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c21d37deb2
The syscall wrappers mechanism automatically creates hidden aliases for syscalls with libc_hidden_def / libc_hidden_weak. The use of libc_hidden_* has the side-effect that for syscall wrappers in non-libc libraries those aliases are not created. In turn, this means that three mq_* syscalls in sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/syscalls.list list the __GI_* names explicitly. The use of libc_hidden_* dates back to the original introduction of that support in 2002-08-03 Roland McGrath <roland@redhat.com> * sysdeps/unix/make-syscalls.sh: Generate libc_hidden_def or libc_hidden_weak for every system call symbol defined. (predating the non-libc syscalls in question) and I see no reason for excluding non-libc syscalls. This patch changes the code to use hidden_def / hidden_weak (via a wrapper syscall_hidden_def in the case where the argument is itself a macro, so that the argument gets expanded before concatenation with __GI_), so avoiding the need to specify the hidden aliases explicitly in this case. Tested for x86_64 and x86 (testsuite, and that disassembly of installed stripped shared libraries is unchanged by the patch; the mq_* symbols change from weak to strong, which is of no significance and two of them will shortly change back to weak as part of a fix for bug 18545). * sysdeps/unix/make-syscalls.sh (emit_weak_aliases): Use hidden_def and hidden_weak instead of libc_hidden_def and libc_hidden_weak. (top level): Refer to hidden_def in comment. * sysdeps/unix/syscall-template.S (syscall_hidden_def): New macro. Use it instead of libc_hidden_def. * sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/syscalls.list (mq_timedsend): Do not specify __GI_* name explicitly. (mq_timedreceive): Likewise. (mq_setattr): Likewise.
91 lines
3.6 KiB
ArmAsm
91 lines
3.6 KiB
ArmAsm
/* Assembly code template for system call stubs.
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Copyright (C) 2009-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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This file is part of the GNU C Library.
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The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
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modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
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License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
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version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
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Lesser General Public License for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
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License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
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<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
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/* The real guts of this work are in the macros defined in the
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machine- and kernel-specific sysdep.h header file. When we
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are defining a cancellable system call, the sysdep-cancel.h
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versions of those macros are what we really use.
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Each system call's object is built by a rule in sysd-syscalls
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generated by make-syscalls.sh that #include's this file after
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defining a few macros:
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SYSCALL_NAME syscall name
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SYSCALL_NARGS number of arguments this call takes
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SYSCALL_SYMBOL primary symbol name
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SYSCALL_CANCELLABLE 1 if the call is a cancelation point
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SYSCALL_NOERRNO 1 to define a no-errno version (see below)
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SYSCALL_ERRVAL 1 to define an error-value version (see below)
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We used to simply pipe the correct three lines below through cpp into
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the assembler. The main reason to have this file instead is so that
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stub objects can be assembled with -g and get source line information
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that leads a user back to a source file and these fine comments. The
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average user otherwise has a hard time knowing which "syscall-like"
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functions in libc are plain stubs and which have nontrivial C wrappers.
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Some versions of the "plain" stub generation macros are more than a few
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instructions long and the untrained eye might not distinguish them from
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some compiled code that inexplicably lacks source line information. */
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#if SYSCALL_CANCELLABLE
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# include <sysdep-cancel.h>
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#else
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# include <sysdep.h>
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#endif
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/* This indirection is needed so that SYMBOL gets macro-expanded. */
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#define syscall_hidden_def(SYMBOL) hidden_def (SYMBOL)
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#define T_PSEUDO(SYMBOL, NAME, N) PSEUDO (SYMBOL, NAME, N)
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#define T_PSEUDO_NOERRNO(SYMBOL, NAME, N) PSEUDO_NOERRNO (SYMBOL, NAME, N)
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#define T_PSEUDO_ERRVAL(SYMBOL, NAME, N) PSEUDO_ERRVAL (SYMBOL, NAME, N)
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#define T_PSEUDO_END(SYMBOL) PSEUDO_END (SYMBOL)
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#define T_PSEUDO_END_NOERRNO(SYMBOL) PSEUDO_END_NOERRNO (SYMBOL)
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#define T_PSEUDO_END_ERRVAL(SYMBOL) PSEUDO_END_ERRVAL (SYMBOL)
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#if SYSCALL_NOERRNO
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/* This kind of system call stub never returns an error.
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We return the return value register to the caller unexamined. */
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T_PSEUDO_NOERRNO (SYSCALL_SYMBOL, SYSCALL_NAME, SYSCALL_NARGS)
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ret_NOERRNO
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T_PSEUDO_END_NOERRNO (SYSCALL_SYMBOL)
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#elif SYSCALL_ERRVAL
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/* This kind of system call stub returns the errno code as its return
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value, or zero for success. We may massage the kernel's return value
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to meet that ABI, but we never set errno here. */
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T_PSEUDO_ERRVAL (SYSCALL_SYMBOL, SYSCALL_NAME, SYSCALL_NARGS)
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ret_ERRVAL
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T_PSEUDO_END_ERRVAL (SYSCALL_SYMBOL)
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#else
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/* This is a "normal" system call stub: if there is an error,
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it returns -1 and sets errno. */
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T_PSEUDO (SYSCALL_SYMBOL, SYSCALL_NAME, SYSCALL_NARGS)
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ret
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T_PSEUDO_END (SYSCALL_SYMBOL)
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#endif
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syscall_hidden_def (SYSCALL_SYMBOL)
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