- 19 6月, 2012 5 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
there is no need/use for a flush hook. the write function serves this purpose already. i originally created the hook for implementing mem streams based on a mistaken reading of posix, and later realized it wasn't useful but never removed it until now.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
apparently this was never tested before.
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- 18 6月, 2012 2 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
the old behavior was to only consider a stream to be "reading" or "writing" if it had buffered, unread/unwritten data. this reportedly differs from the traditional behavior of these functions, which is essentially to return true as much as possible without creating the possibility that both __freading and __fwriting could return true. gnulib expects __fwriting to return true as soon as a file is opened write-only, and possibly expects other cases that depend on the traditional behavior. and since these functions exist mostly for gnulib (does anything else use them??), they should match the expected behavior to avoid even more ugly hacks and workarounds...
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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- 16 6月, 2012 1 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
one file was reusing another file's macro name, and many had inconsistent underscores and application of SYS prefix, etc. patch by Szabolcs Nagy (nsz)
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- 15 6月, 2012 1 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
it probably does not matter for /dev/null, but this should be done consistently anyway.
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- 14 6月, 2012 4 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
this is required in case dtors use stdio. also remove the old comments; one was cruft from when the code used to be using function pointers and conditional calls, and has little motivation now that we're using weak symbols. the other was just complaining about having to support dtors even though the cost was made essentially zero in the non-use case by the way it's done here.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
stime is not _XOPEN_SOURCE, and some functions were missing with _BSD_SOURCE..
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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- 13 6月, 2012 3 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
these are not exposed publicly in any header, but the few programs that use them (modutils/kmod, etc.) are declaring the functions themselves rather than making the syscalls directly, and it doesn't really hurt to have them (same as the capset junk).
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
based on patch by Emil Renner Berthing, with minor changes to dirent.h for LFS64 and organization of declarations this code should work unmodified once a real strverscmp is added, but I've been hesitant to add it because the GNU strverscmp behavior is harmful in a lot of cases (for instance if you have numeric filenames in hex). at some point I plan on trying to design a variant of the algorithm that behaves better on a mix of filename styles.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
these were left in glibc for binary compatibility after the public part of the interface was removed, and libcap kept using them (with its own copy of the header files) rather than just making the syscalls directly. might as well add them since they're so small...
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- 10 6月, 2012 2 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
i originally omitted these (optional, per POSIX) interfaces because i considered them backwards implementation details. however, someone later brought to my attention a fairly legitimate use case: allocating thread stacks in memory that's setup for sharing and/or fast transfer between CPU and GPU so that the thread can move data to a GPU directly from automatic-storage buffers without having to go through additional buffer copies. perhaps there are other situations in which these interfaces are useful too.
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- 08 6月, 2012 7 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
the types of these expressions must match the integer promotions. unsigned 8- and 16-bit values promote to signed int, not unsigned int.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
signedness issue kept %ls with no precision from working at all
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
printf was not printing too many characters, but it was reading one too many wchar_t elements from the input. this could lead to crashes if running off the page, or spurious failure if the conversion of the extra wchar_t resulted in EILSEQ.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
this broke the busybox "free" utility (memory reporting) and possibly other things like uptime.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
the field width limit was not being cleared before reading the literal, causing spurious failures in scanf in cases like "%2d:" scanning "00:".
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- 07 6月, 2012 6 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
this issue affects the last gpl2 version of binutils, which some people are still using out of aversion to gpl3. musl requires -Bsymbolic-functions because it's the only way to make a libc.so that's able to operate prior to dynamic linking but that still behaves correctly with respect to global vars that may be moved to the main program via copy relocations.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
it's possible that the user has provided a compiler that does not have any libc to link to, so linking a main program is a bad idea. instead, generate an empty shared library with no dependencies.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
in theory we could support stack protector in the libc itself, and users wanting to experiment with such usage could add -fstack-protector to CFLAGS intentionally. but to avoid breakage in the default case, override broken distro-patched gcc that forces stack protector on.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
some broken distro-provided toolchains have modified gcc to produce only "gnu hash" dynamic hash table by default. as this is unsupported by musl, that results in a non-working libc.so. we detect and switch this on in configure rather than hard-coding it in the Makefile because it's not supported by old binutils versions, but that might not even be relevant since old binutils versions already fail from -Bsymbolic-functions being missing. at some point I may review whether this should just go in the Makefile...
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
this is not tested yet, but should work to get rid of unwanted --hash-style=gnu hacks present in some distro-patched gcc versions.
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- 06 6月, 2012 2 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
the error will propagate up and be printed to the user at program start time; at runtime, dlopen will just fail and leave a message for dlerror. previously, if mprotect failed, subsequent attempts to perform relocations would crash the program. this was resulting in an increasing number of false bug reports on grsec systems where rwx permission is not possible in cases where users were wrongly attempting to use non-PIC code in shared libraries. supporting that usage is in theory possible, but the x86_64 toolchain does not even support textrels, and the cost of keeping around the necessary information to handle textrels without rwx permissions is disproportionate to the benefit (which is essentially just supporting broken library setups on grsec machines). also, i unified the error-out code in map_library now that there are 3 places from which munmap might have to be called.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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- 04 6月, 2012 3 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
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- 03 6月, 2012 4 次提交
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
Per POSIX, "The abort() function shall cause abnormal process termination to occur, unless the signal SIGABRT is being caught and the signal handler does not return." If SIGABRT is blocked or if a signal handler is installed and does return, abort is still required to cause abnormal program termination. We cannot use a_crash() to do this, since a SIGILL handler could also be installed (and might even longjmp out of the abort, not expecting to be invoked from within abort), nor can we rely on resetting the signal handler and re-raising the signal (this has race conditions in multi-threaded programs). On the other hand, SIGKILL is a perfectly safe, unblockable way to obtain abnormal program termination, and it requires no ugly loop-and-retry logic.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
for some nonsensical reason, glibc's headers use inline functions that redirect some of the standard functions to ugly nonstandard names (and likewise for some of their nonstandard functions).
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
I've been looking for data that would suggest a good default, and since little has shown up, i'm doing this based on the limited data I have. the value 80k is chosen to accommodate 64k of application data (which happens to be the size of the buffer in git that made it crash without a patch to call pthread_attr_setstacksize) plus the max stack usage of most libc functions (with a few exceptions like crypt, which will be fixed soon to avoid excessive stack usage, and [n]ftw, which inherently uses a fair bit in recursive directory searching). if further evidence emerges suggesting that the default should be larger, I'll consider changing it again, but I'd like to avoid it getting too large to avoid the issues of large commit charge and rapid address space exhaustion on 32-bit machines.
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由 Rich Felker 提交于
this fix is necessary because a program could be started with some of the implementation-reserved signals masked (e.g. due to exec having been called from a signal handler, or from a non-musl program) and then could obtain an invalid-to-use-later sigset_t as the old/saved signal mask.
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