Create a method of disabling the debug allocation code paths so that
it's possible to use the libunwindbacktrace library without any
modifications.
Use this path to create and destroy the maps for the process. It's not
stricly necessary in the init code since the symbols are not modified
until after the initialize calls.
Also, remove the debug_XXX source files that doesn't need to be in libc.so.
Fix the maps reading code since it was completely broken for 64 bit.
Bug: 16408686
Change-Id: I6b02ef6ce26fdb7a59ad1029e7cbba9accceb704
Also clean up the implementation of all the pty functions, add tests,
and fix the stub implementations of ttyname(3) and ttyname_r(3).
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=58888
Change-Id: I0fb36438cd1abf8d4e87c29415f03db9ba13c3c2
bionic_systrace.h contains an implementation of tracing that
can be used with systrace.py and its associated viewer. pthread_mutex
now uses this tracing to track pthread_mutex contention, which can be
enabled by using the "bionic" command line option to systrace.
Bug: 15116468
Change-Id: I30ed5b377c91ca4c36568a0e647ddf95d4e4a61a
I've also added insque(3) and remque(3) (from NetBSD because the OpenBSD
ones are currently broken for non-circular lists).
I've not added the three hash table functions that should be in this header
because they operate on a single global hash table and thus aren't likely
to be useful.
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=73719
Change-Id: I97397a7b921e2e860fd9c8032cafd9097380498a
The getentropy_linux.c is lightly modified to build on Android, but we're now
completely in sync with upstream OpenBSD's arc4random implementation.
Change-Id: If32229fc28aba908035fb38703190d41ddcabc95
Since we don't have syslogd on Android and you can't run one on a non-rooted
device, it's more useful if syslog output just goes to the regular Android
logging system.
Bug: 14292866
Change-Id: Icee7f088b97f88ccbdaf471b98cbac7f19f9210a
Also remove __bionic_name_mem which has exactly one caller, and is only
ever expected to be used in this one place.
Change-Id: I833744f91e887639f5b2d1269f966ee9032af207
Code developed for glibc or older versions of bionic might expect more
randomness than the BSD implementation provides.
Bug: 15829381
Change-Id: Ia5a908a816e0a5f0639f514107a6384a51ec157e
The inclusion of the static libc_common library in the malloc_debug_XXX.so
shared libraries causes constructors to be called twice. This doesn't seem
to have caused any issues when setting the libc.debug.malloc property.
However, jemalloc crashes because there are two jemalloc implementations,
one in the static libc_common library and one in the shared library. Each
implementation has created overlapping thread keys that are not the same.
The crash comes because one of the jemalloc keys is actually used by the
locale setting code. Thus if someone sets the locale, the jemalloc code
crashes trying to access the same key.
Change-Id: Iaac650a82d69064db148a6333e9403744f68b4a4
The res_init.c changes bring us a bit closer to upstream too, though
there's still work to be done there. Some of the remaining differences
look like bugs we'd want to fix, so we should definitely try to come
back to that.
Change-Id: I50baa148e967c90d55d711e9904ad54c7d724d4d
Almost all of our stdio is actually OpenBSD, so although this isn't
really a core part of stdio (it doesn't touch struct FILE, for example)
it probably makes sense for it to come from the same upstream. My
actual motivation though is that it's the only FreeBSD file we have
compiler warnings from.
This patch moves us over to -Werror by default, with only the DNS code
having -Wno-error.
Change-Id: Id244a5b445cba41b0a1ca30298ca7b1ed177810c
These symbols should be public (and Firefox uses them), and we'd also probably
rather have the upstream thread-safe implementation.
Bug: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1030899
Change-Id: I2a5888fbb3198546848398f576fd2195ff3fe00c
This is actually revision 1.33, which is no longer the latest, but it's
as close to head as we can currently reasonably get. I've also switched
to the OpenBSD getentropy_linux.c implementation of getentropy, lightly
modified to try to report an error on failure.
Bug: 14499627
Change-Id: Ia7c561184b1f366c9bf66f248aa60f0d53535fcb
Since this was not done earlier, there are binary compatibility concerns
that prevent us from being able to apply this to LP32.
Bug: 11156955
Change-Id: Ie717c3ae4b81c749548a45a993c834e109700b27
In practice, with this implementation we never need to make a system call.
We get the main thread's tid (which is the same as our pid) back from
the set_tid_address system call we have to make during initialization.
A new pthread will have the same pid as its parent, and a fork child's
main (and only) thread will have a pid equal to its tid, which we get for
free from the kernel before clone returns.
The only time we'd actually have to make a getpid system call now is if
we take a signal during fork and the signal handler calls getpid. (That,
or we call getpid in the dynamic linker while it's still dealing with its
own relocations and hasn't even set up the main thread yet.)
Bug: 15387103
Change-Id: I6d4718ed0a5c912fc75b5f738c49a023dbed5189
Parts of this are just getting us in sync with upstream, but the
'const' stuff is our own mess. We should kill the *_tz functions
and lose this difference from upstream.
Change-Id: I17d26534ed3f54667143d78147a8c53be56d7b33
Rename jemalloc.cpp to jemalloc_wrapper.cpp to avoid problems with
the libc library having two jemalloc.o files that clobber each other.
Change-Id: I9a2d966dbf414b1367ee0ef1f0d73fca6f25b518
getdtablesize(3) was removed fro POSIX 2004. Keep the symbol around in LP32 for
binary compatibility, but remove the declaration from unistd.h.
Bug: 13935372
Change-Id: I1f96cd290bf9176f922dad58bd5a7ab2cae7ef0f
These were both removed from POSIX 2004, and we don't define an
implementation for getw(3). Keep the definition of put(3) on LP32 for
binary compatibility.
Bug: 13935372
Change-Id: Iba384b45093ac6d2d7c2d81f7980cd7701dd6f56
vfork() was removed from POSIX 2008, so this replaces its implementation
with a call to fork().
Bug: 13935372
Change-Id: I6d99ac9e52a2efc5ee9bda1cab908774b830cedc
This shouldn't be public API, isn't supported on x86/x86_64, and it's
unlikely anyone would have actually seen the message before anyway.
Using __libc_fatal makes it much more likely to be seen.
Bug: 11156955
Change-Id: Icf7f654b22a7dacd89668b60c11e5705c7215c08
revision 1.11
date: 2014/06/04 07:45:25; author: stsp; state: Exp; lines: +1 -7; commitid:
zJPRH5RUO224FmQu;
Remove assigned but unused local variables and macro from vfwprintf().
Found by Elliott @ google
ok mpi@
Change-Id: I716edc0c4d736a484a5317942de8e87bd8c6fd26
mbrtoc32 and c32rtomb get their implementations from mbrtowc and wcrtomb. The
wc functions now simply call the c32 functions.
Bug: 14646575
Change-Id: I49d4b95fed0f9d790260c996c4d0f8bfd1686324
We need to leave dlmalloc_trim and dlmalloc_inspect_all exposed for
the VM, but if we're seriously looking at other malloc implementations,
that's something we're going to have to fix.
Bug: 11156955
Change-Id: If85156c280044f1616c09a3c50ba674aaf0e8d3a
System calls can be pretty slow. This is mako, which has one of our
lowest latencies:
iterations ns/op
BM_unistd_getpid 10000000 209
BM_unistd_gettid 200000000 8
Bug: 15297299 (kernel panic from too many gettid calls)
Bug: 15315766 (excessive gettid overhead in liblogd)
Change-Id: I49656c0fc5b5d092390264a59e4f2c0d8a8b1aeb
Add optimized versions of bcopy and wmemmove for AArch64 based on the
memmove implementation
Change-Id: I82fbe8a7221ce224c567ffcfed7a94a53640fca8
Signed-off-by: Bernhard Rosenkraenzer <Bernhard.Rosenkranzer@linaro.org>
This reverts commit 8167dd7cb9.
For some reason I thought the bcopy change was bzero. The bcopy code doesn't pass our tests, so reverting until I can figure out what's wrong.
Change-Id: Id89fe959ea5105cd58dff6bba8d91a30cc4bcb07
Add optimized versions of bcopy and wmemmove for AArch64 based on the
memmove implementation
Change-Id: Ie43d0ff4f8ec4edba5b4fb5ccacd941f81ac6557
Signed-off-by: Bernhard Rosenkraenzer <Bernhard.Rosenkranzer@linaro.org>
To use jemalloc, add MALLOC_IMPL = jemalloc in a board config file
and you get the new version automatically.
Update the pthread_create_key tests since jemalloc uses a few keys.
Add a new test to verify memalign works as expected.
Bug: 981363
Change-Id: I16eb152b291a95bd2499e90492fc6b4bd7053836
Our type_info stub implementation is incompatible with the libc++ headers. Since
we don't need this support internally and anyone that wants RTTI support will
have to use libc++ anyway, this can be safely removed.
Change-Id: Ied8b67a0d86a4eb0e31191a50cceba0e39a16a6d
I cleaned up most of our warnings last week but forgot to turn on -Werror,
so of course we're getting new warnings already. I've left -Werror commented
out in those places where we still have warnings to deal with before we can
turn on -Werror.
Change-Id: Ia58ff8b8c1ada4bf81eec6f19ec1d34e133cf4b1
* Register cleanup function with atexit
instead of calling it explicitly on
exit()
* abort() no longer calls _cleanup:
Flushing stdio buffers on abort is no
longer required by POSIX.
* dlmalloc no longer need to reset cleanup
(see above)
* Upstream findfp.c makebuf.c setvbuf.cexit.c
to openbsd versions.
Bug: 14415367
Change-Id: I277058852485a9d3dbb13e5c232db5f9948d78ac
The Android build system always links against libstdc++.so anyway. Having
operator new and operator delete in a separate library means we can't use
constructors and destructors on heap-allocated objects inside the C library,
which is quite an unfortunate limitation.
This will be cheaper too; on LP64 we can stop linking against the [now empty]
libstdc++.so giving the dynamic linker one less library to worry about for
every process.
There's precedent too --- we already have no libpthread or librt.
For now I'm leaving the include files where they are, and I'm generating a
dummy libstdc++.so and libstdc++.a. We can come back and clean that up later
if all goes well.
Bug: 13367666
Change-Id: I6f3e27ea7c30d03d6394965d0400c9dc87fa83db
This hasn't built in over one release cycle and no one even noticed.
art does this the right way and other projects should do the same.
Change-Id: I7d1fb84c4080e008f329ee73e209ce85a36e6d55
Stupidly I found this bug by accident when writing the existing
tests, but I didn't think any real code would hit it. It turns
out that libcore always uses an INET6_ADDRSTRLEN-sized buffer
even when working with AF_INET addresses.
Change-Id: Ieffc8e4bbe9b66b49b033e3e7101c896e097e6f8
Use the upstream OpenBSD implementations of these functions.
Also ensure we have symbols for htonl, htons, ntohl, and ntohs.
gtest doesn't like us using the macro versions in ASSERT_EQ.
Bug: 14840760
Change-Id: I68720e9aca14838df457d2bb27b999d5818ac2b5
Make sure __netdClientDispatch is defined in the same set of libraries that
refer to it (e.g.: with connect.cpp).
Change-Id: I86d7bf2df5bde09f75a35b204eac0e1361747e22
The library exists outside bionic. It is dynamically loaded, to replace selected
standard socket syscalls with versions that talk to netd.
Change connect() to use the library if available.
(cherry picked from commit 3a6b627a14df8111b03e452f2df4b5f4938e0e49)
Change-Id: Ib6198e19dbc306521a26fcecfdf6e8424d163fc9
Add following functions:
bcopy, memcpy, memmove, memset, bzero, memcmp, wmemcmp, strlen,
strcpy, strncpy, stpcpy, stpncpy.
Create new directories inside arch-x86 to specify architecture: atom,
silvermont and generic (non atom or silvermont architectures are treated like generic).
Due to introducing optimized versions of stpcpy and stpncpy,
c-implementations of these functions are moved from
common for architectures makefile to arm and mips specific makefiles.
Change-Id: I990f8061c3e9bca1f154119303da9e781c5d086e
Signed-off-by: Varvara Rainchik <varvara.rainchik@intel.com>
I've reported the wcsftime bug upstream, but we really just want to use -D
to ensure the buggy code isn't built. (I've also brought our strftime a bit
closer to upstream now we have the right define.)
I don't think upstream is likely to fix all their sign-compare and
uninitialized warnings, so let's just silence them.
As for libm, again upstream isn't likely to fix all their warnings, and
silencing those made the ones that were our fault stand out. I've fixed
our <math.h> to fix the warnings caused by our lack of definitions for
the non-imprecise long-double functions. I checked the C99 standard, and
all these functions are there.
Change-Id: Iee8e1182c1db375058fb2c451eceb212bab47a37
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
__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