For tests that call uselocale(), the locale is stored in the
g_userlocale_key thread-specific key. If freelocale() is called later,
then g_uselocal_key points to a deleted pointer. CTS eventually calls
vfprintf to print the result, which calls MB_CUR_MAX and MB_CUR_MAX
accesses the deleted locale stored in g_uselocale_key, causing unpredictable
errors.
Fixed the tests by calling uselocale() with the old locale before
calling freelocale.
Bug: 17299565
Change-Id: I87efa2a9b16999a11d587f68d3aeedcbe6ac8a2c
Previously this was hard coded to 4. This is only the case for UTF-8
locales.
As a side effect, this properly reports C.UTF-8 as the default locale
instead of C.
Change-Id: I7c73cc8fe6ffac61d211cd5f75287e36de06f4fc
(cherry picked from commit 1aec7c1a35)
I've also switched some tests to be positive rather than negative,
because !defined is slightly harder to reason about and there are
only two cases: bionic and glibc.
Change-Id: I8d3ac40420ca5aead3e88c69cf293f267273c8ef
The OpenBSD doesn't support C99, and the extent to which we support
locales is trivial, so just do it ourselves.
Change-Id: If0a06e627ecc593f7b8ea3e9389365782e49b00e
lconv is taken from ndk/sources/android/support/include/locale.h and
matches
bsd/glibc upstream.
Keep old declaration for 32-bits for compatibility.
localeconv.c and deps are taken from openbsd upstream.
Changed strtod.c accordingly.
Change-Id: I9fcc4d15f5674d192950d80edf26f36006cd31b4
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>