- This patch uses gdtoa imported from OpenBSD if newlib configure
option "--enable-newlib-use-gdtoa=no" is NOT specified. gdtoa
provides more accurate output and faster conversion than legacy
ldtoa, while it requires more heap memory.
This patch fixed a problem which isn't in newlib, but in projects
incorrectly using symbols from the reserved namespace.
This reverts commit 3ba1bd0d9d.
- Currently, printf("%La\n", 1e1000L) crashes with segv due to lack
of frexpl() function. With this patch, frexpl() function has been
implemented in libm to solve this issue.
Addresses: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/newlib/2021/018718.html
Use the same name as glibc & gnulib to indicate "newlib itself is
being compiled". This also harmonizes the codebase a bit in that
_LIBC was already used in places instead of _COMPILING_NEWLIB.
Building for bfin-elf, mips-elf, and x86_64-pc-cygwin produces
the same object code.
Some distros enable _FORTIFY_SOURCE by default which upsets building
newlib which itself implements the logic for this define. For example,
building gets.c fails because the includes set up a gets() macro which
expands in the definition.
Since newlib isn't prepared to build itself with _FORTIFY_SOURCE, and
it's not clear if it's even useful, ignore it when building the code.
This also matches what glibc is doing.
We're seeing a build failure in GNU sim code which is using _P locally
but the ctype.h define clashes with it. Rename these to use the same
symbols that glibc does. They're a bit more verbose, but seems likely
that we'll have fewer conflicts if glibc isn't seeing them.
However, these shortnames are still used internally by ctype modules
to produce pretty concise source code, so move the short names to the
internal ctype_.h where short name conflicts shouldn't show up.
Currently, newlib does not declare strsignal if DEFS_H is defined,
ostensibly to work around a gdb bug. However, gdb itself compiles
even with this ifndef removed, and this makes sim (another part of
gdb) fail to compile.
Since it is not clear exactly what issue this was working around,
this patch just replaces that ifdef with the correct check,
i.e. __POSIX_VISIBLE >= 200809.
Add specialized rotations RB_RED_ROTATE_LEFT() and RB_RED_ROTATE_RIGHT() which
may be used if we rotate a red child which has a black sibling. Such a red
node must have at least two child nodes so that the following red-black tree
invariant is fulfilled:
Every path from a given node to any of its descendant NULL nodes goes through
the same number of black nodes.
PARENT
/ \
BLACK RED
/ \
BLACK BLACK
Add specialized rotations RB_PARENT_ROTATE_LEFT() and RB_PARENT_ROTATE_RIGHT()
which may be used if the parent node exists and the direction of the child is
known. The specialized rotations are derived from RB_ROTATE_LEFT() and
RB_ROTATE_RIGHT() where the RB_SWAP_CHILD() was replaced by a simple
assignment.
In RB_GENERATE_REMOVE_COLOR() simplify a chain of conditions of the following
pattern
if (x) {
...
} else if (!x) {
...
}
to
if (x) {
...
} else {
...
}
We have
#define RB_ISRED(elm, field) \
((elm) != NULL && RB_COLOR(elm, field) == RB_RED)
So, the RB_ISRED() contains an implicit check for NULL. In
RB_GENERATE_REMOVE_COLOR() the "elm" pointer cannot be NULL in the while
condition. Use RB_COLOR(elm) == RB_BLACK instead.
__STDINT_EXP() is provided by newlib but not by stdint-gcc.h. stdint-gcc.h
is used when the GCC argument -ffreestanding is used and this results in this
file not compiling.
Added function prototypes to newlib/libc/include/pthread.h
for the following Issue 8 Standard APIs:
pthread_cond_clockwait()
pthread_mutex_clocklock()
pthread_rwlock_clockrdlock()
pthread_rwlock_clockwrlock()
Added implementations for sig2str() and str2sig() in libc/signal
in order to improve POSIX compliance. Added fucntion prototypes
in libc/include/sys/signal.h.
riscv64-unknown-elf-g++-11.1.0 regression suite reports the following
failures for
$ make check-gcc-c++ RUNTESTFLAGS='dg.exp=Wstringop-overflow-6.C'
```
FAIL: g++.dg/warn/Wstringop-overflow-6.C -std=gnu++14 (test for excess errors)
FAIL: g++.dg/warn/Wstringop-overflow-6.C -std=gnu++17 (test for excess errors)
FAIL: g++.dg/warn/Wstringop-overflow-6.C -std=gnu++2a (test for excess errors)
UNSUPPORTED: g++.dg/warn/Wstringop-overflow-6.C -std=gnu++98
```
The "excess errors" being
```
output is In file included from /home/maxim/prj/riscv-upstream/install/riscv64-unknown-elf/include/wchar.h:6,
from /home/maxim/prj/riscv-upstream/build/gcc-stage2/riscv64-unknown-elf/libstdc++-v3/include/cwchar:44,
from /home/maxim/prj/riscv-upstream/build/gcc-stage2/riscv64-unknown-elf/libstdc++-v3/include/bits/postypes.h:40,
from /home/maxim/prj/riscv-upstream/build/gcc-stage2/riscv64-unknown-elf/libstdc++-v3/include/iosfwd:40,
from /home/maxim/prj/riscv-upstream/build/gcc-stage2/riscv64-unknown-elf/libstdc++-v3/include/ios:38,
from /home/maxim/prj/riscv-upstream/build/gcc-stage2/riscv64-unknown-elf/libstdc++-v3/include/ostream:38,
from /home/maxim/prj/riscv-upstream/build/gcc-stage2/riscv64-unknown-elf/libstdc++-v3/include/iostream:39,
from /home/maxim/prj/riscv-upstream/gcc-11.1.0/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/warn/Wstringop-overflow-6.C:6:
/home/maxim/prj/riscv-upstream/install/riscv64-unknown-elf/include/sys/reent.h:685:11: warning: unnecessary parentheses in declaration of '_sig_func' [-Wparentheses]
```
- GCC will set __FLT_EVAL_METHOD__ to 16 if __fp16 supported, e.g.
cortex-a55/aarch64.
- $ aarch64-unknown-elf-gcc -v 2>&1 |grep version
gcc version 9.2.0 (GCC)
- $ aarch64-unknown-elf-gcc -E -dM -mcpu=cortex-a55 - < /dev/null |grep FLT_EVAL_METHOD
#define __FLT_EVAL_METHOD__ 16
#define __FLT_EVAL_METHOD_TS_18661_3__ 16
#define __FLT_EVAL_METHOD_C99__ 16
- The behavior of __FLT_EVAL_METHOD__ == 16 is same as
__FLT_EVAL_METHOD__ == 0 except for float16_t, but newlib didn't
support float16_t.
ISO/IEC TS 18661-3:
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2405.pdf
V2 Changes:
- List Howland, Craig D as co-author since he provide the draft of comment
in math.h.
Co-authored-by: "Howland, Craig D" <howland@LGSInnovations.com>
The revert-part of the revert-and-fix commit, b99887c428 a.k.a.
"Revert previous change to sys/stat.h and fix cris libgloss",
apparently intending to revert f75aa67851 a.k.a. "Fix regression in
cris-elf caused by sys/stat.h change" and fix it in another way,
wasn't complete. Although the fix-part added the prerequisite "#undef
st_atime" (et al) to gensyscalls, the revert-part didn't revert the
"&& !defined(__cris__)" in sys/stat.h, stopping st_atime (et al) from
being defined.
The effect of the unreverted change is that accessing the struct stat
compatibility member names "st_atime" (et al) as in "struct stat
mystat; mystat.st_atime;" yields errors, observable for example when
building libgfortran in gcc:
/x/gcc/libgfortran/intrinsics/stat.c:114:42: error: 'struct stat' has \
no member named 'st_atime'; did you mean 'st_atim'?
114 | sarray->base_addr[8 * stride] = sb.st_atime;
| ^~~~~~~~
| st_atim
(etc.)
Trivially fixed by completing the reversion, removing the "&&
!defined(__cris__)" in sys/stat.h.
Beware: the net effect of the earlier related change to struct stat in
sys/stat.h, leading up to the fix, *does* change its definition as a
type. Thankfully, replacing members like "time_t st_atime; long
st_spare1;" by "struct timespec st_atim;", ditto st_mtim and st_ctim,
is layout-compatible. To wit, that change is "binary compatible".
Incidentally, related to the simulator / Linux ABI, there's a
transitional stage (see gensyscalls), reloading between "struct stat"
(sys/stat.h) and "struct new_stat" (kernel/simulator) as necessary.
Tested by a cris-elf gcc build (including libgfortran).
Change the prototypes to be in line with POSIX/glibc. This may fix
issues with new warnings produced by GCC 11.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
to rb parent pointers. Define RB_SWAP_CHILD to replace the child of a parent
with its twin, and use it in 4 places. Use RB_SET in rb_link_node to remove the
only linuxkpi reference to color, and then drop color- and parent-related
definitions that are defined and used only in rbtree.h.
This is intended to be entirely cosmetic, with no impact on program
behavior, and leave RB_PARENT and RB_SET_PARENT as the only ways to
read and write rb parent pointers.
Reviewed by: markj, kib
Tested by: pho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25264
the sibling of the root of the too-short tree is black and at least one of the
children of that sibling is red, either one or two rotations finish the
rebalancing. In the case when both of the children are red, the current
implementation uses two rotations where only one is necessary. This change
removes that extra rotation, and in that case also removes a needless
black-to-red-to-black recoloring.
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25335
without using their interfaces, making them break when the representation
changes. Revert changes that eliminated the color field from rb-trees, leaving
everything as it was before.
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25250
a bit of DIAGNOSTIC code that depends on it.
Reported by: rpokala, mjguzik
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25204
field. Set the least significant bit in the pointer to the node from its parent
to indicate that the node is red. Have the tree rotation macros leave the
old-parent/new-child node red and the new-parent/old-child node black.
This change makes RB_LEFT and RB_RIGHT no longer assignable, and
RB_COLOR no longer defined. Any code that modifies the tree or
examines a node color would have to be modified after this change.
Reviewed by: markj
Tested by: pho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25105
where the pointer checked is provably never null. Restructure the surrounding
code just enough to make the non-nullness obvious.
Reviewed by: markj
Tested by: pho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25089
child is red or child is null. In the first case, RB_REMOVE_COLOR just changes
the child to black and returns. With this change, RB_REMOVE handles that case,
and drops the child argument to RB_REMOVE_COLOR, since that value is always
null.
RB_REMOVE_COLOR is changed to remove a couple of unneeded tests, and
to eliminate some deep indentation.
RB_ISRED is defined to combine a null check with a test for redness,
to replace that combination in several places.
Reviewed by: markj
Tested by: pho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25032
search to find the node to replace the one being removed, restructure to first
remove the replacement node and correct the parent pointers around it, and then
let the all-cases code at the end deal with the parent of the deleted node,
making it point to the replacement node. This removes one or two conditional
branches.
Reviewed by: markj
Tested by: pho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24845
macros so that is invoked at the root of every subtree that changes in an
insert or delete, and only once, and ordered from the bottom of the tree to the
top. For intel_gas.c, the only user of RB_AUGMENT I can find, change the
augmenting routine so that it does not climb from entry to tree root on every
call, and remove a 'tree correcting' function that can be supplanted by proper
tree augmentation.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: pho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23189
removing a node and reinserting it back with an updated key.
This is one of dependencies for the upcoming stats(3) code.
Reviewed by: cem
Obtained from: Netflix
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Klara Inc, Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21786
For configurations without x2APIC support (guests, older hardware), the global
LAPIC MMIO mapping will trigger false-positive KCSan reports as it will appear
that multiple CPUs are concurrently reading and writing the same address.
This isn't actually true, as the underlying physical access will be performed
on the local CPU's APIC. Additionally, because LAPIC access can happen during
event timer configuration, the resulting KCSan printf can produce a panic due
to attempted recursion on event timer resources.
Add a __nosanitizethread preprocessor define to prevent the compiler from
inserting TSan hooks, and apply it to the x86 LAPIC accessors.
PR: 249149
Reported by: gbe
Reviewed by: andrew, kib
Tested by: gbe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26354
This is an unfortunate instance where the __has_attribute check does
not function usefully. Gcc does have the attribute, but for gcc it only
applies to functions, not variables, and trying to apply it to a
variable generates Wattribute. So far we only apply the attribute to
variables. Only enable the attribute for clang, for now.
Reviewed by: Anton Rang <rang at acm.org>
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22875
The assumptions of linker_set don't play nicely with
AddressSanitizer. AddressSanitizer adds a 'redzone' of zeros around
globals (including those in named sections), whereas linker_set
assumes they are all packed consecutively like a pointer array. So:
let's annotate linker_set so that AddressSanitizer ignores it.
Submitted by: Matthew Bryan <matthew.bryan@isilon.com>
Reviewed by: kib, rang_acm.org
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22239
The <sys/cdefs.h> and <stdatomic.h> headers already included support for
C11 atomics via intrinsincs in modern versions of GCC, but these versions
tried to "hide" atomic variables inside a wrapper structure. This wrapper
is not compatible with GCC's internal <stdatomic.h> header, so that if
GCC's <stdatomic.h> was used together with <sys/cdefs.h>, use of C11
atomics would fail to compile. Fix this by not hiding atomic variables
in a structure for modern versions of GCC. The headers already avoid
using a wrapper structure on clang.
Note that this wrapper was only used if C11 was not enabled (e.g.
via -std=c99), so this also fixes compile failures if a modern version
of GCC was used with -std=c11 but with FreeBSD's <stdatomic.h> instead
of GCC's <stdatomic.h> and this change fixes that case as well.
Reported by: Mark Millard
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16585
As discussed in GCC bug 97088
(https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=97088), parameters in
prototypes of library functions should use reserved names, or no name
at all.
This patch moves the internal struct __tzrule_struct to its own
internal header sys/_tz_structs.h. This is included from newlib's
time code as well as from Cygwin's localtime wrapper.
Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@st.com>
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
As discussed in GCC bug 97088
(https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=97088), parameters in
prototypes of library functions should use reserved names, or no name
at all.
This patch removes the 'ptr' parameter name from
wint_t _getwchar_r (struct _reent *);
wint_t _getwchar_unlocked_r (struct _reent *);
to avoid possible clashes with user code in case someone uses
before including Newlib's wchar.h (or uses some other conflicting
definition)
Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@st.com>
As discussed in GCC bug 97088
(https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=97088), parameters in
prototypes of library functions should use reserved names, or no name
at all.
This patch removes the 'j' parameter name from
extern intmax_t imaxabs(intmax_t);
to avoid possible clashes with user code in case someone uses
before including Newlib's inttypes.h (or uses some other conflicting
definition)
Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@st.com>
As discussed in GCC bug 97088
(https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=97088), parameters in
prototypes of library functions should use reserved names, or no name
at all.
This patch removes the 'x' parameter name from
extern int __isinff (float);
extern int __isinfd (double);
extern int __isnanf (float);
extern int __isnand (double);
extern int __fpclassifyf (float);
extern int __fpclassifyd (double);
extern int __signbitf (float);
extern int __signbitd (double);
to avoid possible clashes with user code in case someone uses
before including Newlib's math.h (or uses some other conflicting
definition)
The MSP430 target supports both 16-bit and 20-bit size_t and intptr_t.
Some implicit casts in Newlib expect these types to be
"long", (a 32-bit type on MSP430) which causes warnings during
compilation such as:
"cast from pointer to integer of different size"
This removes the run-time configuration of errno support present in
portions of the math library and unifies all of the compile-time errno
configuration under a single parameter so that the whole library
is consistent.
The run-time support provided by _LIB_VERSION is no longer present in
the public API, although it is still used internally to disable errno
setting in some functions. Now that it is a constant, the compiler should
remove that code when errno is not supported.
This removes s_lib_ver.c as _LIB_VERSION is no longer variable.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
math_errhandling is specified to contain two bits of information:
1. MATH_ERRNO -- Set when the library sets errno
2. MATH_ERREXCEPT -- Set when math operations report exceptions
MATH_ERRNO should match whether the original math code is compiled in
_IEEE_LIBM mode and the new math code has WANT_ERRNO == 1.
MATH_ERREXCEPT should match whether the underlying hardware has
exception support. This patch adds configurations of this value for
RISC-V, ARM, Aarch64, x86 and x86_64 when using HW float.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>