Description: In the kernel the epoll_event structure is packed
in 64 bit kernel builds to allow the structure to be more easily
compatible with 32 bit user space. As a result, when user space
is 64-bit the structure must be packed as well.
Add unit test to show the ptr alignment issue.
Change-Id: I2c4848d5e38a357219091f350f9b6e3da05090da
Signed-off-by: Philip Hatcher <philip.hatcher@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Fengwei Yin <fengwei.yin@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Hazarika, Prodyut <prodyut.hazarika@intel.com>
Tested-by: Hazarika, Prodyut <prodyut.hazarika@intel.com>
* Ability to register atexit handler from atexit handler
* Correct way to handle both forms of atexit handler
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=66595
Bug: 4998315
Change-Id: I39529afaef97b6e1469c21389d54c0d7d175da28
Although glibc gets by with an 8-byte mbstate_t, OpenBSD uses 12 bytes (of
the 128 bytes it reserves!).
We can actually implement UTF-8 encoding/decoding with a 0-byte mbstate_t
which means we can make things work on LP32 too, as long as we accept the
limitation that the caller needs to present us with a complete sequence
before we'll process it.
Our behavior is fine when going from characters to bytes; we just
update the source wchar_t** to say how far through the input we got.
I'll come back and use the 4 bytes we do have to cope with byte sequences
split across multiple input buffers. The fact that we don't support
UTF-8 sequences longer than 4 bytes plus the fact that the first byte of
a UTF-8 sequence encodes the length means we shouldn't need the other
fields OpenBSD used (at the cost of some recomputation in cases where a
sequence is split across buffers).
This patch also makes the minimal changes necessary to setlocale(3) to
make us behave like glibc when an app requests UTF-8. (The difference
being that our "C" locale is the same as our "C.UTF-8" locale.)
Change-Id: Ied327a8c4643744b3611bf6bb005a9b389ba4c2f
Use the ANDROID_DATA environment variable instead of the hard-coded
directory for these benchmarks.
Change-Id: I00bae7b4a24e81e77fc8f52e1fe99f4d4918f520
If you rewrite the tokens of a #if you need to rewrite the expression to match
because either might be used later. This was showing up as SIGRTMAX being
rewritten in a #define but not in the #ifndef that guarded it, for which case
I've added a unit test.
Change-Id: I6929675461a1afe272edd667594529fd84a3dc4d
__SIGRTMIN will continue to tell the truth. This matches glibc's
behavior (as evidenced by the fact that we don't need a special case
in the strsignal test now).
Change-Id: I1abe1681d516577afa8cd39c837ef12467f68dd2