Newlib has a build configuration where syscalls can be directly
embedded in the newlib library rather than relying on libgloss.
This configuration was broken recently by an update to the libgloss
support for Arm that was not propagated to the syscalls interface in
newlib itself. This patch restores the build. It's essentially a
copy of https://sourceware.org/ml/newlib/2018/msg00128.html but there
are some other minor cleanups and changes that I've made at the same
time. None of those cleanups affect functionality.
The prototypes of the following functions have been updated: _link,
_sbrk, _getpid, _write, _swiwrite, _lseek, _swilseek, _read and
_swiread.
Signed-off-by: Richard Earnshaw <Richard.Earnshaw@arm.com>
E.g. arm ABI requires -fshort-enums for bare-metal toolchains.
Given there are only 29 category enums, the compiler chooses an
8 bit enum type, so a size of 11 bits for the bitfield leads to
a compile time error:
error: width of 'cat' exceeds its type
enum category cat: 11;
^~~
Fix this by aligning the size of the category members to byte
borders.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Scripts do not try to acquire Unicode data by best-effort magic anymore.
Options supported:
-h for help
-i to copy Unicode data from /usr/share/unicode/ucd first
-u to download Unicode data from unicode.org first
If (despite of -i or -u if given) the necessary Unicode files are not
available locally, table generation is skipped, but no error code is
returned, so not to obstruct the build process if called from a Makefile.
E.g. arm ABI requires -fshort-enums for bare-metal toolchains.
Given there are only 29 category enums, the compiler chooses an
8 bit enum type, so a size of 11 bits for the bitfield leads to
a compile time error:
error: width of 'cat' exceeds its type
enum category cat: 11;
^~~
Fix this by aligning the size of the category members to byte
borders.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
touupper and toulower didn't return a value in all cases. Worse,
this only broke Cygwin when building without optimization for debug
purposes.
Why GCC neglects to notice this is a mystery.
While at it, fix formatting.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The tow* functions use an included case conversion table which can be
generated from Unicode data.
The isw* functions use a character categories table (provided by
categories.c) which can be generated from Unicode data.
Delegation between current-locale and specific-locale-dependent functions
was reverted towards the generic locale-dependent functions (*_l.c);
this is however only relevant on systems with non-Unicode wide character
locales, thus not on Cygwin.
Table categories.t and tag enumeration categories.cat provide
character class data for most of the isw* functions.
These data are generated from Unicode data.
Linux and FreeBSD use int as well. In addition, this fixes an Ada
incompatiblity problem on 64-bit targets. See also GCC:
gcc/ada/libgnarl/s-osinte__rtems.ads
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Locale modifier @cjkwide makes Unicode "ambiguous width" characters
wide. So ambiguous width characters can be enforced to have width 2
even in non-CJK locales. This gives e.g. users of "Powerline symbols"
the opportunity to adjust their width to the desired behaviour (and the
behaviour apparently expected by some tools) without having to set a CJK
locale and without losing consistence of terminal character width with
wcwidth/wcswidth locale width.
At least with Binutils 2.30 and GCC 7.3 we need symbol definitions
without the leading underscore.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
This is a NetBSD-specific detail which does not apply to Newlib, causing
linking issues in certain scenarios:
https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2018-01/msg00189.html
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
New optimized powf, logf, log2f, expf and exp2f yield worse performance
on Arm targets with only single precision instructions because the
double precision arithmetic is then implemented via softfloat routines.
This patch uses the old implementation when double precision
instructions are not available on Arm targets.
Testing: Built newlib with GCC's rmprofile Arm multilibs and compared
before/after -> only the above functions are changed and calls to them
(name change from logf to __ieee754_logf and similar). Testing the
changed function on a panel of values yields the same result before the
original patches to improve them and after this one. Double checking the
performance by looping the same panel of values being tested on Arm
Cortex-M4 does show the performance regression is fixed.
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.
Code path for _MB_CAPABLE scans for the '%' character and advances
'fmt' pointer past '%'. Code path for !_MB_CAPABLE leaved fmt pointing
to '%', which caused the state machine to go from START to DONE state
immediately.
Neither upstream FreeBSD nor glibc ever call fflush from ftell
and friends. In border cases it has the tendency to return
wrong or unexpected values, for instance on block devices.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Make prototype of _kill() always visible when _COMPILING_NEWLIB is
defined. This makes <sys/signal.h> consistent with the use of
_COMPILING_NEWLIB in <sys/unistd.h>, <sys/times.h>, etc.
Updated patch to use 0.0f in addition to calling rintf.
Tested same way as before, with a testcase that triggers the code and
make check.
OK?
newlib/
* libm/math/wf_pow.c (powf): Call rintf instead of rint. Use 0.0f
for compare.
To update my email address to my current employer. Specifix died quite a while
ago, and I've had two jobs in the interim.
newlib/
* MAINTAINERS: Update my email address.
To follow up the thread starting at [1], since all uses of TRAD_SYNOPSIS
have been removed, and all uses of ANSI_SYNOPSIS have been renamed to
SYNOPSIS, we can now warn about the use of these.
[1] https://sourceware.org/ml/newlib/2017/msg01182.html
Signed-off-by: Jon Turney <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
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>
Old BSD bug: While ^ is recognized and the set of matching characters
is negated, the code neglects to increment the pointer pointing to the
matching characters. Thus, on a negation expression like %[^xyz], the
matching doesn't only stop at x, y, or z, but incorrectly also on ^.
Fix this by setting the start pointer after recognizing the ^.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The following functions are also guarded in glibc:
fwprintf, swprintf, wprintf, vfwprintf, vswprintf, vwprintf.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
* vfscanf: per POSIX, if the target type is wchar_t, the width is
counted in (multibyte) characters, not in bytes.
* vfscanf: Handle UTF-8 multibyte sequences converted to surrogate
pairs on UTF-16 systems.
* vfwscanf: Don't count high surrogates in input against field width
counting. Per POSIX, input is
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The width value keeps the maximum field width. This is the maximum
field width of the *input*. It's *never* to be used in conjunction
with the number of bytes or characters written to the output argument.
However, especially in vfwscanf, the code is partially taken from
NetBSD which erroneously subtracts the number of multibyte chars
written to the argument from the width variable, thus potentially
subtracting up to MB_CUR_MAX from width for a single character in
the input stream.
To make matters worse, the previous patch adding %m added basically
the same mistake for 'c' type input.
Fix it.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
* The new code is guarded with _WANT_IO_POSIX_EXTENSIONS, but
this is automatically enabled with _WANT_IO_C99_FORMATS for now.
* vfscanf neglects to implement %l[, so %ml[ is not implemented yet
either.
* Sidenote: vfwscanf doesn't allow ranges in %[ yet. Strictly this
is allowed per POSIX, but it differes from vfscanf as well as from
glibc.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The implementation is from NetBSD, with the addition of feature test macros
for readlink. glibc also wraps the following functions:
confstr, getdomainname, getgroups, gethostname, getlogin_r, getwd, pread,
readlinkat, ttyname_r.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
The implementation is mostly from NetBSD, except for switching fgets to
pure inline, and the addition of fgets_unlocked, fread, and fread_unlocked
for parity with glibc. The following functions are also guarded in glibc:
asprintf, dprintf, fprintf, printf, vasprintf, vdprintf, vfprintf, vprintf.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
The implementation is from NetBSD, with the addition of mempcpy (a GNU
extension) for parity with glibc and libssp.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
The Object Size Checking (-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=*) functionality provides
wrappers around functions suspectible to buffer overflows. While
independent from Stack Smashing Protection (-fstack-protector*), they
are often used and implemented together.
While GCC also provides an implementation in libssp, it is completely
broken (CVE-2016-4973, RHBZ#1324759) and seemingly unfixable, as there
is no reliable way for a preprocessor macro to trigger a link flag.
Therefore, adding this here is necessary to make it work.
Note that this does require building gcc with --disable-libssp and
gcc_cv_libc_provides_ssp=yes.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
Compiling with any of the -fstack-protector* flags requires the
__stack_chk_guard data import (which needs to be initialized) and the
__stack_chk_fail{,_local} functions. While GCC's own libssp can provide
these, it is better that we provide these ourselves. The implementation
is custom due to being OS-specific.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
The special handling of %\0 in [w]scanf is flawed. It's just a
matching failure and should be handled as such. scanf also
fakes an int input value on %X with X being an invalid conversion
char. This is also just a matching failure and should be handled
the same way as %\0.
There's no indication of the reason for this "disgusting
backwards compatibility hacks" in the logs, given this
code made it into newlib before setting up the CVS repo.
Just handle these cases identically as matching failures.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Since commit 8128f5482f, we have all the
non-tracing functions listed in posixoptions(7). The tracing functions
are gated by their own option, and are obsolecent anyway.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
Difference to Linux: We can't create files which don't show up
in the filesystem due to OS restrictions. As a kludge, make a
(half-hearted) attempt to hide the file in the filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
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>
RTEMS provides the option to have a global or per-thread reentrancy
as part of application configuration. As part of this, RTEMS provides
the implementation of __getreent() as appropriate. Allow the target
to determine if this method is present in libc.a.
The recently added new math code inlines error handling instead of using
error handling wrappers around __ieee754* internal symbols, and thus the
__ieee754* symbols are no longer provided.
However __ieee754_expf and __ieee754_logf are used in the implementation
of a number of other math functions. These symbols are safe to redirect
to the external expf and logf symbols, because those names are always
reserved when single precision math functions are reserved and the
additional error handling code is either not reached or there will be
an error in the final result that will override an internal spurious
errno setting.
For consistency all of __ieee754_expf, __ieee754_logf and __ieee754_powf
are redirected using a macro.
Based on code from https://github.com/ARM-software/optimized-routines/
This patch adds a highly optimized generic implementation of expf,
exp2f, logf, log2f and powf. The new functions are not only
faster (6x for powf!), but are also smaller and more accurate.
In order to achieve this, the algorithm uses double precision
arithmetic for accuracy, avoids divisions and uses small table
lookups to minimize the polynomials. Special cases are handled
inline to avoid the unnecessary overhead of wrapper functions and
set errno to POSIX requirements.
The new functions are added under newlib/libm/common, but the old
implementations are kept (in newlib/libm/math) for non-IEEE or
pre-C99 systems. Targets can enable the new math code by defining
__OBSOLETE_MATH_DEFAULT to 0 in newlib/libc/include/machine/ieeefp.h,
users can override the default by defining __OBSOLETE_MATH.
Currently the new code is enabled for AArch64 and AArch32 with VFP.
Targets with a single precision FPU may still prefer the old
implementation.
libm.a size changes:
arm: -1692
arm/thumb/v7-a/nofp: -878
arm/thumb/v7-a+fp/hard: -864
arm/thumb/v7-a+fp/softfp: -908
aarch64: -1476
In order to avoid the year 2038 problem, define time_t to a signed
integer with at least 64-bits. The type for time_t can be forced to
long with the --enable-newlib-long-time_t configure option or with the
_USE_LONG_TIME_T system configuration define.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
In case time_t is long, then the cast to long is a nop. In case time_t
is __int_least64_t, then the cast to long may truncate the value before
the division.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Newlib uses _times_r() in clock(). The problem is that the _times_r()
clock frequency is defined by sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK). The clock frequency
of clock() is the constant CLOCKS_PER_SEC.
FreeBSD uses getrusage() for clock(). Since RTEMS has only one process,
the implementation can be simplified.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
In C++, the usage of static inline functions for getchar_unlocked and
putchar_unlocked may result in error messages like
error: ‘_putchar_unlocked’ was not declared in this scope
Fix this by not using the _getchar_unlocked and _putchar_unlocked
macros in C++.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Remove local strnstr() implementation to fix compile error:
newlib/libc/iconv/lib/aliasesi.c:53:8: error: conflicting types for 'strnstr'
_DEFUN(strnstr, (haystack, needle, length),
^
In file included from newlib/libc/iconv/lib/aliasesi.c:29:0:
newlib/libc/include/string.h:125:10:
note: previous declaration of 'strnstr' was here
char *strnstr(const char *, const char *, size_t) __pure;
^~~~~~~
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
This reverts most of commit 979d467ff6.
We cannot avoid some bareword attributes until clang is fixed to
properly support __-decorated attributes; see this bug:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34319
The macros in question expand to the empty string under gcc, so
only compilation under clang is affected, and since clang has the
bug, the obvious solution is to roll back the changes, and document
the issue.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
- For prevent confuse about what BSD license variant we used, 2- or
3-clause license, we change the license to FreeBSD license to make
it unambiguously refers to the 2-clause license.
Always use the __-decorated form of an attribute name in public
headers, as the bareword form is in the user's namespace, and we
don't want compilation to break just because the user defines the
bareword to mean something else.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Add internal inline functions _getchar_unlocked() and
_putchar_unlocked() if __CUSTOM_FILE_IO__ is not defined. These
functions get _REENT only once. Use them for getchar_unlocked() and
putchar_unlocked(). Define getchar() and putchar() to these unlocked
internal functions if __SINGLE_THREAD__ is defined, otherwise use the
external functions to use proper locking of the FILE object.
Assumes that __SINGLE_THREAD__ is not defined if __CYGWIN__ is defined.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
This is copied from musl (MIT license). This is newer and more thorough
than that of FreeBSD currently shipped only on Cygwin.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
With this change the arm platform can now be fully compiled with Clang.
Tested by comparing the output with GCC 4.8.2, and Clang 4.0, using a
variety of arches, big/little endianness, and arm/thumb mode to verify
the generated assembly output matches between GCC vs Clang with UAL, and
also GCC with UAL vs GCC with non-UAL, for all preprocessor code blocks.
The only difference found is an extra nop at the end of the function
when compiled with GCC using armv7-a/thumb/little-endian/-O2 compared to
Clang. The nop is not emitted when compiled in big-endian mode.
Include <strings.h> in <string.h> if __BSD_VISIBLE like on FreeBSD.
Remove redundant declarations from <string.h>. Make ffsl(), ffsll(),
strncasecmp(), strcasecmp_l(), and strncasecmp_l() visible via
__BSD_VISIBLE instead of __GNU_VISIBLE. Add fls(), flsl(), and flsll()
to <strings.h> if __BSD_VISIBLE.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Use memset() to implement bzero() to profit from machine-specific
memset() optimizations.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
In Newlib, the stdio streams are defined to thread-specific pointers
_reent::_stdin, _reent::_stdout and _reent::_stderr. In case
_REENT_SMALL is not defined, then these pointers are initialized via
_REENT_INIT_PTR() or _REENT_INIT_PTR_ZEROED() to thread-specific FILE
objects provided via _reent::__sf[3]. There are two problems with this
(at least in case of RTEMS).
(1) The thread-specific FILE objects are closed by _reclaim_reent().
This leads to problems with language run-time libraries that provide
wrappers to the C/POSIX stdio streams (e.g. C++ and Ada), since they
use the thread-specific FILE objects of the initialization thread. In
case the initialization thread is deleted, then they use freed memory.
(2) Since thread-specific FILE objects are used with a common output
device via file descriptors 0, 1 and 2, the locking at FILE object level
cannot ensure atomicity of the output, e.g. a call to printf().
Introduce a new Newlib configuration option _REENT_GLOBAL_STDIO_STREAMS
to enable the use of global stdio FILE objects.
As a side-effect this reduces the size of struct _reent by more than
50%.
The _REENT_GLOBAL_STDIO_STREAMS should not be used without
_STDIO_CLOSE_PER_REENT_STD_STREAMS.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Commit 8a3b3bb4d7 changed the guard on
some functions from _POSIX_THREADS to __POSIX_VISIBLE. As a consequence,
some use of siginfo_t and pthread_t became visible under configurations
where _POSIX_THREADS is unset but __POSIX_VISIBLE is. Build then fails
because the definition of those types are still unavailable.
This commit make those type definition visible for __POSIX_VISIBLE
configurations. This requires moving the siginfo_t definition out of the
RTEMS specific definitions in sys/signal.h while still guarding it
against cygwin case.
There are two common sigpause variants, both of which take an int argument.
If you request _XOPEN_SOURCE or _GNU_SOURCE, you get the System V version,
which removes the given signal from the process's signal mask; otherwise
you get the BSD version, which sets the process's signal mask to the given
value.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
While POSIX allows these functions to also be defined as macros in C, in
C++ this is not allowed, and prevents these names (particularly feof) from
being used in a custom namespace.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
For whatever reason FreeBSD renames several functions provided by
<arpa/inet.h> and uses weak references to provide the standard function
names. This causes problems on targets lacking proper support for weak
references. We do not need this function renaming on RTEMS.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Don't over-read memory returned by _DTOA_R, and never write to it
since the result might be a string literal.
For example, when doing:
swprintf(tt, 20, L"%.*f", 6, 0.0);
we will get back "0".
Instead, write the result returned by _DTOA_R to the output buffer.
After this, write the 0 chars directly to the the output buffer
(if there are any). This also has the (marginal) advantage that
we read/write less memory overall.
According to the FreeBSD man page BIT_CMP() returns true in case the two
sets are NOT equal.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Add the POSIX header files
* arpa/inet.h
* net/if.h
* netdb.h
* netinet/in.h
* netinet/tcp.h
* sys/socket.h
* sys/syslog.h
* sys/uio.h
* sys/un.h
* syslog.h
* termios.h
and their dependencies for RTEMS. The origin of these files is the
latest FreeBSD.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Make the RTEMS <sys/cpuset.h> compatible with the latest FreeBSD
version.
Fix the CPU_COPY() parameter order, see also:
https://devel.rtems.org/ticket/3023
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Use a dedicated header file <machine/_bitcount.h> to avoid cyclic header
dependencies in future changes.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
The implementation of the POSIX access() function is nothing machine
specific like memcpy(), etc. Move it back to the system domain. This
avoids problems due to the include search order of the Newlib/GCC build
which picks up machine includes before system includes.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Increase the MSIZE for RTEMS to be in line with the latest FreeBSD
version. The legacy network stack of RTEMS will provides its own
definition.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Update the RTEMS <machine/param.h> and <sys/param.h> to be compatible
with the latest FreeBSD version.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
previous commit 4c90db7bc8 introduced
a compile time error because libm/common/s_infconst.c used the remove
__fmath, __dmath, and __ldmath union types.
Since this is very old, and unused for a very long time, just drop the
file and thus the __infinity constants entirely.
Exception: Cygwin exports __infinity from the beginning. There's a very,
VERY low probability that any existing executable or lib still uses this
constant, but we just keep it in for backward compat, nevertheless.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Renumber cluase 4 to 3, per what everybody else did when BSD granted
them permission to remove clause 3. My insistance on keeping the same
numbering for legal reasons is too pedantic, so give up on that point.
Submitted by: Jan Schaumann <jschauma@stevens.edu>
Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/96
Split the QUEUE_MACRO_DEBUG into QUEUE_MACRO_DEBUG_TRACE and
QUEUE_MACRO_DEBUG_TRASH.
Add the debug macrso QMD_IS_TRASHED() and QMD_SLIST_CHECK_PREVPTR().
Document these in queue.3.
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3984
Add two new macros, SLIST_CONCAT and LIST_CONCAT. Note in both the
queue.h header file and in the queue.3 manual page that they are O(n) so
should be used only in low-usage paths with short lists (otherwise an
STAILQ or TAILQ should be used).
Reviewed by: kib
Make the system queue header file fully usable within C++ programs by
adding macros to define class lists.
This change is backwards compatible for all use within C and C++
programs. Only C++ programs will have added support to use the queue
macros within classes. Previously the queue macros could only be used
within structures.
The queue.3 manual page has been updated to describe the new
functionality and some alphabetic sorting has been done while
at it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2745
PR: 200827 (exp-run)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Add new FOREACH_FROM variants of the queue(3) FOREACH macros which can
optionally start the traversal from a previously found element by
passing the element in as "var". Passing a NULL "var" retains the same
semantics as the regular FOREACH macros.
Kudos to phk for suggesting the "FROM" suffix instead of my original
proposal.
Reviewed by: jhb (previous version), rpaulo
MFC after: 1 week
Renumber cluase 4 to 3, per what everybody else did when BSD granted
them permission to remove clause 3. My insistance on keeping the same
numbering for legal reasons is too pedantic, so give up on that point.
Submitted by: Jan Schaumann <jschauma@stevens.edu>
Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/96
For example, the FreeBSD GCC (4.2.1) has a spotty support for that
feature. If the static keyword is used with an unnamed array parameter
in a function declaration, then the compilation fails with:
error: static or type qualifiers in abstract declarator
The feature does work if the parameter is named.
So, the restriction introduced in this commit can be removed when all
affected function prototypes have the workaround.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Panzura
For consistency with the qualifiers added in r310977, define a new
qualifier _Null_unspecified which is also defined in clang 3.7+.
Add two new macros:
__NULLABILITY_PRAGMA_PUSH
__NULLABILITY_PRAGMA_POP
These are for use in headers when we want avoid noisy warnings if
some pointers are left without nullability annotations.
These are added with way ahead of their first use to teach the GCC
ports headers of their existance before their first use.
This was meant to be used by a future FORTIFY_SOURCE implementation.
Probably for good, FORTIFY_SOURCE and this particular GCCism were never
well supported by clang or other compilers. Furthermore, the technology
has long since been replaced by either static checkers, sanitizers, or
even just the strong stack protector that was enabled by default.
Drop __gnu_inline to avoid cluttering the headers.
MFC after: 5 days
Add two new qualifiers for use by the static checkers:
_Nonnull
The _Nonnull nullability qualifier indicates that null is not a meaningful
value for a value of the _Nonnull pointer type.
_Nullable
The _Nullable nullability qualifier indicates that a value of the
_Nullable pointer type can be null.
These were introduced in Clang 3.7. For more information, see:
http://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#nonnull
We add these now without using them so that the GCC ports have time to
pick up the header change.
Hinted by: Android Bionic libc [1]
Also seen in: Apple's Libc-1158.20.4
[1]
baa2a973bd
C99 allows array function parameters to use the static keyword for their
sizes. This tells the compiler that the parameter will have at least the
specified size, and calling code will fail to compile if that guarantee is
not met. However, this syntax is not legal in C++.
This commit reverts r300824, which worked around the problem for
sys/md5.h only, and introduces a new macro: min_size(). min_size(x) can
be used in headers as a static array size, but will still compile in C++
mode.
Reviewed by: cem, ed
MFC after: 4 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8277
fix a typo in __STDC_VERSION__ in __min_size requirements
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Panzura
It clashes with the one in libc++'s <atomic> header.
(Previously, the _Atomic() macro was defined in <stdatomic.h>, which is
only for use with C11, but for various reasons it was moved to its
current location in r251804.)
Discussed with: bdrewery, ed
MFC after: 2 weeks
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>
The locale_t type is provided by <xlocale.h> on Linux, FreeBSD, and Darwin.
While, like on some of those systems, it is automatically included by
<locale.h> with the proper feature test macros, its presence under this
particular name is still presumed in real-world software.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
Problem:
After passing locales created by 'duplocale' to 'uselocale',
referencing 'MB_CUR_MAX', which is actually expanded to
'__locale_mb_cur_max()' by preprocessors, causes segmentation faults.
Direct use of locales from 'newlocale' does not cause the problem.
This is the problem of 'duplocale'.
$ echo $LANG
ja_JP.UTF-8
$ cat test.c
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <locale.h>
volatile int var;
int main(void) {
locale_t const loc = newlocale(LC_ALL_MASK, "", NULL);
locale_t const dup = duplocale(loc);
locale_t const old = uselocale(dup);
var = MB_CUR_MAX; /* <-- crashes here */
uselocale(old);
freelocale(dup);
freelocale(loc);
return 0;
}
$ gcc test.c
$ ./a
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
# Note: "core dumped" in the above message was actually written in
# Japanese, but I translated the part to post a mail in English.
Bug:
In the beginning of '__loadlocale' (newlib/libc/locale/locale.c:501),
there is a code which checks if the operations can be skipped:
> /* Avoid doing everything twice if nothing has changed. */
> if (!strcmp (new_locale, loc->categories[category]))
> return loc->categories[category];
While, in the function '_duplocale_r' (newlib/libc/locale/
duplocale.c), '__loadlocale' is called as in the quoted codes:
> /* If the object is not a "C" locale category, copy it. Just call
> __loadlocale. It knows what to do to replicate the category. */
> tmp_locale.lc_cat[i].ptr = NULL;
> tmp_locale.lc_cat[i].buf = NULL;
> if (!__loadlocale (&tmp_locale, i, tmp_locale.categories[i]))
> goto error;
This call of '__loadlocale' results in the skip check being
!strcmp(tmp_locale.categories[i], tmp_locale.categories[i]),
which is always true. This means that the actual operations of
'__loadLocale' will never be performed for 'duplocale'.
Fix:
The call of '__loadlocale' in '_duplocale_r' is modified.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Teach makedocbook how to handle some new things seen in the makedoc markup
since bd547490:
- struct lines appearing in the synopsis
- use of @strong{} texinfo markup
At the moment when targeting bare-metal targets or systems without
definition for the locking primitives newlib, uses dummy empty macros.
This has the advantage of reduced size and faster implementation but
does not allow the application to retarget the locking routines.
Retargeting is useful for a single toolchain to support multiple systems
since then it's only at link time that you know which system you are
targeting.
This patch adds a new configure option
--enable-newlib-retargetable-locking to use dummy empty functions
instead of dummy empty macros. The default is to keep the current
behavior to not have any size or speed impact on targets not interested
in this feature. To allow for any size of lock, the _LOCK_T type is
changed into pointer to struct _lock and the _init function are tasked
with allocating the locks. The platform being targeted must provide the
static locks. A dummy implementation of the locking routines and static
lock is provided for single-threaded applications to link successfully
out of the box.
To ensure that the behavior is consistent (either no locking whatsoever
or working locking), the dummy implementation is strongly defined such
that a partial retargeting will cause a doubly defined link error.
Indeed, the linker will only pull in the file providing the dummy
implementation if it cannot find an implementation for one of the
routine or lock.
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
In patch b219285f87 you have a syntax
error in the PLD instruction. The syntax for the pld argument should be
in square brackets as it's a memory address like so: pld [r1]. With
your patch the newlib build fails for armv7-a targets. This patch fixes
the build failures.
Tested by making sure the newlib build completes successfully.
2016-01-26 Kyrylo Tkachov <kyrylo.tkachov@arm.com>
* libc/machine/arm/strcpy.c (strcpy): Fix PLD assembly syntax.
* libc/machine/arm/strlen-stub.c (strlen): Likewise.
LTO can re-order top-level assembly blocks, which can cause this
macro definition to appear after its use (or not at all), causing
compilation failures. On modern toolchains (armv4t+), assembly
should write `bx lr` in all cases, and linkers will transparently
convert them to `mov pc, lr`, allowing us to simply remove the
macro.
(source: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comp.sys.arm/3l7fVGX-Wug
and verified empirically)
For the armv4.S file, preserve this macro to maximize backwards
compatibility.
LTO can re-order top-level assembly blocks, which can cause this
macro definition to appear after its use (or not at all), causing
compilation failures. As the macro has very few uses, simply removing
it by inlining is a simple fix.
n.b. one of the macro invocations in strlen-stub.c was already
guarded by the relevant #define, so it is simply converted directly
to a pld
Remove stray commas. Include <sys/cdefs.h> for __restrict (includes
<stddef.h> indirectly).
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
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
Provide an extension NL_LOCALE_NAME() macro, with semantics
matching glibc, which can be used as:
nl_langinfo_l(NL_LOCALE_NAME(LC_MESSAGES), locale);
to get back the locale string that locale was originally
created with during newlocale(). This in turn allows a library
(such as gettext) to determine what thread-local locale settings
it has inherited from the main program without having to be told
what parameters were passed to newlocale(), for less overall
coupling between parts of the program.
gnulib is set up to use the extension:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2017-01/msg00129.html
* libc/include/langinfo.h (NL_LOCALE_NAME): New macro
* libc/locale/nl_langinfo.c (nl_langinfo_l): Expose locale names
of a locale_t's category components.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
A few files were missing headers for memset/malloc, likely missed
because the files don't directly call the functions, rather they
come in via macros in libc/include/sys/reent.h:
#define _REENT_CHECK(var, what, type, size, init) do { \
struct _reent *_r = (var); \
if (_r->what == NULL) { \
_r->what = (type)malloc(size); \
#define _REENT_CHECK_ASCTIME_BUF(var) \
_REENT_CHECK(var, _asctime_buf, char *, _REENT_ASCTIME_SIZE, \
memset((var)->_asctime_buf, 0, _REENT_ASCTIME_SIZE))
Without these fixes, implicit function signatures are provided,
which gcc warns could cause aliasing issues down the line:
../../../../../../../newlib-2.5.0/newlib/libc/time/asctime.c:62:3: warning: type of 'memset' does not match original declaration [-Wlto-type-mismatch]
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/string.h:29:7: note: return value type mismatch
_PTR _EXFUN(memset,(_PTR, int, size_t));
^
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/string.h:29:7: note: 'memset' was previously declared here
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/string.h:29:7: note: code may be misoptimized unless -fno-strict-aliasing is used
../../../../../../../newlib-2.5.0/newlib/libc/time/asctime.c:62:3: warning: type of 'malloc' does not match original declaration [-Wlto-type-mismatch]
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/malloc.h:37:13: note: return value type mismatch
extern _PTR malloc _PARAMS ((size_t));
^
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/malloc.h:37:13: note: 'malloc' was previously declared here
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/malloc.h:37:13: note: code may be misoptimized unless -fno-strict-aliasing is used
../../../../../../../newlib-2.5.0/newlib/libc/time/lcltime.c:58:3: warning: type of 'malloc' does not match original declaration [-Wlto-type-mismatch]
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/malloc.h:37:13: note: return value type mismatch
extern _PTR malloc _PARAMS ((size_t));
^
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/malloc.h:37:13: note: 'malloc' was previously declared here
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/malloc.h:37:13: note: code may be misoptimized unless -fno-strict-aliasing is used
../../../../../../../newlib-2.5.0/newlib/libc/string/strsignal.c:70:3: warning: type of 'malloc' does not match original declaration [-Wlto-type-mismatch]
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/malloc.h:37:13: note: return value type mismatch
extern _PTR malloc _PARAMS ((size_t));
^
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/malloc.h:37:13: note: 'malloc' was previously declared here
/Volumes/code/external/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/include/malloc.h:37:13: note: code may be misoptimized unless -fno-strict-aliasing is used
Including the proper headers elminates the implicit function
signatures and these warnings.
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.
- use of DEBUG flag is non-standard and interferes with other
project's using same flag
- change to be _REENT_CHECK_DEBUG which means the flag is
allowing debugging of _REENT_CHECK macros
- use #ifdef instead of #if
The pthread_setname_np() and pthread_getname_np() are GNU extensions and
provided by glibc.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
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.
Add a user-defined name to the self-contained synchronization objects in
order to make system diagnostics, tracing and debugging more user
friendly.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
https://sourceware.org/ml/newlib/2016/msg01139.htmlhttps://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2016-12/msg00010.html
There is no change if libtool is used.
Some run-time support libraries provided by GCC (e.g. libgomp) use
configure checks to detect certain features, e.g. availability of
thread-local storage. The configure script generates a test program and
tries to compile and link it. It should use target libraries and
startfiles of the build tree if available and not random ones from the
installation prefix for this procedure. The search directories
specified by -B are a bit special, see for_each_path() in gcc.c of the
GCC sources. First a search is performed on all search paths with the
multilib directory appended (if desired), then a second search is
performed on demand with the base directory only. For each multilib
there is a "newlib" subdirectory. This directory is specified by a -B
option for the support libraries. In order to find the newlib artifacts
(ctr0.o, libc.a, libg.a and libm.a) they must be located in a proper
multilib subdirectory withing the build directory.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
RTEMS defined SEM_VALUE_MAX to 32767 unlike other systems like FreeBSD
and glibc. A common value is INT_MAX.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
* 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.
__sinit initialises some common file descriptors as line buffered and
relies on the first users of such FDs to call __smakebuf_r. If
__smakebuf_r realises there's no space for a buffer (malloc returns
NULL), it makes them unbuffered. However, while setting the __SNBF
bit, it doesn't clear the __SLBF bit in the flags. Depending on the
order in which functions check buffering flags in the FD, sometime
they assume it's line buffered (e.g. __sfvwrite_r), trashing
application memory that's not really been allocated to them.
This patch solves the problem by clearing the unbuffered/line buffered
flag when setting the line buffered/unbuffered flag.
In the case of memcpy-armv7m.S being built for a big-endian multilib
(including armv7 without a specific profile), realignment code made
assumptions about the byte ordering being little-endian.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Ensure the Python Lex/Yacc (PLY) cache used by makedocbook is initialized
before it is used by parallelizable rules to make the DocBook XML, as it
appears that these can collide in cache generation, leading to errors.
Signed-off-by: Jon Turney <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
In order to enable proper detection of thread-local storage availability
we have to provide some symbols on ARM.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Turn pthread_spinlock_t into a self-contained object. On uni-processor
configurations, interrupts are disabled in the lock/trylock operations
and the previous interrupt status is restored in the corresponding
unlock operations. On SMP configurations, a ticket lock is a acquired
and released in addition.
See also:
https://devel.rtems.org/ticket/2674
This implementation is simple and efficient. However, this test case of
the Linux Test Project would fail due to call of printf() and sleep()
during spin lock ownership:
https://github.com/linux-test-project/ltp/blob/master/testcases/open_posix_testsuite/conformance/interfaces/pthread_spin_lock/1-2.c
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Provide <memory.h> for all standard Newlib targets and remove
Cygwin-specific header. Most POSIX like systems provide this historic
header.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
The non-standard pthread_yield() function is available at least on
Cygwin, FreeBSD and glibc.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
This makes it possible provide operating system specific types for
<pthread.h>. It is in line with the FreeBSD header file structure and
allows a future cleanup of <pthread.h> to not expose unrelated things
via <sys/types.h> and <unistd.h>. Glibc uses the similar
<bits/pthreadtypes.h> for this purpose.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Add _TICKET_LOCK_INITIALIZER to statically initialize a
_Ticket_lock_Control structure. This makes it possible to embed a
ticket lock in other structures outside of <sys/lock.h>.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Non-default visibility attributes are unsupported on PE/COFF, so don't
use in __hidden definition for Cygwin. Add comment.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The FreeBSD kernel types are not used in Newlib. Provide them via an
external header file to decouple Newlib and FreeBSD updates for RTEMS.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
Hi,
make pdf on Ubuntu 16.04 fail with:
newlib/libc/libc.texinfo:9: Missing @endcsname inserted.
After a lot of fiddling the reason appears to be the combination of concept
and function index despite a lack of concept index entries. Arguably texinfo
should not error in that case but here we are, newlib will fail to build its
documentation on some systems because of this. Since libc.texinfo only
contains function index entries this patch simply removes the combination of
indices. It does the same for libm.texinfo which has concept index entries but
no function index entries.
Tested by running make pdf, make dvi, make info and make html successfully.
libc.pdf appears to have only one index as expected.
== Proposed commit message ==
Fix pdf build failure with texinfo 6.1.0 as provided in Ubuntu 16.04. Index
combination in libc.texinfo and libm.texinfo fails because both file have only
one type of index entries. Removing index combination is thus harmless and
solves the problem.
Is this ok for master?
Best regards,
Thomas
Provide __intmax_t and __uintmax_t via <machine/_default_types.h> and
define intmax_t and uintmax_t in <sys/_stdint.h> for FreeBSD
compatibility.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
The original test is broken. It tests for a NULL locale which
isn't just wrong, it simply can't occur at this point due to an
earlier check for a NULL locale string. Thus, the locale info
for a category is never taken from the environment.
Fixes Coverty CID 153467.
Also, add comment.
Also, add some parens for readability.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Update the getconf utility to support the new flag as well as
_PC_POSIX_PERMISSIONS and _PC_POSIX_SECURITY. These were previously
unsupported, probably as an oversight.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
_ctype_b is defined in ctype_.c as a const char array for non cygwin
targets allowing negative ctype index but as a char array for the same
targets in ctype_.h, giving type conflict at compile time. This is
because the cygwin targets are not treated specially in the latter file.
This patch adds the necessary logic for cygwin targets in ctype_.h.
While both long and long long are 64-bits on x86_64, they are distinct types,
and long was used prior to commit 477463a201.
Changing this breaks the linking of previously compiled C++ functions with
off_t arguments on 64-bit Cygwin with newly compiled code, as the mangling of
long (l) and long long (x) differ.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
Keep __ctype_ptr__ available on Cygwin only, for backward compatibility
with existing apps referencing it via the ctype macros.
Otherwise initialize __global_locale.ctype_ptr and __C_locale.ctype_ptr
and use them throughout.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
__C_locale is const. Thus, overwriting the lconv values in __localeconv_l
will try to write to a R/O region. Given the lconv values in __C_locale
are initialized, there's no reason to write them in __localeconv_l at all.
Just return &__C_locale.lconv.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Only access "C" locale using the new __get_C_locale inline function.
Enable __global_locale for !_MB_CAPABLE targets. Accommodate !_MB_CAPABLE
targets in new locale code.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>