strtof ("-nan") returned positive NaN instead of negative NaN.
strtod ("-nan") and strtold ("-nan") return negative NaN.
Linux glibc has been fixed
that strto{f|d|ld} ("-nan") returns negative NaN.
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=23007
This commit makes strtof preserves the negative sign bit
when parsing "-nan" like glibc.
By previous commit, strto{d|ld} ("nan")
does not use the definition of NaN.
There is no other function that uses the definitions.
This commit remove the definitions.
The definition of qNaN for x86_64 and i386 was wrong.
strto{d|ld} ("nan") returned wrong negative NaN
instead of correct positive NaN
since it used the wrong definition.
On the other hand, strtof ("nan") returns correct positive NaN
since it uses nanf ("") instead of the wrong definition.
This commit makes strto{d|ld} ("nan") uses {nan|nanl} ("")
like strtof ("nan") using.
So strto{d|ld} ("nan") returns positive NaN.
Previously, "test 1 2 3 -a -b -c" was permuted to "test -a -b -c 1 2 3",
but "test 1 2 3 -abc" was left as "test 1 2 3 -abc".
Signed-off-by: Thomas Kindler <mail+newlib@t-kindler.de>
- when calculating a correction to align next brk to page boundary,
ensure that the correction is less than a page size
- if allocating the correction fails, ensure that the top size is
set to brk + sbrk_size (minus any front alignment made)
Signed-off-by: Jeff Johnston <jjohnstn@redhat.com>
- From: Cesar Philippidis <cesar@codesourcery.com>
Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 14:43:42 -0700
Subject: [PATCH] nvptx port
This port adds support for Nvidia GPU's, which are primarily used as
offload accelerators in OpenACC and OpenMP.
The gdtoa implementation uses the type long, defined as Long, in lots
of code. For historical reason newlib defines Long as int32_t instead.
This works fine, as long as floating point exceptions are not enabled.
The conversion to 32 bit int can lead to a FE_INVALID situation.
Example:
const char *str = "121645100408832000.0";
char *ptr;
feenableexcept (FE_INVALID);
strtod (str, &ptr);
This leads to the following situation in strtod
double aadj;
Long L;
[...]
L = (Long)aadj;
For instance, on x86_64 the code here is
cvttsd2si %xmm0,%eax
At this point, aadj is 2529648000.0 in our example. The conversion to
32 bit %eax results in a negative int value, thus the conversion is
invalid. With feenableexcept (FE_INVALID), a SIGFPE is raised.
Fix this by always using 64 bit ints here if double is not a 32 bit type
to avoid this type of FP exceptions.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
This patch fixes a syntax error in exit.c that was introduced during the
ANSI-fication of newlib. The patch fixes a compile-time issue that arises when
newlib is configured with the --enable-lite-exit feature.
Discard QUICKREF sections, rather than writing them to stderr
Discard MATHREF sections, rather than discarding as an error
Pass NOTES sections through to texinfo, rather than discarding as an error
Don't redirect makedoc stderr to .ref file
Remove makedoc output on error
Remove .ref files from CLEANFILES
Regenerate Makefile.ins
Signed-off-by: Jon Turney <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
The variable doesn't follow the convention of having the same name as
the function it's bundled with. Furthermore, it clashes with the
variable of the same name in newlib/libc/stdlib/calloc.c.
Signed-off-by: Florian Schmidt <florian.schmidt@neclab.eu>
Some architectures like ARM encode the short enum option state in the
object file and the linker checks that this option is consistent for all
objects of an executable. In case applications use -fno-short-enums,
then this leads to linker warnings. Use the enum __packed attribute for
the relevent enums to avoid the -fshort-enums compiler option. This
attribute is at least available on GCC, LLVM/clang and the Intel
compiler.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Newlib build system defines __SINGLE_THREAD__ to allow concurrency code
to be only compiled when newlib is configured for multithread. One such
example are locks which become useless in single thread mode. Although
most static locks are indeed guarded by !defined(__SINGLE_THREAD__),
some are not.
This commit adds these missing guards to __dd_hash_mutex,
__atexit_recursive_mutex, __at_quick_exit_mutex and __arc4random_mutex.
It also makes sure locking macros in lock.h are noop in single thread
mode.
In preparation for the patch that would allow retargeting of locking
routines, rename all lock objects to follow this pattern:
"__<name>_[recursive_]mutex".
Following locks were renamed:
__dd_hash_lock -> __dd_hash_mutex
__sfp_lock -> __sfp_recursive_mutex
__sinit_lock -> __sinit_recursive_mutex
__atexit_lock -> __atexit_recursive_mutex
_arc4random_mutex -> __arc4random_mutex
__env_lock_object -> __env_recursive_mutex
__malloc_lock_object -> __malloc_recursive_mutex
__atexit_mutex -> __at_quick_exit_mutex
__tz_lock_object -> __tz_mutex
Hi,
With the patch to allow newlib's locking routine to be retargeted currently
under discussion, we need to start thinking of locks as part of newlib's ABI
since newlib depends on specific names being provided by the OS. This patch
renames 2 locks so that they follow the same naming convention as other locks.
It needs to be applied before the retargeting patch, while locks are still an
internal consideration.
Newlib builds successfully with this change.
Ok for master branch?
Best regards,
Thomas
This patch adds further comments to nano-mallocr.c, to more comprehensively
explain how padding works in the malloc_chunk structure.
It was originally discussed in the following thread:
https://sourceware.org/ml/newlib/2017/msg00031.html
2017-01-13 Joe Seymour <joe.s@somniumtech.com>
newlib/
* libc/stdlib/nano-mallocr.c (malloc_chunk, get_chunk_from_ptr)
(nano_malloc): Add comments.
As described in nano-mallocr.c, chunks of heap are represented in memory
as a size (of type long), followed by some optional padding containing a
negative offset to size, followed by the data area.
get_chunk_from_ptr is responsible for taking a pointer to the data area
(as returned by malloc) and finding the start of the chunk. It does this
by assuming there is no padding and trying to read the size, if the size
is negative then it uses that as an offset to find the true size.
Crucially, it reads the padding area as a long.
nano_malloc is responsible for populating the optional padding area. It
does so by casting a pointer to an (int *) and writing the negative
offset into it.
This means that padding is being written as an int but read as a long.
On msp430 an int is 2 bytes, while a long is 4 bytes. This means that 2
bytes are written to the padding, but 4 bytes are read from it: it has
only been partially initialised.
nano_malloc is the default malloc implementation for msp430.
This patch changes the cast from (int *) to (long *). The change to
nano_malloc has has been observed to fix a TI Energia project that
had been malfunctioning because malloc was returning invalid addresses.
The change to nano_memalign is based entirely on code inspection.
I've built and tested as follows:
Configured (gcc+newlib) with: --target=msp430-elf --enable-languages=c
gcc testsuite variations:
msp430-sim/-mcpu=msp430
msp430-sim/-mcpu=msp430x
msp430-sim/-mcpu=msp430x/-mlarge/-mdata-region=either/-mcode-region=either
msp430-sim/-mhwmult=none
msp430-sim/-mhwmult=f5series
My testing has shown no regressions, however I don't know if the gcc
testsuite provides sufficient coverage for this patch?
I don't have write access, so if this patch is acceptable after review,
I would appreciate it if someone would commit it for me.
Thanks,
2017-01-XX Joe Seymour <joe.s@somniumtech.com>
newlib/
* libc/stdlib/nano-mallocr.c (nano_malloc): Fix incorrect cast.
(nano_memalign): Likewise.
* libc/stdlib/strtod.c (strtof_l): Set errno to ERANGE when double to
float conversion results in infinity.
(strtof): Likewise.
* libc/stdlib/wcstod.c (wcstof_l): Likewise.
(wcstof): Likewise.
make pdf on arm-none-eabi targets fails to build after the reorganization in
baf0c9fcb5 to fold is*_l documentation in their
is* counterpart. This is due two issues:
1) newlib/libc/ctype/ctype.tex still including the def file for the long versions
2) missing angle brackets in .c files for some of is*_l functions
This patch fixes the issues and allows make pdf to succeeds.
- Remove charset parameter from low level __foo_wctomb/__foo_mbtowc calls.
- Instead, create array of function for ISO and Windows codepages to point
to function which does not require to evaluate the charset string on
each call. Create matching helper functions. I.e., __iso_wctomb,
__iso_mbtowc, __cp_wctomb and __cp_mbtowc are functions returning the
right function pointer now.
- Create __WCTOMB/__MBTOWC macros utilizing per-reent locale and replace
calls to __wctomb/__mbtowc with calls to __WCTOMB/__MBTOWC.
- Drop global __wctomb/__mbtowc vars.
- Utilize aforementioned changes in Cygwin to get rid of charset in other,
calling functions and simplify the code.
- In Cygwin restrict global cygheap locale info to the job performed
by internal_setlocale. Use UTF-8 instead of ASCII on the fly in
internal conversion functions.
- In Cygwin dll_entry, make sure to initialize a TLS area with a NULL
_REENT->_locale pointer. Add comment to explain why.
Signed-off by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>