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>
The situation here is a bit confusing. On 64-bit, rlimit and rlimit64 are
the same, and so getrlimit/getrlimit64, setrlimit/setrlimit64,
and prlimit/prlimit64 are all the same. On 32-bit, rlimit and rlimit64 are
different. 32-bit architectures other than MIPS go one step further by having
an even more limited getrlimit system call, so arm and x86 need to use
ugetrlimit instead of getrlimit. Worse, the 32-bit architectures don't have
64-bit getrlimit- and setrlimit-equivalent system calls, and you have to use
prlimit64 instead. There's no 32-bit prlimit system call, so there's no
easy implementation of that --- what should we do if the result of prlimit64
won't fit in a struct rlimit? Since 32-bit survived without prlimit/prlimit64
for this long, I'm not going to bother implementing prlimit for 32-bit.
We need the rlimit64 functions to be able to build strace 4.8 out of the box.
Change-Id: I1903d913b23016a2fc3b9f452885ac730d71e001
This patch switches to using the uapi constants. It also adds the missing
setns system call, fixes sched_getcpu's error behavior, and fixes the
gensyscalls script now ARM is uapi-only too.
Change-Id: I8e16b1693d6d32cd9b8499e46b5d8b0a50bc4f1d
Also make the other architectures more similar to one another,
use NULL instead of 0 in calling code, and remove an unused #define.
Change-Id: I52b874afb6a351c802f201a0625e484df6d093bb
This is needed if we use Clang to compile Bionic, which won't include
__popcountsi2 anymore as Clang generates inline instructions. However
prebuilt binary blobs still depend on libc.so to resolve __popcountsi2.
Change-Id: I9001a3884c4be250c0ceebcd79922783fae1a0b7
This is a better solution than the old __warn_references because it's
a compile-time rather than link-time warning, it doesn't rely on something
that doesn't appear to be supported by gold (which is why you only used
to see these warnings on mips builds), and the errors refer to the exact
call site(s) rather than just telling you which object file contains a
reference to the bad function.
This is primarily so we can build bionic for aarch64; building libc.so
caused these warnings to fire (because link time is the wrong time) and
warnings are errors.
Change-Id: I5df9281b2a9d98b164a9b11807ea9472c6faa9e3
Since the ENTRY/END macros now have .cfi_startproc/.cfi_endproc, most of the
custom arm assembly has no unwind information. Adding the proper cfi directives
for these and removing the arm directives.
Update the gensyscalls.py script to add these cfi directives for the generated
assembly. Also fix the references to non-uapi headers to the proper uapi
header.
In addition, remove the kill.S, tkill.S, tgkill.S for arm since they are not
needed at all. The unwinder (libunwind) is able to properly unwind using the
normal abort.
After this change, I can unwind through the system calls again.
Bug: 11559337
Bug: 11825869
Bug: 11321283
Change-Id: I18b48089ef2d000a67913ce6febc6544bbe934a3
The kernel now maintains the pthread_internal_t::tid field for us,
and __clone was only used in one place so let's inline it so we don't
have to leave such a dangerous function lying around. Also rename
files to match their content and remove some useless #includes.
Change-Id: I24299fb4a940e394de75f864ee36fdabbd9438f9
Let the kernel keep pthread_internal_t::tid updated, including
across forks and for the main thread. This then lets us fix
pthread_join to only return after the thread has really exited.
Also fix the thread attributes of the main thread so we don't
unmap the main thread's stack (which is really owned by the
dynamic linker and contains things like environment variables),
which fixes crashes when joining with an exited main thread
and also fixes problems reported publicly with accessing environment
variables after the main thread exits (for which I've added a new
unit test).
In passing I also fixed a bug where if the clone(2) inside
pthread_create(3) fails, we'd unmap the child's stack and TLS (which
contains the mutex) and then try to unlock the mutex. Boom! It wasn't
until after I'd uploaded the fix for this that I came across a new
public bug reporting this exact failure.
Bug: 8206355
Bug: 11693195
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=57421
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=62392
Change-Id: I2af9cf6e8ae510a67256ad93cad891794ed0580b
We only need it for MAX_ERRNO, and it's time we had somewhere to put
the little assembler utility macros we've been putting off writing.
Change-Id: I9354d2e0dc47c689296a34b5b229fc9ba75f1a83
In practice, thanks to all the registers the stubs don't actually change,
but it's confusing to have an incorrect declaration.
I suspect that fcntl remains broken for aarch64; it happens to work for
x86_64 because the first vararg argument gets placed in the right register
anyway, but I have no reason to believe that's true for aarch64.
This patch adds a unit test, though, so we'll be able to tell when we get
as far as running the unit tests.
Change-Id: I58dd0054fe99d7d51d04c22781d8965dff1afbf3
I've left the exit_group syscall as _exit because otherwise we'd have to
convince the compiler that our _exit (which just calls __exit_group) is
actually "noreturn", and it seems like that would be less clean than just
cutting out the middleman.
We'll just have to trust ourselves not to add anything to SYSCALLS.TXT
that ought to be private but that only has a single leading underscore.
Hopefully we can manage that.
Change-Id: Iac47faea9f516186e1774381846c54cafabc4354
(aarch64 kernels only have the newer system calls.)
Also expose the new functionality that's exposed by glibc in our header files.
Change-Id: I45d2d168a03f88723d1f7fbf634701006a4843c5
Modern architectures only get the *at(2) system calls. For example,
aarch64 doesn't have open(2), and expects userspace to use openat(2)
instead.
Change-Id: I87b4ed79790cb8a80844f5544ac1a13fda26c7b5
Also clean up <signal.h> and revert the hacks that were necessary
for 64-bit in linker/debugger.cpp until now.
Change-Id: I3b0554ca8a49ee1c97cda086ce2c1954ebc11892
For some reason the new cortex-a15 memcpy code from ARM is really bad
for really large copies. This change forces us to go down the old path
for all copies.
All of my benchmarks show the new version is faster for large copies, but
something is going on that I don't understand.
Bug: 10838353
Change-Id: I01c16d4a2575e76f4c69862c6f78fd9024eb3fb8
I originally modified the krait mainloop prefetch from cacheline * 8 to * 2.
This causes a perf degradation for copies bigger than will fit in the cache.
Fixing this back to the original * 8. I tried other multiples, but * 8 is th
sweet spot on krait.
Bug: 11221806
Change-Id: I1f75fad6440f7417e664795a6e7b5616f6a29c45
Let's have both use rt_sigprocmask, like in glibc. The 64-bit ABIs
can share the same code as the 32-bit ABIs.
Also, let's test the return side of these calls, not just the
setting.
Bug: 11069919
Change-Id: I11da99f85b5b481870943c520d05ec929b15eddb
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
We shouldn't have been passing the bottom 32 bits of the address used
for pthread_join to the kernel.
Change-Id: I487e5002d60c27adba51173719213abbee0f183f
This is basically the other half of I5de76f6c46ac87779f207d568a86bb453e2414de
from Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>, but taking the exact upstream
_types.h instead of the modified version. (I was confused when I suggested
otherwise.)
I've also cleaned up the internal_types.h situation; we weren't gaining
anything from these empty files, and there is no upstream internal_types.h
for x86_64.
Change-Id: I802a9a6a8df1c979e820659212c75a47c2ef392e