This patch consolidates the getsockopt Linux syscall implementation on
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/getsockopt.c. The changes are:
1. Remove it from auto-generation syscalls.list on all architectures.
2. Add __ASSUME_GETSOCKOPT_SYSCALL as default and undef if for
specific kernel versions on some architectures.
This also fix a potential issue where 32-bit time_t ABI should use the
linux getsockopt which overrides the underlying SO_* constants used for
socket timestamping for _TIME_BITS=64.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
This avoids crashes in libc when cmsg is null and refrencing msg
structure when it is null
Signed-off-by: Khem Raj <raj.khem@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbols gai_cancel, gai_error, gai_suspend, getaddrinfo_a,
__gai_suspend_time64 were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
For Hurd (which remains !PTHREAD_IN_LIBC), a few #define redirects
had to be added because several pthread functions are not available
under __. (Linux uses __ prefixes for most hidden aliases, and has
to in some cases to avoid linknamespace issues.)
Linux 5.13 has three new syscalls (landlock_create_ruleset,
landlock_add_rule, landlock_restrict_self). Update syscall-names.list
and regenerate the arch-syscall.h headers with build-many-glibcs.py
update-syscalls.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py.
Starting with recent commit 84f7ce8447
"posix: Add glob64 with 64-bit time_t support", elf/check-localplt
fails due to extra PLT reference __glob64_time64 in __glob64_time64
itself.
This is observable with gcc 7.5 on x86_64 with -m32 or s390x with
-m31. E.g. if build with gcc 10, gcc is generating a call to
__glob64_time64.localalias.
This patch is adding a hidden version of __glob64_time64 in the
same way as for __globfree64_time64.
malloc initialization depends on __get_nprocs, so using
scratch buffers in __get_nprocs may result in infinite recursion.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
The symbols forkpty, login, login_tty, logout, logwtmp, openpty
were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
This is a single commit because most of the symbols are tied together
via forkpty, for example.
Several changes to use hidden prototypes are needed. This commit
also updates pseudoterminal terminology on modified lines.
For 390 (31-bit), this commit follows the existing style for the
compat symbol version creation.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Austin Group issue 62 [1] dropped the async-signal-safe requirement
for fork and provided a async-signal-safe _Fork replacement that
does not run the atfork handlers. It will be included in the next
POSIX standard.
It allow to close a long standing issue to make fork AS-safe (BZ#4737).
As indicated on the bug, besides the internal lock for the atfork
handlers itself; there is no guarantee that the handlers itself will
not introduce more AS-safe issues.
The idea is synchronize fork with the required internal locks to allow
children in multithread processes to use mostly of standard function
(even though POSIX states only AS-safe function should be used). On
signal handles, _Fork should be used intead and only AS-safe functions
should be used.
For testing, the new tst-_Fork only check basic usage. I also added
a new tst-mallocfork3 which uses the same strategy to check for
deadlock of tst-mallocfork2 but using threads instead of subprocesses
(and it does deadlock if it replaces _Fork with fork).
[1] https://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=62
librt.so is no longer installed for PTHREAD_IN_LIBC, and tests
are not linked against it. $(librt) is introduced globally for
shared tests that need to be linked for both PTHREAD_IN_LIBC
and !PTHREAD_IN_LIBC.
GLIBC_PRIVATE symbols that were needed during the transition are
removed again.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The symbols were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
The way the ABI intransition is implemented is changed with this
commit: the implementation is now consolidated in one file with a
TIMER_T_WAS_INT_COMPAT check.
The shared librt is now empty, so this commit adds a placeholder
symbol at the base version, GLIBC_2.2, and potentially at the
GLIBC_2.3.3 version as well (the leftover from the int/timer_t ABI
transition).
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbols were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
The way the ABI intransition is implemented is changed with this
commit: the implementation is now consolidated in one file with a
TIMER_T_WAS_INT_COMPAT check.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
The way the ABI intransition is implemented is changed with this
commit: the implementation is now consolidated in one file with a
TIMER_T_WAS_INT_COMPAT check.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerva Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbols were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
timer_create and timer_delete are tied together via the int/timer_t
compatibility code. The way the ABI intransition is implemented
is changed with this commit: the implementation is now consolidated
in one file with a TIMER_T_WAS_INT_COMPAT check.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This is almost equivalent to __WORDSIZE == 64
&& OTHER_SHLIB_COMPAT (librt, GLIBC_2_1, GLIBC_2_3_3), except
that this expression is true for mips64/n64 targets as well,
even though those did not undergo the timer_t transition.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
This adds several temporary GLIBC_PRIVATE exports. The symbol names
are changed so that they all start with __timer_.
It is now possible to invoke the fork handler directly, so
pthread_atfork is no longer necessary. The associated error cannot
happen anymore, and cancellation handling can be removed from
the helper thread routine.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
A placeholder symbol is needed on some architectures for the
GLIBC_2.3.4 version.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerva Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbols were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
A placeholder symbol is required to keep the GLIBC_2.7 version.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerva Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
An explicit call from fork into the mq_notify implementation replaces
the previous use of pthread_atfork.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerva Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
To introduce the proper symbol versioning, the implementation of
the system call wrapper us moved to a C file.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerva Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbols were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Placeholder symbols are needed on some architectures, to keep the
GLIBC_2.1 and GLIBC_2.4 symbol versions around.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerva Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Move the common code into rt/lio_listio-common.c and include
the file in both rt/lio_listio.c and rt/lio_listio64.c. The common
code automatically defines both public symbols for __WORDSIZE == 64.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerva Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Both symbols have to be moved at the same time because they
are intertwined for __WORDSIZE == 64. The treatment of this case
is also changed to match more closely how the other files suppress
the declaration of the *64 identifier.
The symbols were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerva Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbols were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
There is a minor oddity here: This is generic code shared with Hurd,
and Hurd does not have time64 support. This is why the
versioned_symbol export for __aio_suspend_time64 is restricted to
the PTHREAD_IN_LIBC code.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerva Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Both symbols have to be moved at the same time because they
are intertwined for __WORDSIZE == 64. The treatment of this case
is also changed to match more closely how the other files suppress
the declaration of the *64 identifier.
The symbols were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbols were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
A version placeholder symbol is needed on alpha and sparc because
of the additional symbols formerly at version GLIBC_2.3.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>:
This commit also moves the aio_misc and aio_sigquue helper,
so GLIBC_PRIVATE exports need to be added.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The Linux nptl implementation is used as base for generic fork
implementation to handle the internal locks and mutexes. The
system specific bits are moved a new internal _Fork symbol.
(This new implementation will be used to provide a async-signal-safe
_Fork now that POSIX has clarified that fork might not be
async-signal-safe [1]).
For Hurd it means that the __nss_database_fork_prepare_parent and
__nss_database_fork_subprocess will be run in a slight different
order.
[1] https://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=62
For !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS there is no need to issue a 64-bit syscall
if the provided timeout fits in a 32-bit one. The 64-bit usage should
be rare since the timeout is a relative one.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
For !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS there is no need to issue a 64-bit syscall
if the provided timeout fits in a 32-bit one. The 64-bit usage should
be rare since the timeout is a relative one.
The large timeout are already tests by io/tst-utimensat-skeleton.c.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
For !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS there is no need to issue a 64-bit syscall
if the provided timeout fits in a 32-bit one. The 64-bit usage should
be rare since the timeout is a relative one.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
For !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS there is no need to issue a 64-bit syscall
if the provided timeout fits in a 32-bit one. The 64-bit usage should
be rare since the timeout is a relative one.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
For !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS there is no need to issue a 64-bit syscall
if the provided timeout fits in a 32-bit one. The 64-bit usage should
be rare since the timeout is a relative one.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
For !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS there is no need to issue a 64-bit syscall
if the provided timeout fits in a 32-bit one. The 64-bit usage should
be rare since the timeout is a relative one.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
For !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS there is no need to issue a 64-bit syscall
if the provided timeout fits in a 32-bit one. The 64-bit usage should
be rare since the timeout is a relative one.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
It breaks the usage case of live migration like CRIU or similar
and most usages can be optimized away by either building glibc with
a minimum 5.1 kernel or by using the 32-bit syscall for the common
case.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
It breaks the usage case of live migration like CRIU or similar.
The performance drawback is it would require an extra syscall
on older kernels without 64-bit time support.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
It breaks the usage case of live migration like CRIU or similar.
The performance drawback is it would require an extra syscall
on older kernels without 64-bit time support.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
For !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS there is no need to issue a 64-bit syscall
if the provided timeout fits in a 32-bit one. The 64-bit usage should
be rare since the timeout is a relative one. This also avoids the need
to use supports_time64() (which breaks the usage case of live migration
like CRIU or similar).
It also fixes an issue on 32-bit select call for !__ASSUME_PSELECT
(microblase with older kernels only) where the expected timeout
is a 'struct timeval' instead of 'struct timespec'.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
For !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS there is no need to issue a 64-bit syscall
if the provided timeout fits in a 32-bit one. The 64-bit usage should
be rare since the timeout is a relative one. This also avoids the need
to use supports_time64() (which breaks the usage case of live migration
like CRIU or similar).
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
For !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS there is no need to issue a 64-bit syscall
if the provided timeout fits in a 32-bit one. The 64-bit usage should
be rare since the timeout is a relative one. This also avoids the need
to use supports_time64() (which breaks the usage case of live migration
like CRIU or similar).
Checked on i686-linux-gnu on a 4.15 kernel and on a 5.11 kernel
(with and without --enable-kernel=5.1) and on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
For the legacy ABI with supports 32-bit time_t it calls the 64-bit
time directly, since the LFS symbols calls the 64-bit time_t ones
internally.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu and x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
This mirrors the situation on Hurd. These directories are on
the include search part, so #include <pthreadP.h> works after this
change on both Hurd and nptl.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The pthread-based implementation is the generic one. Replacing
the stubs makes it clear that they do not have to be adjusted for
the libpthread move.
Result of:
git mv -f sysdeps/pthread/aio_misc.h sysdeps/generic/
git mv sysdeps/pthread/timer_routines.c sysdeps/htl/
git mv -f sysdeps/pthread/{aio,lio,timer}_*.c rt/
Followed by manual adjustment of the #include paths in
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wordsize-64, and a move of the version
definitions formerly in sysdeps/pthread/Versions.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This function has no dependency on libpthread, so the move is also
applied to Hurd.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This function has no dependency on libpthread, so the move is also
applied to Hurd.
To avoid localplt failures, use __open64_nocancel instead of
pthread_setcancelstate and open.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
These were turned into compat symbols as part of the libpthread
move. It turns out they are used by language run-time libraries
(e.g., the GCC D front end), so it makes to preserve them as
external symbols even though they are not declared in any header
file.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Starting with recent commit 92a7d13439
"x86-64: Align child stack to 16 bytes [BZ #27902]"
the new test misc/tst-misalign-clone has failed on s390x/s390.
This patch is now aligning the stack to a double
word boundary as also done in start.S files.
Similar to fts, ftw routines passes a stat pointer that might
differ of size and layout when 64-bit time API is used.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu and x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Similar to glob, fts routines passes a stat pointer that might
differ of size and layout when 64-bit time API is used.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu and x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The glob might pass a different stat struct for gl_stat and gl_lstat
when GLOB_ALTDIRFUNC is used. This requires add a new 64-bit time
version that also uses 64-bit time stat functions.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu and x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
A new build flag, _TIME_BITS, enables the usage of the newer 64-bit
time symbols for legacy ABI (where 32-bit time_t is default). The 64
bit time support is only enabled if LFS (_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64) is
also used.
Different than LFS support, the y2038 symbols are added only for the
required ABIs (armhf, csky, hppa, i386, m68k, microblaze, mips32,
mips64-n32, nios2, powerpc32, sparc32, s390-32, and sh). The ABIs with
64-bit time support are unchanged, both for symbol and types
redirection.
On Linux the full 64-bit time support requires a minimum of kernel
version v5.1. Otherwise, the 32-bit fallbacks are used and might
results in error with overflow return code (EOVERFLOW).
The i686-gnu does not yet support 64-bit time.
This patch exports following rediretions to support 64-bit time:
* libc:
adjtime
adjtimex
clock_adjtime
clock_getres
clock_gettime
clock_nanosleep
clock_settime
cnd_timedwait
ctime
ctime_r
difftime
fstat
fstatat
futimens
futimes
futimesat
getitimer
getrusage
gettimeofday
gmtime
gmtime_r
localtime
localtime_r
lstat_time
lutimes
mktime
msgctl
mtx_timedlock
nanosleep
nanosleep
ntp_gettime
ntp_gettimex
ppoll
pselec
pselect
pthread_clockjoin_np
pthread_cond_clockwait
pthread_cond_timedwait
pthread_mutex_clocklock
pthread_mutex_timedlock
pthread_rwlock_clockrdlock
pthread_rwlock_clockwrlock
pthread_rwlock_timedrdlock
pthread_rwlock_timedwrlock
pthread_timedjoin_np
recvmmsg
sched_rr_get_interval
select
sem_clockwait
semctl
semtimedop
sem_timedwait
setitimer
settimeofday
shmctl
sigtimedwait
stat
thrd_sleep
time
timegm
timerfd_gettime
timerfd_settime
timespec_get
utime
utimensat
utimes
utimes
wait3
wait4
* librt:
aio_suspend
mq_timedreceive
mq_timedsend
timer_gettime
timer_settime
* libanl:
gai_suspend
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
It is only used for !__USE_MISC, the default way uses the kernel
headers. The patch also adds the SO_TIMESTAMP, SO_TIMESTAMPNS, and
SO_TIMESTAMPING which uses new values for 64-bit time_t kernel
interfaces.
The __USE_TIME_BITS64 is not defined internally yet, although the
internal header is used when building the 64-bit stat implementations.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Instead of replicate the same definitions from struct_shmid64_ds.h
on the multiple struct_shmid_ds.h, use a common header which is included
when required (struct_shmid64_ds_helper.h).
The __USE_TIME_BITS64 is not defined internally yet, although the
internal header is used when building the 64-bit semctl implementation.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Instead of replicate the same definitions from struct_semid64_ds.h
on the multiple struct_semid_ds.h, use a common header which is included
when required (struct_semid64_ds_helper.h).
The __USE_TIME_BITS64 is not defined internally yet, although the
internal header is used when building the 64-bit semctl implementation.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Instead of replicate the same definitions from struct_msqid64_ds.h
on the multiple struct_msqid_ds.h, use a common header which is included
when required (struct_msqid64_ds_helper.h).
The __USE_TIME_BITS64 is not defined internally yet, although the
internal header is used when building the 64-bit stat implementations.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Instead of replicate the same definitions from struct_stat_time64.h
on the multiple struct_stat.h, use a common header which is included
when required (struct_stat_time64_helper.h). The 64-bit time support
is added only for LFS support.
The __USE_TIME_BITS64 is not defined internally yet, although the
internal header is used when building the 64-bit stat implementations.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The __USE_TIME_BITS64 is not defined internally yet.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Handle the SO_TIMESTAMP{NS} similar to recvmsg: for
!__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS it converts the first 32-bit time SO_TIMESTAMP
or SO_TIMESTAMPNS and appends it to the control buffer if has extra
space or returns MSG_CTRUNC otherwise. The 32-bit time field is kept
as-is.
Also for !__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS it limits the maximum number of
'struct mmsghdr *' to IOV_MAX (and also increases the stack size
requirement to IOV_MAX times sizeof (socklen_t)). The Linux imposes
a similar limit to sendmmsg, so bound the array size on recvmmsg is not
unreasonable. And this will be used only on older when building with
32-bit time support.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu (on 5.4 and on 4.15
kernel).
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The recvmsg handling is more complicated because it requires check the
returned kernel control message and make some convertions. For
!__ASSUME_TIME64_SYSCALLS it converts the first 32-bit time SO_TIMESTAMP
or SO_TIMESTAMPNS and appends it to the control buffer if has extra
space or returns MSG_CTRUNC otherwise. The 32-bit time field is kept
as-is.
Calls with __TIMESIZE=32 will see the converted 64-bit time control
messages as spurious control message of unknown type. Calls with
__TIMESIZE=64 running on pre-time64 kernels will see the original
message as a spurious control ones of unknown typ while running on
kernel with native 64-bit time support will only see the time64 version
of the control message.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu (on 5.4 and on 4.15
kernel).
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The constant values will be changed for __TIMESIZE=64, so binaries built
with 64-bit time support might fail to work properly on old kernels.
Both {get,set}sockopt will retry the syscall with the old constant
values and the timeout value adjusted when kernel returns ENOTPROTOPT.
It also adds an internal only SO_{RCV,SND}TIMEO where
COMPAT_SO_{RCV,SND}TIMEO_OLD indicates pre 32-bit time support and
COMPAT_SO_{RCV,SND}TIMEO_NEW indicates time64 support. It allows to
refer to constant independently of the time_t ABI and kernel version
used.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu (on 5.4 and on 4.15
kernel).
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The s390 will require the 64-bit time symbols for y2038 support.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The n32 will require the 64-bit time symbols for y2038 support.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The n32 will require the 64-bit time symbols for y2038 support.
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Commit 68ab82f566 added support for the scv
syscall ABI on powerpc. Since then systems that have kernel and processor
support started using scv. However adding the proper support for a new syscall
ABI requires changes to several other projects (e.g. qemu, valgrind, strace,
kernel), which are gradually receiving support.
Meanwhile, having a way to disable scv on glibc at build time can be useful for
distros that may encounter conflicts with projects that still do not support the
scv ABI, buying time until proper support is added.
This commit adds a --disable-scv option that disables scv support and uses sc
for all syscalls, like before commit 68ab82f566.
Reviewed-by: Raphael M Zinsly <rzinsly@linux.ibm.com>
Now that pthread_kill is provided by libc.so it is possible to
implement the generic POSIX implementation as
'pthread_kill(pthread_self(), sig)'.
For Linux implementation, pthread_kill read the targeting TID from
the TCB. For raise, this it not possible because it would make raise
fail when issue after vfork (where creates the resulting process
has a different TID from the parent, but its TCB is not updated as
for pthread_create). To make raise use pthread_kill, it is make
usable from vfork by getting the target thread id through gettid
syscall.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and aarch64-linux-gnu.
This patch replaced obsolete AC_TRY_COMPILE to AC_COMPILE_IFELSE or
AC_PREPROC_IFELSE.
It has been confirmed that GNU 'autoconf' 2.69 suppressed obsolete
warnings, updated the following files:
- configure
- sysdeps/mach/configure
- sysdeps/mach/hurd/configure
- sysdeps/s390/configure
- sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure
and didn't change the following files:
- sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-opt/configure
- sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/configure
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
In elf/Makefile, remove the $(libdl) dependency from testobj1.so
because it the unused libdl DSO now causes elf/tst-unused-deps to
fail.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
There is a minor functionality enhancement: dlerror now sets
errno if it was set as part of the exception. (This is the result
of using %m in asprintf, to avoid the strerror PLT call.) The
previous errno value upon function return was unpredictable.
Documenting this as a feature is premature; we need to make sure
that the error codes are meaningful when they are set by the dynamic
loader.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Some targets have a GLIBC_2.0 baseline for libdl, while using
GLIBC_2.2 for libc. This means that the generated libc.map file
does not have any version nodes for GLIBC_2.0 or GLIBC_2.1. However,
moving symbols from libdl into libc needs such version nodes.
(Future symbol moves from librt will need this as well.)
This kludge is only necessary for symbols predating GLIBC_2.2 because
the affected targets use GLIBC_2.2 as the baseline for libc. Given
the small number and fixed set of affected architectures, no generic
mechanism is implemented, and instead the map file fragment is
hard-coded in scripts/versions.mk.
The compat_symbol macro already emits the appropriate version strings,
so no adjustments are needed there.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Some symbols have explicit versioned_symbol or compat_symbol markers
in the sources, but no corresponding entry in the Versions files.
This presently works because the local: * directive is only applied
to the base version.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
__pthread_attr_copy can fail and does not initialize the attribute
structure in that case.
If __pthread_attr_copy is never called and there is no allocated
attribute, pthread_attr_destroy should not be called, otherwise
there is a null pointer dereference in rt/tst-mqueue6.
Fixes commit 42d3593505
("Use __pthread_attr_copy in mq_notify (bug 27896)").
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
This patch optimizes the performance of memcpy/memmove for A64FX [1]
which implements ARMv8-A SVE and has L1 64KB cache per core and L2 8MB
cache per NUMA node.
The performance optimization makes use of Scalable Vector Register
with several techniques such as loop unrolling, memory access
alignment, cache zero fill, and software pipelining.
SVE assembler code for memcpy/memmove is implemented as Vector Length
Agnostic code so theoretically it can be run on any SOC which supports
ARMv8-A SVE standard.
We confirmed that all testcases have been passed by running 'make
check' and 'make xcheck' not only on A64FX but also on ThunderX2.
And also we confirmed that the SVE 512 bit vector register performance
is roughly 4 times better than Advanced SIMD 128 bit register and 8
times better than scalar 64 bit register by running 'make bench'.
[1] https://github.com/fujitsu/A64FX
Reviewed-by: Wilco Dijkstra <Wilco.Dijkstra@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <Szabolcs.Nagy@arm.com>
This patch is a test helper script to change Vector Length for child
process. This script can be used as test-wrapper for 'make check'.
Usage examples:
~/build$ make check subdirs=string \
test-wrapper='~/glibc/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/vltest.py 16'
~/build$ ~/glibc/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/vltest.py 16 \
make test t=string/test-memcpy
~/build$ ~/glibc/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/vltest.py 32 \
./debugglibc.sh string/test-memmove
~/build$ ~/glibc/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/vltest.py 64 \
./testrun.sh string/test-memset
Since the variable expands to nothing under Linux, it is no longer
necessary to clutter the makefiles with it.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Only the placeholder compatibility symbols are left now.
The __errno_location symbol was removed (moved) using
scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The symbols were moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
The libpthread placeholder symbols need some changes because some
symbol versions have gone away completely. But
__errno_location@@GLIBC_2.0 still exists, so the GLIBC_2.0 version
is still there.
The internal __pthread_create symbol now points to the correct
function, so the sysdeps/nptl/thrd_create.c override is no longer
necessary.
There was an issue how the hidden alias of pthread_getattr_default_np
was defined, so this commit cleans up that aspects and removes the
GLIBC_PRIVATE export altogether.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The tst-timespec_getres (e5ac7bd679) triggers an issue on 32-bit
architecture on Linux older than 5.1, where the fallback syscall
is used.
Checked on powerpc-linux-gnu.
ISO C2X adds a timespec_getres function alongside the C11
timespec_get, with functionality similar to that of POSIX clock_getres
(including allowing a NULL pointer to be passed to the function).
Implement this function for glibc, similarly to the implementation of
timespec_get.
This includes a basic test like that of timespec_get, but no
documentation in the manual, given that TIME_UTC and timespec_get
aren't documented in the manual at all. The handling of 64-bit time
follows that in timespec_get; people maintaining patch series for
64-bit time will need to update them accordingly (to export
__timespec_getres64, redirect calls in time.h and run the test for
_TIME_BITS=64).
Tested for x86_64 and x86, and (previous version; only testcase
differs) with build-many-glibcs.py.
The symbol was moved using scripts/move-symbol-to-libc.py.
The GLIBC_2.11 version is now empty, so add a placeholder symbol.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>