include/elf.h contains basically the same values as
linux/auxvec.h. Eliminate dups.
include/sys/exec_elf.h contains basically the same
values as linux/elf.h. Eliminate dups.
Change-Id: I66b8358161bb52223bb657f8f73ba28b324f4fa3
from http://svnweb.freebsd.org/base?view=revision&revision=176101
"
Oops, fix the fix in rev.1.10. logb() and logbf() were broken on
denormals, and logb() remained broken after 1.10 because the fix for
logbf() was incompletely translated.
Convert to __FBSDID().
"
Change-Id: I54f33648db7c421b06eee1ea8e63c57a179fae0d
Signed-off-by: Jack Ren <jack.ren@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jin Wei <wei.a.jin@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Bruce Beare <bruce.j.beare@intel.com>
Fix bug:
Currently the mutex lock _tls_desc_lock is not released
when __set_thread_area() fails. That will leads to the deadlock
when __set_tls( ) is called later on.
Change-Id: Iea3267cb0659971cba7766cbc3346f6924274f86
Signed-off-by: Jin Wei <wei.a.jin@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jack Ren <jack.ren@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Bruce Beare <bruce.j.beare@intel.com>
That is to fix the bug:
dlxxx functions can't be called recursively.
For example, if we use dlopen() to use open one library whose constructor
also calls dlopen() in order to open another library, then the thread is
dead-blocked.
By changing the dl_lock from a non-recursive lock to a recursive lock, we can
prevent the thread from dead-blocked by recursive dlxxx calls in the same
thread context.
Change-Id: I1018b41c82f4641cc009c0a2eda31f5a47a534f9
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jack Ren <jack.ren@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Bruce Beare <bruce.j.beare@intel.com>
This patch defines a few new macros that can be used to control the
visibility of symbols exported by the C library:
- ENTRY_PRIVATE() can be used in assembly sources to indicate
that an assembler function should have "hidden" visibility, i.e.
will never be exported by the C library's shared library.
This is the equivalent of using __LIBC_HIDDEN__ for a C function,
but ENTRY_PRIVATE() works like ENTRY(), and must be used with
END() to tag the end of the function.
- __LIBC_ABI_PUBLIC__ can be used to tag a C functions as being
part of the C library's public ABI. This is important for a
few functions that must be exposed by the NDK to maintain
binary compatibility.
Once a symbol has been tagged with this macro, it shall
*never* be removed from the library, even if it becomes
directly unused due to implementation changes
(e.g. __is_threaded).
- __LIBC_ABI_PRIVATE__ can be used for C functions that should
always be exported by the C library because they are used by
other libraries in the platform, but should not be exposed
by the NDK. It is possible to remove such symbols from the
implementation if all callers are also modified.
+ Add missing END() assembly macro for x86
Change-Id: Ia96236ea0dbec41d57bea634b39d246b30e5e234
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>
The x86 asm headers define __u64 regardless of __STRICT_ANSI__.
The linux/videodev2.h header requires __u64 to be defined, thus
this fixes compiling with -std=c99 when including the
linux/videodev2.h header.
In glibc, the asm/types.h header defines __u64 regardless of
__STRICT_ANSI__.
This is the change for the generated arch-arm/asm/types.h
header, as produced by the update_all.py script (without all
the other unrelated changes that the script produces).
FWIW, the same issue also is present in
arch-sh/asm/types.h, but there are no source headers for
arch-sh in external/kernel-headers (and regenerating the
headers simply removes that file).
Change-Id: If05fcc9ed6ff5943602be121c7be140116e361fe
The Linux kernel provides an AT_SECURE auxv flag to inform userspace
whether or not a security transition has occurred. This is more reliable
than directly checking the uid/gid against the euid/egid, because it covers
not only setuid/setgid but also file capabilities, SELinux, and AppArmor
security transitions. It is also a more efficient test since it does
not require any additional system calls.
Change-Id: I9752a4f6da452273258d2876d13b05e402fb0409
The xattr system calls are required for the SE Android userspace in
order to get and set file security contexts. In particular, libselinux
requires these calls.
Change-Id: I78f5eb3d8f3384aed0a5e7c6a6f001781d982017