__set_errno returns -1 exactly so that callers don't need to bother.
The other architectures were already taking advantage of this, but
no one had ever fixed x86 and x86_64.
Change-Id: Ie131494be664f6c4a1bbf8c61bbbed58eac56122
The syscall generation always used 4 bytes for each push cfi directive.
However, the first push should always use an offset of 8 bytes, each
subsequent push after that is only 4 bytes though.
Change-Id: Ibaabd107f399ef67010b9a08213783957c2f74a9
Modify the syscalls script to generate the cfi directives for x86
syscalls.
Update the x86 syscalls.
Change-Id: Ia1993dc714a7e79f917087fff8200e9a02c52603
We only need it for MAX_ERRNO, and it's time we had somewhere to put
the little assembler utility macros we've been putting off writing.
Change-Id: I9354d2e0dc47c689296a34b5b229fc9ba75f1a83
I've left the exit_group syscall as _exit because otherwise we'd have to
convince the compiler that our _exit (which just calls __exit_group) is
actually "noreturn", and it seems like that would be less clean than just
cutting out the middleman.
We'll just have to trust ourselves not to add anything to SYSCALLS.TXT
that ought to be private but that only has a single leading underscore.
Hopefully we can manage that.
Change-Id: Iac47faea9f516186e1774381846c54cafabc4354