The kernel changes for a 64-bit time_t on 32-bit architectures
resulted in <asm/socket.h> indirectly including <linux/posix_types.h>.
The latter is not namespace-clean for the POSIX version of
<sys/socket.h>.
This issue has persisted across several Linux releases, so this commit
creates our own copy of the SO_* definitions for !__USE_MISC mode.
The new test socket/tst-socket-consts ensures that the copy is
consistent with the kernel definitions (which vary across
architectures). The test is tricky to get right because CPPFLAGS
includes include/libc-symbols.h, which in turn defines _GNU_SOURCE
unconditionally.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py. I verified that a discrepancy in
the definitions actually results in a failure of the
socket/tst-socket-consts test.
(cherry picked from commit 7854ebf8ed)
Fixes `<total type="rest" size="..."> incorrectly showing as 0 most
of the time.
The rest value being wrong is significant because to compute the
actual amount of memory handed out via malloc, the user must subtract
it from <system type="current" size="...">. That result being wrong
makes investigating memory fragmentation issues like
<https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=843478> close to
impossible.
(cherry picked from commit b6d2c4475d)
It was introduced in commit 6c8dbf00f5
("Reformat malloc to gnu style.").
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit b0f6679bcd)
Change the tcache->counts[] entries to uint16_t - this removes
the limit set by char and allows a larger tcache. Remove a few
redundant asserts.
bench-malloc-thread with 4 threads is ~15% faster on Cortex-A72.
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
* malloc/malloc.c (MAX_TCACHE_COUNT): Increase to UINT16_MAX.
(tcache_put): Remove redundant assert.
(tcache_get): Remove redundant asserts.
(__libc_malloc): Check tcache count is not zero.
* manual/tunables.texi (glibc.malloc.tcache_count): Update maximum.
(cherry picked from commit 1f50f2ad85)
One of the warnings that appears with -Wextra is "ordered comparison
of pointer with integer zero" in malloc.c:tcache_get, for the
assertion:
assert (tcache->entries[tc_idx] > 0);
Indeed, a "> 0" comparison does not make sense for
tcache->entries[tc_idx], which is a pointer. My guess is that
tcache->counts[tc_idx] is what's intended here, and this patch changes
the assertion accordingly.
Tested for x86_64.
* malloc/malloc.c (tcache_get): Compare tcache->counts[tc_idx]
with 0, not tcache->entries[tc_idx].
(cherry picked from commit 77dc0d8643)
The alignment of TLS variables is wrong if accessed from within a thread
for architectures with tls variant TLS_TCB_AT_TP.
For the main thread the static tls data is properly aligned.
For other threads the alignment depends on the alignment of the thread
pointer as the static tls data is located relative to this pointer.
This patch adds this alignment for TLS_TCB_AT_TP variants in the same way
as it is already done for TLS_DTV_AT_TP. The thread pointer is also already
properly aligned if the user provides its own stack for the new thread.
This patch extends the testcase nptl/tst-tls1.c in order to check the
alignment of the tls variables and it adds a pthread_create invocation
with a user provided stack.
The test itself is migrated from test-skeleton.c to test-driver.c
and the missing support functions xpthread_attr_setstack and xposix_memalign
are added.
ChangeLog:
[BZ #23403]
* nptl/allocatestack.c (allocate_stack): Align pointer pd for
TLS_TCB_AT_TP tls variant.
* nptl/tst-tls1.c: Migrate to support/test-driver.c.
Add alignment checks.
* support/Makefile (libsupport-routines): Add xposix_memalign and
xpthread_setstack.
* support/support.h: Add xposix_memalign.
* support/xthread.h: Add xpthread_attr_setstack.
* support/xposix_memalign.c: New File.
* support/xpthread_attr_setstack.c: Likewise.
(cherry picked from commit bc79db3fd4)
Another executable has already been mapped, so the dynamic linker
cannot perform relocations correctly for the second executable.
(cherry picked from commit 2c75b545de)
nss_db allows for getpwent et al to be called without a set*ent,
but it only works once. After the last get*ent a set*ent is
required to restart, because the end*ent did not properly reset
the module. Resetting it to NULL allows for a proper restart.
If the database doesn't exist, however, end*ent erroniously called
munmap which set errno.
The test case runs "makedb" inside the testroot, so needs selinux
DSOs installed.
(cherry picked from commit 99135114ba)
Building glibc for RISC-V with Linux 5.3 kernel headers fails because
<linux/sched.h>, included in vfork.S for CLONE_* constants, contains a
structure definition not safe for inclusion in assembly code.
All other architectures already avoid use of that header in vfork.S,
either defining the CLONE_* constants locally or embedding the
required values directly in the relevant instruction, where they
implement vfork using the clone syscall (see the implementations for
aarch64, ia64, mips and nios2). This patch makes the RISC-V version
define the constants locally like the other architectures.
Tested build for all three RISC-V configurations in
build-many-glibcs.py with Linux 5.3 headers.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/riscv/vfork.S: Do not include
<linux/sched.h>.
(CLONE_VM): New macro.
(CLONE_VFORK): Likewise.
(cherry picked from commit 8cacbcf4a9)
On alpha, Linux kernel 5.1 added the standard getegid, geteuid and
getppid syscalls (commit ecf7e0a4ad15287). Up to now alpha was using
the corresponding OSF1 syscalls through:
- sysdeps/unix/alpha/getegid.S
- sysdeps/unix/alpha/geteuid.S
- sysdeps/unix/alpha/getppid.S
When building against kernel headers >= 5.1, the glibc now use the new
syscalls through sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/syscalls.list. When it is then
used with an older kernel, the corresponding 3 functions fail.
A quick fix is to move the OSF1 wrappers under the
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha directory so they override the standard
linux ones. A better fix would be to try the new syscalls and fallback
to the old OSF1 in case the new ones fail. This can be implemented in
a later commit.
Changelog:
[BZ #24986]
* sysdeps/unix/alpha/getegid.S: Move to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/getegid.S: ... here.
* sysdeps/unix/alpha/geteuid.S: Move to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/geteuid.S: ... here.
* sysdeps/unix/alpha/getppid.S: Move to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/getppid.S: ... here
This patch significantly improves performance of memmem using a novel
modified Horspool algorithm. Needles up to size 256 use a bad-character
table indexed by hashed pairs of characters to quickly skip past mismatches.
Long needles use a self-adapting filtering step to avoid comparing the whole
needle repeatedly.
By limiting the needle length to 256, the shift table only requires 8 bits
per entry, lowering preprocessing overhead and minimizing cache effects.
This limit also implies worst-case performance is linear.
Small needles up to size 2 use a dedicated linear search. Very long needles
use the Two-Way algorithm (to avoid increasing stack size or slowing down
the common case, inlining is disabled).
The performance gain is 6.6 times on English text on AArch64 using random
needles with average size 8.
Tested against GLIBC testsuite and randomized tests.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
* string/memmem.c (__memmem): Rewrite to improve performance.
(cherry picked from commit 680942b016)
This patch significantly improves performance of strstr using a novel
modified Horspool algorithm. Needles up to size 256 use a bad-character
table indexed by hashed pairs of characters to quickly skip past mismatches.
Long needles use a self-adapting filtering step to avoid comparing the whole
needle repeatedly.
By limiting the needle length to 256, the shift table only requires 8 bits
per entry, lowering preprocessing overhead and minimizing cache effects.
This limit also implies worst-case performance is linear.
Small needles up to size 3 use a dedicated linear search. Very long needles
use the Two-Way algorithm.
The performance gain using the improved bench-strstr on Cortex-A72 is 5.8
times basic_strstr and 3.7 times twoway_strstr.
Tested against GLIBC testsuite, randomized tests and the GNULIB strstr test
(https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gnulib.git/tree/tests/test-strstr.c).
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
* string/str-two-way.h (two_way_short_needle): Add inline to avoid
warning.
(two_way_long_needle): Block inlining.
* string/strstr.c (strstr2): Add new function.
(strstr3): Likewise.
(STRSTR): Completely rewrite strstr to improve performance.
(cherry picked from commit 5e0a7ecb66)
Fixes build using v5.1-rc1 headers.
The kernel has cleaned up how these are defined. Previous behavior
was to define __NR_osf_shmat as 209 and not define __NR_shmat.
Current behavior is to define __NR_shmat as 209 and then define
__NR_osf_shmat as __NR_shmat.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/kernel-features.h (__NR_shmat):
Do not redefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/sysdep.h (__NR_osf_shmat):
Do not redefine.
(cherry picked from commit d5ecee822e)
The fix for BZ#21270 (commit 158d5fa0e1) added a mask to avoid offset larger
than 1^44 to be used along __NR_mmap2. However mips64n32 users __NR_mmap,
as mips64n64, but still defines off_t as old non-LFS type (other ILP32, such
x32, defines off_t being equal to off64_t). This leads to use the same
mask meant only for __NR_mmap2 call for __NR_mmap, thus limiting the maximum
offset it can use with mmap64.
This patch fixes by setting the high mask only for __NR_mmap2 usage. The
posix/tst-mmap-offset.c already tests it and also fails for mips64n32. The
patch also change the test to check for an arch-specific header that defines
the maximum supported offset.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, and I also tests tst-mmap-offset
on qemu simulated mips64 with kernel 3.2.0 kernel for both mips-linux-gnu and
mips64-n32-linux-gnu.
[BZ #24699]
* posix/tst-mmap-offset.c: Mention BZ #24699.
(do_test_bz21270): Rename to do_test_large_offset and use
mmap64_maximum_offset to check for maximum expected offset value.
* sysdeps/generic/mmap_info.h: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mmap_info.h: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mmap64.c (MMAP_OFF_HIGH_MASK): Define iff
__NR_mmap2 is used.
(cherry picked from commit a008c76b56)
Backport of commit 82bc69c012
and commit 30ba037546
without using DT_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS for optimizing the symbol table check.
This is needed so the internal abi between ld.so and libc.so is unchanged.
Avoid lazy binding of symbols that may follow a variant PCS with different
register usage convention from the base PCS.
Currently the lazy binding entry code does not preserve all the registers
required for AdvSIMD and SVE vector calls. Saving and restoring all
registers unconditionally may break existing binaries, even if they never
use vector calls, because of the larger stack requirement for lazy
resolution, which can be significant on an SVE system.
The solution is to mark all symbols in the symbol table that may follow
a variant PCS so the dynamic linker can handle them specially. In this
patch such symbols are always resolved at load time, not lazily.
So currently LD_AUDIT for variant PCS symbols are not supported, for that
the _dl_runtime_profile entry needs to be changed e.g. to unconditionally
save/restore all registers (but pass down arg and retval registers to
pltentry/exit callbacks according to the base PCS).
This patch also removes a __builtin_expect from the modified code because
the branch prediction hint did not seem useful.
* sysdeps/aarch64/dl-machine.h (elf_machine_lazy_rel): Check
STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS and bind such symbols at load time.
STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS is a non-visibility st_other flag for marking
symbols that reference functions that may follow a variant PCS with
different register usage convention from the base PCS.
DT_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS is a dynamic tag that marks ELF modules that
have R_*_JUMP_SLOT relocations for symbols marked with
STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS (i.e. have variant PCS calls via a PLT).
* elf/elf.h (STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS): Define.
(DT_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS): Define.
The kernel is evolving this interface (e.g., removal of the
restriction on cross-device copies), and keeping up with that
is difficult. Applications which need the function should
run kernels which support the system call instead of relying on
the imperfect glibc emulation.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
(cherry picked from commit 5a659ccc0e)
Commit a601b74d31 aka glibc-2.23~693
("In preparation for fixing BZ#16734, fix failure in misc/tst-error1-mem
when _G_HAVE_MMAP is turned off.") introduced a regression:
_IO_unbuffer_all now invokes _IO_wsetb to free wide buffers of all
files, including legacy standard files which are small statically
allocated objects that do not have wide buffers and the _mode member,
causing memory corruption.
Another memory corruption in _IO_unbuffer_all happens when -1
is assigned to the _mode member of legacy standard files that
do not have it.
[BZ #24228]
* libio/genops.c (_IO_unbuffer_all)
[SHLIB_COMPAT (libc, GLIBC_2_0, GLIBC_2_1)]: Do not attempt to free wide
buffers and access _IO_FILE_complete members of legacy libio streams.
* libio/tst-bz24228.c: New file.
* libio/tst-bz24228.map: Likewise.
* libio/Makefile [build-shared] (tests): Add tst-bz24228.
[build-shared] (generated): Add tst-bz24228.mtrace and
tst-bz24228.check.
[run-built-tests && build-shared] (tests-special): Add
$(objpfx)tst-bz24228-mem.out.
(LDFLAGS-tst-bz24228, tst-bz24228-ENV): New variables.
($(objpfx)tst-bz24228-mem.out): New rule.
(cherry picked from commit 21cc130b78)
The test for obsolete typedefs in installed headers was implemented
using grep, and could therefore get false positives on e.g. “ulong”
in a comment. It was also scanning all of the headers included by
our headers, and therefore testing headers we don’t control, e.g.
Linux kernel headers.
This patch splits the obsolete-typedef test from
scripts/check-installed-headers.sh to a separate program,
scripts/check-obsolete-constructs.py. Being implemented in Python,
it is feasible to make it tokenize C accurately enough to avoid false
positives on the contents of comments and strings. It also only
examines $(headers) in each subdirectory--all the headers we install,
but not any external dependencies of those headers. Headers whose
installed name starts with finclude/ are ignored, on the assumption
that they contain Fortran.
It is also feasible to make the new test understand the difference
between _defining_ the obsolete typedefs and _using_ the obsolete
typedefs, which means posix/{bits,sys}/types.h no longer need to be
exempted. This uncovered an actual bug in bits/types.h: __quad_t and
__u_quad_t were being used to define __S64_TYPE, __U64_TYPE,
__SQUAD_TYPE and __UQUAD_TYPE. These are changed to __int64_t and
__uint64_t respectively. This is a safe change, despite the comments
in bits/types.h claiming a difference between __quad_t and __int64_t,
because those comments are incorrect. In all current ABIs, both
__quad_t and __int64_t are ‘long’ when ‘long’ is a 64-bit type, and
‘long long’ when ‘long’ is a 32-bit type, and similarly for __u_quad_t
and __uint64_t. (Changing the types to be what the comments say they
are would be an ABI break, as it affects C++ name mangling.) This
patch includes a minimal change to make the comments not completely
wrong.
sys/types.h was defining the legacy BSD u_intN_t typedefs using a
construct that was not necessarily consistent with how the C99 uintN_t
typedefs are defined, and is also too complicated for the new script to
understand (it lexes C relatively accurately, but it does not attempt
to expand preprocessor macros, nor does it do any actual parsing).
This patch cuts all of that out and uses bits/types.h's __uintN_t typedefs
to define u_intN_t instead. This is verified to not change the ABI on
any supported architecture, via the c++-types test, which means u_intN_t
and uintN_t were, in fact, consistent on all supported architectures.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
* scripts/check-obsolete-constructs.py: New test script.
* scripts/check-installed-headers.sh: Remove tests for
obsolete typedefs, superseded by check-obsolete-constructs.py.
* Rules: Run scripts/check-obsolete-constructs.py over $(headers)
as a special test. Update commentary.
* posix/bits/types.h (__SQUAD_TYPE, __S64_TYPE): Define as __int64_t.
(__UQUAD_TYPE, __U64_TYPE): Define as __uint64_t.
Update commentary.
* posix/sys/types.h (__u_intN_t): Remove.
(u_int8_t): Typedef using __uint8_t.
(u_int16_t): Typedef using __uint16_t.
(u_int32_t): Typedef using __uint32_t.
(u_int64_t): Typedef using __uint64_t.
(cherry picked from commit 711a322a23)
This is a partial backport of test changes in commit
9bf8e29ca1 ("malloc: make malloc fail
with requests larger than PTRDIFF_MAX (BZ#23741)"), without the
actual functionality changes.
The tcache counts[] array is a char, which has a very small range and thus
may overflow. When setting tcache_count tunable, there is no overflow check.
However the tunable must not be larger than the maximum value of the tcache
counts[] array, otherwise it can overflow when filling the tcache.
[BZ #24531]
* malloc/malloc.c (MAX_TCACHE_COUNT): New define.
(do_set_tcache_count): Only update if count is small enough.
* manual/tunables.texi (glibc.malloc.tcache_count): Document max value.
(cherry picked from commit 5ad533e8e6)
dlerror.c (__dlerror_main_freeres) will try to free resources which only
have been initialized when init () has been called. That function is
called when resources are needed using __libc_once (once, init) where
once is a __libc_once_define (static, once) in the dlerror.c file.
Trying to free those resources if init () hasn't been called will
produce errors under valgrind memcheck. So guard the freeing of those
resources using __libc_once_get (once) and make sure we have a valid
key. Also add a similar guard to __dlerror ().
* dlfcn/dlerror.c (__dlerror_main_freeres): Guard using
__libc_once_get (once) and static_bug == NULL.
(__dlerror): Check we have a valid key, set result to static_buf
otherwise.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 11b451c886)
When computing the length of the converted part of the stdio buffer, use
the number of consumed wide characters, not the (negative) distance to the
end of the wide buffer.
(cherry picked from commit 32ff397533)
Since 9182aa6799 (Fix vDSO l_name for GDB's, BZ#387) the initial link_map
for executable itself and loader will have both l_name and l_libname->name
holding the same value due:
elf/dl-object.c
95 new->l_name = *realname ? realname : (char *) newname->name + libname_len - 1;
Since newname->name points to new->l_libname->name.
This leads to pldd to an infinite call at:
elf/pldd-xx.c
203 again:
204 while (1)
205 {
206 ssize_t n = pread64 (memfd, tmpbuf.data, tmpbuf.length, name_offset);
228 /* Try the l_libname element. */
229 struct E(libname_list) ln;
230 if (pread64 (memfd, &ln, sizeof (ln), m.l_libname) == sizeof (ln))
231 {
232 name_offset = ln.name;
233 goto again;
234 }
Since the value at ln.name (l_libname->name) will be the same as previously
read. The straightforward fix is just avoid the check and read the new list
entry.
I checked also against binaries issues with old loaders with fix for BZ#387,
and pldd could dump the shared objects.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, aarch64-linux-gnu, and
powerpc64le-linux-gnu.
[BZ #18035]
* elf/Makefile (tests-container): Add tst-pldd.
* elf/pldd-xx.c: Use _Static_assert in of pldd_assert.
(E(find_maps)): Avoid use alloca, use default read file operations
instead of explicit LFS names, and fix infinite loop.
* elf/pldd.c: Explicit set _FILE_OFFSET_BITS, cleanup headers.
(get_process_info): Use _Static_assert instead of assert, use default
directory operations instead of explicit LFS names, and free some
leadek pointers.
* elf/tst-pldd.c: New file.
(cherry picked from commit 1a4c27355e)
Its API is similar to support_capture_subprocess, but rather creates a
new process based on the input path and arguments. Under the hoods it
uses posix_spawn to create the new process.
It also allows the use of other support_capture_* functions to check
for expected results and free the resources.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
* support/Makefile (libsupport-routines): Add support_subprocess,
xposix_spawn, xposix_spawn_file_actions_addclose, and
xposix_spawn_file_actions_adddup2.
(tst-support_capture_subprocess-ARGS): New rule.
* support/capture_subprocess.h (support_capture_subprogram): New
prototype.
* support/support_capture_subprocess.c (support_capture_subprocess):
Refactor to use support_subprocess and support_capture_poll.
(support_capture_subprogram): New function.
* support/tst-support_capture_subprocess.c (write_mode_to_str,
str_to_write_mode, test_common, parse_int, handle_restart,
do_subprocess, do_subprogram, do_multiple_tests): New functions.
(do_test): Add support_capture_subprogram tests.
* support/subprocess.h: New file.
* support/support_subprocess.c: Likewise.
* support/xposix_spawn.c: Likewise.
* support/xposix_spawn_file_actions_addclose.c: Likewise.
* support/xposix_spawn_file_actions_adddup2.c: Likewise.
* support/xspawn.h: Likewise.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 0e16969129)
This reverts commit 42dfc13abf.
The position of the -Wl,-rpath-link= options on the linker command
line is not correct, so the new way of linking memusagestat does not
always work.
The memusagestat is the only binary that has its own link line which
causes it to be linked against the existing installed C library. It
has been this way since it was originally committed in 1999, but I
don't see any reason as to why. Since we want all the programs we
build locally to be against the new copy of glibc, change the build
to be like all other programs.
(cherry picked from commit f9b645b4b0)
If an error occurs during the tracing operation, particularly during a
call to lock_and_info() which calls _dl_addr, we may end up calling back
into the malloc-subsystem and relock the loader lock and deadlock. For
all intents and purposes the call to _dl_addr can call any of the malloc
family API functions and so we should disable all tracing before calling
such loader functions. This is similar to the strategy that the new
malloc tracer takes when calling the real malloc, namely that all
tracing ceases at the boundary to the real function and any faults at
that point are the purvue of the library (though the new tracer does
this on a per-thread basis in an MT-safe fashion). Since the new tracer
and the hook deprecation are not yet complete we must fix these issues
where we can.
Tested on x86_64 with no regressions.
Co-authored-by: Kwok Cheung Yeung <kcy@codesourcery.com>
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit e621246ec6)
The Japanese era name will be changed on May 1, 2019. The Japanese
government made a preliminary announcement on April 1, 2019.
The glibc ja_JP locale must be updated to include the new era name for
strftime's alternative year format support.
This is a minimal cherry pick of just the required locale changes.
(cherry picked from commit 466afec308)
The offset in era-string format for Taisho gan-nen (1912) is currently
defined as 2, but it should be 1. So fix it. "Gan-nen" means the 1st
(origin) year, Taisho started on July 30, 1912.
Reported-by: Morimitsu, Junji <junji.morimitsu@hpe.com>
Reviewed-by: Rafal Luzynski <digitalfreak@lingonborough.com>
ChangeLog:
[BZ #24162]
* localedata/locales/ja_JP (LC_TIME): Change the offset for Taisho
gan-nen from 2 to 1. Problem reported by Morimitsu, Junji.
(cherry picked from commit 31effacee2)
This patch adds vx and vxe as important hwcaps
which allows one to provide shared libraries
tuned for platforms with non-vx/-vxe, vx or vxe.
ChangeLog:
* sysdeps/s390/dl-procinfo.h (HWCAP_IMPORTANT):
Add HWCAP_S390_VX and HWCAP_S390_VXE.
(cherry picked from commit 61f5e9470f)
Conflicts:
ChangeLog
Problem found by AddressSanitizer, reported by Hongxu Chen in:
https://debbugs.gnu.org/34140
* posix/regexec.c (proceed_next_node):
Do not read past end of input buffer.
(cherry picked from commit 583dd860d5)
Starting with commit 1616d034b6
the output was corrupted on some platforms as _dl_procinfo
was called for every auxv entry and on some architectures like s390
all entries were represented as "AT_HWCAP".
This patch is removing the condition and let _dl_procinfo decide if
an entry is printed in a platform specific or generic way.
This patch also adjusts all _dl_procinfo implementations which assumed
that they are only called for AT_HWCAP or AT_HWCAP2. They are now just
returning a non-zero-value for entries which are not handled platform
specifc.
ChangeLog:
* elf/dl-sysdep.c (_dl_show_auxv): Remove condition and always
call _dl_procinfo.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/dl-procinfo.h (_dl_procinfo):
Ignore types other than AT_HWCAP.
* sysdeps/sparc/dl-procinfo.h (_dl_procinfo): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/dl-procinfo.h (_dl_procinfo):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/powerpc/dl-procinfo.h (_dl_procinfo): Adjust comment
in the case of falling back to generic output mechanism.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/dl-procinfo.h (_dl_procinfo):
Likewise.
(cherry picked from commit 7c6513082b)
Conflicts:
ChangeLog
After commit f1ac745583 ("arm: Use "nr"
constraint for Systemtap probes [BZ #24164]"), we load pd->result into
a register in the probe below:
/* Free the TCB. */
__free_tcb (pd);
}
else
pd->joinid = NULL;
LIBC_PROBE (pthread_join_ret, 3, threadid, result, pd->result);
However, at this point, the thread descriptor has been freed. If the
thread stack does not fit into the thread stack cache, the memory will
have been unmapped, and the program will crash in the probe.
(cherry picked from commit bc10e22c90)
Commit 27761a1042 ("Refactor atfork
handlers") introduced a lock, atfork_lock, around fork handler list
accesses. It turns out that this lock occasionally results in
self-deadlocks in malloc/tst-mallocfork2:
(gdb) bt
#0 __lll_lock_wait_private ()
at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/lowlevellock.S:63
#1 0x00007f160c6f927a in __run_fork_handlers (who=(unknown: 209394016),
who@entry=atfork_run_prepare) at register-atfork.c:116
#2 0x00007f160c6b7897 in __libc_fork () at ../sysdeps/nptl/fork.c:58
#3 0x00000000004027d6 in sigusr1_handler (signo=<optimized out>)
at tst-mallocfork2.c:80
#4 sigusr1_handler (signo=<optimized out>) at tst-mallocfork2.c:64
#5 <signal handler called>
#6 0x00007f160c6f92e4 in __run_fork_handlers (who=who@entry=atfork_run_parent)
at register-atfork.c:136
#7 0x00007f160c6b79a2 in __libc_fork () at ../sysdeps/nptl/fork.c:152
#8 0x0000000000402567 in do_test () at tst-mallocfork2.c:156
#9 0x0000000000402dd2 in support_test_main (argc=1, argv=0x7ffc81ef1ab0,
config=config@entry=0x7ffc81ef1970) at support_test_main.c:350
#10 0x0000000000402362 in main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>)
at ../support/test-driver.c:168
If no locking happens in the single-threaded case (where fork is
expected to be async-signal-safe), this deadlock is avoided.
(pthread_atfork is not required to be async-signal-safe, so a fork
call from a signal handler interrupting pthread_atfork is not
a problem.)
(cherry picked from commit 669ff911e2)
While debugging a kernel warning, Thomas Gleixner, Sebastian Sewior and
Heiko Carstens found a bug in pthread_mutex_trylock due to misordered
instructions:
140: a5 1b 00 01 oill %r1,1
144: e5 48 a0 f0 00 00 mvghi 240(%r10),0 <--- THREAD_SETMEM (THREAD_SELF, robust_head.list_op_pending, NULL);
14a: e3 10 a0 e0 00 24 stg %r1,224(%r10) <--- last THREAD_SETMEM of ENQUEUE_MUTEX_PI
vs (with compiler barriers):
140: a5 1b 00 01 oill %r1,1
144: e3 10 a0 e0 00 24 stg %r1,224(%r10)
14a: e5 48 a0 f0 00 00 mvghi 240(%r10),0
Please have a look at the discussion:
"Re: WARN_ON_ONCE(!new_owner) within wake_futex_pi() triggerede"
(https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20190202112006.GB3381@osiris/)
This patch is introducing the same compiler barriers and comments
for pthread_mutex_trylock as introduced for pthread_mutex_lock and
pthread_mutex_timedlock by commit 8f9450a0b7
"Add compiler barriers around modifications of the robust mutex list."
ChangeLog:
[BZ #24180]
* nptl/pthread_mutex_trylock.c (__pthread_mutex_trylock):
Add compiler barriers and comments.
(cherry picked from commit 823624bdc4)
With the default "nor" constraint, current GCC will use the "o"
constraint for constants, after emitting the constant to memory. That
results in unparseable Systemtap probe notes such as "-4@.L1052".
Removing the "o" alternative and using "nr" instead avoids this.
(cherry picked from commit f1ac745583)
Since the size argument is unsigned. we should use unsigned Jcc
instructions, instead of signed, to check size.
Tested on x86-64 and x32, with and without --disable-multi-arch.
[BZ #24155]
CVE-2019-7309
* NEWS: Updated for CVE-2019-7309.
* sysdeps/x86_64/memcmp.S: Use RDX_LP for size. Clear the
upper 32 bits of RDX register for x32. Use unsigned Jcc
instructions, instead of signed.
* sysdeps/x86_64/x32/Makefile (tests): Add tst-size_t-memcmp-2.
* sysdeps/x86_64/x32/tst-size_t-memcmp-2.c: New test.
(cherry picked from commit 3f635fb433)
For a full analysis of both the pthread_rwlock_tryrdlock() stall
and the pthread_rwlock_trywrlock() stall see:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=23844#c14
In the pthread_rwlock_trydlock() function we fail to inspect for
PTHREAD_RWLOCK_FUTEX_USED in __wrphase_futex and wake the waiting
readers.
In the pthread_rwlock_trywrlock() function we write 1 to
__wrphase_futex and loose the setting of the PTHREAD_RWLOCK_FUTEX_USED
bit, again failing to wake waiting readers during unlock.
The fix in the case of pthread_rwlock_trydlock() is to check for
PTHREAD_RWLOCK_FUTEX_USED and wake the readers.
The fix in the case of pthread_rwlock_trywrlock() is to only write
1 to __wrphase_futex if we installed the write phase, since all other
readers would be spinning waiting for this step.
We add two new tests, one exercises the stall for
pthread_rwlock_trywrlock() which is easy to exercise, and one exercises
the stall for pthread_rwlock_trydlock() which is harder to exercise.
The pthread_rwlock_trywrlock() test fails consistently without the fix,
and passes after. The pthread_rwlock_tryrdlock() test fails roughly
5-10% of the time without the fix, and passes all the time after.
Signed-off-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Torvald Riegel <triegel@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Rik Prohaska <prohaska7@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Torvald Riegel <triegel@redhat.com>
Co-authored-by: Rik Prohaska <prohaska7@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 5fc9ed4c40)
* NEWS: Add the list of bugs fixed in 2.29.
* manual/contrib.texi: Update contributors list with some more
names.
* manual/install.texi: Update latest versions of packages
tested.
* INSTALL: Regenerated.