We use the system call constants from the kernel header files now,
so there's no need to check that they've been correctly transcribed
into SYSCALLS.TXT.
This is a work in progress. I've added TODOs to SYSCALLS.TXT explaining
what's left to do.
Change-Id: I3b86acfe7f84b4da1c802ee5a4ef13a2e83e7939
Currently, our getaddrinfo implementation does not conform to
any IETF standard. It follows draft-ietf-6man-rfc3484-revise-01,
but that draft has expired. Update the policy table to RFC6724.
(cherry-pick of e919b116d35aa7deb24ddece69c491e24c3b0d6f.)
Bug: 8276725
Change-Id: I2d17122defd966ac6c2c13d04887fb110f2598a0
pthread_create returns EAGAIN when it can't allocate a pthread_internal_t,
when it can't allocate a stack for the new thread, or when clone(2) fails
because there are too many threads. It's useful to be able to know why your
pthread_create just failed, so add some logging.
Bug: 8470684
Change-Id: I1bb4497d4f7528eacce0db35c2014771cba64569
Need to get the defintion of the FITRIM ioctl(). Also need
to update the blk_types.h header file as fs.h includes it.
Change-Id: I617622b620925942dc5aead9e49f8e17d17e5d74
The <asm/unistd.h> files contain the canonical data, and
<sys/glibc-syscalls.h> contain new glibc-compatible names,
and if you #include the standard <sys/syscall.h> you get
both sets of names.
Change-Id: I9919c080931c0ba1660f5e37c6a6265ea716d603
This lets us move all the ARM syscall stubs over to the kernel <asm/unistd.h>.
Our generated <sys/linux-syscalls.h> is now unused, but I'll remove that in a
later change.
Change-Id: Ie5ff2cc4abce1938576af7cbaef615a79c7f310d
Also add a more intention-revealing guard so we don't have loads of
places checking whether our inlining macro is defined.
Change-Id: I168860cedcfc798b07a5145bc48a125700265e47
For some reason, socketcalls.c was only being compiled for ARM, where
it makes no sense. For x86 we generate stubs for the socket functions
that use __NR_socketcall directly.
Change-Id: I84181e6183fae2314ae3ed862276eba82ad21e8e
<sys/linux-syscalls.h> only contains constants for the syscalls
we're generating stubs for. We want all the syscalls available
on the architecture in question.
Keep using <sys/linux-syscalls.h> on ARM for now because the
__NR_ARM_set_tls and __NR_ARM_cacheflush values aren't in <asm/unistd.h>.
Change-Id: I66683950d87d9b18d6107d0acc0ed238a4496f44
Fixes the MIPS and x86 builds. strace tests whether syscalls
are supported using #ifdef of the appropriate SYS_ constant.
Change-Id: I90be118dc42abfdaf5b0f9b1e676e8601f55106e
This uses the new strcmp.a15.S code as the basis for new versions
of strcmp.S.
The cortex-a15 code is the performance optimized version of strcmp.a15.S
taken with only the addition of a few pld instructions.
The cortex-a9 code is the same as the cortex-a15 code except that the
unaligned strcmp code was taken from the original strcmp.S.
The krait code is the same as the cortex-a15 code except that one path
in the unaligned strcmp code was taken from the original strcmp.S code
(the 2 byte overlap case).
The generic code is the original unmodified strmp.S from the bionic
subdirectory.
All three new versions underwent these test cases:
Strings the same, all same size:
- Both pointers double word aligned.
- One pointer double word aligned, one pointer word aligned.
- Both pointers word aligned.
- One pointer double word aligned, one pointer 1 off a word alignment.
- One pointer double word aligned, one pointer 2 off a word alignment.
- One pointer double word aligned, one pointer 3 off a word alignment.
- One pointer word aligned, one pointer 1 off a word alignment.
- One pointer word aligned, one pointer 2 off a word alignment.
- One pointer word aligned, one pointer 3 off a word alignment.
For all cases where it made sense, the two pointers were also tested
swapped.
Different strings, all same size:
- Single difference at double word boundary.
- Single difference at word boudary.
- Single difference at 1 off a word alignment.
- Single difference at 2 off a word alignment.
- Single difference at 3 off a word alignment.
Different sized strings, strings the same until the end:
- Shorter string ends on a double word boundary.
- Shorter string ends on word boundary.
- Shorter string ends at 1 off a word boundary.
- Shorter string ends at 2 off a word boundary.
- Shorter string ends at 3 off a word boundary.
For all different cases, run them through the same pointer alignment
cases when the strings are the same size.
For all cases the two pointers were also tested swapped.
Bug: 8005082
Merge from internal master.
(cherry-picked from commit a9a5870d166f8060a8182cd61e5536b0becea74e)
Change-Id: I4c2b98f8a50804fb98ab67f75e9d660f1315a144
We only need one logging API, and I prefer the one that does no
allocation and is thus safe to use in any context.
Also use O_CLOEXEC when opening the /dev/log files.
Move everything logging-related into one header file.
Change-Id: Ic1e3ea8e9b910dc29df351bff6c0aa4db26fbb58