- Charset conversion for UTF-7, ISO-2022 and ISCII, which are not
supported in cygwin, does not work properly as a result. At the
expense of the above, the code has been simplified a bit.
If the process exited with e.g. STATUS_DLL_NOT_FOUND, also process the
file to look for not found DLLs.
(We currently only do this when a STATUS_DLL_NOT_FOUND exception occurs,
which I haven't managed to observe)
This still isn't 100% correct, as it only examines the specified file
for missing DLLs, not recursively on the DLLs it depends upon.
- If pseudo console is disabled, non-cygwin apps do not detect
console device. In this case, some apps output UTF-8 regardless
of the locale setting. At least git-for-windows, rust-based apps
and node.js do that. This patch provides backward compatibility
as default behaviour by setting console codepage to the charset of
the locale. Even in the cases above, garbled output is prevented
with this patch in most cases because mintty uses UTF-8 by default.
I beleave this is not really a problem in cygwin side but that in
app side, however, some users complain about garbled output with
existing apps in MSYS2 (which is based on cygwin) in which pseudo
console is disabled by default.
Setting up the pty in the master constructor ends up creating a new pty
on every stat(2) call on /dev/ptmx. Only do this when actually opening
the device, not when using the device class in another, non-opening
context.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Use tmp_pathbuf instead of HeapAlloc()/HeapFree().
- Remove mb_str_free() function.
- Consider the case where the multibyte string stops in the middle
of a multibyte char.
fhandler_process::exists is called when we are checking a path
starting with "/proc/<pid>/fd". If it returns virt_none and sets an
errno, there is no need for further checking. Just set 'error' and
return.
The incoming path is allowed to have the form "$PID/fd/[0-9]*/.*"
provided the descriptor symlink points to a directory. Check that
this is indeed the case.
The new function __eval_codepage_from_internal_charset
is a simplified version of the former code in
fhandler_tty.cc. It probably needs some extension,
but the gist is to use knowledge of internals to
be as quick as possible.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Both flags are outdated and collide with official flags in
sys/_default_fcntl.h, which may result in weird misbehaviour
of file functions.
O_NOSYMLINK is not used anyway.
O_DIROPEN is used in fhandler_virtual and derived classes.
The collision with O_NOFOLLOW results in spurious EISDIR
errors when, e. g., reading files in the registry.
fhandler_base::open_fs uses O_DIROPEN in the call to
fhandler_base::open, but it's not used in this context
further down the road.
Drop both flags and create an alternative "diropen" bool
flag in fhandler_virtual.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The current gamma, gamma_r, gammaf and gammaf_r functions return
|gamma(x)| instead of ln(|gamma(x)|) due to a change made back in 2002
to the __ieee754_gamma_r implementation. This patch fixes that, making
all of these functions map too their lgamma equivalents.
To fix the underlying bug, the __ieee754_gamma functions have been
changed to return gamma(x), removing the _r variants as those are no
longer necessary. Their names have been changed to __ieee754_tgamma to
avoid potential confusion from users.
Now that the __ieee754_tgamma functions return the correctly signed
value, the tgamma functions have been modified to use them.
libm.a now exposes the following gamma functions:
ln(|gamma(x)|):
__ieee754_lgamma_r
__ieee754_lgammaf_r
lgamma
lgamma_r
gamma
gamma_r
lgammaf
lgammaf_r
gammaf
gammaf_r
lgammal (on machines where long double is double)
gamma(x):
__ieee754_tgamma
__ieee754_tgammaf
tgamma
tgammaf
tgammal (on machines where long double is double)
Additional aliases for any of the above functions can be added if
necessary; in particular, I'm not sure if we need to include
__ieee754_gamma*_r functions (which would return ln(|(gamma(x)|).
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
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For RISC-V targets without hardware FMA support, include the
common fma implementation to provide that API.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
Like ARM, some RISC-V implementations have hardware sqrt. Support for
that can be detected at compile time, which the code did. However, the
filenames were incorrect so that both the risc-v specific and general
code were getting included in the resulting library.
Fix this by following the ARM model and #include'ing the general code
when the architecture-specific support is not available.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
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 is required to avoid colliding with files built from libm/common
that would end up with the same object name.
When libm.a was constructed from the individual sub-libraries, the
contents of the libm/common files would be replaced by that from
libm/machine/arm with the same name.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
...as on glibc right now. This is supposed to support autoconf scripts
checking for existence of these symbols in libpthread.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
GLibc will change this code in the forseeable future to align more
with FreeBSD, so this hack is not actually desired.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Pseudo console internally sends escape sequence CSI6n (query cursor
position) on startup of non-cygwin apps. If the terminal does not
support CSI6n, CreateProcess() hangs waiting for response. To prevent
hang, this patch disables pseudo console if the terminal does not
have CSI6n. This is checked on the first execution of non-cygwin
app using the following steps.
1) Check if the terminal support ANSI escape sequences by looking
into terminfo database. If terminfo has cursor_home (ESC [H),
the terminal is supposed to support ANSI escape sequences.
2) If the terminal supports ANSI escape sequneces, send CSI6n for
a test and wait for a responce for 40ms.
3) If there is a responce within 40ms, CSI6n is supposed to be
supported.
Also set-title capability is checked, and removes escape sequence
for setting window title if the terminal does not have the set-
title capability.
Currently, when using CYGWIN's error_start facility, the faulting
process isn't stopped while the error_start process is started when the
fault is caused by an exception. (it even seems possible in theory that
the faulting process could have exited before the error_start process
attaches).
This leads to e.g. the core dump written by CYGWIN='error_start=dumper'
in response to an exception being non-deterministic.
Remove the waitloop argument from try_to_debug(), only used in the
exception case, so the faulting process busy-waits until the error_start
process attaches.
Code archaeology to determine why the code is this way didn't really
turn up any answers, but this seems a low-risk change, as this only
changes the behaviour when:
- a debugger isn't already attached
- an error_start is specified in CYGWIN env var
- an exception has occurred which will be translated to a signal
If error_start invokes something which doesn't attach using
DebugActiveProcess(), we will spin indefinitely, but that will also
currently occur for any of the existing other uses of try_to_debug(),
which default to waitloop=TRUE.
On 32 bit x86, clang seems to miss loading input parameters based
on asm constraints for inline assembly that uses the x87 floating
registers, unless the snippet has got the volatile keyword.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Code taken from FreeBSD, which implements C11 threads as
wrapper around pthreads. Fix up machine/_threads.h which
is called from newlib's machine-independent threads.h to
match Cygwin's pthreads types.
Add the FreeBSD source files to libc subdir and take
opportunity to define LIBC_OFILES var in Makefile.
Add new symbols to common.din and sort symbols.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
In preparation of importing FreeBSDs stdthreads functions,
change the way pthread_yield is exported, so that the symbol
can be used internally as well.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
pthread_yield was only declared under GNU visibility,
but the function should be available under BSD visibility
as well.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
POSIX requires that key destructors are called in a loop
for each key with a non-NULL value until all values are
NULL, or until all destructors for non-NULL values
have been called at least PTHREAD_DESTRUCTOR_ITERATIONS
(per POSIX: 4) times.
Cygwinonly called all destructors with non-NULL values
exactly once. This patch fixes Cygwin to follow POSIX.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This is a slightly more polished version of the configuration being used
for CI builds at https://ci.appveyor.com/project/cygwin/cygwin, which is
not currently under version control.
We need one more entry than max children in the arrays.
There's no reason to do this for the static array, though.
One more entry in the overflow array is sufficient.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
On PROC_EXEC_CLEANUP, the pinfo's in chld_procs are removed.
This is done in a loop always removing the child with index 0.
This, however, results in copying the last child's pinfo in
chld_procs to position 0. Do this for 100 children and you
get 99 entirely useless copy operations.
Fix this by calling remove_proc in reverse order.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
256 children per process is a bit tight in some scenarios.
Fix this by revamping the `procs' array. Convert it to an
extensible class child_procs and rename procs to chld_procs.
Fix code throughout to use matching class methods rather than
direct access.
To allow a lot more child processes while trying to avoid
allocations at DLL startup, maintain two arrays within class
child_procs, one using a default size for 255 (i686) or 1023
(x86_64) children, the other, dynamically allocated on overflowing
the first array, giving room for another 1023 (i686) or 4095
(x86_64) processes.
On testing with a simple reproducer on a x86_64 machine with
4 Gigs RAM, a system memory overflow occured after forking
about 1450 child processes, so this simple dynamic should
suffice for a while.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
pinfo::remember with the detach parameter set to true is
the only way to call proc_subproc with PROC_DETACHED_CHILD.
This call is exclusively used in spawn to set up a pinfo for
a detached child, and that pinfo goes out of scope right
afterwards without any further action.
Drop the flag and drop the detach parameter from pinfo::remember.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The return value is used in a numerical context and remove_proc
already returned inconsistently "true" vs. 0.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
After patch 23a779bf3d
"Cygwin: pinfo: stop remember doing reattach",
PROC_ADDCHILD actually just sets up a new child, mirroring
PROC_DETACHED_CHILD. The actual attaching of the child is
performed by action PROC_REATTACH_CHILD or pinfo::reattach
respectively.
To better reflect what's going on, rename PROC_REATTACH_CHILD
to PROC_ATTACH_CHILD and rename pinfo::reattach to pinfo::attach.
For better readability change PROC_ADDCHILD to PROC_ADD_CHILD.
Fix comments accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>