The DNS copy of reentrant.h was unused, so remove it.
The strtod implementation can use the upstream-netbsd reentrant.h and
get a little closer to what was then upstream. (It's since been replaced
by gdtoa, and we'll have to follow at some point, but for now this doesn't
make anything any worse.)
ANDROID_CHANGES is (now) only used in the DNS code, so push the -D
down.
The <locale.h> change prevents an LP32 hack from leaking into LP64.
Change-Id: Idf30b98a59d7ca8f7c6cd6d07020b512057911ef
Also neuter __isthreaded.
We should come back to try to hide struct FILE's internals for LP64.
Bug: 3453512
Bug: 3453550
Change-Id: I7e115329fb4579246a72fea367b9fc8cb6055d18
__system_property_serial just returned serial value without
checking if it is dirty, so check and wait until serial
value is not dirty before return
Change-Id: If485b6251b5555b004912c66c7c2cb455a7fdbdc
Signed-off-by: jiaguo <jiaguo@marvell.com>
We'll need a better implementation of strtold for LP64, but all our
long double functions are currently broken for LP64 anyway so this
isn't a regression.
Change-Id: I2bdebac11245d31521d5fa09a16331c03dc4339c
Avoid this error in -ffreestanding mode:
sys/types.h:45:1: error: unknown type name '__uint32_t'
Change-Id: I826b36873862d1d70b47401f31f4369a77666b8e
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
It's safe to fix our constant definitions because we know we never
had symbols before, so can't be passing the bad old constants to the new
functions, or the correct new constants to the old inlines.
Change-Id: I858fc680df39bdd3ba471e867833bdfa71f6224e
The new implementation is a better approximation to the processor time used
by the process because it's actually based on resource usage rather than just
elapsed wall clock time.
Change-Id: I9e13b69c1d3048cadf0eb9dec1e3ebc78225596a
Remove _POSIX_THREAD_ATTR_STACKADDR and _POSIX_THREAD_ATTR_STACKSIZE
since they don't exists. Return -1 for their corresponding values but
don't set errno.
Bug: 13281069
Change-Id: Ice29b4dfebe2b474212e40ee726d86782a3064b9
libbionic_ssp already confused at least one person, and characters
in filenames are cheap, so let's just call this library what it is.
Change-Id: I69ab950bf52fa4d267a6891efb49b5e177efc0c4
From the release notes:
Changes affecting near-future time stamps
Turkey begins DST on 2014-03-31, not 03-30. (Thanks to Faruk Pasin
for the heads-up, and to Tim Parenti for simplifying the update.)
Changes affecting past time stamps
Fiji ended DST on 2014-01-19 at 02:00, not the previously-scheduled
03:00. (Thanks to Steffen Thorsen.)
Ukraine switched from Moscow to Eastern European time on 1990-07-01
(not 1992-01-01), and observed DST during the entire next winter.
(Thanks to Vladimir in Moscow via Alois Treindl.)
In 1988 Israel observed DST from 04-10 to 09-04, not 04-09 to
09-03. (Thanks to Avigdor Finkelstein.)
Bug: 13193205
Change-Id: Ie2e4fd48491315f3e97befff0c8ea797a766c676
This is a much simpler implementation that lets the kernel
do as much as possible.
Co-authored-by: Jörgen Strand <jorgen.strand@sonymobile.com>
Co-authored-by: Snild Dolkow <snild.dolkow@sonymobile.com>
Change-Id: Iad19f155de977667aea09410266d54e63e8a26bf
The kernel uses the very misleading name "si_tid", but glibc uses the more
intention-revealing "si_timerid". We should let people use that.
(Added because I wanted to improve SI_TIMER siginfo_t dumping in strace.)
Change-Id: Ib626cdd3b57a6afb276a15753a237b4e81ec45e3
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>
Many compilers may optimize away the overflow check `msg + l < msg',
where `msg' is a pointer and `l' is an integer, because pointer
overflow is undefined behavior in C.
Use a safe precondition test `l >= eom - msg' instead.
Bug: 13219633
Change-Id: I3fca2125834073cc36d7e9c4e586e97842265a59
Functions protected with !defined(__LP64__) will be get build as C++
symbols for X64 build. This is not the desired work. So protect the
implementation with !defined(__LP64__) as well.
Change-Id: I4ef50ec36e46289ab308063e24f6c5ac61a6ca8d
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
* 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
When libc.debug.malloc is enabled, stack backtraces fail with:
bionic/libc/bionic/libc_logging.cpp:378: assertion "conversion
specifier unsupported" failed
The cause was a change to the format specifier from "%08x" to
"%0*x" to pass the field width as an additional parameter.
Unfortunately this modifier isn't supported by out_vformat() in
libc_logging.cpp.
Changed to use "%016x" if __LP64__ is defined; "%08x" otherwise.
Bug: 13177507
Change-Id: Ibf07263acf14da086d3c3788872f4b5477bd5708
A warning about signed vs unsigned comparison was converted
into an error here :
...
struct stat st;
if (st.st_size > sizeof(prop_area) {
...
st_size is either an off64_t, which is a signed type. It's
worth investigating why this didn't trigger a warning on 32 bit,
where it's signed as well.
Change-Id: Ib2622bd5c444ddcfa7fb2141f00332cbb4a0818b
This change constitutes the minimum amount of
work required to move the code over to C++, address
compiler warnings, and to make it const correct and
idiomatic (within the constraints of being called
from C code).
bug: 13058886
Change-Id: Ic78cf91b7c8e8f07b4ab0781333a9e243763298c
Also undo some of the mess where we have OpenBSD <stdio.h> but a mix of
different BSD's implementations.
In this first pass, I've only moved easy OpenBSD stuff.
Change-Id: Iae67b02cde6dba9d8d06fedeb53efbfdac0a8cf6
Why do we see so many bogus strict-aliasing warnings? Because we asked GCC to
cause trouble on arm and mips.
Change-Id: I25d7fd036b6afff7ccfa799abe0dc1579ead2847
I screwed up when I originally imported these files; they're in lib/libc/
in the upstream tree; there is no top-level libc/ (though there is a top-level
common/, so those files stay where they are).
Change-Id: I7c5e2224a4441ab0e33616a855a8c6aacfeac46f
Our <machine/asm.h> files were modified from upstream, to the extent
that no architecture was actually using the upstream ENTRY or END macros,
assuming that architecture even had such a macro upstream. This patch moves
everyone to the same macros, with just a few tweaks remaining in the
<machine/asm.h> files, which no one should now use directly.
I've removed most of the unused cruft from the <machine/asm.h> files, though
there's still rather a lot in the mips/mips64 ones.
Bug: 12229603
Change-Id: I2fff287dc571ac1087abe9070362fb9420d85d6d
I broke the mips build yesterday because it doesn't use
<private/bionic_asm.h> like the other architectures, including mips64.
I want to move mips closer to mips64 to try to avoid this kind of thing
in future.
Change-Id: Idb985587ff355b9e5e765c1f5671dc0144cd2488
This gives us:
* <dirent.h>
struct dirent64
readdir64, readdir64_r, alphasort64, scandir64
* <fcntl.h>
creat64, openat64, open64.
* <sys/stat.h>
struct stat64
fstat64, fstatat64, lstat64, stat64.
* <sys/statvfs.h>
struct statvfs64
statvfs64, fstatvfs64.
* <sys/vfs.h>
struct statfs64
statfs64, fstatfs64.
This also removes some of the incorrect #define hacks we've had in the
past (for stat64, for example, which we promised to clean up way back
in bug 8472078).
Bug: 11865851
Bug: 8472078
Change-Id: Ia46443521918519f2dfa64d4621027dfd13ac566
bionic/libc/arch-arm64/syscalls/read.S ends with:
b.hi __set_errno
ret
END(read)
If __set_errno returns int, it will set w0 to 0xFFFFFFFF, which means
x0 is 0x00000000FFFFFFFF. When interpreted as a ssize_t that is
INT_MAX, not -1.
Change __set_errno to return long, which will cause x0 to be set instead
of w0.
Change-Id: I9f9ea0f2995928d2ea240eb2ff7758ecdf0ff412
These were needed when bionic's header files were missing these macros (though
it would have made a lot more sense to just fix the header files!) but cause
warnings now.
Change-Id: I65a677122f4f6bd07dffc3f37a0c4c0e823d1bb0
We don't need quite so much duplication because we already have a way
to get the signal number from its name, and that already copes with the
fact that the mips/mips64 numbers are different from everyone else's.
Also remove sys_signame from LP64. glibc doesn't have this BSD-ism.
Change-Id: I6dc411a3d73589383c85d3b07d9d648311492a10
1. Moved arch-specific setup to their own files:
- <arch>/<arch>.mk, arch-specific configs. Variables in those config
end with the arch name.
- removed the extra complexity introduced by function libc-add-cpu-variant-src,
which seems to be not very useful these days.
2. Separated out the crt object files generation rules and set up the
rules for both TARGET_ARCH and TARGET_2ND_ARCH.
3. Build all the libraries for both TARGET_ARCH and TARGET_2ND_ARCH,
with the arch-specific LOCAL_ variables.
Bug: 11654773
Change-Id: I9c2d85db0affa49199d182236d2210060a321421
Our sigset_t definition hasn't been tied to our NSIG definition since we
switched to uapi headers, so we can now fix it without breaking the LP32 ABI.
The kernel uapi headers define and use _NSIG, so we need to have our scripts
rename the kernel's definitions out of the way, then we can define _NSIG
and NSIG in terms of the kernel's off-by-one value.
Bug: 12938442
Change-Id: Ic7c86fd5be5ad1d822f7b2b1d88c8a0d70a1ac0f
No cacheflush for LP64; use the GCC builtin instead. Clean up the
32-bit MIPS implementation now we no longer need to worry about
old versions of GCC.
Bug: 12924756
Change-Id: Ie23955b3ec194e226c4b2bce35b11d5e061f4753
Remove the linker's reliance on BSD cruft and use the glibc-style
ElfW macro. (Other code too, but the linker contains the majority
of the code that needs to work for Elf32 and Elf64.)
All platforms need dl_iterate_phdr_static, so it doesn't make sense
to have that part of the per-architecture configuration.
Bug: 12476126
Change-Id: I1d7f918f1303a392794a6cd8b3512ff56bd6e487
Also move some of the stuff that should be in <link.h> out of the
private "linker.h", to make it clearer that these are public API
known to gdb that we can't change.
Bug: 12554197
Change-Id: I830e1260d3d8b833ed99bc1518f1c6b6102be8af
libc/libm support for MIPS64 targets
Change-Id: I8271941d418612a286be55495f0e95822f90004f
Signed-off-by: Chris Dearman <chris.dearman@imgtec.com>
Signed-off-by: Raghu Gandham <raghu.gandham@imgtec.com>
Most of <machine/_types.h> was either unused, wrong, or identical across
all 32-/64-bit architectures.
I'm not a huge fan of <sys/_types.h> either, but moving the bits we need
up into there is a step forward.
Bug: 12213562
Change-Id: Id13551c78966e324beee2dd90c5575e37d2a71e6
libunwind has #define inline /* empty */ which breaks our fortified headers.
glibc uses __inline but our BSD-derived headers often override that. __inline__
is the third alternative understood by GCC that -- as far as I know -- neither
the C library itself nor third-party code tries to mess with.
Bug: 12871594
Change-Id: I6677e70ea531bb7d4c46021b43af760d4ad8ecf7
As suggested here: https://android-review.googlesource.com/#/c/71267/
it may be used for x86_64 libunwind enabling.
Change-Id: I21623261a48ea7099e030d33932556e294d226ff
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
We don't actually need to worry about sign extension if we reject
negative values ourselves. Previously it was possible to come up
with negative but aligned values that we would pass to the kernel;
in the case of mmap (as opposed to mmap64) we'd incorrectly turn
those into large positive offsets.
Change-Id: I2aa583e0f892d59bb77429aea8730b72db32dcb0
The various committees decided that everyone should get all these macros,
all the time.
Bug: 12708004
Change-Id: Ib56010dcba9b0656e5701546fefb7f78dc0bf916
This is required to make the Nexus 10 graphics driver work on a system
compiled with gcc 4.9.
Change-Id: If3f3d488652a736d9ea3e583548d74fae3ffa902
Signed-off-by: Bernhard Rosenkränzer <Bernhard.Rosenkranzer@linaro.org>
These functions should print assertion violation messages and then
call abort(). They do really not return control flow afterwards.
Consider the declaration of the similar __assert_fail from glibc:
extern void __assert_fail (const char *__assertion,
const char *__file,
unsigned int __line,
const char *__function)
__THROW __attribute__ ((__noreturn__));
Bionic has __noreturn defined in sys/cdefs.h to be that GNU
noreturn attribute.
This patch has a practical value. Consider the following function:
void check(void* ptr) {
assert(ptr != NULL);
}
Without this patch applied, gcc (and presumably clang) shows even in
debug mode:
warning: unused parameter 'ptr' [-Wunused-parameter]
In release mode, NDEBUG is defined and assert() becomes a no-op, as
one should expect. Thus, the warning is shown correctly then.
Another code sample:
float array[2];
int i = 3;
...
assert(i < 2);
array[i] = 0;
gcc says,
warning: array subscript is below array bounds [-Warray-bounds]
In other words, without noreturn attribute, assertions do not
allow a compiler's static analyzer to properly understand
the preconditions.
Change-Id: I3be92e99787c528899cf243ed448c4730c00c45b
Signed-off-by: Vadim Markovtsev <gmarkhor@gmail.com>