Removes the leading underscores from __android_set_abort_message() and
moves its declaration into a public header file.
Bug: 17059126
Change-Id: I470c79db47ec783ea7a54b800f8b78ecbe7479ab
It's okay for a program to choose to drag in stdio, but it's unfortunate
if even the minimal "int main() { return 42; }" drags in stdio...
This brings the minimal static binary on ARM down from 78KiB to 46KiB.
Given that we don't have a separate -lpthread it's not obvious to me that
we can shave this down any further. I'm not sure whether this is a worthwhile
change for that reason. (And the fact that dynamic binaries, the usual case,
are unaffected either way.)
Change-Id: I02f91dcff37d14354314a30b72fed2563f431c88
This more general interface lets liblog give us any fatal log message,
regardless of source. This means we can remove the special case for
LOG_ALWAYS_FATAL with a simpler scheme that automatically works for
the VM too.
Change-Id: Ia6dbf7c3dbabf223081bd5159294835d954bb067
* libc (fatal) logging now makes socket connection to the
user-space logging service.
* Add a TARGET_USES_LOGD make flag for BoardConfig.mk to manage
whether logd is enabled for use or not.
Change-Id: I96ab598c76d6eec86f9d0bc81094c1fb3fb0d9b4
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
* 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
__strcat_chk and __strncat_chk are slightly inefficient,
because they end up traversing over the same memory region
two times.
This change optimizes __strcat_chk / __strncat_chk so they
only access the memory once. Although I haven't benchmarked these
changes, it should improve the performance of these functions.
__strlen_chk - expose this function, even if -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE
isn't defined. This is needed to compile libc itself without
-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE.
Change-Id: Id2c70dff55a276b47c59db27a03734d659f84b74
This adds __libc_fatal, cleans up the internal logging code a bit more,
and switches suitable callers over to __libc_fatal. In addition to logging,
__libc_fatal stashes the message somewhere that the debuggerd signal handler
can find it before calling abort.
In the debuggerd signal handler, we pass this address to debuggerd so that
it can come back with ptrace to read the message and present it to the user.
Bug: 8531731
Change-Id: I416ec1da38a8a1b0d0a582ccd7c8aaa681ed4a29
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