H.J. Lu [Tue, 19 Dec 2017 10:45:16 +0000 (02:45 -0800)]
x86: Add feature_1 to tcbhead_t [BZ #22563]
On x86, padding in struct __jmp_buf_tag is used for shadow stack pointer
to support Shadow Stack in Intel Control-flow Enforcemen Technology.
cancel_jmp_buf has been updated to include saved_mask so that it is as
large as struct __jmp_buf_tag. We must suport the old cancel_jmp_buf
in existing binaries. Since symbol versioning doesn't work on
cancel_jmp_buf, feature_1 is added to tcbhead_t so that setjmp and
longjmp can check if shadow stack is enabled. NB: Shadow stack is
enabled only if all modules are shadow stack enabled.
H.J. Lu [Tue, 19 Dec 2017 10:43:50 +0000 (02:43 -0800)]
Linux/x86: Update cancel_jmp_buf to match __jmp_buf_tag [BZ #22563]
On x86, padding in struct __jmp_buf_tag is used for shadow stack pointer
to support shadow stack in Intel Control-flow Enforcemen Technology.
Since the cancel_jmp_buf array is passed to setjmp and longjmp by
casting it to pointer to struct __jmp_buf_tag, it should be as large
as struct __jmp_buf_tag. Otherwise when shadow stack is enabled,
setjmp and longjmp will write and read beyond cancel_jmp_buf when saving
and restoring shadow stack pointer.
This patch adds bits/types/__cancel_jmp_buf_tag.h to define struct
__cancel_jmp_buf_tag so that Linux/x86 can add saved_mask to
cancel_jmp_buf.
Tested natively on i386, x86_64 and x32. Tested hppa-linux-gnu with
build-many-glibcs.py.
[BZ #22563]
* bits/types/__cancel_jmp_buf_tag.h: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86/bits/types/__cancel_jmp_buf_tag.h
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86/pthreaddef.h: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86/nptl/pthreadP.h: Likewise.
* nptl/Makefile (headers): Add
bits/types/__cancel_jmp_buf_tag.h.
* nptl/descr.h [NEED_SAVED_MASK_IN_CANCEL_JMP_BUF]
(pthread_unwind_buf): Add saved_mask to cancel_jmp_buf.
* sysdeps/nptl/pthread.h: Include
<bits/types/__cancel_jmp_buf_tag.h>.
(__pthread_unwind_buf_t): Use struct __cancel_jmp_buf_tag with
__cancel_jmp_buf.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/pthread.h: Likewise.
H.J. Lu [Tue, 19 Dec 2017 02:11:17 +0000 (18:11 -0800)]
Add --enable-static-pie variants to x86_64, x32 and i686
Since the default GCC and binutils versions used by build-many-glibcs.py,
which are GCC 7 branch and binutils 2.29 branch, support static PIE on
x86_64, x32 and i686, this patch adds --enable-static-pie glibc variants
to x86_64, x32 and i686 to get some coverage for static PIE.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py.
* scripts/build-many-glibcs.py (Context.add_all_configs): Add
--enable-static-pie variants to x86_64, x32 and i686.
m68k bits/mathinline.h declares various functions with const
attributes. These are inappropriate for functions that have results
depending on the rounding mode; the machine-independent
bits/mathcalls.h only uses const attributes for a very few functions
with no rounding mode dependence, and the m68k header should do
likewise. GCC uses pure for such functions with -frounding-math,
resulting in GCC mainline warning for conflicts with between the
header and the built-in attributes and glibc failing to build for m68k
with GCC mainline.
This patch fixes the attributes to avoid using const except when
bits/mathcalls.h does so. (There are a few functions where maybe
bits/mathcalls.h could do so but doesn't, but keeping the headers in
sync in this regard seems to be the safe approach.)
Tested compilation with build-many-glibcs.py with GCC mainline.
[BZ #22631]
* sysdeps/m68k/m680x0/fpu/bits/mathinline.h (__m81_defun): Add
argument for attrubutes. All callers changed.
(__inline_mathop1): Likewise. All callers changed.
(__inline_mathop): Likewise. All callers changed.
[__USE_MISC] (scalbn): Use __inline_forward instead of
__inline_forward_c.
[__USE_ISOC99] (scalbln): Likewise.
[__USE_ISOC99] (nearbyint): Likewise.
[__USE_ISOC99] (lrint): Likewise.
[__USE_MISC] (scalbnf): Likewise.
[__USE_ISOC99] (scalblnf): Likewise.
[__USE_ISOC99] (nearbyintf): Likewise.
[__USE_ISOC99] (lrintf): Likewise.
[__USE_MISC] (scalbnl): Likewise.
[__USE_ISOC99] (scalblnl): Likewise.
[__USE_ISOC99] (nearbyintl): Likewise.
[__USE_ISOC99] (lrintl): Likewise.
* sysdeps/m68k/m680x0/fpu/mathimpl.h: All callers of
__inline_mathop and __m81_defun changed.
Joseph Myers [Tue, 19 Dec 2017 00:08:49 +0000 (00:08 +0000)]
Fix build-many-glibcs.py arm-linux-gnueabihf builds with mainline GCC.
My fix to make the arm-linux-gnueabihf build-many-glibcs.py builds
actually use the hard-float ABI as intended showed up another issue
when building with mainline GCC: GCC now determines an FPU based on
the selected CPU or architecture and gives an error for
-mfloat-abi=hard when the CPU does not imply a choice of FPU. This
patch fixes all the affected configurations to specify a suitable
--with-cpu, --with-fpu or -mfpu option explicitly to avoid that error
from GCC.
Tested the relevant configurations with build-many-glibcs.py with
mainline GCC.
* scripts/build-many-glibcs.py (Context.add_all_configs): Specify
CPU or FPU for ARM hard-float configurations.
Joseph Myers [Mon, 18 Dec 2017 22:55:28 +0000 (22:55 +0000)]
Disable -Wrestrict for two nptl/tst-attr3.c tests.
nptl/tst-attr3 fails to build with GCC mainline because of
(deliberate) aliasing between the second (attributes) and fourth
(argument to thread start routine) arguments to pthread_create.
Although both those arguments are restrict-qualified in POSIX,
pthread_create does not actually dereference its fourth argument; it's
an opaque pointer passed to the thread start routine. Thus, the
aliasing is actually valid in this case, and it's deliberate in the
test. So this patch makes the test disable -Wrestrict for the two
pthread_create calls in question. (-Wrestrict was added in GCC 7,
hence the __GNUC_PREREQ conditions, but the particular warning in
question is new in GCC 8.)
Tested compilation with build-many-glibcs.py for aarch64-linux-gnu.
* nptl/tst-attr3.c: Include <libc-diag.h>.
(do_test) [__GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0)]: Ignore -Wrestrict for two tests.
Joseph Myers [Mon, 18 Dec 2017 22:54:01 +0000 (22:54 +0000)]
Fix truncation warnings in posix/tst-glob_symlinks.c.
The test posix/tst-glob_symlinks.c fails to build with GCC mainline:
tst-glob_symlinks.c: In function 'do_test':
tst-glob_symlinks.c:124:30: error: 'snprintf' output may be truncated before the last format character [-Werror=format-truncation=]
snprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "%s?", dangling_link);
^~~~~
tst-glob_symlinks.c:124:3: note: 'snprintf' output between 2 and 4097 bytes into a destination of size 4096
snprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "%s?", dangling_link);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
tst-glob_symlinks.c:128:30: error: 'snprintf' output may be truncated before the last format character [-Werror=format-truncation=]
snprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "%s*", dangling_link);
^~~~~
tst-glob_symlinks.c:128:3: note: 'snprintf' output between 2 and 4097 bytes into a destination of size 4096
snprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "%s*", dangling_link);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This patch fixes the test to avoid such truncation warnings by
increasing the buffer in question by one byte, to ensure it can hold
any possible result of %s? or %s* formats where %s comes from a buffer
of size PATH_MAX.
Tested compilation with build-many-glibcs.py for aarch64-linux-gnu.
* posix/tst-glob_symlinks.c (do_test): Increase size of buf.
Joseph Myers [Mon, 18 Dec 2017 22:52:41 +0000 (22:52 +0000)]
Disable strncat test array-bounds warnings for GCC 8.
Some strncat tests fail to build with GCC 8 because of -Warray-bounds
warnings. These tests are deliberately test over-large size arguments
passed to strncat, and already disable -Wstringop-overflow warnings,
but now the warnings for these tests come under -Warray-bounds so that
option needs disabling for them as well, which this patch does (with
an update on the comments; the DIAG_IGNORE_NEEDS_COMMENT call for
-Warray-bounds doesn't need to be conditional itself, because that
option is supported by all versions of GCC that can build glibc).
Tested compilation with build-many-glibcs.py for aarch64-linux-gnu.
* string/tester.c (test_strncat): Also disable -Warray-bounds
warnings for two tests.
H.J. Lu [Mon, 18 Dec 2017 20:24:26 +0000 (12:24 -0800)]
Pass -no-pie to GCC only if GCC defaults to PIE [BZ #22614]
After --enable-static-pie is added to configure, libc_cv_pie_default is
set to yes when either --enable-static-pie is used to configure glibc
or GCC defaults to PIE. We should set no-pie-ldflag to -no-pie, which
is supported on GCC 6 and later, only if GCC defaults to PIE, not when
--enable-static-pie is used to configure glibc.
Tested on x32 with --enable-static-pie using GCC 5 and without
--enable-static-pie using GCC 7.
[BZ #22614]
* Makeconfig (no-pie-ldflag): Set to -no-pie only if
$(cc-pie-default) == yes.
* config.make.in (cc-pie-default): New.
* configure.ac (libc_cv_pie_default): Renamed to ...
(libc_cv_cc_pie_default): This.
(libc_cv_pie_default): Set to $libc_cv_cc_pie_default.
* configure: Regenerated.
Florian Weimer [Mon, 18 Dec 2017 19:04:13 +0000 (20:04 +0100)]
ld.so: Examine GLRO to detect inactive loader [BZ #20204]
GLRO (_rtld_global_ro) is read-only after initialization and can
therefore not be patched at run time, unlike the hook table addresses
and their contents, so this is a desirable hardening feature.
The hooks are only needed if ld.so has not been initialized, and this
happens only after static dlopen (dlmopen uses a single ld.so object
across all namespaces).
Joseph Myers [Mon, 18 Dec 2017 18:50:40 +0000 (18:50 +0000)]
Fix nscd readlink argument aliasing (bug 22446).
Current GCC mainline detects that nscd calls readlink with the same
buffer for both input and output, which is not valid (those arguments
are both restrict-qualified in POSIX). This patch makes it use a
separate buffer for readlink's input (with a size that is sufficient
to avoid truncation, so there should be no problems with warnings
about possible truncation, though not strictly minimal, but much
smaller than the buffer for output) to avoid this problem.
Tested compilation for aarch64-linux-gnu with build-many-glibcs.py.
[BZ #22446]
* nscd/connections.c (handle_request) [SO_PEERCRED]: Use separate
buffers for readlink input and output.
Similar to commit 1ab47db00dfbc0128119e3503d3ed640ffc4830b
("mips64: fix clobbering s0 in setjmp() [BZ #22624]")
as sysdeps/mips/setjmp_aux.c is almost an identical copy
of sysdeps/mips/mips64/setjmp_aux.c.
[BZ #22624]
* sysdeps/mips/setjmp_aux.c (__sigsetjmp_aux): Use
inhibit_stack_protector.
When configured as --enable-stack-protector=all glibc
inserts stack checking canary into every function
including __sigsetjmp_aux(). Stack checking code
ends up using s0 register to temporary hold address
of global canary value.
Unfortunately __sigsetjmp_aux assumes no caller' caller-save
registers should be clobbered as it stores them as-is.
The fix is to disable stack protection of __sigsetjmp_aux.
Tested on the following test:
#include <setjmp.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
jmp_buf jb;
volatile register long s0 asm ("$s0");
s0 = 1234;
if (setjmp(jb) == 0)
longjmp(jb, 1);
printf ("$s0 = %lu\n", s0);
}
Without the fix:
$ qemu-mipsn32 -L . ./mips-longjmp-bug
$s0 = 1082346228
With the fix:
$ qemu-mipsn32 -L . ./mips-longjmp-bug
$s0 = 1234
[BZ #22624]
* sysdeps/mips/mips64/setjmp_aux.c (__sigsetjmp_aux): Use
inhibit_stack_protector.
Szabolcs Nagy [Mon, 18 Dec 2017 11:47:14 +0000 (11:47 +0000)]
Update NEWS with aarch64 static pie support
The required binutils patches are not in a released version yet, but
glibc has support for static linked pie on aarch64 since commit 14d886edbd3d80b771e1c42fbd9217f9074de9c6
Dmitry V. Levin [Sun, 17 Dec 2017 23:49:46 +0000 (23:49 +0000)]
elf: do not substitute dst in $LD_LIBRARY_PATH twice [BZ #22627]
Starting with commit glibc-2.18.90-470-g2a939a7e6d81f109d49306bc2e10b4ac9ceed8f9 that
introduced substitution of dynamic string tokens in fillin_rpath,
_dl_init_paths invokes _dl_dst_substitute for $LD_LIBRARY_PATH twice:
the first time it's called directly, the second time the result
is passed on to fillin_rpath which calls expand_dynamic_string_token
which in turn calls _dl_dst_substitute, leading to the following
behaviour:
$ mkdir -p /tmp/'$ORIGIN' && cd /tmp/'$ORIGIN' &&
echo 'int main(){}' |gcc -xc - &&
strace -qq -E LD_LIBRARY_PATH='$ORIGIN' -e /open ./a.out
open("/tmp//tmp/$ORIGIN/tls/x86_64/libc.so.6", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
open("/tmp//tmp/$ORIGIN/tls/libc.so.6", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
open("/tmp//tmp/$ORIGIN/x86_64/libc.so.6", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
open("/tmp//tmp/$ORIGIN/libc.so.6", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
open("/etc/ld.so.cache", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
open("/lib64/libc.so.6", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
Fix this by removing the direct _dl_dst_substitute invocation.
* elf/dl-load.c (_dl_init_paths): Remove _dl_dst_substitute preparatory
code and invocation.
Szabolcs Nagy [Fri, 17 Nov 2017 10:45:32 +0000 (10:45 +0000)]
aarch64: fix start code for static pie
There are three flavors of the crt startup code:
1) crt1.o used for non-pie,
2) Scrt1.o used for dynamic linked pie (dynamic linker relocates),
3) rcrt1.o used for static linked pie (self relocation is needed)
In the --enable-static-pie case crt1.o is built with -DPIC and in case
of static linking it interposes _dl_relocate_static_pie in libc to
avoid self relocation.
Scrt1.o is built with -DPIC -DSHARED and it relies on GOT entries that
the static linker cannot relax and thus need relocation before the
start code is executed, so rcrt1.o needs separate implementation.
This implementation does not work for .text > 4G position independent
executables, which is fine since the toolchain does not support
-mcmodel=large with -fPIE.
Tests pass with ld/22269 and ld/22263 binutils bugs fixed.
Aurelien Jarno [Sat, 16 Dec 2017 11:25:41 +0000 (12:25 +0100)]
ldconfig: set LC_COLLATE to C [BZ #22505]
ldconfig supports `include' directives and use the glob function to
process them. The glob function sort entries according to the LC_COLLATE
category. When using a standard "include /etc/ld.so.conf.d/*.conf" entry
in /etc/ld.so.conf, the order therefore depends on the locale used to
run ldconfig. A few examples of locale specific order that might be
disturbing in that context compared to the C locale:
- The cs_CZ and sk_SK locales sort the digits after the letters.
- The et_EE locale sorts the 'z' between 's' and 't'.
This patch fixes that by setting LC_COLLATE to C in order to process
files in deterministic order, independently of the locale used to launch
ldconfig.
NOTE: This should NOT be backported to older release branches.
Changelog:
[BZ #22505]
* elf/ldconfig.c (main): Call setlocale to force LC_COLLATE to C.
Carlos O'Donell [Wed, 13 Dec 2017 04:35:05 +0000 (20:35 -0800)]
Fix tst-leaks1 (bug 14681)
The test tst-leaks1 exercises calling dlopen with a $ORIGIN DST.
This results in a theoretical leak e.g.
Memory not freed:
-----------------
Address Size Caller
0x0000000001d766c0 0x21 at 0x7fb1bd8bf4ab
Or as seen via valgrind:
==27582== 33 bytes in 1 blocks are still reachable in loss record 1 of 1
==27582== at 0x4C2CB6B: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:299)
==27582== by 0x40124AA: _dl_get_origin (dl-origin.c:50)
==27582== by 0x4007DB9: expand_dynamic_string_token (dl-load.c:382)
==27582== by 0x400899C: _dl_map_object (dl-load.c:2160)
==27582== by 0x4013020: dl_open_worker (dl-open.c:224)
==27582== by 0x5166F9B: _dl_catch_exception (dl-error-skeleton.c:198)
==27582== by 0x4012BD9: _dl_open (dl-open.c:594)
==27582== by 0x4E39EF5: dlopen_doit (dlopen.c:66)
==27582== by 0x5166F9B: _dl_catch_exception (dl-error-skeleton.c:198)
==27582== by 0x516700E: _dl_catch_error (dl-error-skeleton.c:217)
==27582== by 0x4E3A514: _dlerror_run (dlerror.c:162)
==27582== by 0x4E39F70: dlopen@@GLIBC_2.2.5 (dlopen.c:87)
There is no real leak.
The calling link map (the executable's link map) has it's l_origin
expanded for future use as part of _dl_get_origin, and that results
in the main executable link map having a N-byte allocation for
l->l_origin that is never freed since the executable's link map is
just a part of the process.
To take this into account we do one dlopen with $ORIGIN before
calling mtrace to force the initialization of the executable link
map.
Signed-off-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
H.J. Lu [Sat, 16 Dec 2017 00:59:33 +0000 (16:59 -0800)]
Add --enable-static-pie configure option to build static PIE [BZ #19574]
Static PIE extends address space layout randomization to static
executables. It provides additional security hardening benefits at
the cost of some memory and performance.
Dynamic linker, ld.so, is a standalone program which can be loaded at
any address. This patch adds a configure option, --enable-static-pie,
to embed the part of ld.so in static executable to create static position
independent executable (static PIE). A static PIE is similar to static
executable, but can be loaded at any address without help from a dynamic
linker. When --enable-static-pie is used to configure glibc, libc.a is
built as PIE and all static executables, including tests, are built as
static PIE. The resulting libc.a can be used together with GCC 8 or
above to build static PIE with the compiler option, -static-pie. But
GCC 8 isn't required to build glibc with --enable-static-pie. Only GCC
with PIE support is needed. When an older GCC is used to build glibc
with --enable-static-pie, proper input files are passed to linker to
create static executables as static PIE, together with "-z text" to
prevent dynamic relocations in read-only segments, which are not allowed
in static PIE.
The following changes are made for static PIE:
1. Add a new function, _dl_relocate_static_pie, to:
a. Get the run-time load address.
b. Read the dynamic section.
c. Perform dynamic relocations.
Dynamic linker also performs these steps. But static PIE doesn't load
any shared objects.
2. Call _dl_relocate_static_pie at entrance of LIBC_START_MAIN in
libc.a. crt1.o, which is used to create dynamic and non-PIE static
executables, is updated to include a dummy _dl_relocate_static_pie.
rcrt1.o is added to create static PIE, which will link in the real
_dl_relocate_static_pie. grcrt1.o is also added to create static PIE
with -pg. GCC 8 has been updated to support rcrt1.o and grcrt1.o for
static PIE.
Static PIE can work on all architectures which support PIE, provided:
1. Target must support accessing of local functions without dynamic
relocations, which is needed in start.S to call __libc_start_main with
function addresses of __libc_csu_init, __libc_csu_fini and main. All
functions in static PIE are local functions. If PIE start.S can't reach
main () defined in a shared object, the code sequence:
pass address of local_main to __libc_start_main
...
local_main:
tail call to main via PLT
can be used.
2. start.S is updated to check PIC instead SHARED for PIC code path and
avoid dynamic relocation, when PIC is defined and SHARED isn't defined,
to support static PIE.
3. All assembly codes are updated check PIC instead SHARED for PIC code
path to avoid dynamic relocations in read-only sections.
4. All assembly codes are updated check SHARED instead PIC for static
symbol name.
5. elf_machine_load_address in dl-machine.h are updated to support static
PIE.
6. __brk works without TLS nor dynamic relocations in read-only section
so that it can be used by __libc_setup_tls to initializes TLS in static
PIE.
NB: When glibc is built with GCC defaulted to PIE, libc.a is compiled
with -fPIE, regardless if --enable-static-pie is used to configure glibc.
When glibc is configured with --enable-static-pie, libc.a is compiled
with -fPIE, regardless whether GCC defaults to PIE or not. The same
libc.a can be used to build both static executable and static PIE.
There is no need for separate PIE copy of libc.a.
On x86-64, the normal static sln:
text data bss dec hex filename
625425 8284 5456 639165 9c0bd elf/sln
the static PIE sln:
text data bss dec hex filename
657626 20636 5392 683654 a6e86 elf/sln
The code size is increased by 5% and the binary size is increased by 7%.
Linker requirements to build glibc with --enable-static-pie:
1. Linker supports --no-dynamic-linker to remove PT_INTERP segment from
static PIE.
2. Linker can create working static PIE. The x86-64 linker needs the
fix for
Using GCC 7 and binutils master branch, build-many-glibcs.py with
--enable-static-pie with all patches for static PIE applied have the
following build successes:
Joseph Myers [Fri, 15 Dec 2017 22:37:17 +0000 (22:37 +0000)]
Fix testing with read-only source directory.
Three tests fail with a read-only source directory because they try to
write into the source directory. None of these write into it in a way
that should actually be problematic for concurrent builds sharing the
same writable source directory, but avoiding any writing into the
source directory (from testing, or from building glibc if the source
timestamps are properly ordered) is still a good idea, as being able
to build with read-only sources helps make sure there isn't anything
that could cause problems for concurrent builds.
This patch changes the tests in question to use either /tmp or the
build directory to write their temporary files (or to test O_TMPFILE,
as applicable).
Tested for x86_64.
* io/Makefile (tst-open-tmpfile-ARGS): New variable.
* posix/tst-mmap-offset.c (fname): Use /tmp.
* stdlib/tst-setcontext3.sh (tempfile): Use ${objpfx}.
The conventional configure triplet for ARM GNU/Linux with hard-float
ABI is arm-*-linux-gnueabihf. However, GCC does not automatically use
the hard-float ABI based on that triplet. This patch fixes
build-many-glibcs.py to pass --with-float=hard so that the
arm-linux-gnueabihf configurations actually build with the intended
ABI.
Tested building the affected configurations with build-many-glibcs.py.
* scripts/build-many-glibcs.py (Context.add_all_configs): Use
--with-float=hard for arm-linux-gnueabihf configurations.
Joseph Myers [Fri, 15 Dec 2017 14:27:20 +0000 (14:27 +0000)]
Do not build .mo files in source directory (bug 14121).
Building and installing glibc leaves .mo files (compiled message
translations) behind in the source directory. Building those files in
the source directory may once have made sense, if they were included
in release tarballs; now that release tarballs are just the output of
"git archive", building any non-checked-in files in the source
directory does not make sense. This patch changes these files to be
built in the build directory instead. The realclean rule is changed
to simply adding the .mo files to the "generated" variable, since once
the files are in the build directory it make no sense to exclude them
from normal cleanup rules.
This is necessary but not sufficient to avoid build-many-glibcs.py
needing to copy the glibc source directory. Its list of files to
touch on checkout to avoid subsequent regeneration (configure,
preconfigure, *-kw.h) is incomplete (missing at least INSTALL,
sysdeps/gnu/errlist.c, posix/testcases.h, posix/ptestcases.h,
locale/C-translit.h, (only regenerated for Hurd builds)
sysdeps/mach/hurd/bits/errno.h, (only regenerated for 32-bit SPARC
builds) sysdeps/sparc/sparc32/{sdiv,udiv,rem,urem}.S) - the existing
list may be sufficient to prevent regeneration that actually changes
the file contents depending on the installed build tools, but not to
ensure there is no regeneration at all - and there might well be other
things writing into the source directory in the course of building and
testing (so needing appropriate testing with read-only source
directories with different timestamp orderings to find and eliminate
all such cases).
Tested for x86_64.
[BZ #14121]
* po/Makefile (generated): Add $(ALL_LINGUAS:%=%.mo).
(%.mo): Change to $(objpfx)%.mo. Use $(make-target-directory).
($(mo-installed)): Use $(objpfx)%.mo.
(realclean): Remove rule.
Joseph Myers [Fri, 15 Dec 2017 14:20:52 +0000 (14:20 +0000)]
Remove old po/ code for copying .po files from shared directory.
po/Makefile has both old code for copying .po files from a shared
directory /com/share/ftp/gnu/po/maint/glibc (presumably once present
on some GNU server), and new code for downloading them from the
Translation Project. This patch removes the old code, leading only
the new code.
Tested for x86_64.
* po/Makefile (linguas): Remove rule and dependencies.
(linguas.mo): Likewise.
(.PHONY): Do not depend on linguas and linguas.mo.
(podir): Remove variable.
(pofiles): Likewise.
[$(pofiles)] (%.po): Remove rule.
Joseph Myers [Fri, 15 Dec 2017 14:06:07 +0000 (14:06 +0000)]
Update SPARC divrem generation to match output.
While working on another patch I noticed that (a)
sysdeps/sparc/sparc32/Makefile is the only place with special
realclean settings, apart from po/, and (b) the generated files with a
rule in that Makefile to generate them (using m4) had been patched
manually so no longer corresponded with the output of the generator -
so if the timestamps were wrong, a build would result in changes to
the files in the source directory. (They also didn't correspond
because of changes in make 3.81 to how make handles whitespace at the
start of a line in a sequence of backslash-newline continuation lines
within a recipe.)
This patch fixes the generation and output files to match. The issue
with make and whitespace at start of continuation lines is fixed by
putting those newlines outside of arguments to echo, so the number of
spaces in the argument matches the number in the existing generated
files. Then divrem.m4 is changed to avoid generating whitespace-only
lines (my fix to the outputs from 2013; this fix to the generator also
changes the indentation of a label in the output files) and to
generate an alias in udiv.S (Adhemerval's fix from March).
build-many-glibcs.py doesn't have a non-v9 SPARC configuration,
because non-v9 32-bit SPARC didn't build when I set up
build-many-glibcs.py but sparcv9 did build. Whether or not non-v9
32-bit SPARC now builds (or indeed whether or not support for it is
obsolete), I tested by removing the sparcv8 and sparcv9 versions of
the four files in question, so forcing the generated files to be built
and used, and the compilation parts of the glibc testsuite passed.
* sysdeps/sparc/sparc32/Makefile
($(divrem:%=$(sysdep_dir)/sparc/sparc32/%.S)): Do not include
start-of-line whitespace in argument of echo.
* sysdeps/sparc/sparc32/divrem.m4: Avoid generating lines starting
with whitespace. Generate __wrap_.udiv alias.
* sysdeps/sparc/sparc32/rem.S: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/sparc/sparc32/sdiv.S: Likewise.
* sysdeps/sparc/sparc32/udiv.S: Likewise.
* sysdeps/sparc/sparc32/urem.S: Likewise.
SXID_ERASE is implicit for all environment variables. Avoid
mentioning it in the tunables list; that way only the ones with
SXID_IGNORE remain prominent and mentioned. TODO: we need to audit
each of those cases and drop them to SXID_ERASE wherever possible.
Support added to identify Sparc M7/T7/S7/M8/T8 processor capability.
Performance tests run on Sparc S7 using new code and old niagara4 code.
Optimizations for memset also apply to bzero as they share code.
For memset/bzero, performance comparison with niagara4 code:
For memset nonzero data,
256-1023 bytes - 60-90% gain (in cache); 5% gain (out of cache)
1K+ bytes - 80-260% gain (in cache); 40-80% gain (out of cache)
For memset zero data (and bzero),
256-1023 bytes - 80-120% gain (in cache), 0% gain (out of cache)
1024+ bytes - 2-4x gain (in cache), 10-35% gain (out of cache)
Tested in sparcv9-*-* and sparc64-*-* targets in both multi and
non-multi arch configurations.
Patrick McGehearty <patrick.mcgehearty@oracle.com>
Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Support added to identify Sparc M7/T7/S7/M8/T8 processor capability.
Performance tests run on Sparc S7 using new code and old niagara4 code.
Optimizations for memcpy also apply to mempcpy and memmove
where they share code. Optimizations for memset also apply
to bzero as they share code.
For memcpy/mempcpy/memmove, performance comparison with niagara4 code:
Long word aligned data
0-127 bytes - minimal changes
128-1023 bytes - 7-30% gain
1024+ bytes - 1-7% gain (in cache); 30-100% gain (out of cache)
Word aligned data
0-127 bytes - 50%+ gain
128-1023 bytes - 10-200% gain
1024+ bytes - 0-15% gain (in cache); 5-50% gain (out of cache)
Unaligned data
0-127 bytes - 0-70%+ gain
128-447 bytes - 40-80%+ gain
448-511 bytes - 1-3% loss
512-4096 bytes - 2-3% gain (in cache); 0-20% gain (out of cache)
4096+ bytes - ± 3% (in cache); 20-50% gain (out of cache)
Tested in sparcv9-*-* and sparc64-*-* targets in both multi and
non-multi arch configurations.
Patrick McGehearty <patrick.mcgehearty@oracle.com>
Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Replace the simple byte-wise compare in the misaligned case with a
dword compare with page boundary checks in place. For simplicity I've
chosen a 4K page boundary so that we don't have to query the actual
page size on the system.
This results in up to 3x improvement in performance in the unaligned
case on falkor and about 2.5x improvement on mustang as measured using
bench-strcmp.
* sysdeps/aarch64/strcmp.S (misaligned8): Compare dword at a
time whenever possible.
Carlos O'Donell [Wed, 13 Dec 2017 02:32:42 +0000 (18:32 -0800)]
Fix testing with nss-crypt.
A glibc master build with --enable-nss-crypt using the NSS
crypto libraries fails during make check with the following error:
<command-line>:0:0: error: "USE_CRYPT" redefined [-Werror]
<command-line>:0:0: note: this is the location of the previous
definition
This is caused by commit 36975e8e7ea227f7006abdc722ecfefe2079429b
by H.J. Lu which replaces all = with +=. The fix is to undefine
USE_CRYPT before defining it to zero.
Committed as an obvious fix. Fixes the build issue on x86_64 with
no regressions.
Signed-off-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Joseph Myers [Tue, 12 Dec 2017 23:34:05 +0000 (23:34 +0000)]
Add sysdeps/ieee754/soft-fp.
The default sysdeps/ieee754 fma implementations rely on exceptions and
rounding modes to achieve correct results through internal use of
round-to-odd. Thus, glibc configurations without support for
exceptions and rounding modes instead need to use implementations of
fma based on soft-fp.
At present, this is achieved via having implementation files in
soft-fp/ that are #included by sysdeps files for each glibc
configuration that needs them. In general this means such a
configuration has its own s_fma.c and s_fmaf.c.
TS 18661-1 adds functions that do an operation (+ - * / sqrt fma) on
arguments wider than the return type, with a single rounding of the
infinite-precision result to that return type. These are also
naturally implemented using round-to-odd on platforms with hardware
support for rounding modes and exceptions but lacking hardware support
for these narrowing operations themselves. (Platforms that have
direct hardware support for such narrowing operations include at least
ia64, and Power ISA 2.07 or later, which I think means POWER8 or
later.)
So adding the remaining TS 18661-1 functions would mean at least six
narrowing function implementations (fadd fsub fmul fdiv ffma fsqrt),
with aliases for other types and further implementations in some
configurations, that need to be overridden for configurations lacking
hardware exceptions and rounding modes. Requiring all such
configurations (currently seven of them) to have their own source
files for all those functions seems undesirable.
Thus, this patch adds a directory sysdeps/ieee754/soft-fp to contain
libm function implementations based on soft-fp. This directory is
then used via Implies from all the configurations that need it, so no
more files need adding to every such configuration when adding more
functions with soft-fp implementations. A configuration can still
selectively #include a particular file from this directory if desired;
thus, the MIPS #include of the fmal implementation is retained, since
that's appropriate even for hard float (because long double is always
implementated in software for MIPS64, so the soft-fp implementation of
fmal is better than the ldbl-128 one).
This also provides additional motivation for my recent patch removing
--with-fp / --without-fp: previously there was no need for correct use
of --without-fp for no-FPU ARM or SH3, and now we have autodetection
nofpu/ sysdeps directories can be used by this patch for those
configurations without imposing any new requirements on how glibc is
configured.
(The mips64/*/fpu/s_fma.c files added by this patch are needed to keep
the dbl-64 version of fma for double, rather than the ldbl-128 one,
used in that case.)
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py that installed stripped shared
libraries are unchanged by this patch.
libio: Free backup area when it not required (BZ#22415)
Some libio operations fail to correctly free the backup area (created
by _IO_{w}default_pbackfail on unget{w}c) resulting in either invalid
buffer free operations or memory leaks.
For instance, on the example provided by BZ#22415 a following
fputc after a fseek to rewind the stream issues an invalid free on
the buffer. It is because although _IO_file_overflow correctly
(from fputc) correctly calls _IO_free_backup_area, the
_IO_new_file_seekoff (called by fseek) updates the FILE internal
pointers without first free the backup area (resulting in invalid
values in the internal pointers).
The wide version also shows an issue, but instead of accessing invalid
pointers it leaks the backup memory on fseek/fputwc operation.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
* libio/Makefile (tests): Add tst-bz22415.
(tst-bz22415-ENV): New rule.
(generated): Add tst-bz22415.mtrace and tst-bz22415.check.
(tests-special): Add tst-bz22415-mem.out.
($(objpfx)tst-bz22415-mem.out): New rule.
* libio/fileops.c (_IO_new_file_seekoff): Call _IO_free_backup_area
in case of a successful seek operation.
* libio/wfileops.c (_IO_wfile_seekoff): Likewise.
(_IO_wfile_overflow): Call _IO_free_wbackup_area in case a write
buffer is required.
* libio/tst-bz22415.c: New test.
James Clarke [Tue, 12 Dec 2017 14:17:10 +0000 (12:17 -0200)]
ia64: Add ipc_priv.h header to set __IPC_64 to zero
When running strace, IPC_64 was set in the command, but ia64 is
an architecture where CONFIG_ARCH_WANT_IPC_PARSE_VERSION *isn't* set
in the kernel, so ipc_parse_version just returns IPC_64 without
clearing the IPC_64 bit in the command.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ia64/ipc_priv.h: New file defining
__IPC_64 to 0 to avoid IPC_64 being set.
Joseph Myers [Tue, 12 Dec 2017 13:56:47 +0000 (13:56 +0000)]
Remove --with-fp / --without-fp.
There is a configure option --without-fp that specifies that nofpu
sysdeps directories should be used instead of fpu directories.
For most glibc configurations, this option is of no use: either there
is no valid nofpu variant of that configuration, or there are no fpu
or nofpu sysdeps directories for that processor and so the option does
nothing. For a few configurations, if you are using a soft-float
compiler this option is required, and failing to use it generally
results in compilation errors from inline asm using unavailable
floating-point instructions.
We're moving away from --with-cpu to configuring glibc based on how
the compiler generates code, and it is natural to do so for
--without-fp as well; in most cases the soft-float and hard-float ABIs
are incompatible so you have no hope of building a working glibc with
an inappropriately configured compiler or libgcc.
This patch eliminates --without-fp, replacing it entirely by automatic
configuration based on the compiler. Configurations for which this is
relevant (coldfire / mips / powerpc32 / sh) define a variable
with_fp_cond in their preconfigure fragments (under the same
conditions under which those fragments do anything); this is a
preprocessor conditional which the toplevel configure script then uses
in a test to determine which sysdeps directories to use.
The config.make with-fp variable remains. It's used only by powerpc
(sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/Makefile) to add -mhard-float to various
flags variables. For powerpc, -mcpu= options can imply use of
soft-float. That could be an issue if you want to build for
e.g. 476fp, but are using --with-cpu=476 because there isn't a 476fp
sysdeps directory. If in future we eliminate --with-cpu and replace
it entirely by testing the compiler, it would be natural at that point
to eliminate that code as well (as the user should then just use a
compiler defaulting to 476fp and the 476 sysdeps directory would be
used automatically).
Tested for x86_64, and tested with build-many-glibcs.py that installed
shared libraries are unchanged by this patch.
* configure.ac (--with-fp): Remove configure option.
(with_fp_cond): New variable.
(libc_cv_with_fp): New configure test. Use this variable instead
of with_fp.
* configure: Regenerated.
* config.make.in (with-fp): Use @libc_cv_with_fp@.
* manual/install.texi (Configuring and compiling): Remove
--without-fp.
* INSTALL: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/m68k/preconfigure (with_fp_cond): Define for ColdFire.
* sysdeps/mips/preconfigure (with_fp_cond): Define.
* sysdeps/powerpc/preconfigure (with_fp_cond): Define for 32-bit.
* sysdeps/sh/preconfigure (with_fp_cond): Define.
* scripts/build-many-glibcs.py (Context.add_all_configs): Do not
use --without-fp to configure glibc.
Paul Clarke [Mon, 11 Dec 2017 19:39:42 +0000 (17:39 -0200)]
New generic cosf
The same logic used in s_cosf.S version for x86 and powerpc
is used to create a generic s_cosf.c, so there is no performance
improvement in x86_64 and powerpc64.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_cosf.c: New implementation.
Stefan Liebler [Mon, 11 Dec 2017 07:47:51 +0000 (08:47 +0100)]
S390: Add CFI rule in _dl_runtime_resolve[_vx] for unwinding.
In _dl_runtime_resolve[_vx], unwinding fails after the new stack frame
is created as there is no CFI rule for r15. This is also observeable in
GDB: Backtrace stopped: previous frame inner to this frame (corrupt stack?)
Therefore this patch is now storing r15 on stack and is using cfi_offset rule.
The stmg/lmg instruction is used to store/load r14 and r15 with one instruction.
On 64bit, the offsets of the fprs have moved to store r15 directly after r14.
On 31bit, the r14/r15 is now stored between the other gprs and fprs as the space
wasn't used.
ChangeLog:
* sysdeps/s390/s390-64/dl-trampoline.h (_dl_runtime_resolve):
Store r15 on stack and add cfi rule.
* sysdeps/s390/s390-32/dl-trampoline.h (_dl_runtime_resolve):
Likewise.
Joseph Myers [Thu, 7 Dec 2017 16:21:00 +0000 (16:21 +0000)]
Fix ctanh (0 + i NaN), ctanh (0 + i Inf) (bug 22568, DR#471).
As per C11 DR#471, ctanh (0 + i NaN) and ctanh (0 + i Inf) should
return 0 + i NaN (with "invalid" exception in the second case but not
the first), not NaN + i NaN. This has corresponding implications for
ctan since its special cases are defined by ctan (z) = -i ctanh (iz).
This patch implements these cases for ctanh and ctan, updating
tests accordingly.
Tested for x86_64.
[BZ #22568]
* math/s_ctan_template.c (M_DECL_FUNC (__ctan)): Set imaginary
part of result to imaginary part of argument if it is zero and the
real part of the argument is not finite.
* math/s_ctanh_template.c (M_DECL_FUNC (__ctanh)): Set real part
of result to real part of argument if it is zero and the imaginary
part of the argument is not finite.
Mike FABIAN [Wed, 6 Dec 2017 13:37:42 +0000 (14:37 +0100)]
lt_LT locale: Base collation on copy "iso14651_t1" [BZ #22524]
[BZ #22524]
* localedata/Makefile: Add lt_LT.UTF-8 to test-input
and to the list of locales to be built for testing.
* localedata/lt_LT.UTF-8.in: New file for testing the collation.
* localedata/locales/lt_LT (LC_COLLATE): Use “copy "iso14651_t1"”
and build the collation rules upon that.
Joseph Myers [Thu, 7 Dec 2017 00:48:31 +0000 (00:48 +0000)]
Add _Float32 function aliases.
This patch concludes filling out TS 18661-3 support for different
types by adding *f32 function aliases of float functions to support
_Float32. As with _Float64 and _Float32x, this is supported for all
glibc configurations. As with the previous such patches there are
some x86 ulps updates because of inline functions present for float
but not for _Float32. The patch also has the usual
bits/floatn-common.h update, symbol versions, ABI baselines updates,
test enablement and documentation.
Tested for x86_64 and x86, and with build-many-glibcs.py, with both
GCC 6 and GCC 7.
Joseph Myers [Wed, 6 Dec 2017 23:06:12 +0000 (23:06 +0000)]
Support defining strtof32, wcstof32 aliases.
This patch adds support for defining strtof32, wcstof32, strtof32_l
and wcstof32_l functions as aliases of the corresponding float
functions when _Float32 support is enabled.
Tested for x86_64; also tested with build-many-glibcs.py in
conjunction with other _Float32 changes.
* stdlib/strtof.c: Include <bits/floatn.h>
[__HAVE_FLOAT32 && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT32] (strtof32): Define
and later undefine as macro. Define as weak alias if
[!USE_WIDE_CHAR].
[__HAVE_FLOAT32 && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT32] (wcstof32): Define
and later undefine as macro. Define as weak alias if
[USE_WIDE_CHAR].
* stdlib/strtof_l.c: Include <bits/floatn.h>
[__HAVE_FLOAT32 && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT32] (strtof32_l): Define
and later undefine as macro. Define as weak alias if
[!USE_WIDE_CHAR].
[__HAVE_FLOAT32 && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT32] (wcstof32_l): Define
and later undefine as macro. Define as weak alias if
[USE_WIDE_CHAR].
Joseph Myers [Wed, 6 Dec 2017 22:44:56 +0000 (22:44 +0000)]
Support defining strfromf32 alias.
This patch adds support for defining strfromf32 as an alias of
strfromf when _Float32 support is enabled.
Tested for x86_64; also tested with build-many-glibcs.py in
conjunction with other _Float32 changes.
* stdlib/strfromf.c: Include <bits/floatn.h>.
[__HAVE_FLOAT32 && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT32] (strfromf32): Define
and later undefine as macro and define as weak alias.
Joseph Myers [Wed, 6 Dec 2017 22:17:11 +0000 (22:17 +0000)]
Add header for _Float32 testing.
This patch adds the header required for testing _Float32 function
aliases, using float ulps. The corresponding makefile support will be
included in the main patch that enables those aliases.
In conjunction with other _Float32 changes, tested for x86_64 and with
build-many-glibcs.py.
Joseph Myers [Wed, 6 Dec 2017 22:14:09 +0000 (22:14 +0000)]
Support _Float32 in libm_alias_float.
This patch makes the libm_alias_float macro support creating _Float32
aliases, in preparation for enabling glibc support for that type.
Tested for x86_64; also tested with build-many-glibcs.py in
conjunction with other _Float32 changes.
* sysdeps/generic/libm-alias-float.h: Include <bits/floatn.h>.
[__HAVE_FLOAT32 && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT32]
(libm_alias_float_other_r): Create f32 alias.
(libm_alias_float_r): Use semicolon before call to
libm_alias_float_other_r.
Joseph Myers [Wed, 6 Dec 2017 21:50:32 +0000 (21:50 +0000)]
Correct some ia64 libm_alias_float_other calls.
This patch corrects three ia64 libm_alias_float_other calls so they
generate the intended _Float32 aliases when such aliases are enabled.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py for ia64-linux-gnu (that installed
stripped shared libraries are unchanged when applied to current
sources, and that this enables compilation tests to pass when used in
conjunction with other _Float32 patches).
* sysdeps/ia64/fpu/e_exp2f.S (__exp2f): Use exp2 not __exp2 as
second argument to libm_alias_float_other.
* sysdeps/ia64/fpu/e_log2f.S (__log2f): Use log2 not __log2 as
second argument to libm_alias_float_other.
* sysdeps/ia64/fpu/e_powf.S (__powf): Use pow not __pow as second
argument to libm_alias_float_other.
Joseph Myers [Wed, 6 Dec 2017 21:35:20 +0000 (21:35 +0000)]
Make cacosh (0 + iNaN) return NaN + i pi/2 (bug 22561, DR#471).
As per C11 DR#471 (adjusted resolution accepted for C17), cacosh (0 +
iNaN) should return NaN +/- i pi/2, not NaN + iNaN.
This patch fixes the code accordingly. The test has hardcoded the
result with positive sign of the imaginary part (with an associated
comment), since the unspecified sign for a result other than 0 or
infinity isn't currently supported by the test infrastructure.
Tested for x86_64.
[BZ #22561]
* math/s_cacosh_template.c (M_DECL_FUNC (__cacosh)): Use pi/2 for
real part of result for argument 0 + i * NaN.
* math/libm-test-cacosh.inc (cacosh_test_data): Update expected
results for tests of 0 + i * NaN.
Joseph Myers [Wed, 6 Dec 2017 15:19:06 +0000 (15:19 +0000)]
Don't make local variables static in ldbl-96 j1l.
The ldbl-96 implementation of j1l has some function-local variables
that are declared static for no apparent reason (this dates back to
the first addition of that file).
Any vaguely recent compiler, probably including any that are supported
for building glibc, optimizes away the "static" here, as the values of
the variables on entry to the function are dead. So there is not
actually a user-visible bug here at present (but with any compilers
that didn't optimize away the static at all, possibly building with
less or no optimization, so that the function stored intermediate
values to and then loaded them from the variables, there would have
been a thread-safety issue). But the "static" clearly doesn't belong
there and might potentially make things unsafe were compilation
without optimization to be supported in future, so this patch removes
it.
Tested for x86_64.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-96/e_j1l.c (qone): Don't make local
variables static.
Joseph Myers [Wed, 6 Dec 2017 13:42:58 +0000 (13:42 +0000)]
Make some ldbl-128, ldbl-128ibm arrays const.
I noticed that an x86_64 build of libm unexpectedly contained more
non-constant data than an older version (before _Float128 support)
did. The problem is non-const arrays in the ldbl-128 j0l and j1l
implementations; this patch makes those arrays, and the corresponding
ldbl-128ibm ones, const.
Tested for x86_64, and tested compilation for powerpc with
build-many-glibcs.py.
Mike FABIAN [Wed, 6 Dec 2017 09:02:48 +0000 (10:02 +0100)]
hsb_DE locale: Base collation on copy "iso14651_t1" [BZ #22515]
[BZ #22515]
* localedata/Makefile: Add hsb_DE.UTF-8 to test-input
and to the list of locales to be built for testing.
* localedata/hsb_DE.UTF-8.in: New file for testing the collation.
* localedata/locales/hsb_DE (LC_COLLATE): Use “copy "iso14651_t1"”
and build the collation rules upon that.
Joseph Myers [Wed, 6 Dec 2017 00:58:03 +0000 (00:58 +0000)]
Add _Float64, _Float32x function aliases.
This patch continues filling out TS 18661-3 support by adding *f64 and
*f32x function aliases, supporting _Float64 and _Float32x, as aliases
for double functions. These types are supported for all glibc
configurations. The API corresponds exactly to that for _Float128 and
_Float64x. _Float32 aliases to float functions remain to be added in
subsequent patches to complete this process (then there are a few
miscellaneous functions in TS 18661-3 to implement that aren't simply
versions of existing functions for new types).
The patch enables the feature in bits/floatn-common.h, adds symbol
versions and documentation with updates to ABI baselines, and arranges
for the libm functions for the new types to be tested. As with the
_Float64x changes there are some x86 ulps updates because of header
inlines not used for the new types (and one other change to the
non-multiarch libm-test-ulps, which I suppose comes from using a
different compiler version / configuration from when it was last
regenerated).
Tested for x86_64 and x86, and with build-many-glibcs.py, with both
GCC 6 and GCC 7.
Joseph Myers [Tue, 5 Dec 2017 21:52:15 +0000 (21:52 +0000)]
Use long double not double for _Float64 with old GCC if values the same.
If double, long double and _Float64 all have the same set of values,
TS 18661-3 requires the usual arithmetic conversions on long double
and _Float64 to produce _Float64. For this to be the case when
building with a compiler without a distinct _Float64 type, _Float64
must be a typedef for long double, not for double. (_Float32x,
however, must be double in such a case, not long double, because the
usual arithmetic conversions on _Float32x and double must produce
double.)
This patch adjusts the fallback definition of _Float64 and associated
macros accordingly in that case, to fix the build of test-tgmath3 with
GCC 6 for such a configuration. Tested in conjunction with _Float64
changes with build-many-glibcs.py for arm-linux-gnueabi, to make sure
the issue with test-tgmath3 is fixed. Also tested for x86_64.
* bits/floatn-common.h: Include <bits/long-double.h>.
[__HAVE_FLOAT64 && (!__GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0) || defined __cplusplus)
&& __NO_LONG_DOUBLE_MATH] (__f64): Use suffix 'l'.
[__HAVE_FLOAT64 && (!__GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0) || defined __cplusplus)
&& __NO_LONG_DOUBLE_MATH] (__CFLOAT64): Use _Complex long double.
[__HAVE_FLOAT64 && (!__GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0) || defined __cplusplus)
&& __NO_LONG_DOUBLE_MATH] (_Float64): Use long double.
[__HAVE_FLOAT64 && !__GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0) && __NO_LONG_DOUBLE_MATH]
(__builtin_huge_valf64): Use __builtin_huge_vall.
[__HAVE_FLOAT64 && !__GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0) && __NO_LONG_DOUBLE_MATH]
(__builtin_inff64): Use __builtin_infl.
[__HAVE_FLOAT64 && !__GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0) && __NO_LONG_DOUBLE_MATH]
(__builtin_nanf64): Use __builtin_nanl.
[__HAVE_FLOAT64 && !__GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0) && __NO_LONG_DOUBLE_MATH]
(__builtin_nansf64): Use __builtin_nansl.
Rogerio Alves [Tue, 5 Dec 2017 16:24:14 +0000 (14:24 -0200)]
Add elision tunables
This patch adds several new tunables to control the behavior of
elision on supported platforms[1]. Since elision now depends
on tunables, we should always *compile* with elision enabled,
and leave the code disabled, but available for runtime
selection. This gives us *much* better compile-time testing of
the existing code to avoid bit-rot[2].
Tested on ppc, ppc64, ppc64le, s390x and x86_64.
[1] This part of the patch was initially proposed by
Paul Murphy but was "staled" because the framework have changed
since the patch was originally proposed:
https://patchwork.sourceware.org/patch/10342/
[2] This part of the patch was inititally proposed as a RFC by
Carlos O'Donnell. Make sense to me integrate this on the patch:
Joseph Myers [Tue, 5 Dec 2017 18:31:53 +0000 (18:31 +0000)]
Support defining strtof64, strtof32x, wcstof64, wcstof32x aliases.
This patch adds support for defining strtof64, strtof32x, wcstof64,
wcstof32x and the corresponding _l functions as aliases of the
corresponding double functions when _Float64 and _Float32x support is
enabled.
Tested for x86_64; also tested with build-many-glibcs.py in
conjunction with other _Float64 / _Float32x changes.
* stdlib/strtod.c: Include <bits/floatn.h>.
(BUILD_DOUBLE): New macro.
[BUILD_DOUBLE && __HAVE_FLOAT64 && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT64]
(strtof64): Define and later undefine as macro. Define as weak
alias if [!USE_WIDE_CHAR].
[BUILD_DOUBLE && __HAVE_FLOAT64 && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT64]
(wcstof64): Define and later undefine as macro. Define as weak
alias if [USE_WIDE_CHAR].
[BUILD_DOUBLE && __HAVE_FLOAT32X && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT32X]
(strtof32x): Define and later undefine as macro. Define as weak
alias if [!USE_WIDE_CHAR].
[BUILD_DOUBLE && __HAVE_FLOAT32X && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT32X]
(wcstof32x): Define and later undefine as macro. Define as weak
alias if [USE_WIDE_CHAR].
* stdlib/strtod_l.c: Include <bits/floatn.h>.
(BUILD_DOUBLE): New macro.
[BUILD_DOUBLE && __HAVE_FLOAT64 && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT64]
(strtof64_l): Define and later undefine as macro. Define as weak
alias if [!USE_WIDE_CHAR].
[BUILD_DOUBLE && __HAVE_FLOAT64 && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT64]
(wcstof64_l): Define and later undefine as macro. Define as weak
alias if [USE_WIDE_CHAR].
[BUILD_DOUBLE && __HAVE_FLOAT32X && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT32X]
(strtof32x_l): Define and later undefine as macro. Define as weak
alias if [!USE_WIDE_CHAR].
[BUILD_DOUBLE && __HAVE_FLOAT32X && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT32X]
(wcstof32x_l): Define and later undefine as macro. Define as weak
alias if [USE_WIDE_CHAR].
This patch avoid an extra floating point to integer conversion in
reduced internal function for generic sinf by defining the sign as
double instead of integers.
There is no much difference on Haswell with GCC 7.2.1:
Joseph Myers [Tue, 5 Dec 2017 18:01:25 +0000 (18:01 +0000)]
Support defining strfromf64, strfromf32x aliases.
This patch adds support for defining strfromf64 and strfromf32x
aliases of strfromd when the corresponding types are enabled.
Tested for x86_64; also tested with build-many-glibcs.py in
conjunction with other _Float64 / _Float32x changes.
* stdlib/strfromd.c: Include <bits/floatn.h>.
[__HAVE_FLOAT64 && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT64] (strfromf64): Define
and later undefine as macro and define as weak alias.
[__HAVE_FLOAT32X && !__HAVE_DISTINCT_FLOAT32X] (strfromf32x):
Likewise.
Joseph Myers [Tue, 5 Dec 2017 17:34:25 +0000 (17:34 +0000)]
Add headers for _Float64, _Float32x testing.
This patch adds the headers required for testing _Float64 and
_Float32x function aliases (using double ulps). The corresponding
makefile support will be included in the patch that actually adds
those aliases; there doesn't seem much point in adding makefile
conditionals for testing something that will be available
unconditionally.
In conjunction with other _Float64 / _Float32x changes, test for
x86_64 and with build-many-glibcs.py.
* math/test-float32x.h: New file.
* math/test-float64.h: Likewise.
Joseph Myers [Tue, 5 Dec 2017 16:59:34 +0000 (16:59 +0000)]
Support _Float64, _Float32x in libm_alias_double.
This patch makes the libm_alias_double macros support creating
_Float64 and _Float32x aliases, in preparation for enabling glibc
support for those types.
Tested for x86_64; also tested with build-many-glibcs.py in
conjunction with other _Float64 / _Float32x changes.
* sysdeps/generic/libm-alias-double.h: Include <bits/floatn.h>.
(libm_alias_double_other_r_f64): New macro.
(libm_alias_double_other_r_f32x): Likewise.
(libm_alias_double_other_r): Use libm_alias_double_other_r_f64 and
libm_alias_double_other_r_f32x.
(libm_alias_double_r): Use semicolon before call to
libm_alias_double_other_r.
* sysdeps/ieee754/ldbl-opt/libm-alias-double.h: Include
<bits/floatn.h>.
(libm_alias_double_other_r_f64): New macro.
(libm_alias_double_other_r_f32x): Likewise.
(libm_alias_double_other_r): Use libm_alias_double_other_r_f64 and
libm_alias_double_other_r_f32x.
H.J. Lu [Tue, 5 Dec 2017 16:32:19 +0000 (08:32 -0800)]
s_sinf.c: Replace floor with simple casts
Since s_sinf.c either assigns the return value of floor to integer or
passes double converted from integer to floor, this patch replaces
floor with simple casts.
Also since long == int for 32-bit targets, we can use long instead of
int to avoid 64-bit integer for 64-bit targets.
On Skylake, bench-sinf reports performance improvement:
Before After Improvement
max 130.566 129.564 30%
min 7.704 7.706 0%
mean 21.8188 19.1363 30%
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_sinf.c (reduced): Replace long with
int.
(SINF_FUNC): Likewise. Replace floor with simple casts.
Mike FABIAN [Tue, 5 Dec 2017 14:33:37 +0000 (15:33 +0100)]
et_EE locale: Base collation on iso14651_t1 [BZ #22517]
[BZ #22517]
* localedata/Makefile: Add et_EE.UTF-8 to test-input
and to the list of locales to be built for testing.
* localedata/et_EE.UTF-8.in: New file for testing the collation.
* localedata/locales/et_EE (LC_COLLATE): Use “copy "iso14651_t1"”
and build the collation rules upon that.
Chris Metcalf [Tue, 5 Dec 2017 15:24:56 +0000 (10:24 -0500)]
tilegx: work around vector insn bug in gcc
Avoid an issue in gcc where some of the vector (aka SIMD) ops will
sometimes end up getting wrongly optimized out. We use these
instructions in many of the string implementations. If/when we
have an upstreamed fix for this problem in gcc we can conditionalize
the use of the extended assembly workaround in glibc.
Florian Weimer [Tue, 5 Dec 2017 14:20:30 +0000 (15:20 +0100)]
Linux: Implement interfaces for memory protection keys
This adds system call wrappers for pkey_alloc, pkey_free, pkey_mprotect,
and x86-64 implementations of pkey_get and pkey_set, which abstract over
the PKRU CPU register and hide the actual number of memory protection
keys supported by the CPU. pkey_mprotect with a -1 key is implemented
using mprotect, so it will work even if the kernel does not support the
pkey_mprotect system call.
The system call wrapers use unsigned int instead of unsigned long for
parameters, so that no special treatment for x32 is needed. The flags
argument is currently unused, and the access rights bit mask is limited
to two bits by the current PKRU register layout anyway.
Joseph Myers [Tue, 5 Dec 2017 00:26:26 +0000 (00:26 +0000)]
Use libm_alias_float for powerpc.
Continuing the preparation for additional _FloatN / _FloatNx function
aliases, this patch makes powerpc libm function implementations use
libm_alias_float to define function aliases.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py that installed stripped shared
libraries are unchanged for all its hard-float powerpc configurations.
* sysdeps/powerpc/fpu/s_cosf.c: Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(cosf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/fpu/s_fabs.S: Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(fabsf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/fpu/s_fmaf.S: Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(fmaf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/fpu/s_rintf.c: Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(rintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/fpu/s_sinf.c: Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(sinf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/power5+/fpu/s_modff.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(modff): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/power7/fpu/s_logbf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(logbf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/fpu/s_ceilf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(ceilf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/fpu/s_copysign.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(copysignf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/fpu/s_floorf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(floorf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/fpu/s_llrintf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llrintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/fpu/s_llroundf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/fpu/s_lrint.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(lrintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/fpu/s_lround.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(lroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/fpu/s_nearbyintf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(nearbyintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/fpu/s_rintf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(rintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/fpu/s_roundf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(roundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/fpu/s_truncf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(truncf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/multiarch/s_ceilf.c:
Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(ceilf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/multiarch/s_copysignf.c:
Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(copysignf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/multiarch/s_floorf.c:
Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(floorf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/multiarch/s_llrintf.c:
Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(llrintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/multiarch/s_llroundf.c:
Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(llroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/multiarch/s_logbf.c:
Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(logbf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/multiarch/s_lrintf.c:
Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(lrintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/multiarch/s_lroundf.c:
Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(lroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/multiarch/s_modff.c:
Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(modff): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/multiarch/s_roundf.c:
Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(roundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/multiarch/s_truncf.c:
Include <libm-alias-float.h>.
(truncf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/s_llrintf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llrintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/fpu/s_llround.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power5+/fpu/s_ceilf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(ceilf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power5+/fpu/s_floorf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(floorf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power5+/fpu/s_llround.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power5+/fpu/s_lround.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(lroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power5+/fpu/s_roundf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(roundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power5+/fpu/s_truncf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(truncf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power6/fpu/s_copysign.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(copysignf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power6/fpu/s_llrintf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llrintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power6/fpu/s_llround.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power6x/fpu/s_lrint.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(lrintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power6x/fpu/s_lround.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(lroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/multiarch/s_ceilf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(ceilf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/multiarch/s_copysignf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(copysignf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/multiarch/s_cosf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(cosf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/multiarch/s_floorf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(floorf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/multiarch/s_llrintf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llrintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/multiarch/s_llroundf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/multiarch/s_logbf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(logbf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/multiarch/s_modff.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(modff): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/multiarch/s_roundf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(roundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/multiarch/s_sinf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(sinf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/multiarch/s_truncf.c: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(truncf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/s_ceilf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(ceilf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/s_copysign.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(copysignf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/s_floorf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(floorf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/s_llrint.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llrintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/s_llroundf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/s_nearbyintf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(nearbyintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/s_rintf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(rintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/s_roundf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(roundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/fpu/s_truncf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(truncf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power5+/fpu/s_ceilf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(ceilf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power5+/fpu/s_floorf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(floorf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power5+/fpu/s_llround.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power5+/fpu/s_roundf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(roundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power5+/fpu/s_truncf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(truncf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power6/fpu/s_copysign.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(copysignf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power6x/fpu/s_llrint.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llrintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power6x/fpu/s_llround.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power8/fpu/s_cosf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(cosf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power8/fpu/s_llrint.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llrintf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power8/fpu/s_llround.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(llroundf): Define using libm_alias_float.
* sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power8/fpu/s_sinf.S: Include
<libm-alias-float.h>.
(sinf): Define using libm_alias_float.
Mike FABIAN [Mon, 4 Dec 2017 16:46:28 +0000 (17:46 +0100)]
tr_TR locale: Base collation on iso14651_t1 [BZ #22527]
[BZ #22527]
* localedata/locales/tr_TR (LC_COLLATE): Base collation rules
on iso14651_t1. A test file localedata/tr_TR.UTF-8.in is already
available, this rewrite of the collation rules does reproduce
the test file in the same order.
Mike FABIAN [Mon, 4 Dec 2017 12:10:29 +0000 (13:10 +0100)]
hr_HR locale: Don’t use single code points for the digraphs in LC_TIME
[BZ #10580]
* localedata/locales/hr_HR (LC_TIME): Use two letters for the
digraphs in the month and day names. Using single code points for
digraphs is deprecated. While there are dedicated Unicode
codepoints, for the digraphs, these are included for backwards
compatibility and modern texts use a sequence of Basic Latin
characters. See: https://www.unicode.org/faq/ligature_digraph.html
This makes the month and day names agree exactly with CLDR now,
CLDR does not use the single code points for the digraphs either.
Joseph Myers [Mon, 4 Dec 2017 16:58:08 +0000 (16:58 +0000)]
Use __floor not floor in sinf.
The new sinf implementation introduced localplt failures for all
platforms where the compiler did not inline the calls to floor
(converted to trunc by machine-independent optimizations). This patch
changes the calls to use __floor as normal in libm.
We can't use the public function names floor / floorf / floorl /
floorf128 in libm code in the absence of appropriate asms to redirect
floor/trunc calls, if not inlined, to use the internal names instead
(while avoiding breaking code building the floor functions themselves)
- while having such asms and then calling the public functions
unconditionally would be desirable for optimization (few architectures
have __floor inlines in math_private.h, and once the built-in function
is used you don't need them), using __floor is the minimum safe fix
for the present test regressions.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py that this fixes the localplt test
failure for arm-linux-gnueabi.
* sysdeps/ieee754/flt-32/s_sinf.c (SINF_FUNC): Use __floor instead
of floor.
aarch64: Avoid hidden symbols for memcpy/memmove into static binaries
The __GI_* symbol aliases for __memcpy_generic are unnecessary since
they're never used. Add them only for libc.so to avoid PLT. Maybe
some time in future we need to evaluate the relative cost of PLT vs
gains from multiarch memcpy implementations and take a call on whether
to drop this completely.
* sysdeps/aarch64/multiarch/memcpy_generic.S (__GI_memcpy):
Define only for libc.so.
Stefan Liebler [Mon, 4 Dec 2017 15:40:13 +0000 (16:40 +0100)]
S390: Fix backtrace in vdso functions.
On s390, GDB fails to show the complete backtrace from within vdso functions.
The macro INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_CALL saves the return address in r14 to r10
before branching to the vdso function. The branch-instruction updates r14
in order to let the vdso function return. Then the original address in r14 is
restored from r10. Unfortunately, there are no cfi-rules and GDB fails.
Furthermore the call of the vdso function does not comply with the s390 ABI
as no stack-frame for the vdso-function is generated.
This patch removes the s390 specific macro INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_CALL
and the common implementation in sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sysdep-vdso.h is used.
Then the vdso function is called via function-pointer and GCC generates a
new stack-frame and emits all needed cfi-rules.
The defines CLOBBER_[0-6] are removed as they were only used in macro
INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_CALL.
The macro INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_NO_SYSCALL_FALLBACK is not used on s390.
The only user is power. Thus it is removed from s390 sysdep.h.