We don't have floating-point exception or non-default rounding mode
support for the RISC-V soft-float environment, `feraiseexcept' and
`fesetround' do nothing unless the `__riscv_flen' macro has been set.
Therefore following ISO C language requirements[1] only define macros
for soft float that correspond to actually supported floating-point
environment features, removing failures from GCC testing such as:
FAIL: gcc.dg/torture/fp-int-convert-timode-3.c -O0 execution test
FAIL: gcc.dg/torture/fp-int-convert-timode-4.c -O0 execution test
References:
[1] "Programming languages -- C", ISO/IEC 9899:2023, working draft --
September 3, 2022, Section 7.6 "Floating-point environment <fenv.h>"
Fixes: 7040b2de08 ("Add RISC-V port for libm")
Signed-off-by: Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>
This is still not properly resolving <https://gcc.gnu.org/PR85463>
'[nvptx] "exit" in offloaded region doesn't terminate process', but is
one step into that direction, and allows for simplifying some GCC code.
... as implemented for GCN in 'newlib/libc/sys/amdgcn/*' files, but (for now)
still adding to the catch-all 'newlib/libc/machine/nvptx/misc.c' file.
This is necessary for the GCC/Fortran I/O system, for example.
Co-authored-by: Andrew Stubbs <ams@codesourcery.com>
Given that nvptx newlib currently restricts itself to ELIX level 1, this
is not already a problem. However, in the following we'd like to lift
that restriction, and then run into:
[...]/newlib/libc/ssp/stack_protector.c: In function ‘__stack_chk_init’:
[...]/newlib/libc/ssp/stack_protector.c:31:1: sorry, unimplemented: global constructors not supported on this target
31 | }
| ^
GCC patch "nvptx: Support global constructors/destructors via 'collect2'"
has been posted, but not yet accepted. Until that is resolved, use the
same manual SSP setup as for GCN.
The libgloss port has been reaching back into newlib internals for a
single header whose contents have been frozen for almost a decade.
To break this backwards libgloss->newlib dependency, move the acle
header to the srcroot include/ so everyone can use the same copy.
Add function prologue/epilogue to conditionally add BTI landing pads
and/or PAC code generation & authentication instructions depending on
compilation flags. Save the PAC value in the jump buffer so that
longjmp can only return to the authenticated location.
Add function prologue/epilogue to conditionally add BTI landing pads
and/or PAC code generation & authentication instructions depending on
compilation flags.
This patch enables PACBTI for all relevant variants of strlen:
* Newlib for armv8.1-m.main+pacbti
* Newlib for armv8.1-m.main+pacbti+mve
* Newlib-nano
Add function prologue/epilogue to conditionally add BTI landing pads
and/or PAC code generation & authentication instructions depending on
compilation flags.
This patch enables PACBTI for all relevant variants of strcmp:
* Newlib for armv8.1-m.main+pacbti
* Newlib for armv8.1-m.main+pacbti+mve
* Newlib-nano
Augment the arm_asm.h header file to simplify function prologues and
epilogues whilst adding support for PACBTI enablement via macros for
hand-written assembly functions. For PACBTI, both prologues/epilogues
as well as cfi-related directives are automatically amended
accordingly, depending on the compile-time mbranch-protection argument
values.
It defines the following preprocessor macros:
* HAVE_PAC_LEAF: Indicates whether pac-signing has been requested for
leaf functions.
* PAC_LEAF_PUSH_IP: Whether leaf functions should push the pac code
to the stack irrespective of whether the ip register is clobbered in
the function or not.
* STACK_ALIGN_ENFORCE: Whether a dummy register should be added to
the push list as necessary in the prologue to ensure stack
alignment preservation at the start of assembly function. The
epilogue behavior is likewise affected by this flag, ensuring any
pushed dummy registers also get popped on function return.
It also defines the following assembler macros:
* prologue: In addition to pushing any callee-saved registers onto
the stack, it generates any requested pacbti instructions.
Pushed registers are specified via the optional `first', `last',
`push_ip' and `push_lr' macro argument parameters.
when a single register number is provided, it pushes that
register. When two register numbers are provided, they specify a
rage to save. If push_ip and/or push_lr are non-zero, the
respective registers are also saved. Stack alignment is requested
via the `align` argument, which defaults to the value of
STACK_ALIGN_ENFORCE, unless manually overridden.
For example:
prologue push_ip=1 -> push {ip}
prologue push_ip=1, align8=1 -> push {r2, ip}
prologue push_ip=1, push_lr=1 -> push {ip, lr}
prologue 1 -> push {r1}
prologue 1, align8=1 -> push {r0, r1}
prologue 1 push_ip=1 -> push {r1, ip}
prologue 1 4 -> push {r1-r4}
prologue 1 4 push_ip=1 -> push {r1-r4, ip}
* epilogue: pops registers off the stack and emits pac key signing
instruction, if requested. The `first', `last', `push_ip',
`push_lr' and `align' function as per the prologue macro,
generating pop instead of push instructions.
Stack alignment is enforced via the following helper macro
call-chain:
{prologue|epilogue} ->_align8 -> _preprocess_reglist ->
_preprocess_reglist1 -> {_prologue|_epilogue}
Finally, the necessary cfi directives for adding debug information
to prologue and epilogue are generated via the following macros:
* cfisavelist - prologue macro helper function, generating
necessary .cfi_offset directives associated with push instruction.
Therefore, the net effect of calling `prologue 1 2 push_ip=1' is
to generate the following:
push {r1-r2, ip}
.cfi_adjust_cfa_offset 12
.cfi_offset 143, -4
.cfi_offset 2, -8
.cfi_offset 1, -12
* cfirestorelist - epilogue macro helper function, emitting
.cfi_restore instructions prior to resetting the cfa offset. As
such, calling `epilogue 1 2 push_ip=1' will produce:
pop {r1-r2, ip}
.cfi_register 143, 12
.cfi_restore 2
.cfi_restore 1
.cfi_def_cfa_offset 0
... so that all of 'exit', '_exit', '_Exit' work. 'exit' thus becomes the
standard 'newlib/libc/stdlib/exit.c' -- and functions registered via 'atexit'
are now called at return from 'main' or manual 'exit' invocation.
It seems there is a swapped logic in one of the subcases of
setjmp.S for MIPS: when the FPU registers are 64-bit within
a 32-bit aligned jmp_buf, the code realigns the pointers
before doing 64-bit writes, but the branch logic is swapped:
we must avoid the address adjustement when bit 2 is zero
(that is, the address is already 8-byte aligned).
This always triggers an address error when run, as tested
on a MIPS VR4300 with O64 ABI.
As per the arm Procedure Call Standard for the Arm Architecture
section 6.1.2 [1], VFP registers s16-s31 (d8-d15, q4-q7) must be
preserved across subroutine calls.
The current setjmp/longjmp implementations preserve only the core
registers, with the jump buffer size too small to store the required
co-processor registers.
In accordance with the C Library ABI for the Arm Architecture
section 6.11 [2], this patch sets _JBTYPE to long long adjusting
_JBLEN to 20.
It also emits vfp load/store instructions depending on architectural
support, predicated at compile time on ACLE feature-test macros.
[1] https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/blob/main/aapcs32/aapcs32.rst
[2] https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/blob/main/clibabi32/clibabi32.rst
We have "Iconv" and "iconv" nodes which generates Iconv.html and
iconv.html files. On a case-insensitive filesystem, these collide.
Rename the "Iconv" node to match the chapter name that it's already
using to avoid the issue.
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>
This patch fixes warnings that appears when compiling:
#define fwopen(__cookie,__fn) funopen(__cookie, (int (*)())0, __fn,
(fpos_t (*)())0, (int (*)())0)
Expands to:
funopen(__null, (int (*)())0, &app_printf, (fpos_t (*)())0, (int
(*)())0)
argument of type "int (*)()" is incompatible with parameter of type
"int (*)(void *__cookie, char *__buf, int __n)"C/C++(167)
invalid conversion from 'fpos_t (*)()' {aka 'long int (*)()'} to
'fpos_t (*)(void*, fpos_t, int)' {aka 'long int (*)(void*,
Discussion is here:
https://github.com/espressif/arduino-esp32/issues/7407
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-December/252571.html
Cygwin's default locale is "C.UTF-8" as far as LC_CTYPE settings
are concerned. However, while __global_locale contains fixed
mbtowc and wctomb pointers, the lc_ctype_T pointer is still pointing
to _C_ctype_locale, representing the standard "C" locale.
The problem with this is that the codeset name as well as MB_CUR_MAX
is wrong.
Fix this by introducing a new lc_ctype_T structure called
_C_utf8_ctype_locale, setting the default codeset to "UTF-8" and
MB_CUR_MAX to 6. Use this as lc_ctype_T pointer in __global_locale
by default on Cygwin.
Fixes: a6a477fa81 ("POSIX-1.2008 per-thread locales, groundwork part 1")
Co-Authored-By: Takashi Yano <takashi.yano@nifty.ne.jp>
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Call __builtin_gcn_get_stack_limit and __builtin_gcn_first_call_this_thread_p
to reduce dependency on some register/layout assumptions by using the new
GCC mainline (GCC 13) builtins, if they are available. If not, the existing
code is used.
..., not just '#if defined(__CYGWIN__)'. (Exception: 'clog10l' which currently
indeed is for Cygwin only.)
This completes 2017-07-05 commit be3ca39474
"Fixed warnings for some long double complex methods" after Aditya Upadhyay's
work on importing "Long double complex methods" from NetBSD.
For example, this changes GCC/nvptx libgfortran 'configure' output as follows:
[...]
checking for ccosf... yes
checking for ccos... yes
checking for ccosl... [-no-]{+yes+}
[...]
..., and correspondingly GCC/nvptx 'nvptx-none/libgfortran/config.h' as
follows:
[...]
/* Define to 1 if you have the `ccosl' function. */
-/* #undef HAVE_CCOSL */
+#define HAVE_CCOSL 1
[...]
Similarly for 'ccoshl', 'cexpl', 'cpowl', 'csinl', 'csinhl', 'ctanl', 'ctanhl',
'cacoshl', 'cacosl', 'casinhl', 'catanhl'. ('conjl', 'cprojl' are not
currently being used in libgfortran.)
This in turn simplifies GCC/nvptx 'libgfortran/intrinsics/c99_functions.c'
compilation such that this files doesn't have to provide its own
"Implementation of various C99 functions" for those, when in fact they're
available in newlib libm.
Commit 737e2004a3 accidentally introduced a call to strlen in
code used with wide character strings in case of wcsftime. Use
STRLEN instead.
Fixes: 737e2004a3 ("strftime.c(__strftime): add %q, %v, tests; tweak %Z doc")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The first attempt to support the 64-bit mode had two bugs:
1. The saved general-purpose register 31 value was overwritten with the saved
link register value.
2. The link register was saved and restored using 32-bit instructions.
Use 64-bit store/load instructions to save/restore the link register. Make
sure that the general-purpose register 31 and the link register storage areas
do not overlap.
- add support for using sysconf to get page size in _mallocr.c via
HAVE_SYSCONF_PAGESIZE flag set in configure.host
- set flag in configure.host for arm and add a default sysconf implementation
in libc/sys/arm that returns the page size
- the default implementation can be overridden outside newlib to allow a
different page size to improve malloc on devices with a small footprint
without needing to rebuild newlib
- this patch is based on a contribution from Torbjorn Svensson and
Niklas Dahlquist (https://ecos.sourceware.org/ml/newlib/current/017616.html)
Previously, the chacha20 instance would be rekeyed every 1.6MB. This
makes it happen at a random point somewhere in the 1-2MB range.
Feedback deraadt@ visa@, ok tb@ visa@
newlib port: Make REKEY_BASE depend on SIZE_MAX
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
In the incredibly unbelievable circumstance where _rs_init() fails to
allocate pages, don't call abort() because of corefile data leakage
concerns, but simply _exit(). The reasoning is _rs_init() will only fail
if someone finds a way to apply specific pressure against this failure
point, for the purpose of leaking information into a core which they can
read. We don't need a corefile in this instance to debug that. So take
this "lever" away from whoever in the future wants to do that.
In the nano version of malloc, when the last chunk is to be extended,
there is no need to acount for the header again as it's already taken
into account in the overall "alloc_size" at the beginning of the
function.
Contributed by STMicroelectronics
Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@foss.st.com>
When using nano malloc and the remaning heap space is not big enough to
fullfill the allocation, malloc will attempt to merge the last chunk in
the free list with a new allocation in order to create a bigger chunk.
This is successful, but the chunk still remains in the free_list, so
any later call to malloc can give out the same region without it first
being freed.
Possible sequence to verify:
void *p1 = malloc(3000);
void *p2 = malloc(4000);
void *p3 = malloc(5000);
void *p4 = malloc(6000);
void *p5 = malloc(7000);
free(p2);
free(p4);
void *p6 = malloc(35000);
free(p6);
void *p7 = malloc(42000);
void *p8 = malloc(32000);
Without the change, p7 and p8 points to the same address.
Requirement, after malloc(35000), there is less than 42000 bytes
available on the heap.
Contributed by STMicroelectronics
Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@foss.st.com>
When __SINGLE_THREAD__ is not defined, stdin, stdout and stderr needs
to have their _lock instance initialized. The __sfp() method is not
invoked for the 3 mentioned fds thus, the std() method needs to handle
the initialization of the lock.
This is more or less a revert of 382550072b
Contributed by STMicroelectronics
Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@foss.st.com>
This patch makes syscalls for SH architecture respecting the global option
"--disable-newlib-supplied-syscalls". This is useful when a bare-metal
toolchain is needed.
Signed-off-by: Yilin Sun <imi415@imi.moe>
This simple testcase:
locale_t st = newlocale(LC_ALL_MASK, "C", (locale_t)0);
locale_t st2 = newlocale(LC_CTYPE_MASK, "en_US.UTF-8", st);
is sufficient to reproduce a crash in _newlocale_r. After the first call
to newlocale, `st' points to __C_locale, which is const. When using `st'
as locale base in the second call, _newlocale_r tries to set pointers
inside base to NULL. This is bad if base is __C_locale, obviously.
Add a test to avoid trying to overwrite pointer values inside base if
base is __C_locale.
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>
By default, Newlib uses a huge object of type struct _reent to store
thread-specific data. This object is returned by __getreent() if the
__DYNAMIC_REENT__ Newlib configuration option is defined.
The reentrancy structure contains for example errno and the standard input,
output, and error file streams. This means that if an application only uses
errno it has a dependency on the file stream support even if it does not use
it. This is an issue for lower end targets and applications which need to
qualify the software according to safety standards (for example ECSS-E-ST-40C,
ECSS-Q-ST-80C, IEC 61508, ISO 26262, DO-178, DO-330, DO-333).
If the new _REENT_THREAD_LOCAL configuration option is enabled, then struct
_reent is replaced by dedicated thread-local objects for each struct _reent
member. The thread-local objects are defined in translation units which use
the corresponding object.
In a follow up patch, struct _reent is optionally replaced by dedicated
thread-local objects. In this case,_REENT is optionally defined to NULL. Add
the _REENT_IS_NULL() macro to disable this check on demand.