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The LFS support is implemented on fxstat64.c, instead of fxstat.c for 64-bit architectures. The fxstatat.c implements the non-LFS and it is a no-op for !XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64. The generic non-LFS implementation handles two cases: 1. New kABIs which uses generic pre 64-bit time Linux ABI (csky and nios): it issues __NR_fstatat64 plus handle the overflow on st_ino, st_size, or st_blocks. It only handles _STAT_VER_KERNEL. 2. Old kABIs with old non-LFS support (arm, i386, hppa, m68k, mips32, microblaze, s390, sh, powerpc, and sparc32). it issues __NR_fstatat64 and convert to non-LFS stat struct based on the version. Also non-LFS mips64 is an outlier and it has its own implementation since _STAT_VER_LINUX requires a different conversion function (it uses the kernel_stat as the sysissues argument since its exported ABI is different than the kernel one for both non-LFS and LFS implementation). The generic LFS implementation handles multiple cases: 1. XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64 being 1: 1.1. 64-bit kABI (aarch64, ia64, powerpc64*, s390x, riscv64, and x86_64): it issues __NR_newfstatat for _STAT_VER_KERNEL or _STAT_VER_LINUX. 1.2. 64-bit kABI outlier (sparc64): it issuess fstatat64 with a temporary stat64 and convert to output stat64 based on the input version (and using a sparc64 specific __xstat32_conv). 1.3. New 32-bit kABIs with only 64-bit time_t support (arc and riscv32): it issues __NR_statx and covert to struct stat64. 2. Old ABIs with XSTAT_IS_XSTAT64 being 0 (arm, csky, i386, hppa, m68k, microblaze, mips32, nios2, sh, powerpc32, and sparc32): it issues __NR_fstat64. Also, two special cases requires specific implementations: 1. alpha: it uses the __NR_fstatat64 syscall instead. 2. mips64: as for non-LFS implementation its ABIs differ from glibc exported one, which requires an specific conversion function to handle the kernel_stat. Checked with a build for all affected ABIs. I also checked on x86_64, i686, powerpc, powerpc64le, sparcv9, sparc64, s390, and s390x. Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de> |
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.. | ||
bits | ||
wordsize-32 | ||
____longjmp_chk.c | ||
brk.c | ||
chmod.c | ||
chown.c | ||
dl-origin.c | ||
dup2.c | ||
epoll_create.c | ||
futimesat.c | ||
inotify_init.c | ||
kernel_stat.h | ||
lchown.c | ||
link.c | ||
Makefile | ||
mkdir.c | ||
pipe.c | ||
readlink.c | ||
README | ||
rmdir.c | ||
stat-check.c | ||
symlink.c | ||
syscalls.list | ||
sysdep.h | ||
unlink.c | ||
utimes.c | ||
xmknod.c |
This hierarchy supports Linux systems using the new asm-generic/unistd.h, which removes many familiar old syscalls. For example, to implement open(), newer Linux architectures require glibc to invoke the __NR_openat syscall with AT_FDCWD. This hierarchy provides all those implementations. It also provides support for 32-bit platforms using the 64-bit kernel syscall APIs, as the 32-bit ones are no longer provided. Note that newer ILP32 environments (x32 or AArch64:ILP32, for example) are converting to use more 64-bit types in kernel syscalls, so that aspect of this support is in more flux as of this writing.