This gets us back to using vfork now our ARM vfork assembler stub is
fixed, and adds the missing thread safety for the 'pidlist'.
Bug: 5335385
Change-Id: Ib08bfa65b2cb9fa695717aae629ea14816bf988d
This is actually a slightly newer upstream version than the one I
originally pulled. Hopefully now it's in upstream-freebsd it will
be easier to track upstream, though I still need to sit down and
write the necessary scripts at some point.
Bug: 5110679
Change-Id: I87e563f0f95aa8e68b45578e2a8f448bbf827a33
The defines HAVE_32_BYTE_CACHE_LINES and ARCH_ARM_USE_NON_NEON_MEMCPY
are not used by any code. The previous memcpy code that used these
has been split into different architecture versions to avoid the need
for them.
Bug: 8005082
(cherry picked from commit 6e1a5cf31b)
Change-Id: I69654d47db1458136782b5504290f620e924ee75
Move arch specific code for arm, mips, x86 into separate
makefiles.
In addition, add different arm cpu versions of memcpy/memset.
Bug: 8005082
(cherry picked from commit acdde8c1cf)
Change-Id: I0108d432af9f6283ae99adfc92a3399e5ab3e31d
The old scandir implementation didn't take into account the varying
size of directory entries, and didn't correctly clean up on its
error exits.
Bug: 7339844
Change-Id: Ib40e3564709752241a3119a496cbb2192e3f9abe
imgtec pointed out that pthread_kill(3) was broken, but most of the
other functions that ought to return ESRCH for invalid/exited threads
were equally broken.
Change-Id: I96347f6195549aee0c72dc39063e6c5d06d2e01f
# Via Elliott Hughes (1) and Gerrit Code Review (1)
* commit '0a2cb815974ea96af664fa966079966a08916722':
Simplify __stack_chk_fail, and fix it so we get debuggerd stack traces.
libc_bionic.a is already compiled -Werror, but this one file gets
compiled into its own library because it needs to be compiled with
-fno-stack-protector.
Change-Id: I273c535ab5c73ccaccbcf793fda1f788a2589abe
This reverts commit 6f94de3ca4
(Doesn't try to increase the number of TLS slots; that leads to
an inability to boot. Adds more tests.)
Change-Id: Ia7d25ba3995219ed6e686463dbba80c95cc831ca
# Via Android Git Automerger (1) and others
* commit '6b73d13fa414afeecba6718bf724e8ac922bac39':
Revert "Revert "Pull the pthread_key_t functions out of pthread.c.""
# Via Gerrit Code Review (2) and Android Git Automerger (1)
* commit 'e4b08318c13fac774b233a5459427563d2983f79':
Revert "Pull the pthread_key_t functions out of pthread.c."
POSIX says pthread_create returns EAGAIN, not ENOMEM.
Also pull pthread_attr_t functions into their own file.
Also pull pthread_setname_np into its own file.
Also remove unnecessary #includes from pthread_key.cpp.
Also account for those pthread keys used internally by bionic,
so they don't count against the number of keys available to user
code. (They do with glibc, but glibc's limit is the much more
generous 1024.)
Also factor out the common errno-restoring idiom to reduce gotos.
Bug: 6702535
Change-Id: I555e66efffcf2c1b5a2873569e91489156efca42
This was originally motivated by noticing that we were setting the
wrong bits for the well-known tls entries. That was a harmless bug
because none of the well-known tls entries has a destructor, but
it's best not to leave land mines lying around.
Also add some missing POSIX constants, a new test, and fix
pthread_key_create's return value when we hit the limit.
Change-Id: Ife26ea2f4b40865308e8410ec803b20bcc3e0ed1
There's now only one place where we deal with this stuff, it only needs to
be parsed once by the dynamic linker (rather than by each recipient), and it's
now easier for us to get hold of auxv data early on.
Change-Id: I6314224257c736547aac2e2a650e66f2ea53bef5
We had two copies of the backtrace code, and two copies of the
libcorkscrew /proc/pid/maps code. This patch gets us down to one.
We also had hacks so we could log in the malloc debugging code.
This patch pulls the non-allocating "printf" code out of the
dynamic linker so everyone can share.
This patch also makes the leak diagnostics easier to read, and
makes it possible to paste them directly into the 'stack' tool (by
using relative PCs).
This patch also fixes the stdio standard stream leak that was
causing a leak warning every time tf_daemon ran.
Bug: 7291287
Change-Id: I66e4083ac2c5606c8d2737cb45c8ac8a32c7cfe8
Add signalfd() call to bionic.
Adding the signalfd call was done in 3 steps:
- add signalfd4 system call (function name and syscall
number) to libc/SYSCALLS.TXT
- generate all necessary headers by calling
libc/tools/gensyscalls.py. This patch is adding
the generated files since the build system
does not call gensyscalls.py.
- create the signalfd wrapper in signalfd.cpp and add
the function prototype to sys/signalfd.h
(cherry-pick of 0c11611c11, modified to
work with older versions of GCC still in use on some branches.)
Change-Id: I4c6c3f12199559af8be63f93a5336851b7e63355
Add signalfd() call to bionic.
Adding the signalfd call was done in 3 steps:
- add signalfd4 system call (function name and syscall
number) to libc/SYSCALLS.TXT
- generate all necessary headers by calling
libc/tools/gensyscalls.py. This patch is adding
the generated files since the build system
does not call gensyscalls.py.
- create the signalfd wrapper in signalfd.cpp and add
the function prototype to sys/signalfd.h
Change-Id: I7ee1d3e60d5d3e1c73d9820e07d23b9ce6e1a5ab
raise() should use pthread_kill() in a pthreads environment.
For bionic this means it should always be used.
Change-Id: Ic679272b664d2b8a7068b628fb83a9f7395c441f
This patch replaces .S versions of x86 crtfiles with .c which are much
easier to support. Some of the files are matching .c version of Arm
crtfiles. x86 files required some cleanup anyway and this cleanup actually
led to matching Arm files.
I didn't change anything to share the same crt*.c between x86 and Arm. I
prefer to keep them separate for a while in case any change is required
for one of the arch, but it's good thing to do in the following patches.
Change-Id: Ibcf033f8d15aa5b10c05c879fd4b79a64dfc70f3
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
Most of these tests were in system/extras, but I've added more to cover other
cases explicitly mentioned by POSIX.
Change-Id: I5e8d77e4179028d77306935cceadbb505515dcde
The declaration for alphasort() in <dirent.h> used the deprecated:
int alphasort(const void*, const void*);
while both Posix and GLibc use instead:
int alphasort(const struct dirent** a, const struct dirent** b);
See: http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/alphasort.html
This patch does the following:
- Update the declaration to match Posix/GLibc
- Get rid of the upstream BSD code which isn't compatible with the new
signature.
- Implement a new trivial alphasort() with the right signature, and
ensure that it uses strcoll() instead of strcmp().
- Remove Bionic-specific #ifdef .. #else .. #endif block in
dirent_test.cpp which uses alphasort().
Even through strcoll() currently uses strcmp(), this does the right
thing in the case where we decide to update strcoll() to properly
implement locale-specific ordered comparison.
Change-Id: I4fd45604d8a940aaf2eb0ecd7d73e2f11c9bca96
Based on a pair of patches from Intel:
https://android-review.googlesource.com/#/c/43909/https://android-review.googlesource.com/#/c/44903/
For x86, this patch supports _both_ the global that ARM/MIPS use
and the per-thread TLS entry (%gs:20) that GCC uses by default. This
lets us support binaries built with any x86 toolchain (right now,
the NDK is emitting x86 code that uses the global).
I've also extended the original tests to cover ARM/MIPS too, and
be a little more thorough for x86.
Change-Id: I02f279a80c6b626aecad449771dec91df235ad01
Also separate out the C++ files so we can use -Werror on them. I'd
rather wait for LOCAL_CPPFLAGS to be in AOSP, but this also lets us
see which files still need to be sorted into one bucket or the other.
Change-Id: I6acc1f7c043935c70a3b089f705d218b9aaaba0a
Also stop building the obsolete three files, now bionic and libcore
both use the new single file.
Bug: 7012465
Change-Id: I1b9b49af7382c57b6cb8820c2275e6d4044b2bb6
ARM and x86 have custom memcpy implementations, but MIPS relies on the generic
one, which I recently moved.
Change-Id: I9e49243f63b27a4123f2c6623d6286ec82d333c7
I'll need at least one more pass, because there's some upstream code
lurking in libc/bionic, but this is still a step in the right direction.
Change-Id: I55927315972da8327ae01c5240ed587db17e8462
Some userspace programs (e.g. perf) need getline.
Changes:
() add getdelim.c, getline.c from NetBSD (http://netbsd.org/) under the
NetBSD Foundation's (TNF) license ("2 clause" Berkeley-style license).
() add stub for reentrant.h header that is needed by getdelim.c
() add tests for getdelim(3) and getline(3).
() update NOTICE file.
Change-Id: I22ed82dd5904b9d7a3695535c04f502be3c27c5d
Signed-off-by: Irina Tirdea <irina.tirdea@intel.com>
Please see "man 3 ftw" for a description of the
ftw / nftw functions.
This code is taken directly from netbsd unmodified.
Change-Id: Ia4879ac57212b424adf5281b5e92858e216d0f14
Otherwise libc_malloc_debug_leak.so is failed to load runtime in x86
case
Change-Id: I8207ce06d1ec17b233f4e4fcfdd2b161673b4fa8
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
To properly support legacy ARM shared libraries, libc.so needs
to export the symbols __dso_handle and atexit, even though
these are now supplied by the crt startup code.
This patch reshuffles the existing CRT_LEGACY_WORKAROUND
conditionally compiled code slightly so it works as the
original author likely intended.
Change-Id: Id6c0e94dc65b7928324a5f0bad7eba6eb2f464b9
Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@gmail.com>
Useful if you're trying to defeat ASLR, otherwise not
so much ...
Change-Id: I17ebb50bb490a3967db9c3038f049adafe2b8ea7
Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@gmail.com>
Move dlmalloc code to upstream-dlmalloc to make pulling upstream changes
easier.
Declare pvalloc and malloc_usable_size routines present in malloc.h but with
missing implementations. Remove other functions from malloc.h that have
no implementation nor use in Android.
Change-Id: Ia6472ec6cbebc9ad1ef99f4669de9d33fcc2efb4
Add __bionic_clone function for x86, which will be
used for clone system call.
Change-Id: I889dc9bf4b7ebb4358476e17e6f3233e26491f4d
Signed-off-by: Jin Wei <wei.a.jin@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Xiaokang Qin <xiaokang.qin@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Beare, Bruce J <bruce.j.beare@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jack Ren <jack.ren@intel.com>
Author-tracking-BZ: 51414
This should help prevent broken builds next time I'm messing with
assembler/compiler/linker flags...
Change-Id: I30f15a3ce3c3f3c60cad7bc59aaba9f42d792224
This reverts commit 8793e7c7d2,
and fixes the build by building upstream NetBSD source as a
separate library that's then swallowed whole into libc_common.
Change-Id: I6c9317d8c48b5ccaf85a7b185bc07fb31176ff97
There were two bugs in our implementation. Intel found one, but another
remainined, and tracking upstream is the way forward for functions where
we add no value.
Change-Id: Ida9bac0293fb2c4cbc942b1e0515ee0477c6538b
This allows debugging tools to know they are working with Android
binaries and adapt accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Thiago Jung Bauermann <thiago.bauermann@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Hope <michael.hope@linaro.org>
Change-Id: Ic906992fcad61c028bb765821637a3e1333bf52b
This test is designed to detect code such as:
int main() {
char buf[10];
memcpy(buf, "1234567890", sizeof(buf));
size_t len = strlen(buf); // segfault here with _FORTIFY_SOURCE
printf("%d\n", len);
return 0;
}
or anytime strlen reads beyond an object boundary. This should
help address memory leakage vulnerabilities and make other
unrelated vulnerabilities harder to exploit.
Change-Id: I354b425be7bef4713c85f6bab0e9738445e00182
libc's stack protector initialization routine (__guard_setup)
is in bionic/ssp.c. This code deliberately modifies the stack
canary. This code should never be compiled with -fstack-protector-all
otherwise it will crash (mismatched canary value).
Force bionic/ssp.c to be compiled with -fno-stack-protector
Change-Id: Ib95a5736e4bafe1a460d6b4e522ca660b417d8d6
Add strlcpy / strlcat support to FORTIFY_SOURCE. This allows
us to do consistency checks on to ensure we don't overflow buffers
when the compiler is able to tell us the size of the buffer we're
dealing with.
Unlike previous changes, this change DOES NOT use the compiler's
builtin support. Instead, we do everything the compiler would
normally do.
Change-Id: I47c099a911382452eafd711f8e9bfe7c2d0a0d22
sprintf FORTIFY_SOURCE protections are not available
on clang.
Also add various __attribute__s to stdio functions.
Change-Id: I936d1f9e55fe53a68885c4524b7b59e68fed218d
Add _FORTIFY_SOURCE support for snprintf, vsnprintf
At this time, we opt out of these protections for clang, as clang
does not implement __builtin_va_arg_pack().
http://clang.llvm.org/docs/UsersManual.html#c_unimpl_gcc
Change-Id: I73ebe5ec8dad1dca8898a76d6afb693a25f75375
Ensure that strcat / strncat check for integer overflows
when computing the length of the resulting string.
Change-Id: Ib806ad33a0d3b50876f384bc17787a28f0dddc37
Add _FORTIFY_SOURCE support for the following functions:
* memset
* bzero
Move the __BIONIC_FORTIFY_INLINE definition to cdefs.h so it
can be used from multiple header files.
Change-Id: Iead4d5e35de6ec97786d58ee12573f9b11135bb7
Add initial support for -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE to bionic for the
following functions:
* memcpy
* memmove
* strcpy
* strcat
* strncpy
* strncat
This change adds a new version of the above functions which passes
the size of the destination buffer to __builtin___*_chk.
If the compiler can determine, at compile time, that the destination
buffer is large enough, or the destination buffer can point to an object
of unknown size, then the check call is bypassed.
If the compiler can't make a compile time decision, then it calls
the __*_chk() function, which does a runtime buffer size check
These options are only enabled if the code is compiled with
-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=1 or 2, and only when optimizations are enabled.
Please see
* http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Object-Size-Checking.html
* http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2004-09/msg02055.html
for additional details on FORTIFY_SOURCE.
Testing: Compiled the entire Android tree with -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=1,
and verified that everything appears to be working properly.
Also created a test buffer overflow, and verified that it was
caught by this change.
Change-Id: I4fddb445bafe92b16845b22458d72e6dedd24fbc
This patch is a rewrite of libc.debug.malloc = 10 (chk_malloc). It provides
the same features as the original (poison freed memory, detect heap overruns
and underruns), except that it provides more debugging information whenever it
detects a problem.
In addition to the original features, the new chk_malloc() implementation
detects multiple frees within a given range of the last N allocations, N being
configurable via the system property libc.debug.malloc.backlog.
Finally, this patch keeps track of all outstanding memory allocations. On
program exit, we walk that list and report each outstanding allocation.
(There is support (not enabled) for a scanner thread periodically walks over
the list of outstanding allocations as well as the backlog of recently-freed
allocations, checking for heap-usage errors.)
Feature overview:
1) memory leaks
2) multiple frees
3) use after free
4) overrun
Implementation:
-- for each allocation, there is a:
1) stack trace at the time the allocation is made
2) if the memory is freed, there is also a stack trace at the point
3) a front and rear guard (fence)
4) the stack traces are kept together with the allocation
-- the following lists and maintained
1) all outstanding memory allocations
3) a backlog of allocations what are freed; when you call free(), instead of
actually freed, the allocation is moved to this backlog;
4) when the backlog of allocations gets full, the oldest entry gets evicted
from it; at that point, the allocation is checked for overruns or
use-after-free errors, and then actually freed.
5) when the program exits, the list of outstanding allocations and the
backlog are inspected for errors, then freed;
To use this, set the following system properties before running the process or
processes you want to inspect:
libc.malloc.debug.backlog # defaults to 100
libc.malloc.debug 10
When a problem is detected, you will see the following on logcat for a multiple
free:
E/libc ( 7233): +++ ALLOCATION 0x404b9278 SIZE 10 BYTES MULTIPLY FREED!
E/libc ( 7233): +++ ALLOCATION 0x404b9278 SIZE 10 ALLOCATED HERE:
E/libc ( 7233): *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
E/libc ( 7233): #00 pc 0000c35a /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #01 pc 0000c658 /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #02 pc 00016d80 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #03 pc 4009647c /system/bin/malloctest
E/libc ( 7233): #04 pc 00016f24 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): +++ ALLOCATION 0x404b9278 SIZE 10 FIRST FREED HERE:
E/libc ( 7233): *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
E/libc ( 7233): #00 pc 0000c35a /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #01 pc 0000c7d2 /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #02 pc 00016d94 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #03 pc 40096490 /system/bin/malloctest
E/libc ( 7233): #04 pc 00016f24 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): +++ ALLOCATION 0x404b9278 SIZE 10 NOW BEING FREED HERE:
E/libc ( 7233): *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
E/libc ( 7233): #00 pc 0000c35a /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #01 pc 0000c6ac /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #02 pc 00016d94 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #03 pc 400964a0 /system/bin/malloctest
E/libc ( 7233): #04 pc 00016f24 /system/lib/libc.so
The following for a heap overrun and underrun:
E/libc ( 7233): +++ REAR GUARD MISMATCH [10, 11)
E/libc ( 7233): +++ ALLOCATION 0x404b9198 SIZE 10 HAS A CORRUPTED REAR GUARD
E/libc ( 7233): +++ ALLOCATION 0x404b9198 SIZE 10 ALLOCATED HERE:
E/libc ( 7233): *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
E/libc ( 7233): #00 pc 0000c35a /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #01 pc 0000c658 /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #02 pc 00016d80 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #03 pc 40096438 /system/bin/malloctest
E/libc ( 7233): #04 pc 00016f24 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): +++ ALLOCATION 0x404b9198 SIZE 10 FREED HERE:
E/libc ( 7233): *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
E/libc ( 7233): #00 pc 0000c35a /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #01 pc 0000c7d2 /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #02 pc 00016d94 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #03 pc 40096462 /system/bin/malloctest
E/libc ( 7233): #04 pc 00016f24 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): +++ ALLOCATION 0x404b9358 SIZE 10 HAS A CORRUPTED FRONT GUARD
E/libc ( 7233): +++ ALLOCATION 0x404b9358 SIZE 10 ALLOCATED HERE:
E/libc ( 7233): *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
E/libc ( 7233): #00 pc 0000c35a /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #01 pc 0000c658 /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #02 pc 00016d80 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #03 pc 400964ba /system/bin/malloctest
E/libc ( 7233): #04 pc 00016f24 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): +++ ALLOCATION 0x404b9358 SIZE 10 FREED HERE:
E/libc ( 7233): *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
E/libc ( 7233): #00 pc 0000c35a /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #01 pc 0000c7d2 /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #02 pc 00016d94 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #03 pc 400964e4 /system/bin/malloctest
E/libc ( 7233): #04 pc 00016f24 /system/lib/libc.so
The following for a memory leak:
E/libc ( 7233): +++ THERE ARE 1 LEAKED ALLOCATIONS
E/libc ( 7233): +++ DELETING 4096 BYTES OF LEAKED MEMORY AT 0x404b95e8 (1 REMAINING)
E/libc ( 7233): +++ ALLOCATION 0x404b95e8 SIZE 4096 ALLOCATED HERE:
E/libc ( 7233): *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
E/libc ( 7233): #00 pc 0000c35a /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #01 pc 0000c658 /system/lib/libc_malloc_debug_leak.so
E/libc ( 7233): #02 pc 00016d80 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #03 pc 0001bc94 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #04 pc 0001edf6 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #05 pc 0001b80a /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #06 pc 0001c086 /system/lib/libc.so
E/libc ( 7233): #07 pc 40096402 /system/bin/malloctest
E/libc ( 7233): #08 pc 00016f24 /system/lib/libc.so
Change-Id: Ic440e9d05a01e2ea86b25e8998714e88bc2d16e0
Signed-off-by: Iliyan Malchev <malchev@google.com>
Rewrite
crtbegin.S -> crtbegin.c
crtbegin_so.S -> crtbegin_so.c
This change allows us to generate PIC code without relying
on text relocations.
As a consequence of this rewrite, also rewrite
__dso_handle.S -> __dso_handle.c
__dso_handle_so.S -> __dso_handle_so.c
atexit.S -> atexit.c
In crtbegin.c _start, place the __PREINIT_ARRAY__, __INIT_ARRAY__,
__FINI_ARRAY__, and __CTOR_LIST__ variables onto the stack, instead of
passing a pointer to the text section of the binary.
This change appears sorta wonky, as I attempted to preserve,
as much as possible, the structure of the original assembly.
As a result, you have C files including other C files, and other
programming uglyness.
Result: This change reduces the number of files with text-relocations
from 315 to 19 on my Android build.
Before:
$ scanelf -aR $OUT/system | grep TEXTREL | wc -l
315
After:
$ scanelf -aR $OUT/system | grep TEXTREL | wc -l
19
Change-Id: Ib9f98107c0eeabcb606e1ddc7ed7fc4eba01c9c4
crtbegin_dynamic and crtbegin_static are essentially identical,
minus a few trivial differences (comments and whitespace).
Eliminate duplicates.
Change-Id: Ic9fae6bc9695004974493b53bfc07cd3bb904480
Some SoCs that support NEON nevertheless perform better with a non-NEON than a
NEON memcpy(). This patch adds build variable ARCH_ARM_USE_NON_NEON_MEMCPY,
which can be set in BoardConfig.mk. When ARCH_ARM_USE_NON_NEON_MEMCPY is
defined, we compile in the non-NEON optimized memcpy() even if the SoC supports
NEON.
Change-Id: Ia0e5bee6bad5880ffc5ff8f34a1382d567546cf9
Currently the dlmalloc allocates the memory with 8-byte alignment.
According to the com.aurorasoftworks.quadrant.ui.professional benchmark data:
We can get much better memory performance if we change it to be 16-byte aligned.
For example, On Nexus-S:
8-byte aligned :
1378 1070 1142 1665 1765 1163 1179 1263 1404 avg: 1336.555555556
16-byte aligned:
1691 1731 1780 1691 1671 1678 1802 1758 1780 avg: 1731.333333333
gain: 29.53%
That patch provides flexibity to customize the MALLOC_ALIGNMENT from the
board config.The macro MALLOC_ALIGNMENT defaults to 8.
To change it, please define BOARD_MALLOC_ALIGNMENT in the BoardConfig.mk:
BOARD_MALLOC_ALIGNMENT := <whatever>
Change-Id: I8da0376944a0bbcef1d0fc026bfb6d9125db9739
Signed-off-by: Jin Wei <wei.a.jin@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jack Ren <jack.ren@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Beare, Bruce J <bruce.j.beare@intel.com>
So that we can always get the full stack trace regardless of gcc's handling
of the "noreturn" attribute associated with abort().
(Cherry pick of Id264a5167e7cabbf11515fbc48f5469c527e34d4.)
Bug: 6455193
Conflicts:
libc/Android.mk
Change-Id: I568fc5303fd1d747075ca933355f914122f94dac
So that we can always get the full stack trace regardless of gcc's handling
of the "noreturn" attribute associated with abort().
[cherry-picked from master]
BUG:6455193
Change-Id: I0102355f5bf20e636d3feab9d1424495f38e39e2
So that we can always get the full stack trace regardless of gcc's handling
of the "noreturn" attribute associated with abort().
BUG:6455193
Change-Id: Id264a5167e7cabbf11515fbc48f5469c527e34d4
ARM Cortex A8 use 64 bytes and ARM Cortex A9 use 32 bytes cache line
size.
The following patch:
Adds code to adjust memcpy cache line size to match A9 cache line
size.
Adds a flag to select between 32 bytes and 64 bytes cache line
size.
Copyright (C) ST-Ericsson SA 2010
Modified neon implementation to fit Cortex A9 cache line size
Author: Henrik Smiding henrik.smiding@stericsson.com for
ST-Ericsson.
Change-Id: I8a55946bfb074e6ec0a14805ed65f73fcd0984a3
Signed-off-by: Christian Bejram <christian.bejram@stericsson.com>
By default, Android no longer compiles code using it's custom
linker script /build/core/armelf.xsc. However, this causes
problems for libc. Certain programs linked using older versions
of GOLD expect libc.so to export __exidx_start and __exidx_end.
Removing the custom linker script causes libc.so not to export
those symbols.
For now, continue using the old linker script, until we can
figure out a better solution.
Change-Id: Iaf002afd63a58b848818da24e5a4525620dc4d74
Marking segments read-only was pushing the alignment of __on_dlclose by
2 bytes making it unaligned. This change makes sure the ARM code is
aligned to the 4 byte boundary.
Bug: 6313309
Change-Id: Ic2bf475e120dd61225ec19e5d8a9a8b1d0b7f081
New functions:
tfind
tsearch
tdelete
twalk
tdestroy (GNU extension)
Bug fix: the current implementation for realpath would crash
if the second argument (resolved_path) is NULL.
New headers:
ar.h
search.h
Change-Id: Ib6c1e42fc186a6d597a6e5a9692b16acaa155804
We don't have a toolchain anymore, we don't have working original
kernel headers, and nobody is maintaining this so there is really
no point in keeping this here. Details of the patch:
- removed code paths from Android.mk files related to the SuperH
architecture ("sh")
- removed libc/arch-sh, linker/arch-sh, libc/kernel/arch-sh
- simplified libc/SYSCALLS.TXT
- simplified the scripts in libc/tools/ and libc/kernel/tools
Change-Id: I26b0e1422bdc347489e4573e2fbec0e402f75560
Signed-off-by: David 'Digit' Turner <digit@android.com>
This patch uses the new hardware feature macros for x86 to define
various compile-time macros used to make the C library use
SSE2 and/or SSSE3 optimized memory functions for target CPUs
that support these features.
Note that previously, we relied on the macros being defined by
build/core/combo/TARGET_linux-x86.mk, but this is no longer the
case.
Change-Id: Ieae5ff5284c0c839bc920953fb6b91d2f2633afc
this works by building a directed graph of acquired
pthread mutexes and making sure there are no loops in
that graph.
this feature is enabled with:
setprop debug.libc.pthread 1
when a potential deadlock is detected, a large warning is
output to the log with appropriate back traces.
currently disabled at compile-time. set PTHREAD_DEBUG_ENABLED=1
to enable.
Change-Id: I916eed2319599e8aaf8f229d3f18a8ddbec3aa8a
Use tgkill instead of tkill to implement pthread_kill.
This is safer in the event that the thread has already terminated
and its id has been reused by a different process.
Change-Id: Ied715e11d7eadeceead79f33db5e2b5722954ac9
__atomic_cmpxchg and other related atomic operations did not
provide memory barriers, which can be a problem for non-platform
code that links against them when it runs on multi-core devices.
This patch does two things to fix this:
- It modifies the existing implementation of the functions
that are exported by the C library to always provide
full memory barriers. We need to keep them exported by
the C library to prevent breaking existing application
machine code.
- It also modifies <sys/atomics.h> to only export
always-inlined versions of the functions, to ensure that
any application code compiled against the new header will
not rely on the platform version of the functions.
This ensure that said machine code will run properly on
all multi-core devices.
This is based on the GCC built-in sync primitives.
The end result should be only slightly slower than the
previous implementation.
Note that the platform code does not use these functions
at all. A previous patch completely removed their usage in
the pthread and libstdc++ code.
+ rename arch-arm/bionic/atomics_arm.S to futex_arm.S
+ rename arch-x86/bionic/atomics_x86.S to futex_x86.S
+ remove arch-x86/include/sys/atomics.h which already
provided inlined functions to the x86 platform.
Change-Id: I752a594475090cf37fa926bb38209c2175dda539
* commit '6b6ebeca985fb3843b56b507ac4ac1be44080a9c':
enable support for large files (> 2G)
Enable functional DSO object destruction
x86: Enable -fstack-protector
Update X86 Bionic CRT files for unwind/exceptions
bionic, libthread_db x86 fixes
Updated gcc 4.4.3 IA toolchain doesn't require the .ctors list
Remove an extra register move.
Replace __atomic_XXX with GCC __sync_XXX intrinsics.
move some typedefs to procfs.h required by gdbserver build
use consistent guards for off_t and size_t defines for IA
Simplify variable typing for IA builds
sigsetmask.c was not processing the "mask" argument.
Add defines for CAIF support
Remove extra/unneeded copy of fenv.h
Use proper variable typing
Update ATOM string routines to latest
Fix undefined reference to dl_iterate_phdr for x86
Fix missing NL
ptrace.c Fix source file format to unix from dos
* commit '3a13102637c8be53edf28f96598ac11aaa3e14df':
enable support for large files (> 2G)
Enable functional DSO object destruction
x86: Enable -fstack-protector
Update X86 Bionic CRT files for unwind/exceptions
bionic, libthread_db x86 fixes
Updated gcc 4.4.3 IA toolchain doesn't require the .ctors list
Remove an extra register move.
Replace __atomic_XXX with GCC __sync_XXX intrinsics.
move some typedefs to procfs.h required by gdbserver build
use consistent guards for off_t and size_t defines for IA
Simplify variable typing for IA builds
sigsetmask.c was not processing the "mask" argument.
Add defines for CAIF support
Remove extra/unneeded copy of fenv.h
Use proper variable typing
Update ATOM string routines to latest
Fix undefined reference to dl_iterate_phdr for x86
Fix missing NL
ptrace.c Fix source file format to unix from dos
Unfortunately, legacy .so files for ARM don't have a correct crtbegin file.
Consequently, we have to grandfather the old __dso_handle behaviour.
Add some ifdefs for ARM to allow it to use the old code until we can work
out a transition.
Change-Id: I6a28f368267d792c94e1d985d8344023bc632f6f
Author: H.J. Lu <hongjiu.lu@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Bruce Beare <bruce.j.beare@intel.com>