musl - an implementation of the standard library for Linux-based systems
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Szabolcs Nagy 2810b30fc3 regex: increase the stack tre uses for tnfa creation
10k elements stack is increased to 1000k, otherwise tnfa creation fails
for reasonable sized patterns: a single literal char can add 7 elements
to this stack, so regcomp of an 1500 char long pattern (with only litral
chars) fails with REG_ESPACE. (the new limit allows about < 150k chars,
this arbitrary limit allows most command line regex usage.)

ideally there would be no upper bound: regcomp dynamically reallocates
this buffer, every reallocation checks for allocation failure and at
the end this stack is freed so there is no reason for special bound.
however that may have unwanted effect on regcomp and regexec runtime
so this is a conservative change.
2016-01-31 17:33:54 -05:00
arch better a_sc inline asm constraint on aarch64 and arm 2016-01-31 17:32:56 -05:00
crt move dynamic linker to its own top-level directory, ldso 2016-01-25 19:29:55 -05:00
dist
include fix siginfo_t for mips 2016-01-26 22:31:21 -05:00
ldso ldso: fix GDB dynamic linker info on MIPS 2016-01-30 20:55:22 -05:00
src regex: increase the stack tre uses for tnfa creation 2016-01-31 17:33:54 -05:00
tools add CFI generation script for x86_64 2015-10-13 18:09:46 -04:00
.gitignore support out-of-tree build 2016-01-17 16:34:43 -05:00
configure don't suppress shared libc when linker lacks -Bsymbolic-functions 2016-01-31 00:40:33 -05:00
COPYRIGHT update authors/contributors list 2015-03-16 18:43:54 -04:00
INSTALL update notice on broken gcc versions in INSTALL file 2014-07-31 19:02:54 -04:00
Makefile don't suppress shared libc when linker lacks -Bsymbolic-functions 2016-01-31 00:40:33 -05:00
README update version reference in the README file 2014-06-25 14:16:53 -04:00
VERSION release 1.1.12 2015-10-19 19:12:57 -04:00
WHATSNEW release 1.1.12 2015-10-19 19:12:57 -04:00

    musl libc

musl, pronounced like the word "mussel", is an MIT-licensed
implementation of the standard C library targetting the Linux syscall
API, suitable for use in a wide range of deployment environments. musl
offers efficient static and dynamic linking support, lightweight code
and low runtime overhead, strong fail-safe guarantees under correct
usage, and correctness in the sense of standards conformance and
safety. musl is built on the principle that these goals are best
achieved through simple code that is easy to understand and maintain.

The 1.1 release series for musl features coverage for all interfaces
defined in ISO C99 and POSIX 2008 base, along with a number of
non-standardized interfaces for compatibility with Linux, BSD, and
glibc functionality.

For basic installation instructions, see the included INSTALL file.
Information on full musl-targeted compiler toolchains, system
bootstrapping, and Linux distributions built on musl can be found on
the project website:

    http://www.musl-libc.org/