Steve Ellcey [Mon, 23 Sep 2013 16:58:30 +0000 (09:58 -0700)]
2013-09-23 Steve Ellcey <sellcey@mips.com>
* sysdeps/mips/math_private.h (libc_feholdexcept_mips): New function.
(libc_feholdexcept): New macro.
(libc_feholdexceptf): New macro.
(libc_feholdexceptl): New macro.
(libc_fesetround_mips): New function.
(libc_fesetround): New macro.
(libc_fesetroundf): New macro.
(libc_fesetroundl): New macro.
(libc_feholdexcept_setround_mips): New function.
(libc_feholdexcept_setround): New macro.
(libc_feholdexcept_setroundf): New macro.
(libc_feholdexcept_setroundl): New macro.
(libc_fesetenv_mips): New function.
(libc_fesetenv): New macro.
(libc_fesetenvf): New macro.
(libc_fesetenvl): New macro.
(libc_feupdateenv_mips): New function.
(libc_feupdateenv): New macro.
(libc_feupdateenvf): New macro.
(libc_feupdateenvl): New macro.
Check for integer overflow in cache size computation in strcoll
strcoll is implemented using a cache for indices and weights of
collation sequences in the strings so that subsequent passes do not
have to search through collation data again. For very large string
inputs, the cache size computation could overflow. In such a case,
use the fallback function that does not cache indices and weights of
collation sequences.
Fall back to non-cached sequence traversal and comparison on malloc fail
strcoll currently falls back to alloca if malloc fails, resulting in a
possible stack overflow. This patch implements sequence traversal and
comparison without caching indices and rules.
Carlos O'Donell [Mon, 23 Sep 2013 05:44:38 +0000 (01:44 -0400)]
BZ #15754: Fix test case for ARM.
Statically built binaries use __pointer_chk_guard_local,
while dynamically built binaries use __pointer_chk_guard.
Provide the right definition depending on the test case
we are building.
Carlos O'Donell [Mon, 23 Sep 2013 04:52:09 +0000 (00:52 -0400)]
BZ #15754: CVE-2013-4788
The pointer guard used for pointer mangling was not initialized for
static applications resulting in the security feature being disabled.
The pointer guard is now correctly initialized to a random value for
static applications. Existing static applications need to be
recompiled to take advantage of the fix.
The test tst-ptrguard1-static and tst-ptrguard1 add regression
coverage to ensure the pointer guards are sufficiently random
and initialized to a default value.
It has been a long practice for software using IEEE 754 floating-point
arithmetic run on MIPS processors to use an encoding of Not-a-Number
(NaN) data different to one used by software run on other processors.
And as of IEEE 754-2008 revision [1] this encoding does not follow one
recommended in the standard, as specified in section 6.2.1, where it
is stated that quiet NaNs should have the first bit (d1) of their
significand set to 1 while signalling NaNs should have that bit set to
0, but MIPS software interprets the two bits in the opposite manner.
As from revision 3.50 [2][3] the MIPS Architecture provides for
processors that support the IEEE 754-2008 preferred NaN encoding format.
As the two formats (further referred to as "legacy NaN" and "2008 NaN")
are incompatible to each other, tools have to provide support for the
two formats to help people avoid using incompatible binary modules.
The change is comprised of two functional groups of features, both of
which are required for correct support.
1. Dynamic linker support.
To enforce the NaN encoding requirement in dynamic linking a new ELF
file header flag has been defined. This flag is set for 2008-NaN
shared modules and executables and clear for legacy-NaN ones. The
dynamic linker silently ignores any incompatible modules it
encounters in dependency processing.
To avoid unnecessary processing of incompatible modules in the
presence of a shared module cache, a set of new cache flags has been
defined to mark 2008-NaN modules for the three ABIs supported.
Changes to sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/readelflib.c have been made
following an earlier code quality suggestion made here:
and are therefore a little bit more extensive than the minimum
required.
Finally a new name has been defined for the dynamic linker so that
2008-NaN and legacy-NaN binaries can coexist on a single system that
supports dual-mode operation and that a legacy dynamic linker that
does not support verifying the 2008-NaN ELF file header flag is not
chosen to interpret a 2008-NaN binary by accident.
2. Floating environment support.
IEEE 754-2008 features are controlled in the Floating-Point Control
and Status (FCSR) register and updates are needed to floating
environment support so that the 2008-NaN flag is set correctly and
the kernel default, inferred from the 2008-NaN ELF file header flag
at the time an executable is loaded, respected.
As the NaN encoding format is a property of GCC code generation that is
both a user-selected GCC configuration default and can be overridden
with GCC options, code that needs to know what NaN encoding standard it
has been configured for checks for the __mips_nan2008 macro that is
defined internally by GCC whenever the 2008-NaN mode has been selected.
This mode is determined at the glibc configuration time and therefore a
few consistency checks have been added to catch cases where compilation
flags have been overridden by the user.
The 2008 NaN set of features relies on kernel support as the in-kernel
floating-point emulator needs to be aware of the NaN encoding used even
on hard-float processors and configure the FPU context according to the
value of the 2008 NaN ELF file header flag of the executable being
started. As at this time work on kernel support is still in progress
and the relevant changes have not made their way yet to linux.org master
repository.
Therefore the minimum version supported has been artificially set to
10.0.0 so that 2008-NaN code is not accidentally run on a Linux kernel
that does not suppport it. It is anticipated that the version is
adjusted later on to the actual initial linux.org kernel version to
support this feature. Legacy NaN encoding support is unaffected, older
kernel versions remain supported.
[1] "IEEE Standard for Floating-Point Arithmetic", IEEE Computer
Society, IEEE Std 754-2008, 29 August 2008
[2] "MIPS Architecture For Programmers, Volume I-A: Introduction to the
MIPS32 Architecture", MIPS Technologies, Inc., Document Number:
MD00082, Revision 3.50, September 20, 2012
[3] "MIPS Architecture For Programmers, Volume I-A: Introduction to the
MIPS64 Architecture", MIPS Technologies, Inc., Document Number:
MD00083, Revision 3.50, September 20, 2012
Will Newton [Wed, 7 Aug 2013 13:15:52 +0000 (14:15 +0100)]
ARM: Improve armv7 memcpy performance.
Only enter the aligned copy loop with buffers that can be 8-byte
aligned. This improves performance slightly on Cortex-A9 and
Cortex-A15 cores for large copies with buffers that are 4-byte
aligned but not 8-byte aligned.
ports/ChangeLog.arm:
2013-09-16 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* sysdeps/arm/armv7/multiarch/memcpy_impl.S: Tighten check
on entry to aligned copy loop to improve performance.
Jia Liu [Fri, 6 Sep 2013 16:01:08 +0000 (00:01 +0800)]
sunrpc/rpc/types.h: fix OS X and FreeBSD build problems
When I build arm-linux-gcc on OS X, I find glibc will get a build error
in sunrpc/rpc/types.h, so I add __APPLE_CC__ to make OS X build OK.
For FreeBSD, Add __FreeBSD__ to make it build OK, too.
URL: http://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2013-09/msg00155.html
URL: http://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2013-09/msg00217.html
URL: http://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2013-09/msg00240.html Signed-off-by: Jia Liu <proljc@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Will Newton [Wed, 11 Sep 2013 12:07:33 +0000 (13:07 +0100)]
benchtests: Rename argument to TIMING_INIT macro.
The TIMING_INIT macro currently sets the number of loop iterations
to 1000, which limits usefulness. Make the argument a clock
resolution value and multiply by 1000 in bench-skeleton.c instead
to allow easier reuse.
ChangeLog:
2013-09-11 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* benchtests/bench-timing.h (TIMING_INIT): Rename ITERS
parameter to RES. Remove hardcoded 1000 value.
* benchtests/bench-skeleton.c (main): Pass RES parameter
to TIMING_INIT and multiply result by 1000.
Will Newton [Fri, 16 Aug 2013 11:54:29 +0000 (12:54 +0100)]
malloc: Check for integer overflow in memalign.
A large bytes parameter to memalign could cause an integer overflow
and corrupt allocator internals. Check the overflow does not occur
before continuing with the allocation.
ChangeLog:
2013-09-11 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
[BZ #15857]
* malloc/malloc.c (__libc_memalign): Check the value of bytes
does not overflow.
Will Newton [Fri, 16 Aug 2013 10:59:37 +0000 (11:59 +0100)]
malloc: Check for integer overflow in valloc.
A large bytes parameter to valloc could cause an integer overflow
and corrupt allocator internals. Check the overflow does not occur
before continuing with the allocation.
ChangeLog:
2013-09-11 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
[BZ #15856]
* malloc/malloc.c (__libc_valloc): Check the value of bytes
does not overflow.
Will Newton [Mon, 12 Aug 2013 14:08:02 +0000 (15:08 +0100)]
malloc: Check for integer overflow in pvalloc.
A large bytes parameter to pvalloc could cause an integer overflow
and corrupt allocator internals. Check the overflow does not occur
before continuing with the allocation.
ChangeLog:
2013-09-11 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
[BZ #15855]
* malloc/malloc.c (__libc_pvalloc): Check the value of bytes
does not overflow.
Allan McRae [Tue, 10 Sep 2013 04:12:10 +0000 (14:12 +1000)]
Clarify documentation cross-reference
The end of the "Parsing of Floats" subsection currently reads:
The GNU C Library also provides '_l' versions of these functions,
which take an additional argument, the locale to use in conversion.
*Note Parsing of Integers::.
Split the final note as it is unrelated to the above comment and
reference it with "See also" instead.
Allan McRae [Tue, 10 Sep 2013 04:09:27 +0000 (14:09 +1000)]
Update pt_chown sections of the manual
The pt-chown binary is discussed in the "Running make install" section
without clarification of the needed configure option. Clarify this
and simplfy the discription which is already covered in the "Configuring
and compiling" section.
Long ago static startup did not parse the auxiliary vector and therefore
could not get at any `AT_FPUCW' tag to check whether upon FPU context
allocation the kernel would use a FPU control word setting different to
that provided by the `__fpu_control' variable. Static startup therefore
always initialized the FPU control word, forcing immediate FPU context
allocation even for binaries that otherwise never used the FPU.
As from GIT commit f8f900ecb9096ec47f5b7bb7626e29223c69061a static
startup supports parsing the auxiliary vector, so now it can avoid
explicit initialization of the FPU control word, just as can dynamic
startup, in the usual case where the setting written to the FPU control
word would be the same as the kernel uses. This defers FPU context
allocation until the binary itself actually pokes at the FPU.
Note that the `AT_FPUCW' tag is usually absent from the auxiliary vector
in which case _FPU_DEFAULT is assumed to be the kernel default.
Will Newton [Wed, 7 Aug 2013 18:56:21 +0000 (19:56 +0100)]
malloc: Add realloc test.
The current tests don't test the functionality of realloc in detail.
Add a new test for realloc that exercises some of the corner cases
that are not otherwise tested.
ChangeLog:
2013-09-09 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* malloc/Makefile: Add tst-realloc to tests.
* malloc/tst-realloc.c: New file.
Allan McRae [Mon, 9 Sep 2013 02:51:29 +0000 (12:51 +1000)]
Update to latest versions of GPL-2.0 and LGPL-2.1
Pull copies of these files directly from the GNU website:
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.txt
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl-2.1.txt
Fixes the address of the Free Software Foundation (BZ #15844). Also
includes some minor formatting changes and corrects references to
the GNU "Library" General Public License.
Carlos O'Donell [Fri, 6 Sep 2013 05:02:30 +0000 (01:02 -0400)]
Coordinate IPv6 definitions for Linux and glibc
This change synchronizes the glibc headers with the Linux kernel
headers and arranges to coordinate the definition of structures
already defined the Linux kernel UAPI headers.
It is now safe to include glibc's netinet/in.h or Linux's linux/in6.h
in any order in a userspace application and you will get the same
ABI. The ABI is guaranteed by UAPI and glibc.