__atomic_cmpxchg and other related atomic operations did not
provide memory barriers, which can be a problem for non-platform
code that links against them when it runs on multi-core devices.
This patch does two things to fix this:
- It modifies the existing implementation of the functions
that are exported by the C library to always provide
full memory barriers. We need to keep them exported by
the C library to prevent breaking existing application
machine code.
- It also modifies <sys/atomics.h> to only export
always-inlined versions of the functions, to ensure that
any application code compiled against the new header will
not rely on the platform version of the functions.
This ensure that said machine code will run properly on
all multi-core devices.
This is based on the GCC built-in sync primitives.
The end result should be only slightly slower than the
previous implementation.
Note that the platform code does not use these functions
at all. A previous patch completely removed their usage in
the pthread and libstdc++ code.
+ rename arch-arm/bionic/atomics_arm.S to futex_arm.S
+ rename arch-x86/bionic/atomics_x86.S to futex_x86.S
+ remove arch-x86/include/sys/atomics.h which already
provided inlined functions to the x86 platform.
Change-Id: I752a594475090cf37fa926bb38209c2175dda539
This patch changes the declaration of size_t on x86 targets
to test for the __ANDROID__ macro, instead of ANDROID
__ANDROID__ should be a builting toolchain macro, while ANDROID
is usually added manually during the build.
Testing against __ANDROID__ allows us to use the header when
using the NDK's standalone x86 toolchain.
This is related to http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=19011
The bug was already fixed in the NDK platform headers, this simply updates
the C library one accordingly.
Change-Id: Ie038c4c8b37b7d24e2e4ae4d7a63371b69c9a51e