Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Bump autoconf requirement to 2.71 to allow regenerating configure on
more recent distributions. autoconf 2.71 has been in Fedora since F36
and is the current version in Debian stable (bookworm). It appears to
be current in Gentoo as well.
All sysdeps configure and preconfigure scripts have also been
regenerated; all changes are trivial transformations that do not affect
functionality.
Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
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Add extra check for compiler definitions to ensure that compiler provides
sqrt and fma hw fpu instructions else use software implementation.
As divide/sqrt and FMA hw support from CPU side is optional,
the compiler can be configured by options to generate hw FPU instructions,
but without use of FDDIV, FDSQRT, FSDIV, FSSQRT, FDMADD and FSMADD
instructions. In this case __builtin_sqrt and __builtin_sqrtf provided by
compiler can't be used inside the glibc code, as these builtins are used
in implementations of sqrt() and sqrtf() functions but at the same time
these builtins unfold to sqrt() and sqrtf(). So it is possible to receive
code like that:
0001c4b4 <__ieee754_sqrtf>:
1c4b4: 0001 0000 b 0 ;1c4b4 <__ieee754_sqrtf>
The same is also true for __builtin_fma and __builtin_fmaf.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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While porting ARCv2 to elfutils [1], it was brought up that the
necessary changes to the project's libelf/elf.h must come from
glibc, because they sync it from glibc [2]. Therefore, this patch
is to update ARC entries in elf/elf.h.
The majority of the update is about adding new definitions,
specially for the relocations. However, there is one rename, one
deletion, and one change:
- R_ARC_JUMP_SLOT renamed to R_ARC_JMP_SLOT to match binutils.
- R_ARC_B26 removed because it is unused and deprecated.
- R_ARC_TLS_DTPOFF_S9 changed from 0x4a to the correct value 0x49.
Finally, a specific SHT class for ARC has been added to glibcelf.py.
Else, it would result in a collision:
_register_elf_h(Sht, ranges=True,
File "/src/glibc/scripts/glibcelf.py", line x, in _register_elf_h
raise ValueError('duplicate value {}: {}, {}'.format(
ValueError: duplicate value 1879048193:
SHT_ARC_ATTRIBUTES, SHT_X86_64_UNWIND
[1]
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/elfutils-devel/2022q4/005530.html
[2]
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/elfutils-devel/2022q4/005548.html
No regression has been observed after applying this patch. Below
follows the result:
UNSUPPORTED: crypt/cert
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-audit22
FAIL: elf/tst-audit25a
FAIL: elf/tst-audit25b
FAIL: elf/tst-bz15311
FAIL: elf/tst-bz28937
FAIL: elf/tst-dlmopen4
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-dlopen-self-container
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-dlopen-tlsmodid-container
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-glibc-hwcaps-prepend-cache
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-ldconfig-bad-aux-cache
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-ldconfig-ld_so_conf-update
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-pldd
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-preload-pthread-libc
XPASS: elf/tst-protected1a
XPASS: elf/tst-protected1b
FAIL: elf/tst-tls-allocation-failure-static-patched
FAIL: elf/tst-tls1
FAIL: elf/tst-tls3
FAIL: elf/tst-tlsalign-extern
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-valgrind-smoke
UNSUPPORTED: grp/tst-initgroups1
UNSUPPORTED: grp/tst-initgroups2
UNSUPPORTED: io/tst-getcwd-smallbuff
UNSUPPORTED: locale/tst-localedef-path-norm
FAIL: localedata/sort-test
UNSUPPORTED: localedata/tst-localedef-hardlinks
FAIL: malloc/tst-malloc-thread-fail-malloc-check
FAIL: malloc/tst-malloc_info-malloc-check
UNSUPPORTED: math/test-fesetexcept-traps
UNSUPPORTED: math/test-fexcept-traps
UNSUPPORTED: math/test-nearbyint-except
UNSUPPORTED: math/test-nearbyint-except-2
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-adjtimex
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-clock_adjtime
FAIL: misc/tst-misalign-clone
FAIL: misc/tst-misalign-clone-internal
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-ntp_adjtime
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-pkey
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-rseq
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-rseq-disable
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-syslog
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-ttyname
FAIL: nptl/test-cond-printers
FAIL: nptl/test-condattr-printers
FAIL: nptl/test-mutex-printers
FAIL: nptl/test-mutexattr-printers
FAIL: nptl/test-rwlock-printers
FAIL: nptl/test-rwlockattr-printers
UNSUPPORTED: nptl/tst-pthread-gdb-attach
UNSUPPORTED: nptl/tst-pthread-gdb-attach-static
UNSUPPORTED: nptl/tst-pthread-getattr
UNSUPPORTED: nptl/tst-rseq-nptl
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-compat1
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-db-endgrent
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-db-endpwent
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-files-hosts-long
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-gai-actions
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-test3
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-reload1
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-reload2
UNSUPPORTED: posix/bug-ga2
UNSUPPORTED: posix/bug-ga2-mem
FAIL: posix/globtest
UNSUPPORTED: posix/tst-vfork3
UNSUPPORTED: posix/tst-vfork3-mem
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/mtrace-tst-leaks2
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/tst-leaks2
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/tst-resolv-ai_idn
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/tst-resolv-ai_idn-latin1
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/tst-resolv-res_init
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/tst-resolv-res_init-thread
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-bz28213
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue1
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue10
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue2
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue3
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue4
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue5
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue6
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue8
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue8x
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue9
UNSUPPORTED: stdlib/test-bz22786
UNSUPPORTED: stdlib/tst-system
UNSUPPORTED: string/test-bcopy
UNSUPPORTED: string/test-memmove
UNSUPPORTED: string/tst-memmove-overflow
UNSUPPORTED: string/tst-strerror
UNSUPPORTED: string/tst-strsignal
UNSUPPORTED: time/tst-clock_settime
UNSUPPORTED: time/tst-settimeofday
Summary of test results:
21 FAIL
4184 PASS
69 UNSUPPORTED
16 XFAIL
2 XPASS
Signed-off-by: Shahab Vahedi <shahab@synopsys.com>
Signed-off-by: Vineet Gupta <vineet.gupta@linux.dev>
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This makes it more likely that the compiler can compute the strlen
argument in _startup_fatal at compile time, which is required to
avoid a dependency on strlen this early during process startup.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
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In the future, this will result in a compilation failure if the
macros are unexpectedly undefined (due to header inclusion ordering
or header inclusion missing altogether).
Assembler sources are more difficult to convert. In many cases,
they are hand-optimized for the mangling and no-mangling variants,
which is why they are not converted.
sysdeps/s390/s390-32/__longjmp.c and sysdeps/s390/s390-64/__longjmp.c
are special: These are C sources, but most of the implementation is
in assembler, so the PTR_DEMANGLE macro has to be undefined in some
cases, to match the assembler style.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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This allows us to define a generic no-op version of PTR_MANGLE and
PTR_DEMANGLE. In the future, we can use PTR_MANGLE and PTR_DEMANGLE
unconditionally in C sources, avoiding an unintended loss of hardening
due to missing include files or unlucky header inclusion ordering.
In i386 and x86_64, we can avoid a <tls.h> dependency in the C
code by using the computed constant from <tcb-offsets.h>. <sysdep.h>
no longer includes these definitions, so there is no cyclic dependency
anymore when computing the <tcb-offsets.h> constants.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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Rename atomic_exchange_rel/acq to use atomic_exchange_release/acquire
since these map to the standard C11 atomic builtins.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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The start code can get linked into dynamic linked executables where
LGPL would require shipping the source or linkable binaries when the
executable is distributed.
On some targets the license exception was missing in start.S (which
is compiled into crt1.o and Scrt1.o which may end up linked into PDE
and PIE binaries).
I did not review what other code may end up in executables, just
fixed the start.S license inconsistency across targets.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
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If an executable has copy relocations for extern protected data, that
can only work if the library containing the definition is built with
assumptions (a) the compiler emits GOT-generating relocations (b) the
linker produces R_*_GLOB_DAT instead of R_*_RELATIVE. Otherwise the
library uses its own definition directly and the executable accesses a
stale copy. Note: the GOT relocations defeat the purpose of protected
visibility as an optimization, but allow rtld to make the executable and
library use the same copy when copy relocations are present, but it
turns out this never worked perfectly.
ELF_RTYPE_CLASS_EXTERN_PROTECTED_DATA has strange semantics when both
a.so and b.so define protected var and the executable copy relocates
var: b.so accesses its own copy even with GLOB_DAT. The behavior change
is from commit 62da1e3b00b51383ffa7efc89d8addda0502e107 (x86) and then
copied to nios2 (ae5eae7cfc9c4a8297ff82ec6b794faca1976ecc) and arc
(0e7d930c4c11de896fe807f67fa1eb756c9c1e05).
Without ELF_RTYPE_CLASS_EXTERN_PROTECTED_DATA, b.so accesses the copy
relocated data like a.so.
There is now a warning for copy relocation on protected symbol since
commit 7374c02b683b7110b853a32496a619410364d70b. It's extremely
unlikely anyone relies on the ELF_RTYPE_CLASS_EXTERN_PROTECTED_DATA
behavior, so let's remove it: this removes a check in the symbol lookup
code.
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Since ad43cac44a the generic code already shuffles the argv/envp/auxv
on the stack to remove the ld.so own arguments and thus _dl_skip_args
is always 0. So there is no need to adjust the argc or argv.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
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_dl_skip_args is always 0, so the target specific code that modifies
argv after relro protection is applied is no longer used.
After the patch relro protection is applied to _dl_argv consistently
on all targets.
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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PI_STATIC_AND_HIDDEN indicates whether accesses to internal linkage
variables and hidden visibility variables in a shared object (ld.so)
need dynamic relocations (usually R_*_RELATIVE). PI (position
independent) in the macro name is a misnomer: a code sequence using GOT
is typically position-independent as well, but using dynamic relocations
does not meet the requirement.
Not defining PI_STATIC_AND_HIDDEN is legacy and we expect that all new
ports will define PI_STATIC_AND_HIDDEN. Current ports defining
PI_STATIC_AND_HIDDEN are more than the opposite. Change the configure
default.
No functional change.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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I used these shell commands:
../glibc/scripts/update-copyrights $PWD/../gnulib/build-aux/update-copyright
(cd ../glibc && git commit -am"[this commit message]")
and then ignored the output, which consisted lines saying "FOO: warning:
copyright statement not found" for each of 7061 files FOO.
I then removed trailing white space from math/tgmath.h,
support/tst-support-open-dev-null-range.c, and
sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/strlen-vec.S, to work around the following
obscure pre-commit check failure diagnostics from Savannah. I don't
know why I run into these diagnostics whereas others evidently do not.
remote: *** 912-#endif
remote: *** 913:
remote: *** 914-
remote: *** error: lines with trailing whitespace found
...
remote: *** error: sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/statx_cp.c: trailing lines
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And use machine-sp.h instead. The Linux implementation is based on
already provided CURRENT_STACK_FRAME (used on nptl code) and
STACK_GROWS_UPWARD is replaced with _STACK_GROWS_UP.
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Now that memusage.c uses generic types we can remove them.
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These typedef are used solely on memusage and can be replaced with
generic types.
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Some architectures do not use the auto-generated tcb-offsets.h.
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TLS_INIT_TCB_ALIGN is not actually used. TLS_TCB_ALIGN was likely
introduced to support a configuration where the thread pointer
has not the same alignment as THREAD_SELF. Only ia64 seems to use
that, but for the stack/pointer guard, not for storing tcbhead_t.
Some ports use TLS_TCB_OFFSET and TLS_PRE_TCB_SIZE to shift
the thread pointer, potentially landing in a different residue class
modulo the alignment, but the changes should not impact that.
In general, given that TLS variables have their own alignment
requirements, having different alignment for the (unshifted) thread
pointer and struct pthread would potentially result in dynamic
offsets, leading to more complexity.
hppa had different values before: __alignof__ (tcbhead_t), which
seems to be 4, and __alignof__ (struct pthread), which was 8
(old default) and is now 32. However, it defines THREAD_SELF as:
/* Return the thread descriptor for the current thread. */
# define THREAD_SELF \
({ struct pthread *__self; \
__self = __get_cr27(); \
__self - 1; \
})
So the thread pointer points after struct pthread (hence __self - 1),
and they have to have the same alignment on hppa as well.
Similarly, on ia64, the definitions were different. We have:
# define TLS_PRE_TCB_SIZE \
(sizeof (struct pthread) \
+ (PTHREAD_STRUCT_END_PADDING < 2 * sizeof (uintptr_t) \
? ((2 * sizeof (uintptr_t) + __alignof__ (struct pthread) - 1) \
& ~(__alignof__ (struct pthread) - 1)) \
: 0))
# define THREAD_SELF \
((struct pthread *) ((char *) __thread_self - TLS_PRE_TCB_SIZE))
And TLS_PRE_TCB_SIZE is a multiple of the struct pthread alignment
(confirmed by the new _Static_assert in sysdeps/ia64/libc-tls.c).
On m68k, we have a larger gap between tcbhead_t and struct pthread.
But as far as I can tell, the port is fine with that. The definition
of TCB_OFFSET is sufficient to handle the shifted TCB scenario.
This fixes commit 23c77f60181eb549f11ec2f913b4270af29eee38
("nptl: Increase default TCB alignment to 32").
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
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These are common between most architectures. Only the x86 targets
are outliers.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
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rseq support will use a 32-byte aligned field in struct pthread,
so the whole struct needs to have at least that alignment.
nptl/tst-tls3mod.c uses TCB_ALIGNMENT, therefore include <descr.h>
to obtain the fallback definition.
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
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The 4af6982e4c fix does not fully handle RTLD_BOOTSTRAP usage on
rtld.c due two issues:
1. RTLD_BOOTSTRAP is also used on dl-machine.h on various
architectures and it changes the semantics of various machine
relocation functions.
2. The elf_get_dynamic_info() change was done sideways, previously
to 490e6c62aa get-dynamic-info.h was included by the first
dynamic-link.h include *without* RTLD_BOOTSTRAP being defined.
It means that the code within elf_get_dynamic_info() that uses
RTLD_BOOTSTRAP is in fact unused.
To fix 1. this patch now includes dynamic-link.h only once with
RTLD_BOOTSTRAP defined. The ELF_DYNAMIC_RELOCATE call will now have
the relocation fnctions with the expected semantics for the loader.
And to fix 2. part of 4af6982e4c is reverted (the check argument
elf_get_dynamic_info() is not required) and the RTLD_BOOTSTRAP
pieces are removed.
To reorganize the includes the static TLS definition is moved to
its own header to avoid a circular dependency (it is defined on
dynamic-link.h and dl-machine.h requires it at same time other
dynamic-link.h definition requires dl-machine.h defitions).
Also ELF_MACHINE_NO_REL, ELF_MACHINE_NO_RELA, and ELF_MACHINE_PLT_REL
are moved to its own header. Only ancient ABIs need special values
(arm, i386, and mips), so a generic one is used as default.
The powerpc Elf64_FuncDesc is also moved to its own header, since
csu code required its definition (which would require either include
elf/ folder or add a full path with elf/).
Checked on x86_64, i686, aarch64, armhf, powerpc64, powerpc32,
and powerpc64le.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
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dynamic-link.h is included more than once in some elf/ files (rtld.c,
dl-conflict.c, dl-reloc.c, dl-reloc-static-pie.c) and uses GCC nested
functions. This harms readability and the nested functions usage
is the biggest obstacle prevents Clang build (Clang doesn't support GCC
nested functions).
The key idea for unnesting is to add extra parameters (struct link_map
*and struct r_scope_elm *[]) to RESOLVE_MAP,
ELF_MACHINE_BEFORE_RTLD_RELOC, ELF_DYNAMIC_RELOCATE, elf_machine_rel[a],
elf_machine_lazy_rel, and elf_machine_runtime_setup. (This is inspired
by Stan Shebs' ppc64/x86-64 implementation in the
google/grte/v5-2.27/master which uses mixed extra parameters and static
variables.)
Future simplification:
* If mips elf_machine_runtime_setup no longer needs RESOLVE_GOTSYM,
elf_machine_runtime_setup can drop the `scope` parameter.
* If TLSDESC no longer need to be in elf_machine_lazy_rel,
elf_machine_lazy_rel can drop the `scope` parameter.
Tested on aarch64, i386, x86-64, powerpc64le, powerpc64, powerpc32,
sparc64, sparcv9, s390x, s390, hppa, ia64, armhf, alpha, and mips64.
In addition, tested build-many-glibcs.py with {arc,csky,microblaze,nios2}-linux-gnu
and riscv64-linux-gnu-rv64imafdc-lp64d.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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All the ports now have THREAD_GSCOPE_IN_TCB set to 1. Remove all
support for !THREAD_GSCOPE_IN_TCB, along with the definition itself.
Signed-off-by: Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com>
Message-Id: <20210915171110.226187-4-bugaevc@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@ens-lyon.org>
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They provide TLS_GD/TLS_LD/TLS_IE/TLS_IE macros for TLS testing. Now
that we have migrated to __thread and tls_model attributes, these macros
are unused and the tls-macros.h files can retire.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
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Signed-off-by: Vineet Gupta <vgupta@synopsys.com>
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Any FPU_STATUS write needs setting the FWE bit (31) whcih just provides
a "control signal" to enable explicit write (vs. the side-effect of FPU
instructions). However this bit is RAZ and write-only, thus effectively
never stored in FPU_STATUS register. Thus when reading the register
there is no need to clear it. This shaves off a BCLR instruction from
the fe*exceptino family of functions and while no big deal still makes
sense to do.
This came up when debugging a race in math/test-fenv-tls [1]
[1]: https://github.com/foss-for-synopsys-dwc-arc-processors/linux/issues/54
Signed-off-by: Vineet Gupta <vgupta@synopsys.com>
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Needed after 43576de04afc6
Signed-off-by: Vineet Gupta <vgupta@synopsys.com>
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It turns out the startup code in csu/elf-init.c has a perfect pair of
ROP gadgets (see Marco-Gisbert and Ripoll-Ripoll, "return-to-csu: A
New Method to Bypass 64-bit Linux ASLR"). These functions are not
needed in dynamically-linked binaries because DT_INIT/DT_INIT_ARRAY
are already processed by the dynamic linker. However, the dynamic
linker skipped the main program for some reason. For maximum
backwards compatibility, this is not changed, and instead, the main
map is consulted from __libc_start_main if the init function argument
is a NULL pointer.
For statically linked binaries, the old approach based on linker
symbols is still used because there is nothing else available.
A new symbol version __libc_start_main@@GLIBC_2.34 is introduced because
new binaries running on an old libc would not run their ELF
constructors, leading to difficult-to-debug issues.
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Reinstate pass for
FAIL: math/test-double-cosh
FAIL: math/test-double-sinh
FAIL: math/test-float32x-cosh
FAIL: math/test-float32x-sinh
FAIL: math/test-float64-cosh
FAIL: math/test-float64-sinh
FAIL: math/test-ldouble-cosh
FAIL: math/test-ldouble-sinh
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I used these shell commands:
../glibc/scripts/update-copyrights $PWD/../gnulib/build-aux/update-copyright
(cd ../glibc && git commit -am"[this commit message]")
and then ignored the output, which consisted lines saying "FOO: warning:
copyright statement not found" for each of 6694 files FOO.
I then removed trailing white space from benchtests/bench-pthread-locks.c
and iconvdata/tst-iconv-big5-hkscs-to-2ucs4.c, to work around this
diagnostic from Savannah:
remote: *** pre-commit check failed ...
remote: *** error: lines with trailing whitespace found
remote: error: hook declined to update refs/heads/master
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Now __thread_gscope_wait (the function behind THREAD_GSCOPE_WAIT,
formerly __wait_lookup_done) can be implemented directly in ld.so,
eliminating the unprotected GL (dl_wait_lookup_done) function
pointer.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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There are several compiler implementations that allow large stack
allocations to jump over the guard page at the end of the stack and
corrupt memory beyond that. See CVE-2017-1000364.
Compilers can emit code to probe the stack such that the guard page
cannot be skipped, but on aarch64 the probe interval is 64K by default
instead of the minimum supported page size (4K).
This patch enforces at least 64K guard on aarch64 unless the guard
is disabled by setting its size to 0. For backward compatibility
reasons the increased guard is not reported, so it is only observable
by exhausting the address space or parsing /proc/self/maps on linux.
On other targets the patch has no effect. If the stack probe interval
is larger than a page size on a target then ARCH_MIN_GUARD_SIZE can
be defined to get large enough stack guard on libc allocated stacks.
The patch does not affect threads with user allocated stacks.
Fixes bug 26691.
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Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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This includes all 4 TLS addressing models
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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Code for C runtime startup and dynamic loading including PLT layout.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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This code deals with the ARC ABI.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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