Old notes on conformance of GNU libc with various standards

The text below was formerly in the file CONFORMANCE in the source tree. These notes on standards conformance have not been updated since 2012, but may still be somewhat relevant. Feel free to remove text that is definitely no longer relevant, move text to more useful locations, and so on.


The GNU libc is designed to be conformant with existing standard as far as possible. To ensure this I've run various tests. The results are presented here.

Open Group's hdrchk

The hdrchk test suite is available from the Open Group at https://opengroup.org/infosrv/unsupported/stdtools/hdrchk/

I've last run the suite on 2004-04-17 on a Linux/x86 system running a Fedora Core 2 test 2 + updates with the following results [*]:

        FIPS            No reported problems

        POSIX90         No reported problems

        XPG3            Prototypes are now in the correct header file

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
*** Starting unistd.h
Missing: extern char *  cuserid();
Missing: extern int     rename();
*** Completed unistd.h
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

        XPG4            Prototype is now in the correct header file
                        and the _POSIX2_C_VERSION symbol has been removed

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
*** Starting unistd.h
Missing: extern char *  cuserid();
Missing: #define        _POSIX2_C_VERSION       (-1L)
*** Completed unistd.h
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

        POSIX96         Prototype moved
                        (using "base realtime threads" subsets)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
*** Starting unistd.h
Missing: extern int     pthread_atfork();
*** Completed unistd.h
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

        UNIX98          Prototypes moved and _POSIX2_C_VERSION removed
                        (using "base realtime threads mse lfs" subset)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
*** Starting unistd.h
Missing: extern char *  cuserid();
Missing: #define        _POSIX2_C_VERSION       (-1L)
Missing: extern int     pthread_atfork();
*** Completed unistd.h
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

That means all the reported issues are due to the headers having been cleaned up for recent POSIX/Unix specification versions. Duplicated prototypes have been removed and obsolete symbols have been removed. Which means that as far as the tests performed by the script go, the headers files comply to the current POSIX/Unix specification.

[*] Since the scripts are not clever enough for the way gcc handles include files (namely, putting some of them in gcc-local directory) I copied over the iso646.h, float.h, and stddef.h headers and ignored the problems resulting from the split limits.h file).

Technical C standards conformance issues in glibc

If you compile programs against glibc with __STRICT_ANSI__ defined (as, for example, by gcc -ansi, gcc -std=c89, gcc -std=iso1990:199409 or gcc -std=c99), and use only the headers specified by the version of the C standard chosen, glibc will attempt to conform to that version of the C standard (as indicated by __STDC_VERSION__):

GCC options

Standard version

-ansi

ISO/IEC 9899:1990

-std=c89

ISO/IEC 9899:1990

-std=iso9899:199409

ISO/IEC 9899:1990 as amended by Amd.1:1995

-std=c99

ISO/IEC 9899:1999

(Note that -std=c99 is not available in GCC 2.95.2, and that no version of GCC presently existing implements the full C99 standard.)

You may then define additional feature test macros to enable the features from other standards, and use the headers defined in those standards (for example, defining _POSIX_C_SOURCE to be 199506L to enable features from ISO/IEC 9945-1:1996).

There are some technical ways in which glibc is known not to conform to the supported versions of the C standard, as detailed below. Some of these relate to defects in the standard that are expected to be fixed, or to compiler limitations.

Defects in the C99 standard

Some defects in C99 were corrected in Technical Corrigendum 1 to that standard. glibc follows the corrected specification.

Implementation of library functions

The implementation of some library functions does not fully follow the standard specification:

C99 added additional forms of floating point constants (hexadecimal constants, NaNs and infinities) to be recognised by strtod and scanf. The effect is to change the behavior of some strictly conforming C90 programs; glibc implements the C99 versions only irrespective of the standard version selected.

C99 added %a as another scanf format specifier for floating point values. This conflicts with the glibc extension where %as, %a[ and %aS mean to allocate the string for the data read. A strictly conforming C99 program using %as, %a[ or %aS in a scanf format string will misbehave under glibc if it does not include <stdio.h> and instead declares scanf itself; if it gets the declaration of scanf from <stdio.h>, it will use a C99-conforming version.

Compiler limitations

The macros __STDC_IEC_559__, __STDC_IEC_559_COMPLEX__ and __STDC_ISO_10646__ are properly supposed to be constant throughout the translation unit (before and after any library headers are included). However, they mainly relate to library features, and GCC only knows to preinclude <stdc-predef.h> to get their definitions in version 4.8 and later. Programs that test them before including any standard headers may misbehave with older compilers.

GCC doesn't support the optional imaginary types. Nor does it understand the keyword _Complex before GCC 3.0. This has the corresponding impact on the relevant headers.

glibc's <tgmath.h> implementation is arcane but thought to work correctly; a clean and comprehensible version requires compiler builtins.

For most of the headers required of freestanding implementations, glibc relies on GCC to provide correct versions. (At present, glibc provides <stdint.h>, and GCC doesn't before version 4.5.)

The definition of math_errhandling conforms so long as no translation unit using math_errhandling is compiled with -fno-math-errno, -fno-trapping-math or options such as -ffast-math that imply these options. math_errhandling is only conditionally defined depending on __FAST_MATH__; the compiler does not provide the information needed for more exact definitions based on settings of -fno-math-errno and -fno-trapping-math, possibly for only some source files in a program.

Issues with headers

None known.

None: OldNotes/Conformance (last edited 2017-08-06 15:41:10 by ZackWeinberg)