- The last change in path.cc introduced a bug that causes an error
when accessing a virtual drive which mounts UNC path such as
"\\server\share\dir" rather than "\\server\share". This patch
fixes the issue.
Use AM_SILENT_RULES, to enable automake silent rules (by default), if we
are using a version of automake which supports it (>=1.11).
Silent rules can be disabled by configuring with '--disable-silent-rules',
or invoking 'make V=1'.
For ease of reviewing, this patch doesn't contain configure and
Makefile.in regeneration.
Future work: There are a few compilations which are not silenced by
this, as they use custom rules.
This avoids warning with autoconf >= 2.70:
configure.ac:47: warning: The macro `AC_CONFIG_HEADER' is obsolete.
AC_CONFIG_HEADERS has been supported since before autconf 2.59, the
minimum version we can be using, controlled by AC_PREREQ.
- This patch uses gdtoa imported from OpenBSD if newlib configure
option "--enable-newlib-use-gdtoa=no" is NOT specified. gdtoa
provides more accurate output and faster conversion than legacy
ldtoa, while it requires more heap memory.
- Currently, frexpl() supports only the following cases.
1) LDBL_MANT_DIG == 64 or 113
2) 'long double' is equivalent to 'double'
This patch add support for LDBL_MANT_DIG == 53.
This patch fixed a problem which isn't in newlib, but in projects
incorrectly using symbols from the reserved namespace.
This reverts commit 3ba1bd0d9d.
Rather than special case status code 0xc00004b3, add status and matching
error code to ntdll.h and handle it as part of the standard error mapping.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The code accessing the floating point control/status register, namely
#define __cfc1(__fcsr) __asm __volatile("cfc1 %0, $31" : "=r" (__fcsr)
does not compile with mips16. This changed the makefile to pass -mno-mips16 to avoid the following
compiler error:
mips-mti-elf fails with "Error: unrecognized opcode `cfc1 $3,$31'"
To keep getrlimit/setrlimit clean, move the RLIMIT_AS code into
local static functions __set_rlimit_as and __get_rlimit_as.
Also, make adding process to the job the last step, to be able to
close and release the job resources if anything failed. Add matching
comment.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
If the incoming soft limit is less restrictive than the current
hard limit, bail out with EPERM. Given the previous sanity check,
this implies trying to raise the hard limit. While, theoretically,
this should be allowed for privileged processes, Windows has no
matching concept in terms of job limits
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- Currently, printf("%La\n", 1e1000L) crashes with segv due to lack
of frexpl() function. With this patch, frexpl() function has been
implemented in libm to solve this issue.
Addresses: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/newlib/2021/018718.html
Code based on the idea implemented by the oneTBB project,
see https://github.com/oneapi-src/oneTBB
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- If the number has large integer part and small fraction part is
specified in output format, e.g. printf("%.3f", sqrt(2)*1e60);,
valid output digits were insufficient. This patch fixes the issue.
NtReadFile can return STATUS_PENDING occasionally even in non-blocking
mode. Check for this and wait for NtReadFile to complete. To avoid
code repetition, do this in a static helper function nt_read.
https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin/2021-November/249930.html
reported a regression introduce by using a dynamically sized local
char array in favor of a statically sized array.
Fix this by reverting to a statically sized array, using a small
buffer on the stack for a reasonable number of requested digits, a
big mallocated buffer otherwise. This should work for small targets
as well, given that malloc is used in printf anyway right now.
This is *still* hopefully just a temporary measure, unless somebody
actually provides a new ldtoa.
Fixes: 4d90e53359 ("ldtoa: fix dropping too many digits from output")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
raise(2) on Linux returns the same values and sets errno
independent of calling kill(2) or pthread_kill(3). Align
code to behave the same.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The check for the pthread self pointer in TLS is misleading,
given the main thread has this pointer initialized as well.
Check for the global __isthreaded flag as well.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- This patch fixes the issue that process sometimes hangs for 60
seconds with the following scenario.
1) Open command prompt.
2) Run "c:\cygwin64\bin\bash -l"
3) Compipe the following source with mingw compiler.
/*--- Begin ---*/
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {return getchar();}
/*---- End ----*/
4) Run "tcsh -c ./a.exe"
5) Hit Ctrl-C.
The file attributes after creating a file are not necessarily
identical to the attributes we passed as argument to NtCreateFile.
This results in subsequent operations like fchmod or facl to
set the DOS file attributes to unexpected values.
The fix is to request file attributes from the OS after file creation
and cache those.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Appveyor has quite restrictive concurrent job limits for free projects,
so reduce the job's runtime by dropping 'make check' to avoid blocking
(since we're now also running that in a GitHub action).
When running Cygwin's Bash in the Windows Terminal (see
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/terminal/ for details), Cygwin
is receiving keyboard input in the form of UTF-16 characters.
UTF-16 has that awkward challenge that it cannot map the full Unicode
range, and to make up for it, there are the ranges U+D800-U+DBFF and
U+DC00-U+DFFF which are illegal except when they come in a pair encoding
for Unicode characters beyond U+FFFF.
Cygwin does not handle such surrogate pairs correctly at the moment, as
can be seen e.g. when running Cygwin's Bash in the Windows Terminal and
then inserting an emoji (e.g. via Windows + <dot>, which opens an emoji
picker on recent Windows versions): Instead of showing an emoji, this
shows the infamous question mark in a black triangle, i.e. the invalid
Unicode character.
Let's special-case surrogate pairs in this scenario.
This fixes https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/3281
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Use the same name as glibc & gnulib to indicate "newlib itself is
being compiled". This also harmonizes the codebase a bit in that
_LIBC was already used in places instead of _COMPILING_NEWLIB.
Building for bfin-elf, mips-elf, and x86_64-pc-cygwin produces
the same object code.
A recent change in binutils marks the .gnu_debuglink_overlay section
as debug section. When dllfixdbg calls objcopy -g, the section
is removed and the --add-gnu-debuglink option on the same command line
appends the section consequentially at the end of the sections.
This in turn breaks Windows Version info and, potentially, raising
the cygheap size at runtime.
Fix this by adding an explicit --keep-section=.gnu_debuglink_overlay
to the objcopy command line.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Some distros enable _FORTIFY_SOURCE by default which upsets building
newlib which itself implements the logic for this define. For example,
building gets.c fails because the includes set up a gets() macro which
expands in the definition.
Since newlib isn't prepared to build itself with _FORTIFY_SOURCE, and
it's not clear if it's even useful, ignore it when building the code.
This also matches what glibc is doing.
The _COMPILING_NEWLIB symbol is for declaring "the code is being
compiled for newlib itself" so headers can change behavior vs the
header being used by users (who should get the normal clean API).
Unfortunately, this symbol is defined inconsistently leading to it
only being useful for a few subsections of the tree.
Pull it out so that it's defined all the time for all targets.