modern compilers (for gcc, versions 4.8 and later) automatically
pre-include <stdc-predef.h> to obtain the values of certain predefined
macros specified by ISO C but which reflect properties of the library
implementation, not just the compiler. provide values indicating that
wchar_t is Unicode-encoded and that Annex F (IEEE floating point) is
supported unless the compiler indicates otherwise.
based on patch by Masanori Ogino.
these changes still do not yield a fully-conforming abort, but they
fix two known issues:
- per POSIX, termination via SIGKILL is not "abnormal", but both ISO C
and POSIX require abort to yield abnormal termination.
- raising SIGKILL fails to do anything to pid 1 in some containers.
now, the trapping instruction produced by a_crash() is expected to
produce abnormal termination, without the risk of invoking a signal
handler since SIGILL and SIGSEGV are blocked, and _Exit, which
contains an infinite loop analogous to the one being removed from
abort itself, is used as a last resort.
this implementation still fails to produce an exit status as if the
process terminated via SIGABRT in cases where SIGABRT is blocked or
ignored, but fixing that is not easy; the obvious pseudo-solutions all
have subtle race conditions where a concurrent fork or exec can expose
incorrect signal state.
it was changed to EM_OR1K in 200d15479c
as that was meant to be the official name, but glibc and the latest
gabi spec still uses the EM_OPENRISC name:
http://www.sco.com/developers/gabi/latest/ch4.eheader.html
binutils defines both macros so we should do the same for backward
compatibility.
placing the opening brace on the same line as the struct keyword/tag
is the style I prefer and seems to be the prevailing practice in more
recent additions.
these changes were generated by the command:
find include/ arch/*/bits -name '*.h' \
-exec sed -i '/^struct [^;{]*$/{N;s/\n/ /;}' {} +
and subsequently checked by hand to ensure that the regex did not pick
up any false positives.
same changes as in the generic header.
and BOTHER and IBSHIFT were removed (present in linux uapi but not
in glibc) and TIOCSER_TEMT was added (present in glibc).
add EXTA, EXTB, CIBAUD, CMSPAR, XCASE macros and hide them as well as
CBAUD, ECHOCTL, ECHOPRT, ECHOKE, FLUSHO, PENDIN in standard mode.
the new macros are both in glibc termios.h and in linux asm/termbits.h,
the later also contains IBSHIFT and BOTHER, those were not added.
these are not standard macros, but some of them are in the reserved
namespace so could be exposed, the ones which are not reserved are
CIBAUD, CMSPAR and XCASE (which was removed in issue 6), the rest
got hidden to be consistent with glibc.
mips and powerpc use their own asm/ioctls.h, not the asm-generic/ioctls.h
and they lack termiox macros that are available on other targets.
see kernel commit 1d65b4a088de407e99714fdc27862449db04fb5c
the (unused) speed fields were omitted when these ports were first
added (within this release cycle, so not present in any release yet)
in accordance with how glibc defines the structure on mips archs.
however their omission does not match existing musl practice/intent.
glibc provides its own, mostly-unified termios structure definition
and performs translation in userspace to match the kernel structure
for the arch, but has gratuitous differences on a few archs like mips,
presumably as a result of historical mistakes. some other libcs use
the kernel definitions directly. musl essentially does that, by
matching the kernel layout in the part of the structure the kernel
will read/write, but leaves additional space at the end for
extensibility. these are nominally the (nonstandard) speed fields and
(on most archs) extra c_cc elements, but since they are not used they
could be repurposed if there's ever a need.
commit 6d38c9cf80 provided an
arm-specific version of posix_fadvise to address the alternate
argument order the kernel expects on arm, but neglected to address
that powerpc (32-bit) has the same issue. instead of having arch
variant files in duplicate, simply put the alternate version in the
top-level file under the control of a macro defined in syscall_arch.h.
when commit 0b6eb2dfb2 added the
parentheses around __syscall to invoke the function directly, there
was no __syscall7 in the syscall macro infrastructure, so this hack
was needed. commit 9a3bbce447 fixed that
but failed to remove the hack.
the kernel ABI value for RUSAGE_CHILDREN is -1, not 1. the latter is
actually interpreted as RUSAGE_THREAD, to obtain values for just the
calling thread and not the whole process.
Linux's documentation (robust-futex-ABI.txt) claims that, when a
process dies with a futex on the robust list, bit 30 (0x40000000) is
set to indicate the status. however, what actually happens is that
bits 0-30 are replaced with the value 0x40000000, i.e. bits 0-29
(containing the old owner tid) are cleared at the same time bit 30 is
set.
our userspace-side code for robust mutexes was written based on that
documentation, assuming that kernel would never produce a futex value
of 0x40000000, since the low (owner) bits would always be non-zero.
commit d338b506e3 introduced this
assumption explicitly while fixing another bug in how non-recoverable
status for robust mutexes was tracked. presumably the tests conducted
at that time only checked non-process-shared robust mutexes, which are
handled in pthread_exit (which implemented the documented kernel
protocol, not the actual one) rather than by the kernel.
change pthread_exit robust list processing to match the kernel
behavior, clearing bits 0-29 while setting bit 30, and use the value
0x7fffffff instead of 0x40000000 to encode non-recoverable status. the
choice of value here is arbitrary; any value with at least one of bits
0-29 set should work just as well,
despite clarifications made to the COPYRIGHT file in commit
f0a6139933, there continues to be
confusion about whether the permissions granted actually apply to all
files. I am the sole author of these files and clearly intend, and
have always intended, for the grant of permission to apply to them.
compilers are free not to copy, or in some cases to clobber, padding
bytes in a structure. while it's an aliasing violation, and thus
undefined behavior, to copy or manipulate other sockaddr types using
sockaddr_storage, it seems likely that traditional code attempts to do
so, and the original intent of the sockaddr_storage structure was
probably to allow such usage.
in the interest of avoiding silent and potentially dangerous breakage,
ensure that there are no actual padding bytes in sockaddr_storage by
moving and adjusting the size of the __ss_padding member so that it
fits exactly.
this change also removes a silent assumption that the alignment of
long is equal to its size.
kernel connection multiplexor macros AF_KCM, PF_KCM, SOL_KCM were
added in linux commit ab7ac4eb9832e32a09f4e8042705484d2fb0aad3
MSG_BATCH sendmsg flag for performance optimization was added
in linux commit f092276d85b82504e8a07498f4e9e0c51f06745c
SOL_* macros are now synced with linux socket.h which is not a uapi
header and glibc did not have the macros either, but that has changed
http://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2016-05/msg00322.html
new fields and associated linux commit:
tcpi_notsent_bytes, tcpi_min_rtt cd9b266095f422267bddbec88f9098b48ea548fc
tcpi_data_segs_in, tcpi_data_segs_out a44d6eacdaf56f74fad699af7f4925a5f5ac0e7f