After download new version from upstream (OpenBSD 1.17) did the
following:
* changed all u_int* types to uint*
* add #include <sys/types.h>
All these changes are Android-specific and had been done before for
previous version (1.14).
Bug: http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=54465
Change-Id: Ieb44e7fce4e794d997bb00ee0dd417fb61521720
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
Also update the x86 asm.h to support this; we need it for libm assembler
anyway.
Also clean up the _FBSDID hack in <sys/cdefs.h>.
Change-Id: Iababd977b8110ec022bf7c93f4d62ece47630e7c
This brings us up to date with FreeBSD HEAD, fixes various bugs, unifies
the set of functions we support on ARM, MIPS, and x86, fixes "long double",
adds ISO C99 support, and adds basic unit tests.
It turns out that our "long double" functions have always been broken
for non-normal numbers. This patch fixes that by not using the upstream
implementations and just forwarding to the regular "double" implementation
instead (since "long double" on Android is just "double" anyway, which is
what BSD doesn't support).
All the tests pass on ARM, MIPS, and x86, plus glibc on x86-64.
Bug: 3169850
Bug: 8012787
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=6697
Change-Id: If0c343030959c24bfc50d4d21c9530052c581837
Replace a kernel header file dependency with files from NetBSD.
They're more complete, and ELF is ELF, whether you're on Linux or a BSD.
Bug: 7973611
Change-Id: I83ee719e7efdf432ec2ddbe8be271d05b2f558d7
Previously we'd been relying on getting the machine-specific <endian.h>
instead of the top-level <endian.h>, and <sys/endian.h> was basically broken.
Now, with this patch and the previous patch we should have <endian.h>
and <sys/endian.h> behaving the same. This is basically how NetBSD's endian.h
works, and was probably how ours was originally intended to work.
Bug: http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=39824
Change-Id: I71de5a507e633de166013a658b5764df9e1aa09c
The near duplicates upset fussier compilers that insist that
typedefs be exactly the same, but the fix isn't to make all
copies identical...
Change-Id: Icfdace41726f36ec33c9ae919dbb5a54d3529cc9
This patch updates the C library headers to provide ucontext_t
definitions for three architectures.
+ Fix <signal.h> to always define 'struct sigcontext'.
The new declarations are announced with new macros defined in
<sys/cdefs.h> in order to make it easier to adapt client code
that already defines its own, incompatible, versions of the
structures seen here.
http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=34784
Change-Id: Ie78c48690a4ce61c50593f6c39639be7fead3596
This patch defines a few new macros that can be used to control the
visibility of symbols exported by the C library:
- ENTRY_PRIVATE() can be used in assembly sources to indicate
that an assembler function should have "hidden" visibility, i.e.
will never be exported by the C library's shared library.
This is the equivalent of using __LIBC_HIDDEN__ for a C function,
but ENTRY_PRIVATE() works like ENTRY(), and must be used with
END() to tag the end of the function.
- __LIBC_ABI_PUBLIC__ can be used to tag a C functions as being
part of the C library's public ABI. This is important for a
few functions that must be exposed by the NDK to maintain
binary compatibility.
Once a symbol has been tagged with this macro, it shall
*never* be removed from the library, even if it becomes
directly unused due to implementation changes
(e.g. __is_threaded).
- __LIBC_ABI_PRIVATE__ can be used for C functions that should
always be exported by the C library because they are used by
other libraries in the platform, but should not be exposed
by the NDK. It is possible to remove such symbols from the
implementation if all callers are also modified.
+ Add missing END() assembly macro for x86
Change-Id: Ia96236ea0dbec41d57bea634b39d246b30e5e234
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