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.
Link directly with RegDeleteKeyExW(), available since Vista.
(It's unclear the LoadLibrary wrapper was ever doing anything useful
here, as (i) DLL lookup in PATH was avoided as advapi32 is already
loaded into the process, and (ii) advapi32 is a 'known DLL' which is
only ever loaded from system directory)
Remove "32" or "64" from each of the following names: acl32,
aclcheck32, aclfrommode32, aclfrompbits32, aclfromtext32, aclsort32,
acltomode32, acltopbits32, acltotext32, facl32, fchown32, fcntl64,
fstat64, _fstat64, _fstat64_r, ftruncate64, getgid32, getgrent32,
getgrgid32, getgrnam32, getgroups32, getpwuid32, getpwuid_r32,
getuid32, getuid32, initgroups32, lseek64, lstat64, mknod32, mmap64,
setegid32, seteuid32, setgid32, setgroups32, setregid32, setreuid32,
setuid32, stat64, _stat64_r, truncate64.
Remove prototypes and macro definitions of these names.
Remove "#ifndef __INSIDE_CYGWIN__" from some headers so that the new
names will be available when compiling Cygwin.
Remove aliases that are no longer needed.
Include <unistd.h> in fhandler_clipboard.cc for the declarations of
geteuid and getegid.
Remove the definitions of the following: acl, aclcheck, aclfrommode,
aclfrompbits, aclfromtext, aclsort, acltomode, acltopbits, acltotext,
chown, fchown, _fcntl, fstat, _fstat_r, ftruncate, getegid, geteuid, getgid,
getgrent, getgrgid, getgrnam, getgroups, getpwduid, getpwuid,
getpwuid_r, getuid, initgroups, lacl, lacl32, lchown, lseek, lstat,
mknod, mmap, setegid, seteuid, setgid, setgroups, setregid, setreuid,
setuid, stat, _stat_r, truncate.
[For most of these, the corresponding 64-bit entry points are obtained
by exporting aliases. For example, acl is an alias for acl32, and
truncate is an alias for truncate64.]
Remove the following structs and all code using them (which is 32-bit
only): __stat32, __group16, __flock32, __aclent16_t.
Remove the typedefs of __blkcnt32_t __dev16_t, __ino32_t, which are
used only in code that has been removed.
Put the typedefs of __uid16_t and __gid16_t in one header, instead of
one header if __INSIDE_CYGWIN__ is defined and a different header
otherwise.
The current definition of mknod in syscalls.cc has a third argument of
type __dev16_t instead of dev_t. Fix this on 64-bit Cygwin by making
the existing mknod 32-bit only and then exporting mknod as an alias
for mknod32. (No fix is needed on 32-bit because mknod is redirected
to mknod32 via NEW_FUNCTIONS in Makefile.am.)
Addresses: https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin-developers/2022-May/012589.html
The __sFILE::_lock member is present if __SINGLE_THREAD__ is not defined. In
this case, it is initialized in __sfp(). It is a bug to do it sometimes also
in std().
killpg(pgid, 0) (or kill_pgrp(pgid, si_signo=0), in signal.cc)
fails (returns -1) even when there is a process in the process
group pgid, if the process is in the middle of spawnve(), see
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2022-May/251479.html
When exec'ing a process the assumption is that the exec'ed process creates its
own symlink (in pinfo::thisproc() in pinfo.cc). If the exec'ing process
calls NtClose on it's own winpid symlink, but the exec'ed process didn't
progress enough into initialization, there's a slim chance that neither
the exec'ing process, nor the exec'ed process has a winpid symlink
attached.
Always create the winpid symlink in spawn.cc, even for exec'ed Cygwin
processes. Make sure to dup the handle into the new process, and stop
creating the winpid symlink in exec'ed processes.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- The commit "Cygwin: fix new sigfe.o generation in optimized case"
fixed the wrong tlsoffsets generation by adding -O0 to compile
options. Current gentls_offsets expects entry of "start_offset"
is the first entry in the assembler code. However, without -O0,
entry of "start_offset" goes to the last entry for some reason.
Currently, -O0 can prevents assembler code from reversing the
order of the entries, however, there is no guarantee that it will
retain the order of the entries in the future.
This patch makes gentls_offsets parse the assembler code in the
two pass to omit -O0 option dependency.
The compiler warns the double parentheses are unnecessary in some
target, and cause fail cases when doing some testcases in regression.
gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/warn/Wstringop-overflow-6.C
Remove the unnecessary parentheses will fix it. See more details in
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=85775
Same like in commit 0542583129,
Author: Maxim Blinov <maxim.blinov@embecosm.com>
Date: Thu Jul 22 22:41:42 2021 +0100
Remove unneccesary parenthesis around declarator
Thanks for Sebastian Huber's remind!
For the exit processing only members of _GLOBAL_REENT were used by default. If
the _REENT_GLOBAL_ATEXIT option was enabled, then the data structures were
provided through dedicated global objects. Make this option the default.
Remove the option. Rename struct _reent members _atexit and _atexit0 to
_reserved_6 and _reserved_7, respectively. Provide them only if
_REENT_BACKWARD_BINARY_COMPAT is defined.
Rename struct _reent::_new::_unused members _nextf and _nmalloc to _reserved_3
and _reserved_4, respectively. Rename struct _reent::_new member _unused to
_reserved_5. Provide them only if _REENT_BACKWARD_BINARY_COMPAT is defined.
Remove unused _N_LISTS define.
Add the --enable-newlib-reent-binary-compat configure option. This option is
disabled by default. If enabled, then unused members in struct _reent are
preserved to maintain the structure layout.
Leave x86_64 CPU-specific code and #error out when trying to build
for another target. Access special registers CPU-agnostic.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Previously, the command "cmd /c script -c cmd" in console of Win7
crashes. This seems to be due to a bug (?) of AttachConsole().
This patch adds workaround for this issue.
Currently, pty reattaches to the console of the process which is
predetermined by ConsoleProcessList() after temporarily attaching
to another console. After that, the console output handle opened
with the name "CONOUT$" may not be accessible in Win7.
This seems to happen when the attached process does not have the
same handle even if the console attached is the same. With this
patch, cygwin-console-helper which is started when pty master is
opened in console, is utilized to be a target process to which
pty reattaches if the OS is Win7.
Commit 0597c84b9b ("Cygwin: revamp TLS offsets computation")
introduced a really weird problem when building Cygwin with
optimization.
First of all, the tlsoffsets file is broken with -O2. This
can easily be fixed by running the compiler with -O0 when called
from the gentls_offsets script.
But it gets worse:
When creating sigfe.o with optimization, the generated machine code
uses incorrect offsets: For some reason the assembler codes using
_cygtls.stackptr as offset value are assembled into machine code
using _cygtls.pstackptr as offsets.
And as if that isn't already absurd enough, renaming _cygtls.pstackptr
to, say, _cygtls.blurb, fixes the assembled machine code expressions;
they use the value of _cygtls.stackptr again.
So I changed gentls_offsets and gendef to use _cygtls.foo_p rather
than _cygtls.pfoo and that fixes the assembled code in the optimized
case.
No, I can't explain that. There's no system in that behaviour.
It looks absolutely crazy.
Fixes: 0597c84b9b ("Cygwin: revamp TLS offsets computation")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Given we only called create_token on W7 WOW64 anyway, we can now
drop this function and all other functions only called from there
entirely.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>