Unfortunately fgrep is now deprecated in a very pushy way.
Make sure to use grep -F instead all around, even in docs
and comments/
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This function closes or sets the close-on-exec flag for a specified
range of file descriptors. It is available on FreeBSD and Linux.
Signed-off-by: Christian Franke <christian.franke@t-online.de>
Split fhandler_disk_file::fallocate into multiple methods, each
implementing a different aspect of fallocate(2), thus adding
FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE and FALLOC_FL_ZERO_RANGE handling.
For more correctly implementing posix_fallocate(3) semantics, make
sure to re-allocate holes in the given range if the file is sparse.
While at it, change the way checking when to make a file sparse.
The rule is now, make file sparse if the hole created by the action
spans at least one sparse block, taking the allocation granularity
of sparse files into account.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
First cut of the new, Linux-specific fallocate(2) function.
Do not add any functionality yet, except of basic handling
of FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
also, take mode flags parameter instead of just a bool.
Introduce __FALLOC_FL_TRUNCATE mode flag as internal flag to
indictae being called from ftruncate(2).
This is in preparation of an upcoming change introducing the
Linx-specific fallocate(2) call.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Add a missing "void" to the prototype for __cpuset_zero_s().
Reported-by: Marco Mason <marco.mason@gmail.com>
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2023-September/254423.html
Signed-off-by: Mark Geisert <mark@maxrnd.com>
Fixes: c6cfc99648d6 (Cygwin: sys/cpuset.h: add cpuset-specific external functions)
Use __size_t and __pid_t instead of size_t and pid_t to avoid
further dependencies to external headers.
Reported-by: Brian Inglis <Brian.Inglis@Shaw.ca>
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The latest incarnation of sys/cpuset.h broke building coreutils.
The reason is the inclusion of stdlib.h and string.h and hence
premature requests for datatypes not yet defined in the include
chain.
Avoid this by defining __cpuset_alloc and __cpuset_free as external
functions, now defined in sched.cc. Linux is doing this too, just
using different names for the functions. Redefine __cpuset_zero_s
to use __builtin_memset only on compilers supporting it, otherwise
using a simple loop. Drop the stdlib.h and string.h includes.
Fixes: 3f2790e044 ("Cygwin: Make gcc-specific code in <sys/cpuset.h> compiler-agnostic")
Reported-by: Denis Excoffier <cygwin@Denis-Excoffier.org>
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Commit 3c75fac130 fixed the __restrict definition in sys/cdefs.h,
but uncovered a problem in the definition of lio_listio in Cygwin's
aio.h. It uses the C99 extension of using the restrict keyword
to define non-overlapping arrays. However, this is not allowed in
C++.
Use the newly defined __restrict_arr from commit e66c63be6b
("sys/cdefs.h: introduce __restrict_arr, as in glibc")
Fixes: 3c75fac130 ("sys/cdefs.h: fix for use __restrict in C++"
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Per C++11, uchar16_t and uchar32_t are defined the same as
uint_least16_t and uint_least32_t. Also, check for the C++
version to make sure that the types are not colliding with
predefined c++ types.
Fixes: 4f258c55e8 ("Cygwin: Add ISO C11 functions c16rtomb, c32rtomb, mbrtoc16, mbrtoc32.")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Add uchar.h accordingly.
For the c32 functions, use the internal functions wirtomb and mbrtowi
as base, and convert wirtomb and mbrtowi to inline functions calling
the c32 functions.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Commit c743751aaf ("Cygwin: Export
posix_spawn_file_actions_add{f}chdir_np")
added two new functions but we forgot to bump the API version.
Catch up.
Fixes: c743751aaf ("Cygwin: Export posix_spawn_file_actions_add{f}chdir_np")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The current version of <sys/cpuset.h> cannot be compiled by Clang due to
the use of builtin versions of malloc, free, and memset. Their presence
here was a dubious optimization anyway, so their usage has been
converted to standard library functions.
The use of __builtin_popcountl remains because Clang implements it just
like gcc does. If/when some other compiler (Rust? Go?) runs into this
issue we can deal with specialized handling then.
The "#include <sys/cdefs>" here to define __inline can be removed since
both of the new includes sub-include it.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2023-July/253927.html
Fixes: 9cc910dd33a5 (Cygwin: Make <sys/cpuset.h> safe for c89 compilations)
Signed-off-by: Mark Geisert <mark@maxrnd.com>
Four modifications to include/sys/cpuset.h:
* Change C++-style comments to C-style also supported by C++
* Change "inline" to "__inline" on code lines
* Add "#include <sys/cdefs.h>" to make sure __inline is defined
* Don't declare loop variables on for-loop init clauses
Tested by first reproducing the reported issue with home-grown test
programs by compiling with gcc option "-std=c89", then compiling again
using the modified <sys/cpuset.h>. Other "-std=" options tested too.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin-patches/2023q3/012308.html
Fixes: 315e5fbd99ec ("Cygwin: Fix type mismatch on sys/cpuset.h")
Signed-off-by: Mark Geisert <mark@maxrnd.com>
Addresses https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2023-March/253220.html
Take the opportunity to follow FreeBSD's and Linux's lead in recasting
macro inline code as calls to static inline functions. This allows the
macros to be type-safe. In addition, added a lower bound check to the
functions that use a cpu number to avoid a potential buffer underrun on
a bad argument. h/t to Corinna for the advice on recasting.
Fixes: 362b98b49a ("Cygwin: Implement CPU_SET(3) macros")
Until Cygwin 3.3.6, we define __LARGE64_FILES unconditionally, so we
were using the type __sFILE64 even for 64 bit. That was lazy and wrong.
so commit 2902b3a09e ("Cygwin: drop requirement to build newlib's
stdio64") tried to fix that.
Unfortunately this patch forgot to take the exposure of the typename
__sFILE64 in userspace into account. This leads to trouble in C++ due
to name mangling.
Commit 0f376ae220 tried to fix this by just renaming __sFILE to
__sFILE64 by using a macro. While __sFILE and __sFILE64 are the same
size, they are not exactly congruent.
To avoid backward compatibility problems, make sure to define FILE
as the real __sFILE64, and make sure that __sFILE is not defined at
all on Cygwin.
Fixes: 0f376ae220 ("Cygwin: rename __sFILE to __sFILE64 for backward
compatibility")
Fixes: 2902b3a09e ("Cygwin: drop requirement to build newlib's stdio64")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Until Cygwin 3.3.6, we define __LARGE64_FILES unconditionally, so we
were using the type __sFILE64 even for 64 bit. That was lazy and wrong.
so commit 2902b3a09e ("Cygwin: drop requirement to build newlib's
stdio64") tried to fix that.
Unfortunately this patch forgot to take the exposure of the typename
__sFILE64 in userspace into account. This leads to trouble in C++ due
to name mangling.
Fix this by redefining __sFILE to __sFILE64. The type name is very much
internal, so it doesn't really matter, except for the fact that it needs
to stay backward compatible so as not to break building against C++ libs
built under older versions of Cygwin.
Fixes: 2902b3a09e ("Cygwin: drop requirement to build newlib's stdio64")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Given that 64 bit Cygwin defines all file access types (off_t,
fpos_t, and derived types) as 64 bit anyway, there's no reason
left to rely on the stdio64 part of newlib. Use base functions
and base types.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Define FD_SETSIZE (<sys/select.h>) to be 1024 by default, and define
NOFILE (<sys/param.h>) to be OPEN_MAX (== 3200) by default.
Remove the comment in <sys/select.h> that FD_SETSIZE should be >=
NOFILE.
Bump API minor.
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-July/251839.html
Commit e1ce752a1d, "Cygwin: remove miscellaneous 32-bit code", removed
most occurrences of '#ifdef __x86_64__'. Restore those occurrences
that guarded code specific to the AMD64 processor, and #error out if
the processor is different. This will make it easier to find
AMD64-specific code if we ever want to add support for a different
64-bit processor (e.g., ARM64).
The _REENT_GLOBAL_STDIO_STREAMS was introduced by commit
668a4c8722 in 2017. Since then it was enabled by
default for RTEMS. Recently, the option was enabled for Cygwin which
previously used an alternative implementation to use global stdio streams.
In Newlib, the stdio streams are defined to thread-specific pointers
_reent::_stdin, _reent::_stdout and _reent::_stderr. If the option is disabled
(the default for most systems), then these pointers are initialized to
thread-specific FILE objects which use file descriptors 0, 1, and 2,
respectively. There are at least three problems with this:
(1) The thread-specific FILE objects are closed by _reclaim_reent(). This
leads to problems with language run-time libraries that provide wrappers to
the C/POSIX stdio streams (for example C++ and Ada), since they use the
thread-specific FILE objects of the initialization thread. In case the
initialization thread is deleted, then they use freed memory.
(2) Since thread-specific FILE objects are used with a common output device via
file descriptors 0, 1 and 2, the locking at FILE object level cannot ensure
atomicity of the output, e.g. a call to printf().
(3) There are resource managment issues, see:
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/newlib/2022/019558.htmlhttps://bugs.linaro.org/show_bug.cgi?id=5841
This patch enables the _REENT_GLOBAL_STDIO_STREAMS behaviour for all Newlib
configurations and removes the option. This removes a couple of #ifdef blocks.
These have no effect on x86_64. Retain a few occurrences of __cdecl
in files imported from other sources.
Also retain all occurrences of WINAPI, even though the latter is
simply a macro that expands to __stdcall. Most of these occurrences
are associated with Windows API functions, and removing them might
make the code confusing instead of simpler.