There are only three users of bionic definition of ALIGN and keeping it
in sys/param.h polutes the namespace.
I inline the definition in the the three places that's used.
Bug: 13400663
Change-Id: I565008e8426c38ffb07422f42cd8e547d53044e9
The x86_64 build was failing because clone.S had a call to __thread_entry which
was being added to a different intermediate .a on the way to making libc.so,
and the linker couldn't guarantee statically that such a relocation would be
possible.
ld: error: out/target/product/generic_x86_64/obj/STATIC_LIBRARIES/libc_common_intermediates/libc_common.a(clone.o): requires dynamic R_X86_64_PC32 reloc against '__thread_entry' which may overflow at runtime; recompile with -fPIC
This patch addresses that by ensuring that the caller and callee end up in the
same intermediate .a. While I'm here, I've tried to clean up some of the mess
that led to this situation too. In particular, this removes libc/private/ from
the default include path (except for the DNS code), and splits out the DNS
code into its own library (since it's a weird special case of upstream NetBSD
code that's diverged so heavily it's unlikely ever to get back in sync).
There's more cleanup of the DNS situation possible, but this is definitely a
step in the right direction, and it's more than enough to get x86_64 building
cleanly.
Change-Id: I00425a7245b7a2573df16cc38798187d0729e7c4
* 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
For Honeycomb, we added proper file thread-safety for
all FILE* operations. However, we did implement that by
using an out-of-band hash table to map FILE* pointers
to phtread_mutex_t mutexes, because we couldn't change
the size of 'struct _sFILE' without breaking the ABI.
It turns out that our BSD-derived code already has
some support code to extend FILE* objects, so use it
instead. See libc/stdio/fileext.h
This patch gets rid of the hash table, and put the
mutex directly into the sFILE extension.
Change-Id: If1c3fe0a0a89da49c568e9a7560b7827737ff4d0
Fix the handle locking in stdio to use flockfile/funlockfile
internally when and where required. Macros in <stdio.h> are updated
to automatically call the underlying functions when the process is
threaded to obtain the necessary locking. A private mutex is added
to protect __sglue, the internal list of FILE handles, and another
to protect the one-time initialization. Some routines in libc that
use getc() change to use getc_unlocked() as they're either protected
by their own lock or aren't thread-safe routines anyway.
Based on OpenBSD change by guenther@openbsd.orghttp://www.mail-archive.com/source-changes@cvs.openbsd.org/msg01015.html
Bug: 3446659
Change-Id: Ie82116e358c541718d6709ec45ca6796be5a007b
Although header libc/stdio/local.h declares the macros and private
variables of stdio, there are several internal symbols exposed
unexpectedly.
Change-Id: Ie7a07f85b70322fb9cd05b3c8e1bcc416061eb4b