Avoid a recursive make to speed things up a bit.
This drops the header install logic because the lm32/ subdir doesn't
actually have any header files to install.
- In fhandler_console::cons_master_thread(), a struct which has
only a static function is used. In this case, struct instance
is not necessary. So with this patch, the static function is
invoked without creating instance.
So far the values of SigPnd and SigBlk were always 0 and SigIgn
was incorrectly set to the block mask of the current thread of
the calling process.
Fix that by adding a _pinfo::siginfo method and a PICOM_SIGINFO
message to allow to request actual signal info of any running process.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The "how" value only makes sense if a new set is given. If we
only read the current signal set, ignore the value of "how" per
POSIX:
"If set is a null pointer, the value of the argument how is not
significant"
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- With this patch, some pty functions/variables have been renamed
so that the name *pcon* is not used for those that are called
even when the pseudo console is not active.
- When Ctrl-C terminates a non-cygwin process on a pseudo console,
pty master attaches to the pseudo console first, and send
CTRL_C_EVENT. If the non-cygwin process closes the pseudo console
before the pty master calls FreeConsole(), the pty master process
will crash. With this patch, pty master process takes over the
ownership of the pseudo console, and closes it by myself.
The current targ-include setup runs `cp` every header file it installs,
in serial. This can be a little noticeable on systems, so cleanup the
logic to rely on cp's ability to copy multiple files to a directory in
a single call.
We still need a check for empty directories with no headers (i.e. the
glob doesn't match anything), so add a helper variable to contain that
logic to reduce the boiler plate a little.
This is a bit of an abbreviated form of what's in the Newlib subdir,
but with emphasis on Libgloss-specific parts, and anything unique to
it. I haven't put too much effort in.
Rather than define per-object rules in the Makefile, have small files
that define & include the right content. This simplifies the build
rules, and makes understanding the source a little easier (imo) as it
makes all the subdirs behave the same: you have 1 source file and it
produces 1 object. It's also about the same amount of boiler plate,
without having to define custom build rules that can fall out of sync.
Some of these rules were already unnecessary as they were compiling a
single source file into the same named object w/out custom flags, and
Automake handles that for us completely.
This will also be important as we merge the libc.a build into the top
dir since it relies on a single flat list of objects for overrides.
Also take the opportunity to clean up the unnecessary header deps in
here. Automake provides dependency generation for free now.
Since POSIX cp requires copying a file to a directory without having
to specify the name explicitly, rely on that to avoid calling basename
on every source file.
We can also drop the stub `true` call if the -f test failed. The use
of `if` already takes care of that in POSIX shell.
- With this patch, unique invisible consoles are created for each pty
to isolate CTRL_C_EVENTs between ptys. This is necessary by Ctrl-C
handling in fhandler_termios::process_sigs() for non-cygwin apps
started in pty if the pseudo console is disabled.
- The commit "Cygwin: console: Prevent the order of typeahead input
from swapped." did not fully resolve the issue. If keys are typed
during input buffer fix, the order of key event may be swapped.
This patch fixes the issue again.
- The recent commit "Cygwin: pinfo: Fix exit code when non-cygwin app
exits by Ctrl-C." did not fix enough the issue. If a non-cygwin app
is reading the console, it will not return STATUS_CONTROL_C_EXIT
even if it is terminated by Ctrl-C. As a result, the previous patch
does not take effect.
This patch solves this issue by setting sigExeced to SIGINT in
ctrl_c_handler(). In addition, sigExeced will be cleared if the app
does not terminated within predetermined time period. The reason is
that the app does not seem to be terminated by the signal sigExeced.
- The commit "Cygwin: console: Fix issues of apps which open pty."
did not fix the second problem correctly. That commit looked to
fix the issue, but the actual problem was that ctrl_c_handler()
should be reregistered *AFTER* FreeConsole()/AttachConsole().
This patch correct that.
- The commit "Cygwin: console: Restore CTRL_BREAK_EVENT handling."
was accidentally mixed with experimental code in exceptions.cc.
Due to this, non-cygwin app receives CTRL_C_EVENT twice in the
following scenario.
1) Run 'sleep 10 | <non-cygwin app>'
2) Hit Ctrl-C.
3) The non-cygwin app receives CTRL_C_EVENT twice.
This patch reverts the code with the problem.
- If a lot of keys are typed very quickly in the app which does
not read console, the order of input keys in console input buffer
occasionally swapped. Although this extremely rarely happens,
is obviously a bug of cons_master_thread. This patch fixes the
issue.
- The commit "Cygwin: console: Redesign handling of special keys."
removes special treatment for pty in with pseudo console activated,
however, it is necessary on second thought. This is because sending
CTRL_C_EVENT to non-cygwin apps will be done in pseudo console,
therefore, sending it in fhandler_pty_master::write() duplicates
that event for non-cygwin apps.
- After some recent changes for special keys handling break the
apps which open pty (such as script command). If the app which
opens pty is executed in console, the following issues occur.
1) If the script command was started from non-cygwin shell
(such as cmd.exe), another cygwin app started in pty slave
cannot receive Ctrl-C.
2) If non-cygwin app is executed in pty slave, the app which
opened the pty (e.g. script command) crashes by Ctrl-C.
This patch fixes these issues.
Now that we require Automake 1.15, we can use this macro rather than
set the tool up ourselves. The current code doesn't properly search
for a prefixed ar tool as-is.
This kills off the last configure script under libc/ and folds it
into the top newlib configure script. The a lot of the logic was
already in the top configure script, so move what's left into a
libc/acinclude.m4 file.
- Previously, if non-cygwin app exits by Ctrl-C, exit code was
0x00007f00. With this patch, the exit code will be 0x00000002,
which means process exited by SIGINT.
The multi-build.in file in libgloss duplicates common multilib logic
in the root source tree. Document it a bit, and rename the rule so
it doesn't clash with the common multi-do rule. This will let us use
them in the same makefile so we can merge aarch64/ & arm/ up (as the
only targets that use this local multi-build.in atm).
When merging iq2000 up a level, it included a partial conversion to
AM_PROG_AS in the common directory. Finish it for all directories
to kill off the custom LIB_AM_PROG_AS which we no longer need since
we require Automake 1.15 now.
Now that we use AC_NO_EXECUTABLES, and we require a recent version of
autoconf, we don't need to define our own copies of these macros. So
switch to the standard AC_PROG_CC.
- The recent change by the commit "Cygwin: console: Redesign handling
of special keys." breaks the handling of CTRL_BREAK_EVENT. The login
shell in console exits on Ctrl-Break key. This patch fixes the issue.
I split libg.a out into a sep target from libc.a for the main dir in
commit f2b053f49e ("newlib: separate out
libg from libc"), but missed the multilib dirs. That leads to an
uncommon parallel build failure:
- libc.a rule runs & finishes
- $(BUILD_MULTISUBDIR)/libc.a rule runs
-> failure due to libg.a not yet existing
- libg.a rule runs & finishes
Split the multilib libg rule out from libc too so it can depend on the
main libg directly and avoid this race.
- The inferior of the GDB cannot be continued after SIGINT even
though nopass option is set. This seems because cygwin GDB does
not support hooking cygwin signal. Therefore, a workaround for
GDB is added. With this patch, only CTRL_C_EVENT is sent to the
GDB inferior by Ctrl-C and sending SIGINT is omitted. Note that
"handle SIGINT (no)pass" command does not take effect even with
or without this patch.
- This patch rearranges the cooperation between cons_master_thread,
line_edit, and ctrl_c_handler so that only one of them operates
at the same time. Since these handle Ctrl-C individually, so the
signal may be sent multiple times to the process. This patch fixes
the issue.
Use AM_MAINTAINER_MODE so devs have to opt-in to automatic rebuilds
of autotools. This matches what newlib (and most every other GNU
toolchain package) does with automake.
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>
Remove dependency on __sdidinit member of struct _reent to check
object initialization. Like __sdidinit, the __cleanup member of
struct _reent is initialized in the __sinit() function. Checking
initialization against __cleanup serves the same purpose and will
reduce overhead in the __sfp() function in a follow up patch.