
From the release notes: Changes affecting future time stamps Pacific/Fiji will observe DST from 2014-11-02 02:00 to 2015-01-18 03:00. (Thanks to Ken Rylander for the heads-up.) Guess that future years will use a similar pattern. A new Zone Pacific/Bougainville, for the part of Papua New Guinea that plans to switch from UTC+10 to UTC+11 on 2014-12-28 at 02:00. (Thanks to Kiley Walbom for the heads-up.) Changes affecting time zone abbreviations Since Belarus is not changing its clocks even though Moscow is, the time zone abbreviation in Europe/Minsk is changing from FET to its more-traditional value MSK on 2014-10-26 at 01:00. (Thanks to Alexander Bokovoy for the heads-up about Belarus.) The new abbreviation IDT stands for the pre-1976 use of UT+8 in Indochina, to distinguish it better from ICT (UT+7). Changes affecting past time stamps Many time stamps have been corrected for Asia/Ho_Chi_Minh before 1976 (thanks to Trần Ngọc Quân for an indirect pointer to Trần Tiến Bình's authoritative book). Asia/Ho_Chi_Minh has been added to zone1970.tab, to give tzselect users in Vietnam two choices, since north and south Vietnam disagreed after our 1970 cutoff. Asia/Phnom_Penh and Asia/Vientiane have been turned into links, as they differed from existing zones only for older time stamps. As usual, these changes affect pre-1970 time stamps only. Their old contents have been moved to the 'backzone' file. Bug: 18085936 Change-Id: I89c065b4788b10ed7530cc4e8cfbc1b65c05c1b7
Working on bionic
What are the big pieces of bionic?
libc/ --- libc.so, libc.a
The C library. Stuff like fopen(3)
and kill(2)
.
libm/ --- libm.so, libm.a
The math library. Traditionally Unix systems kept stuff like sin(3)
and
cos(3)
in a separate library to save space in the days before shared
libraries.
libdl/ --- libdl.so
The dynamic linker interface library. This is actually just a bunch of stubs
that the dynamic linker replaces with pointers to its own implementation at
runtime. This is where stuff like dlopen(3)
lives.
libstdc++/ --- libstdc++.so
The C++ ABI support functions. The C++ compiler doesn't know how to implement
thread-safe static initialization and the like, so it just calls functions that
are supplied by the system. Stuff like __cxa_guard_acquire
and
__cxa_pure_virtual
live here.
linker/ --- /system/bin/linker and /system/bin/linker64
The dynamic linker. When you run a dynamically-linked executable, its ELF file
has a DT_INTERP
entry that says "use the following program to start me". On
Android, that's either linker
or linker64
(depending on whether it's a
32-bit or 64-bit executable). It's responsible for loading the ELF executable
into memory and resolving references to symbols (so that when your code tries to
jump to fopen(3)
, say, it lands in the right place).
tests/ --- unit tests
The tests/
directory contains unit tests. Roughly arranged as one file per
publicly-exported header file.
benchmarks/ --- benchmarks
The benchmarks/
directory contains benchmarks.
What's in libc/?
libc/ arch-arm/ arch-arm64/ arch-common/ arch-mips/ arch-mips64/ arch-x86/ arch-x86_64/ # Each architecture has its own subdirectory for stuff that isn't shared # because it's architecture-specific. There will be a .mk file in here that # drags in all the architecture-specific files. bionic/ # Every architecture needs a handful of machine-specific assembler files. # They live here. include/ machine/ # The majority of header files are actually in libc/include/, but many # of them pull in a <machine/something.h> for things like limits, # endianness, and how floating point numbers are represented. Those # headers live here. string/ # Most architectures have a handful of optional assembler files # implementing optimized versions of various routines. The # functions are particular favorites. syscalls/ # The syscalls directories contain script-generated assembler files. # See 'Adding system calls' later. include/ # The public header files on everyone's include path. These are a mixture of # files written by us and files taken from BSD. kernel/ # The kernel uapi header files. These are scrubbed copies of the originals # in external/kernel-headers/. These files must not be edited directly. The # generate_uapi_headers.sh script should be used to go from a kernel tree to # external/kernel-headers/ --- this takes care of the architecture-specific # details. The update_all.py script should be used to regenerate bionic's # scrubbed headers from external/kernel-headers/. private/ # These are private header files meant for use within bionic itself. dns/ # Contains the DNS resolver (originates from NetBSD code). upstream-dlmalloc/ upstream-freebsd/ upstream-netbsd/ upstream-openbsd/ # These directories contain unmolested upstream source. Any time we can # just use a BSD implementation of something unmodified, we should. # The structure under these directories mimics the upstream tree, # but there's also... android/ include/ # This is where we keep the hacks necessary to build BSD source # in our world. The *-compat.h files are automatically included # using -include, but we also provide equivalents for missing # header/source files needed by the BSD implementation. bionic/ # This is the biggest mess. The C++ files are files we own, typically # because the Linux kernel interface is sufficiently different that we # can't use any of the BSD implementations. The C files are usually # legacy mess that needs to be sorted out, either by replacing it with # current upstream source in one of the upstream directories or by # switching the file to C++ and cleaning it up. stdio/ # These are legacy files of dubious provenance. We're working to clean # this mess up, and this directory should disappear. tools/ # Various tools used to maintain bionic. tzcode/ # A modified superset of the IANA tzcode. Most of the modifications relate # to Android's use of a single file (with corresponding index) to contain # time zone data. zoneinfo/ # Android-format time zone data. # See 'Updating tzdata' later.
Adding system calls
Adding a system call usually involves:
- Add entries to SYSCALLS.TXT. See SYSCALLS.TXT itself for documentation on the format.
- Run the gensyscalls.py script.
- Add constants (and perhaps types) to the appropriate header file. Note that you should check to see whether the constants are already in kernel uapi header files, in which case you just need to make sure that the appropriate POSIX header file in libc/include/ includes the relevant file or files.
- Add function declarations to the appropriate header file.
- Add at least basic tests. Even a test that deliberately supplies an invalid argument helps check that we're generating the right symbol and have the right declaration in the header file. (And strace(1) can confirm that the correct system call is being made.)
Updating kernel header files
As mentioned above, this is currently a two-step process:
- Use generate_uapi_headers.sh to go from a Linux source tree to appropriate contents for external/kernel-headers/.
- Run update_all.py to scrub those headers and import them into bionic.
Updating tzdata
This is fully automated:
- Run update-tzdata.py.
Running the tests
The tests are all built from the tests/ directory.
Device tests
$ mma
$ adb sync
$ adb shell /data/nativetest/bionic-unit-tests/bionic-unit-tests32
$ adb shell \
/data/nativetest/bionic-unit-tests-static/bionic-unit-tests-static32
# Only for 64-bit targets
$ adb shell /data/nativetest/bionic-unit-tests/bionic-unit-tests64
$ adb shell \
/data/nativetest/bionic-unit-tests-static/bionic-unit-tests-static64
Host tests
The host tests require that you have lunch
ed either an x86 or x86_64 target.
$ mma
# 64-bit tests for 64-bit targets, 32-bit otherwise.
$ mm bionic-unit-tests-run-on-host
# Only exists for 64-bit targets.
$ mm bionic-unit-tests-run-on-host32
Against glibc
As a way to check that our tests do in fact test the correct behavior (and not just the behavior we think is correct), it is possible to run the tests against the host's glibc.
$ mma
$ bionic-unit-tests-glibc32 # already in your path
$ bionic-unit-tests-glibc64
Gathering test coverage
For either host or target coverage, you must first:
$ export NATIVE_COVERAGE=true
- Note that the build system is ignorant to this flag being toggled, i.e. if you change this flag, you will have to manually rebuild bionic.
- Set
bionic_coverage=true
inlibc/Android.mk
andlibm/Android.mk
.
Coverage from device tests
$ mma
$ adb sync
$ adb shell \
GCOV_PREFIX=/data/local/tmp/gcov \
GCOV_PREFIX_STRIP=`echo $ANDROID_BUILD_TOP | grep -o / | wc -l` \
/data/nativetest/bionic-unit-tests/bionic-unit-tests32
$ acov
acov
will pull all coverage information from the device, push it to the right
directories, run lcov
, and open the coverage report in your browser.
Coverage from host tests
First, build and run the host tests as usual (see above).
$ croot
$ lcov -c -d $ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT -o coverage.info
$ genhtml -o covreport coverage.info # or lcov --list coverage.info
The coverage report is now available at covreport/index.html
.