If the file has no relro segment, the generated relro file will have
length 0, which caused mmap to fail. If the relro file has nonzero size,
but is too short (e.g. because it's for the wrong version of the
library), the linker would segfault while comparing the data. Fix both
these issues: don't try to map a zero length file, and don't try to
compare data that would be beyond the end of the file.
Improve test to explicitly generate two versions of the library: one
with -z relro, and one with -z norelro, so we can test both cases; also
explicitly test the case where the relro file has length 0.
Bug: 14299541
Change-Id: Id8b95585edda90e8bb5de452a35b70ed2d224934
Although glibc gets by with an 8-byte mbstate_t, OpenBSD uses 12 bytes (of
the 128 bytes it reserves!).
We can actually implement UTF-8 encoding/decoding with a 0-byte mbstate_t
which means we can make things work on LP32 too, as long as we accept the
limitation that the caller needs to present us with a complete sequence
before we'll process it.
Our behavior is fine when going from characters to bytes; we just
update the source wchar_t** to say how far through the input we got.
I'll come back and use the 4 bytes we do have to cope with byte sequences
split across multiple input buffers. The fact that we don't support
UTF-8 sequences longer than 4 bytes plus the fact that the first byte of
a UTF-8 sequence encodes the length means we shouldn't need the other
fields OpenBSD used (at the cost of some recomputation in cases where a
sequence is split across buffers).
This patch also makes the minimal changes necessary to setlocale(3) to
make us behave like glibc when an app requests UTF-8. (The difference
being that our "C" locale is the same as our "C.UTF-8" locale.)
Change-Id: Ied327a8c4643744b3611bf6bb005a9b389ba4c2f
Use the ANDROID_DATA environment variable instead of the hard-coded
directory for these benchmarks.
Change-Id: I00bae7b4a24e81e77fc8f52e1fe99f4d4918f520
If you rewrite the tokens of a #if you need to rewrite the expression to match
because either might be used later. This was showing up as SIGRTMAX being
rewritten in a #define but not in the #ifndef that guarded it, for which case
I've added a unit test.
Change-Id: I6929675461a1afe272edd667594529fd84a3dc4d
__SIGRTMIN will continue to tell the truth. This matches glibc's
behavior (as evidenced by the fact that we don't need a special case
in the strsignal test now).
Change-Id: I1abe1681d516577afa8cd39c837ef12467f68dd2
This also gets us the C99 wcstoimax and wcstoumax, and a working fgetwc and
ungetwc, all of which are needed in the implementation.
This also brings several other files closer to upstream.
Change-Id: I23b025a8237a6dbb9aa50d2a96765ea729a85579
This replaces a partial set of non-functional functions with a complete
set of functions, all of which actually work.
This requires us to implement mbsnrtowcs and wcsnrtombs which completes
the set of what we need for libc++.
The mbsnrtowcs is basically a copy & paste of wcsnrtombs, but I'm going
to go straight to looking at using the OpenBSD UTF-8 implementation rather
than keep polishing our home-grown turd.
(This patch also opportunistically switches us over to upstream btowc,
mbrlen, and wctob, since they're all trivially expressed in terms of
other functions.)
Change-Id: I0f81443840de0f1aa73b96f0b51988976793a323
Since multilib is not set every time, it needs to be per module or
there is a change that another target will use the multilib value set
previously.
Change-Id: I5c30e18d5111705cb3f6e3d4cd9ef8a28c9b746c