Rename CygwinCreateThread to create_posix_thread and move
from miscfuncs.cc to create_posix_thread.cc, inbcluding all
related functions. Analogue for the prototypes.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
provide entire internal and external pthread API from inside the
same file.
While I dislike to have another even larger file, this is basically
cleaning up the source and grouping the external API into useful
chunks. Splitting the file cleanly is tricky due to usage of inline
methods is_good_object and verifyable_object_isvalid.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
So far, wmemset used the C implemantation from newlib. Let's use
the optimized assembler code instead.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- convert gentls_offsets to a shell script, only running the target
compiler and gawk.
- Simplify cygtls.h. The new gentls_offsets script only requires two
lines with the "public:" keyword as markers. The comments are not
used anymore, the output is a preprocesses file without comments.
Align Makefile rules accordingly.
- Rather than generating perl variables and C #defines, just generate
.ecu statements and .include the TLS offsets file right from the
generated assembler file sigfe.s. It's the only place we really
need (some of) the offsets.
- Drop the target-specific name of the TLS offsets file and generate
it on the fly in the build dir. Fix configure and Makefile rules
accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Convert all the libc/ subdir makes into the top-level Makefile. This
allows us to build all of libc from the top Makefile without using any
recursive make calls. This is faster and avoids the funky lib.a logic
where we unpack subdir archives to repack into a single libc.a. The
machine override logic is maintained though by way of Makefile include
ordering, and source file accumulation in libc_a_SOURCES.
There's a few dummy.c files that are no longer necessary since we aren't
doing the lib.a accumulating, so punt them.
The winsup code has been pulling the internal newlib ssp library out,
but that doesn't exist anymore, so change that to pull the objects.
Bash has a very convenient feature that is called process substitution
(e.g. `diff -u <(seq 0 10) <(seq 1 11)`). To make this work, Bash
requires the `/dev/fd` symlink to exist, and Cygwin therefore creates
this symlink (together with the `stdin`, `stdout` and `stderr` ones)
upon start-up.
This strategy is incompatible with the idea of providing a subset of
Cygwin in a `.zip` file (because there is no standard way to represent
symlinks in `.zip` files, and besides, older Windows versions would
potentially lack support for them anyway).
That type of `.zip` file is what Git for Windows wants to use, though,
bundling a minimal subset for third-party applications in MinGit (see
https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/wiki/MinGit for details).
Let's side-step this problem completely by creating those symlinks
implicitly, similar to the way `/dev/` is populated with special
devices.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
On second thought, we don't actually need this script.
Express the entire action as sufficiently simple Makefile rule.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
In Makefile.am, add the value of $(V) to the dllfixdbg call.
In dllfixdbg, if V=1, print what the script is doing.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Change dllfixdbg to keep the input DLL intact and just generate
a new DLL matching the debug file. Fix Makefile rule accordingly.
The result is, cygwin0.dll is the original DLL created with full
debug sections and stays that way throughout the build process.
Only new-cygwin1.dll will become the stripped DLL matching with
the file containing the debug sections cygwin1.dbg. This is ok,
because commit ba02fef995 ("Cygwin: Makefile.am: fix DLL build rule")
made new-cygwin1.dll the DLL to be installed.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
A single Makefile rule creates three files in three steps, the second
and third one never showing up in dependencies. The next step creating
the link lib only depends on the first of these files. Even if the
second or third step in the DLL build rule fails, the next make
invocation never picks up on this and just goes ahead creating the
link lib.
Fix this by splitting the DLL build rule into three rules, with
every step on the way depending on the previous rule. Also fix up
the names, TEST_DLL_NAME just doesn't cut it.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
We need deps to newlib's libc.a and libm.a, otherwise changes
in newlib code don't trigger a rebuild of the Cygwin DLL.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This was used before switching to automake to allow easy tweaking
of optimization and debugging settings from the command line during
testing. Reenable.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
So far, the mqd_t type returned a pointer to an allocated
area under the hood. The mutex and event objects attached
to the message queue were implemented as inheritable types.
As unfortunate side effect the HANDLEs to these objects
were inherited by exec'd child processes, even though all
other message queue properties are not inherted, per POSIX.
Fix this by converting an mqd_t to a descriptor, and create a
matching fhandler_mqueue object to handle various aspects of
the message queues inside the fhandler. Especially, create the
IPC objects as non-inheritable and duplicate the HANDLEs as
part of the fixup_after_fork mechanism.
Drop using mmap and create the memory map with NT functions.
This allows to control duplication of handle and mapping in the
forked child process, without the requirement to regenerate the
map in the same spot. It also allows to dup() the descriptor,
as on Linux, albeit this isn't implemented yet.
This patch is the first cut. There's a bit more to do, like
moving more functionality from the POSIX functions into the
fhandler and making sure the mqd_t type can't be used in other
descriptor-related functions willy-nilly.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Converting to automake dropped the former, handwritten tags/ctags
target. This leads to a couple of problems:
- For no good reason the tags file gets written to the builddir
instead of to the srcdir where it's needed.
- `make tags' requires etags to exist, rather than checking if it
exists and skipping it.
- Adding the extra ctags arguments to AM_CTAGSFLAGS still results
in a shortened tags file.
(Temporary?) solution: Revert the old tags/ctags rules and silence
the automake warnings.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Specify toollibdir and toolincludedir in terms of tooldir, so the
install location is correct if tooldir is the default
($(exec_prefix)/$(target_alias)), or explicitly specified on the 'make'
command line.
v2:
* Include tzmap.h in BUILT_SOURCES
* Make per-file flags appear after user-supplied CXXFLAGS, so they can
override optimization level.
* Correct .o files used to define symbols exported by libm.a
* Drop gcrt0.o mistakenly included in libgmon.a
* Add missing line continuations in GMON_FILES value
v3:
* use per-file flags for .c compilation
* override C{XX,}FLAGS, as they are set on the command line by top-level make
v4:
* Drop -Wno-error=write-strings from path_testsuite CXXFLAGS
v5:
* Update for changes in master
- Add -fno-threadsafe-statics to CXX flags
- Add hypotl.cc
- Remove fenv.cc (in favour of newlib), add fenv.c stub
- Add proc.5 manpage rules