If __get_tls has the right type, a lot of confusing casting can disappear.
It was probably a mistake that __get_tls was exposed as a function for mips
and x86 (but not arm), so let's (a) ensure that the __get_tls function
always matches the macro, (b) that we have the function for arm too, and
(c) that we don't have the function for any 64-bit architecture.
Change-Id: Ie9cb989b66e2006524ad7733eb6e1a65055463be
Normally we don't have -Werror for upstream code, but for those warnings
that probably point to 32-bit assumptions about pointers, we want those
warnings to always be errors.
Change-Id: Ibece9caf09b2f7989ca600ef448d07868669a8fb
The NDK ABI requires that you support SSE2, and the build system won't let you
build with ARCH_X86_HAVE_SSE2 set to false. So let's stop pretending this
constant is actually a variable, and let's remove the corresponding dead code.
Also, the USE_SSE2 and USE_SSE3 macros are unused, so let's not bother
setting them.
Change-Id: I40b501d998530d22518ce1c4d14575513a8125bb
Clang and gcc default to different standards, so we should be explicit
about the versions we want to compile for.
Change-Id: I65495a2392dd29f36373b94c616c2506173e6033
Use basic .c versions of all functions for x86_64 until they are
manually optimized and .s versions released.
Change-Id: I59bba08931e894822db485c8803c2665c226234a
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
Fortify calls to recv() and recvfrom().
We use __bos0 to match glibc's behavior, and because I haven't
tested using __bos.
Change-Id: Iad6ae96551a89af17a9c347b80cdefcf2020c505
Found by adapting the simple unit tests for libc logging to test
snprintf too. Fix taken from upstream OpenBSD without updating
the rest of stdio.
Change-Id: Ie339a8e9393a36080147aae4d6665118e5d93647
Required for x86 build with multilib compiler.
Change-Id: Iac71cdc3461df6fb48cb2a7b713324ca368e6704
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
I've mailed the tz list about this, and will switch to whatever upstream
fix comes along as soon as it's available.
Bug: 10310929
Change-Id: I36bf3fcf11f5ac9b88137597bac3487a7bb81b0f
This change creates assembler versions of __memcpy_chk/__memset_chk
that is implemented in the memcpy/memset assembler code. This change
avoids an extra call to memcpy/memset, instead allowing a simple fall
through to occur from the chk code into the body of the real
implementation.
Testing:
- Ran the libc_test on __memcpy_chk/__memset_chk on all nexus devices.
- Wrote a small test executable that has three calls to __memcpy_chk and
three calls to __memset_chk. First call dest_len is length + 1. Second
call dest_len is length. Third call dest_len is length - 1.
Verified that the first two calls pass, and the third fails. Examined
the logcat output on all nexus devices to verify that the fortify
error message was sent properly.
- I benchmarked the new __memcpy_chk and __memset_chk on all systems. For
__memcpy_chk and large copies, the savings is relatively small (about 1%).
For small copies, the savings is large on cortex-a15/krait devices
(between 5% to 30%).
For cortex-a9 and small copies, the speed up is present, but relatively
small (about 3% to 5%).
For __memset_chk and large copies, the savings is also small (about 1%).
However, all processors show larger speed-ups on small copies (about 30% to
100%).
Bug: 9293744
Merge from internal master.
(cherry-picked from 7c860db074)
Change-Id: I916ad305e4001269460ca6ebd38aaa0be8ac7f52
Create one version of strcat/strcpy/strlen for cortex-a15/krait and another
version for cortex-a9.
Tested with the libc_test strcat/strcpy/strlen tests.
Including new tests that verify that the src for strcat/strcpy do not
overread across page boundaries.
NOTE: The handling of unaligned strcpy (same code in strcat) could probably
be optimized further such that the src is read 64 bits at a time instead of
the partial reads occurring now.
strlen improves slightly since it was recently optimized.
Performance improvements for strcpy and strcat (using an empty dest string):
cortex-a9
- Small copies vary from about 5% to 20% as the size gets above 10 bytes.
- Copies >= 1024, about a 60% improvement.
- Unaligned copies, from about 40% improvement.
cortex-a15
- Most small copies exhibit a 100% improvement, a few copies only
improve by 20%.
- Copies >= 1024, about 150% improvement.
- Unaligned copies, about 100% improvement.
krait
- Most small copies vary widely, but on average 20% improvement, then
the performance gets better, hitting about a 100% improvement when
copies 64 bytes of data.
- Copies >= 1024, about 100% improvement.
- When coping MBs of data, about 50% improvement.
- Unaligned copies, about 90% improvement.
As strcat destination strings get larger in size:
cortex-a9
- about 40% improvement for small dst strings (>= 32).
- about 250% improvement for dst strings >= 1024.
cortex-a15
- about 200% improvement for small dst strings (>=32).
- about 250% improvement for dst strings >= 1024.
krait
- about 25% improvement for small dst strings (>=32).
- about 100% improvement for dst strings >=1024.
Merge from internal master.
(cherry-picked from d119b7b6f4)
Change-Id: I296463b251ef9fab004ee4dded2793feca5b547a
Only works on some kernels, and only on page-aligned regions of
anonymous memory. It will show up in /proc/pid/maps as
[anon:<name>] and in /proc/pid/smaps as Name: <name>
Change-Id: If31667cf45ff41cc2a79a140ff68707526def80e
This change creates assembler versions of __memcpy_chk/__memset_chk
that is implemented in the memcpy/memset assembler code. This change
avoids an extra call to memcpy/memset, instead allowing a simple fall
through to occur from the chk code into the body of the real
implementation.
Testing:
- Ran the libc_test on __memcpy_chk/__memset_chk on all nexus devices.
- Wrote a small test executable that has three calls to __memcpy_chk and
three calls to __memset_chk. First call dest_len is length + 1. Second
call dest_len is length. Third call dest_len is length - 1.
Verified that the first two calls pass, and the third fails. Examined
the logcat output on all nexus devices to verify that the fortify
error message was sent properly.
- I benchmarked the new __memcpy_chk and __memset_chk on all systems. For
__memcpy_chk and large copies, the savings is relatively small (about 1%).
For small copies, the savings is large on cortex-a15/krait devices
(between 5% to 30%).
For cortex-a9 and small copies, the speed up is present, but relatively
small (about 3% to 5%).
For __memset_chk and large copies, the savings is also small (about 1%).
However, all processors show larger speed-ups on small copies (about 30% to
100%).
Bug: 9293744
Change-Id: I8926d59fe2673e36e8a27629e02a7b7059ebbc98
Create one version of strcat/strcpy/strlen for cortex-a15/krait and another
version for cortex-a9.
Tested with the libc_test strcat/strcpy/strlen tests.
Including new tests that verify that the src for strcat/strcpy do not
overread across page boundaries.
NOTE: The handling of unaligned strcpy (same code in strcat) could probably
be optimized further such that the src is read 64 bits at a time instead of
the partial reads occurring now.
strlen improves slightly since it was recently optimized.
Performance improvements for strcpy and strcat (using an empty dest string):
cortex-a9
- Small copies vary from about 5% to 20% as the size gets above 10 bytes.
- Copies >= 1024, about a 60% improvement.
- Unaligned copies, from about 40% improvement.
cortex-a15
- Most small copies exhibit a 100% improvement, a few copies only
improve by 20%.
- Copies >= 1024, about 150% improvement.
- Unaligned copies, about 100% improvement.
krait
- Most small copies vary widely, but on average 20% improvement, then
the performance gets better, hitting about a 100% improvement when
copies 64 bytes of data.
- Copies >= 1024, about 100% improvement.
- When coping MBs of data, about 50% improvement.
- Unaligned copies, about 90% improvement.
As strcat destination strings get larger in size:
cortex-a9
- about 40% improvement for small dst strings (>= 32).
- about 250% improvement for dst strings >= 1024.
cortex-a15
- about 200% improvement for small dst strings (>=32).
- about 250% improvement for dst strings >= 1024.
krait
- about 25% improvement for small dst strings (>=32).
- about 100% improvement for dst strings >=1024.
Change-Id: Ifd091ebdbce70fe35a7c5d8f71d5914255f3af35
Yet another archaic relic containing bugs that had been fixed years before the
Android project even started...
Bug: 9935113
Change-Id: I3c9d019a216efd609ee568cf8c70bc360f357403
This updates the MIPS arch to be much more in
sync with the commit Nick Kralevich made last
June; see 9d40326830.
Rewrite
crtbegin.S -> crtbegin.c
crtbegin_so.S -> crtbegin_so.c
__dso_handle.S -> __dso_handle.c
__dso_handle_so.S -> __dso_handle_so.c
atexit.S -> atexit.c
Previously __do_global_dtors_aux was in the tasks
__FINI_ARRAY__ linked with crtbegin.S and it now being
removed as there is no need to call a destructor just
before terminating a process.
Shared libraries, on the other hand, are linked with
crtbegin_so.c and have a hidden destructor declared
to allow the bionic linker to call __on_dlclose().
Change-Id: Ieb4da5199b54573de05743990e309db381a11cb8
Signed-off-by: Pete Delaney <piet.delaney@imgtec.com>
Signed-off-by: Chao-Ying Fu <chao-ying.fu@imgtec.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Dearman <chris.dearman@imgtec.com>
Well, kinda... localtime.c still contains a bunch of Android-specific
hacks, as does strftime.c. But the other files are now exactly the same
as upstream.
This catches up with several years of bug fixes, and fixes most of the
compiler warnings that were in this code. (Just two remain.)
Bug: 1744909
Change-Id: I2ddfecb6fd408c847397c17afb0fff859e27feef
* commit 'fbec57d46c42460b2381484d1610ff21922d162e':
bionic: add compatibility mode for properties
bionic: use the size of the file to determine property area size
Allow a new bionic to work with an old init property area by supporting
the old format.
(cherry picked from commit ad76c85b9c)
Change-Id: Ib496e818a62a5834d40c71eb4745783d998be893
* A dlmalloc usage error shouldn't call abort(3) because we want to
cause a SIGSEGV by writing the address dlmalloc didn't like to an
address the kernel won't like, so that debuggerd will dump the
memory around the address that upset dlmalloc.
* Switch to the simpler FreeBSD/NetBSD style of registering stdio
cleanup. Hopefully this will let us simplify more of the stdio
implementation.
* Clear the stdio cleanup handler before we abort because of a dlmalloc
corruption error. This fixes the reported bug, where we'd hang inside
dlmalloc because the stdio cleanup reentered dlmalloc.
Bug: 9301265
Change-Id: Ief31b389455d6876e5a68f0f5429567d37277dbc
- eventfd.cpp and eventfd.s will output to the same file when building libc.a
out/target/product/*/obj/STATIC_LIBRARIES/libc_intermediates/WHOLE/libc_common_objs/eventfd.o
- And then `eventfd` will undefined when statically linked to libc.
Also add a unit test.
(cherry-pick of 8baa929d5d3bcf63381cf78ba76168c80c303f5e.)
Change-Id: Icd0eb0f4ce0511fb9ec00a504d491afd47d744d3
- eventfd.cpp and eventfd.s will output to the same file when building libc.a
out/target/product/*/obj/STATIC_LIBRARIES/libc_intermediates/WHOLE/libc_common_objs/eventfd.o
- And then `eventfd` will undefined when statically linked to libc.
Also add a unit test.
Change-Id: Ib310ade3256712ca617a90539e8eb07459c98505
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
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
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
Merge from internal master.
(cherry-picked from commit 6e1a5cf31b)
Change-Id: Ib18fc3f4131b21cdbd19b9dde7697ac25d066fcf
Move arch specific code for arm, mips, x86 into separate
makefiles.
In addition, add different arm cpu versions of memcpy/memset.
Bug: 8005082
Merge from internal master (acdde8c1cf).
Change-Id: I04f3d0715104fab618e1abf7cf8f7eec9bec79df
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