Commit Graph

12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Rich Felker 56fbaa3bbe make all objects used with atomic operations volatile
the memory model we use internally for atomics permits plain loads of
values which may be subject to concurrent modification without
requiring that a special load function be used. since a compiler is
free to make transformations that alter the number of loads or the way
in which loads are performed, the compiler is theoretically free to
break this usage. the most obvious concern is with atomic cas
constructs: something of the form tmp=*p;a_cas(p,tmp,f(tmp)); could be
transformed to a_cas(p,*p,f(*p)); where the latter is intended to show
multiple loads of *p whose resulting values might fail to be equal;
this would break the atomicity of the whole operation. but even more
fundamental breakage is possible.

with the changes being made now, objects that may be modified by
atomics are modeled as volatile, and the atomic operations performed
on them by other threads are modeled as asynchronous stores by
hardware which happens to be acting on the request of another thread.
such modeling of course does not itself address memory synchronization
between cores/cpus, but that aspect was already handled. this all
seems less than ideal, but it's the best we can do without mandating a
C11 compiler and using the C11 model for atomics.

in the case of pthread_once_t, the ABI type of the underlying object
is not volatile-qualified. so we are assuming that accessing the
object through a volatile-qualified lvalue via casts yields volatile
access semantics. the language of the C standard is somewhat unclear
on this matter, but this is an assumption the linux kernel also makes,
and seems to be the correct interpretation of the standard.
2015-03-03 22:50:02 -05:00
Rich Felker c1a9658bd1 default features: make musl usable without feature test macros
the old behavior of exposing nothing except plain ISO C can be
obtained by defining __STRICT_ANSI__ or using a compiler option (such
as -std=c99) that predefines it. the new default featureset is POSIX
with XSI plus _BSD_SOURCE. any explicit feature test macros will
inhibit the default.

installation docs have also been updated to reflect this change.
2012-09-07 23:13:55 -04:00
Rich Felker 400c5e5c83 use restrict everywhere it's required by c99 and/or posix 2008
to deal with the fact that the public headers may be used with pre-c99
compilers, __restrict is used in place of restrict, and defined
appropriately for any supported compiler. we also avoid the form
[restrict] since older versions of gcc rejected it due to a bug in the
original c99 standard, and instead use the form *restrict.
2012-09-06 22:44:55 -04:00
Rich Felker f07222739b fix typo in aio.h 2012-07-19 00:37:43 -04:00
Rich Felker 3b94daba71 _GNU_SOURCE is supposed to imply _LARGEFILE64_SOURCE
this is ugly and stupid, but now that the *64 symbol names exist, a
lot of broken GNU software detects them in configure, then either
breaks during build due to missing off64_t definition, or attempts to
compile without function declarations/prototypes. "fixing" it here is
easier than telling everyone to add yet another feature test macro to
their builds.
2012-06-04 08:03:56 -04:00
Rich Felker 2dd8d5e1b8 add support for ugly *64 functions with _LARGEFILE64_SOURCE
musl does not support legacy 32-bit-off_t whatsoever. off_t is always
64 bit, and correct programs that use off_t and the standard functions
will just work out of the box. (on glibc, they would require
-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 to work.) however, some programs instead define
_LARGEFILE64_SOURCE and use alternate versions of all the standard
types and functions with "64" appended to their names.

we do not want code to actually get linked against these functions
(it's ugly and inconsistent), so macros are used instead of prototypes
with weak aliases in the library itself. eventually the weak aliases
may be added at the library level for the sake of using code that was
originally built against glibc, but the macros will still be the
desired solution in the headers.
2012-05-04 00:13:23 -04:00
Rich Felker 450f2c4a85 remove useless (at best, harmful) feature test checks in aio.h 2012-04-03 19:16:51 -04:00
Rich Felker f0a8d60d32 stupid typo (caused by rather ugly spelling in POSIX..) in aio 2011-09-28 11:36:11 -04:00
Rich Felker 4da289e1b3 fix return types for aio_read and aio_write again
previous fix was backwards and propagated the wrong type rather than
the right one...
2011-09-13 21:21:53 -04:00
Rich Felker 13cd969552 fix various errors in function signatures/prototypes found by nsz 2011-09-13 21:09:35 -04:00
Rich Felker fd408d27a0 fix prototypes for aio_read and aio_write 2011-09-13 15:39:58 -04:00
Rich Felker b4de6f93ae implement POSIX asynchronous io
some features are not yet supported, and only minimal testing has been
performed. should be considered experimental at this point.
2011-09-09 01:07:38 -04:00