This patch adds the ulps test file to prepare for the upcoming
hard float patch. This is separated out to make the hard float patch
smaller.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Using int may give false results for future dates (timeouts after the
year 2028).
Fixes commit 04a21e050d64a1193a6daab872bca2528bda44b ("CVE-2024-33601,
CVE-2024-33602: nscd: netgroup: Use two buffers in addgetnetgrentX
(bug 31680)").
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
This change follows two previous fixes addressing multiple definitions
of __memcpy_chk and __mempcpy_chk functions on i586, and __memmove_chk
and __memset_chk functions on i686. The test is intended to prevent
such issues from occurring in the future.
Signed-off-by: Gabi Falk <gabifalk@gmx.com>
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry V. Levin <ldv@altlinux.org>
Commit c73c96a4a1 updated memcpy.S and
mempcpy.S, but omitted memmove.S and memset.S. As a result, the static
library built as PIC, whether with or without multiarch support,
contains two definitions for each of the __memmove_chk and __memset_chk
symbols.
/usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/14/../../../../i686-pc-linux-gnu/bin/ld: /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/14/../../../../lib/libc.a(memset-ia32.o): in function `__memset_chk':
/var/tmp/portage/sys-libs/glibc-2.39-r3/work/glibc-2.39/string/../sysdeps/i386/i686/memset.S:32: multiple definition of `__memset_chk'; /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/14/../../../../lib/libc.a(memset_chk.o):/var/tmp/portage/sys-libs/glibc-2.39-r3/work/glibc-2.39/debug/../sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/memset_chk.c:24: first defined here
After this change, regardless of PIC options, the static library, built
for i686 with multiarch contains implementations of these functions
respectively from debug/memmove_chk.c and debug/memset_chk.c, and
without multiarch contains implementations of these functions
respectively from sysdeps/i386/memmove_chk.S and
sysdeps/i386/memset_chk.S. This ensures that memmove and memset won't
pull in __chk_fail and the routines it calls.
Reported-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
Tested-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
Fixes: c73c96a4a1 ("i686: Fix build with --disable-multiarch")
Signed-off-by: Gabi Falk <gabifalk@gmx.com>
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry V. Levin <ldv@altlinux.org>
/home/bmg/install/compilers/x86_64-linux-gnu/lib/gcc/x86_64-glibc-linux-gnu/13.2.1/../../../../x86_64-glibc-linux-gnu/bin/ld: /home/bmg/build/glibcs/i586-linux-gnu/glibc/libc.a(memcpy_chk.o): in function `__memcpy_chk':
/home/bmg/src/glibc/debug/../sysdeps/i386/memcpy_chk.S:29: multiple definition of `__memcpy_chk';/home/bmg/build/glibcs/i586-linux-gnu/glibc/libc.a(memcpy.o):/home/bmg/src/glibc/string/../sysdeps/i386/i586/memcpy.S:31: first defined here /home/bmg/install/compilers/x86_64-linux-gnu/lib/gcc/x86_64-glibc-linux-gnu/13.2.1/../../../../x86_64-glibc-linux-gnu/bin/ld: /home/bmg/build/glibcs/i586-linux-gnu/glibc/libc.a(mempcpy_chk.o): in function `__mempcpy_chk': /home/bmg/src/glibc/debug/../sysdeps/i386/mempcpy_chk.S:28: multiple definition of `__mempcpy_chk'; /home/bmg/build/glibcs/i586-linux-gnu/glibc/libc.a(mempcpy.o):/home/bmg/src/glibc/string/../sysdeps/i386/i586/memcpy.S:31: first defined here
After this change, the static library built for i586, regardless of PIC
options, contains implementations of these functions respectively from
sysdeps/i386/memcpy_chk.S and sysdeps/i386/mempcpy_chk.S. This ensures
that memcpy and mempcpy won't pull in __chk_fail and the routines it
calls.
Reported-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Gabi Falk <gabifalk@gmx.com>
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry V. Levin <ldv@altlinux.org>
The FSF's Licensing and Compliance Lab noted a discrepancy in the
licensing of several files in the glibc package.
When timespect_get.c was impelemented the license did not include
the standard ", or (at your option) any later version." text.
Change the license in timespec_get.c and all copied files to match
the expected license.
This change was previously approved in principle by the FSF in
RT ticket #1316403. And a similar instance was fixed in
commit 46703efa02.
While AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT is similar in function to the Hurd's O_NOTRANS,
there are significant enough differences in semantics:
1. AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT has no effect on already established mounts,
whereas O_NOTRANS causes the lookup to ignore both passive and active
translators. A better approximation of the AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT behavior
would be to honor active translators, but avoid starting passive
ones; like what the file_name_lookup_carefully () routine from
sutils/clookup.c in the Hurd source tree does.
2. On GNU/Hurd, translators are used much more pervasively than mounts
on "traditional" Unix systems: among other things, translators
underlie features like symlinks, device nodes, and sockets. And while
on a "traditional" Unix system, the mountpoint and the root of the
mounted tree may look similar enough for many purposes (they're both
directories, for one thing), the Hurd allows for any combination of
the two node types, and indeed it is common to have e.g. a device
node "mounted" on top of a regular file node on the underlying
filesystem. Ignoring the translator and stat'ing the underlying node
is therefore likely to return very different results from what you'd
get if you stat the translator's root node.
In practice, mapping AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT to O_NOTRANS was breaking GNU
Coreutils, including stat(1) and ls(1):
$ stat /dev/hd0s1
File: /dev/hd0s1
Size: 0 Blocks: 8 IO Block: 8192 regular empty file
Device: 0,8 Inode: 32866 Links: 1
This was also breaking GNOME's glib, where a g_local_file_stat () call
that is supposed to stat () a file through a symlink uses
AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT, which gets mapped to O_NOTRANS, which then causes the
stat () call to stat symlink itself like lstat () would, rather then the
file it points to, which is what the logic expects to happen.
This reverts most of 13710e7e6a
"hurd: Add support for AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT".
Signed-off-by: Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com>
This reverts commit 84e93afc7 ("Switch to UTF-8 for INSTALL") and
reinstates commit c14f2e4aa ("Make sure INSTALL is ASCII plaintext")
and regenerates INSTALL.
It turns out that different versions of makeinfo (texinfo/texi2any),
at least versions 7.0.3 and 7.1, put unicode quote glyphs in different
places (specifically whether contractions like you'd, don't, aren't or
you'll use ’ or '). This breaks the make dist target as used for
(snapshot) releases, which have a check on the regenerated INSTALL
file. Using --disable-encoding generates the same plaintext ASCII on
all versions.
An alternative would be to regenerate INSTALL with texinfo 7.1 and
require at least that version. But that seems too soon while various
distros don't have 7.1 yet. We can try again to use UTF-8 for INSTALL
in a couple of years.
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
At this point, this is mainly a tool for testing the early ld.so
CPU compatibility diagnostics: GCC uses the new instructions in most
functions, so it's easy to spot if some of the early code is not
built correctly.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Also compile dl-misc.os with $(rtld-early-cflags) to avoid
Program received signal SIGILL, Illegal instruction.
0x00007ffff7fd36ea in _dl_strtoul (nptr=nptr@entry=0x7fffffffe2c9 "2",
endptr=endptr@entry=0x7fffffffd728) at dl-misc.c:156
156 bool positive = true;
(gdb) bt
#0 0x00007ffff7fd36ea in _dl_strtoul (nptr=nptr@entry=0x7fffffffe2c9 "2",
endptr=endptr@entry=0x7fffffffd728) at dl-misc.c:156
#1 0x00007ffff7fdb1a9 in tunable_initialize (
cur=cur@entry=0x7ffff7ffbc00 <tunable_list+2176>,
strval=strval@entry=0x7fffffffe2c9 "2", len=len@entry=1)
at dl-tunables.c:131
#2 0x00007ffff7fdb3a2 in parse_tunables (valstring=<optimized out>)
at dl-tunables.c:258
#3 0x00007ffff7fdb5d9 in __GI___tunables_init (envp=0x7fffffffdd58)
at dl-tunables.c:288
#4 0x00007ffff7fe44c3 in _dl_sysdep_start (
start_argptr=start_argptr@entry=0x7fffffffdcb0,
dl_main=dl_main@entry=0x7ffff7fe5f80 <dl_main>)
at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/dl-sysdep.c:110
#5 0x00007ffff7fe5cae in _dl_start_final (arg=0x7fffffffdcb0) at rtld.c:494
#6 _dl_start (arg=0x7fffffffdcb0) at rtld.c:581
#7 0x00007ffff7fe4b38 in _start ()
(gdb)
when setting GLIBC_TUNABLES in glibc compiled with APX.
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
This avoids potential memory corruption when the underlying NSS
callback function does not use the buffer space to store all strings
(e.g., for constant strings).
Instead of custom buffer management, two scratch buffers are used.
This increases stack usage somewhat.
Scratch buffer allocation failure is handled by return -1
(an invalid timeout value) instead of terminating the process.
This fixes bug 31679.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
The addgetnetgrentX call in addinnetgrX may have failed to produce
a result, so the result variable in addinnetgrX can be NULL.
Use db->negtimeout as the fallback value if there is no result data;
the timeout is also overwritten below.
Also avoid sending a second not-found response. (The client
disconnects after receiving the first response, so the data stream did
not go out of sync even without this fix.) It is still beneficial to
add the negative response to the mapping, so that the client can get
it from there in the future, instead of going through the socket.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
If we failed to add a not-found response to the cache, the dataset
point can be null, resulting in a null pointer dereference.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Add another difficult needle to strstr that clearly shows the quadratic
complexity of bruteforce algorithms.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Define MINIMUM_X86_ISA_LEVEL at configure time to avoid
/usr/bin/ld: …/build/elf/librtld.os: in function `init_cpu_features':
…/git/elf/../sysdeps/x86/cpu-features.c:1202: undefined reference to `_dl_runtime_resolve_fxsave'
/usr/bin/ld: …/build/elf/librtld.os: relocation R_X86_64_PC32 against undefined hidden symbol `_dl_runtime_resolve_fxsave' can not be used when making a shared object
/usr/bin/ld: final link failed: bad value
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
when glibc is built with -march=x86-64-v3 and configured with
--with-rtld-early-cflags=-march=x86-64, which is used to allow ld.so to
print an error message on unsupported CPUs:
Fatal glibc error: CPU does not support x86-64-v3
This fixes BZ #31676.
Reviewed-by: Sunil K Pandey <skpgkp2@gmail.com>
The current IFUNC selection is always using the most recent
features which are available via AT_HWCAP. But in
some scenarios it is useful to adjust this selection.
The environment variable:
GLIBC_TUNABLES=glibc.cpu.hwcaps=-xxx,yyy,zzz,....
can be used to enable HWCAP feature yyy, disable HWCAP feature xxx,
where the feature name is case-sensitive and has to match the ones
used in sysdeps/loongarch/cpu-tunables.c.
Signed-off-by: caiyinyu <caiyinyu@loongson.cn>
Fall back to ppoll if ppoll_time64 fails with ENOSYS.
Fixes commit 370da8a121 ("nptl: Fix
tst-cancel30 on sparc64").
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Delay setting file->decided until the data has been successfully loaded
by _nl_load_locale(). If the function fails to load the data then we
must return and error and leave decided untouched to allow the caller to
attempt to load the data again at a later time. We should not set
decided to 1 early in the function since doing so may prevent attempting
to load it again. We want to try loading it again because that allows an
open to fail and set errno correctly.
On the other side of this problem is that if we are called again with
the same inputs we will fetch the cached version of the object and carry
out no open syscalls and that fails to set errno so we must set errno to
ENOENT in that case. There is a second code path that has to be handled
where the name of the locale matches but the codeset doesn't match.
These changes ensure that errno is correctly set on failure in all the
return paths in _nl_find_locale().
Adds tst-locale-loadlocale to cover the bug.
No regressions on x86_64.
Co-authored-by: Jeff Law <law@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
On some architectures and depending on the page size, the loader can
also allocate some memory during dependencies loading and it will be
marked as 'loader malloc'. However, if the system page size is
large enough, the initial data page will be enough for all required
allocation and there will be no extra loader mmap. To avoid false
negatives, the test does not check for such pages.
Checked on powerpc64le-linux-gnu with 64k pagesize.
Reviewed-by: Simon Chopin <simon.chopin@canonical.com>
Until GCC removes Nios II support (at which point we should do so as
well), this is now needed for GCC 14 / mainline to build for
nios2-linux-gnu target.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py (GCC mainline) for nios2-linux-gnu.
These fields store timestamps when the system was running. No Linux
systems existed before 1970, so these values are unused. Switching
to unsigned types allows continued use of the existing struct layouts
beyond the year 2038.
The intent is to give distributions more time to switch to improved
interfaces that also avoid locking/data corruption issues.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
These structs describe file formats under /var/log, and should not
depend on the definition of _TIME_BITS. This is achieved by
defining __WORDSIZE_TIME64_COMPAT32 to 1 on 32-bit ports that
support 32-bit time_t values (where __time_t is 32 bits).
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The default <utmp-size.h> is for ports with a 64-bit time_t.
Ports with a 32-bit time_t or with __WORDSIZE_TIME64_COMPAT32=1
need to override it.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Add a simple benchmark to measure the overhead of internal libc locks in
the random() implementation on both single- and multi-threaded cases.
This relies on the implementation of random using internal locks to
access shared global data, and that the runtime uses multi-threaded
locking once a thread has been created (even after it finishes).
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
ISO-2022-CN-EXT uses escape sequences to indicate character set changes
(as specified by RFC 1922). While the SOdesignation has the expected
bounds checks, neither SS2designation nor SS3designation have its;
allowing a write overflow of 1, 2, or 3 bytes with fixed values:
'$+I', '$+J', '$+K', '$+L', '$+M', or '$*H'.
Checked on aarch64-linux-gnu.
Co-authored-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
When using the glibc.rtld.enable_secure tunable we need to keep track of
the count of environment variables we skip due to __libc_enable_secure
being set and adjust the auxv section of the stack. This fixes an
assertion when running ld.so directly with glibc.rtld.enable_secure set.
Add a testcase that ensures the assert is not hit.
elf/rtld.c:1324 assert (auxv == sp + 1);
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
This seems to have stopped working with some GCC 14 versions,
which clobber r2. With other compilers, the kernel-provided
r2 value is still available at this point.
Reviewed-by: Peter Bergner <bergner@linux.ibm.com>
This reverts commit a1735e0aa8.
The test failure is a real valgrind bug that needs to be fixed before
valgrind is usable with a glibc that has been built with
CC="gcc -march=x86-64-v3". The proposed valgrind patch teaches
valgrind to replace ld.so strcmp with an unoptimized scalar
implementation, thus avoiding any AVX2-related problems.
Valgrind bug: <https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=485487>
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
It uses the same two-way algorithm used on strstr, strcasestr, and
memmem. Different than strstr, neither the "shift table" optimization
nor the self-adapting filtering check is used because it would result in
a too-large shift table (and it also simplifies the implementation bit).
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and aarch64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
Parametrize test-strstr.c so it can be used to check wcsstr.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and aarch64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
The gnulib version contains an important change (9ce573cde), which
fixes some problems with multithreading, entropy loss, and ASLR leak
nfo. It also fixes an issue where getrandom is not being used
on some new files generation (only for __GT_NOCREATE on first try).
The 044bf893ac removed __path_search, which is now moved to another
gnulib shared files (stdio-common/tmpdir.{c,h}). Tthis patch
also fixes direxists to use __stat64_time64 instead of __xstat64,
and move the include of pathmax.h for !_LIBC (since it is not used
by glibc). The license is also changed from GPL 3.0 to 2.1, with
permission from the authors (Bruno Haible and Paul Eggert).
The sync also removed the clock fallback, since clock_gettime
with CLOCK_REALTIME is expected to always succeed.
It syncs with gnulib commit 323834962817af7b115187e8c9a833437f8d20ec.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Co-authored-by: Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>
Co-authored-by: Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu>
Reviewed-by: Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>
This commit adds a simple bind/accept/connect test for an IPv4 TCP
connection to a local process via the loopback interface.
Reviewed-by: Arjun Shankar <arjun@redhat.com>
None of the existing tests seem to cover the case where
_dl_signal_error is called without an active error handler.
The new elf/tst-rtld-does-not-exist test triggers such a
_dl_signal_error call from _dl_map_object.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
_dl_signal_error may be called with objname == NULL. _dl_exception_create
checks objname == NULL. But fatal_error doesn't. Check objname before
calling fatal_error. This fixes BZ #31596.
Reviewed-by: Sunil K Pandey <skpgkp2@gmail.com>
When static PIE is enabled by default, we shouldn't use crtbeginS.o and
crtendS.o for non-PIE static executables. Check $($(@F)-no-pie) to use
crtbeginT.o and crtend.o to create non-PIE static executables.
Reviewed-by: Sunil K Pandey <skpgkp2@gmail.com>
This prints some information from struct cpu_features, and the midr_el1
and dczid_el0 system register contents on every CPU.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
This is surprisingly difficult to implement if the goal is to produce
reasonably sized output. With the current approaches to output
compression (suppressing zeros and repeated results between CPUs,
folding ranges of identical subleaves, dealing with the %ecx
reflection issue), the output is less than 600 KiB even for systems
with 256 logical CPUs.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>