In 829c089f83, we disabled all
FORTIFY_SOURCE support when compiling under clang. At the time,
we didn't have proper test cases, and couldn't easily create targeted
clang tests.
This change re-enables FORTIFY_SOURCE support under clang for a
limited set of functions, where we have explicit unittests available.
The functions are:
* memcpy
* memmove
* strcpy
* strncpy
* strcat
* strncat
* memset
* strlen (with modifications)
* strchr (with modifications)
* strrchr (with modifications)
It may be possible, in the future, to enable other functions. However,
I need to write unittests first.
For strlen, strchr, and strrchr, clang unconditionally calls the
fortified version of the relevant function. If it doesn't know the
size of the buffer it's dealing with, it passes in ((size_t) -1),
which is the largest possible size_t.
I added two new clang specific unittest files, primarily copied
from fortify?_test.cpp.
I've also rebuild the entire system with these changes, and didn't
observe any obvious problems.
Change-Id: If12a15089bb0ffe93824b485290d05b14355fcaa
Define __errordecl and replace __attribute__((__error__("foo")))
with __errordecl. Make sure __errordecl is a no-op on clang, as it
generates a compile time warning.
Change-Id: Ifa1a2d3afd6881de9d479fc2adac6737871a2949
Also add a more intention-revealing guard so we don't have loads of
places checking whether our inlining macro is defined.
Change-Id: I168860cedcfc798b07a5145bc48a125700265e47
Define the macros ACCESSPERMS, ALLPERMS and DEFFILEMODE.
These macros originates from BSD but has been available in glibc
for quite some time.
Change-Id: I429cd30aa4e73f53b153ee7740070cebba166c57
The kernel has supported this syscall for quite some time now,
but bionic did not. Now that there is a need for it, let's
add it to bionic.
Change-Id: Ifcef3e46f1438d79435b600c4e6063857ab16903