This adds ARMv8 optimized string handling functions to Bionic.
The implementations live in a generic/ directory because there will
likely be more CPU specific versions (e.g. Cortex-A53 vs. Cortex-A57)
later.
These implementations are 50%+ faster on current v8 models.
Change-Id: If3adc54a284d9519459b0d4d4390f0cd6ded8786
Signed-off-by: Bernhard Rosenkraenzer <Bernhard.Rosenkranzer@linaro.org>
GCC is removing these checks anyway because it knows the arguments
must be non-null, so leaving this code around is just confusing.
We know from experience that people were shipping code with locking
bugs because they weren't checking for error returns. Failing hard
like glibc does seems the better choice. (And it's what the checked
in code was already doing; this patch doesn't change that. It just
makes it more obvious that that's what's going on.)
Change-Id: I167c6d7c0a296822baf0cb9b43b97821eba7ab35
This replaces the non-standard pthread_mutex_lock_timeout_np, which we have
to keep around on LP32 for binary compatibility.
Change-Id: I098dc7cd38369f0c1bec1fac35687fbd27392e00
This is part of the upstream sync (Net/Open/Free BSDs expose the
nameser.h in their public headers).
Change-Id: Ib063d4e50586748cc70201a8296cd90d2e48bbcf
We only support CLOCK_REALTIME and CLOCK_MONOTONIC for now,
so we us a single bit from pthread_cond_t->value to denote
the clock type. Note that this reduces the width of the counter
to 30 bits, but this should be large enough for all practical
purposes.
bug: 13232338
Change-Id: I857e7da64b3ecbb23eeac7c9f3fbd460f60231bd
The only way the setitimer call can fail is if the unsigned number of seconds is
too large to fit in the kernel's signed number of seconds. If you schedule a
68-year alarm, glibc will fail by returning 0 and BSD will fail by returning -1.
Change-Id: Ic3721b01428f5402d99f31fd7f2ba2cc58805607
* TARGET_USES_LOGD is true or false, yes is not valid
* was supposed to be in the libc_bionic definition
Change-Id: I7f15d0fe61205641f7310ba9762df885e6c959d0
Note that a dynamically-linked binary will still probably see two attempts ---
one by the dynamic linker (which will set its copy of the flag so it won't try
again) and then one by the executable itself (which gets a new uninitialized
copy of the flag).
Change-Id: Id6b7e47780f0f24d2ca0384a75373f4824fa8f12
This costs us about 1000 fewer syscalls, which makes "adb shell strace date"
a lot more readable (which is the reason I've been meaning to fix this for a
long time now), but also actually saves a measurable amount of time.
Longer-term we should try to keep the tzdata mmap(2)ed in like libcore
does.
Change-Id: I1dd9c81968a13d3a6a55ba17f8a7d5c1f38cd103
Also add the corresponding constant, struct, and function declarations
to <sys/socket.h>, and perfunctory tests so we know that the symbols
actually exist.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Ranquet <guillaumex.ranquet@intel.com>
Change-Id: Ib0d854239d3716be90ad70973c579aff4895a4f7