9899:2011 Appendix K 3.7.4.1.
Other needed supporting types, defines and constraint_handler
infrastructure is added as specified in the C11 spec.
Submitted by: Tom Rix <trix@juniper.net>
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
Discussed with: ed
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9903
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10161
Replace uses of the GCC __nonnull__ attribute with the clang nullability
qualifiers. The replacement should be transparent for clang developers as
the new qualifiers will produce the same warnings and will be useful for
static checkers but will not cause aggressive optimizations.
GCC will not produce such warnings and developers will have to use
upgraded GCC ports built with the system headers from r312538.
Hinted by: Apple's Libc-1158.20.4, Bionic libc
MFC after: 11.1 Release
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9004
While the checks are considered useful, the attribute does dangerous
optimizations, removing NULL checks where they can be needed. Remove the
uses of this attribute introduced in r281130: the changes were inspired on
Google's bionic where this attribute is not used anymore.
The __nonnull() attribute will be deprecrated from our headers and
replaced with the Clang _Nonnull qualifier in the future.
MFC after: 3 days
The setkey() and encrypt() functions are part of XSI, not the POSIX base
definitions. There is no strict requirement for us to provide these,
especially if we're only going to keep these around as undocumented
stubs. The same holds for des_setkey() and des_cipher().
Instead of providing functions that only generate warnings when linking,
simply disallow linking against them. The impact of this is relatively
low. It only causes two leaf ports to break. I'll see what I can do to
help out to get those fixed.
PR: 211626
POSIX requires that MB_CUR_MAX expands to an expression of type size_t.
It currently expands to an int. As these are already macros, don't
change the underlying type of these functions. There is no ned to touch
those.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6645
POSIX requires that these functions have an unsigned int for their first
argument; not an unsigned long.
My reasoning is that we can safely change these functions without
breaking the ABI. As far as I know, our supported architectures either
use registers for passing function arguments that are at least as big as
long (e.g., amd64), or int and long are of the same size (e.g., i386).
Reviewed by: ache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6644
Both __alloc_align and __alloc_size can't be used when the function
returns a pointer to memory. This fixes breakage when building with
clang 3.4:
In file included from /usr/src/svn/usr.sbin/bhyve/atkbdc.c:40:
/usr/include/stdlib.h:176:6: error: '__alloc_size__' attribute only
applies to functions that return a pointer [-Werror,-Wignored-attributes]
Pointed out by: ngie, cem
Approved by: re (gjb)
etc) in stdlib.h. These will be needed for newer versions of libc++,
which uses them for defining overloaded versions of abs() and div().
MFC after: 1 week
This lets the compiler know about the alignment of pointers returned
by aligned_alloc(3), posix_memalign(3). and contigmalloc(9)
Currently this is only supported in recent gcc but we are ready to
use it if clang implements it.
Relnotes: yes
Add a manpage for it, assign the copyright to the OpenBSD project on it since it
is mostly copy/paste from OpenBSD manpage.
style(9) fixes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2420
Reviewed by: kib
The `nonnull' attribute specifies that some function parameters should be
non-null pointers. This is very useful as it helps the compiler generate
warnings on suspicious code and can also enable some small optimizations.
Also start using 'alloc_size' attribute in the allocator functions.
This is an initial step to better integrate our libc with the compiler:
these attributes are fully supported by clang and they are also useful
for the static analyzer.
Note that due to some bogus internal procedure in the way gcc ports
are built they may require updating if they were built before r280801.
Relnotes: yes
Hinted by: Android's bionic libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2107
bsearch_b is the Apple blocks enabled version of bsearch(3).
This was added to libc in Revision 264042 but the commit
missed the declaration required to make use of it.
While here move some other block-related functions to the
BSD_VISIBLE block as these are non-standard.
Phabric: D638
Reviewed by: theraven, wollman
but ACM formula we use have internal state (and return value) in the
[1, 0x7ffffffe] range, so our RAND_MAX (0x7fffffff) is never reached
because it is off by one, zero is not reached too.
Correct both RAND_MAX and rand(3) return value, shifting last one
to the 0 by 1 subtracted, resulting POSIXed [0, 0x7ffffffd(=new RAND_MAX)]
range.
2) Add a checks for not overflowing on too big seeds. It may happens on
the machines, where sizeof(unsigned int) > 32 bits.
Reviewed by: bde [1]
MFC after: 2 weeks
prior to 3.0.0 release) as contrib/jemalloc, and integrate it into libc.
The code being imported by this commit diverged from
lib/libc/stdlib/malloc.c in March 2010, which means that a portion of
the jemalloc 1.0.0 ChangeLog entries are relevant, as are the entries
for all subsequent releases.
The C11 folks reinvented the wheel by introducing an aligned version of
malloc(3) called aligned_alloc(3), instead of posix_memalign(3). Instead
of returning the allocation by reference, it returns the address, just
like malloc(3).
Reviewed by: jasone@
As C1X is close to being released, there is no need to wrap around a
feature that is already part of C90. Most of these files already use
`const' in different placed as well.
identifier reserved for the implementation in C99 and earlier so there is
no sensible reason for introducing yet another reserved identifier when we
could just use the one C1x uses.
Approved by: brooks (mentor)
__noreturn macro and modify the other exiting functions to use it.
The __noreturn macro, unlike __dead2, must be used BEFORE the function.
This is in line with the C and C++ specifications that place _Noreturn (c1x)
and [[noreturn]] (C++11) in front of the functions. As with __dead2, this
macro falls back to using the GCC attribute.
Unfortunately, clang currently sets the same value for the C version macro
in C99 and C1x modes, so these functions are hidden by default. At some
point before 10.0, I need to go through the headers and clean up the C1x /
C++11 visibility.
Reviewed by: brooks (mentor)
load of _l suffixed versions of various standard library functions that use
the global locale, making them take an explicit locale parameter. Also
adds support for per-thread locales. This work was funded by the FreeBSD
Foundation.
Please test any code you have that uses the C standard locale functions!
Reviewed by: das (gdtoa changes)
Approved by: dim (mentor)
SUSv4 requires that implementation returns EINVAL if supplied path is NULL,
and ENOENT if path is empty string [1].
Bring prototype in conformance with SUSv4, adding restrict keywords.
Allow the resolved path buffer pointer be NULL, in which case realpath(3)
allocates storage with malloc().
PR: kern/121897 [1]
MFC after: 2 weeks
__XOPEN_SOURCE >= 700, since mktemp() was withdrawn
from the standard. However, __XSI_VISIBLE is set to
700 in the default BSD envrionment, where mktemp()
should still exist; hence, check for this.
A more elegant way of obtaining a name of a character device by its file
descriptor on FreeBSD, is to use the FIODGNAME ioctl. Because a valid
file descriptor implies a file descriptor is visible in /dev, it will
always resolve a valid device name.
I'm adding a more friendly wrapper for this ioctl, called fdevname(). It
is a lot easier to use than devname() and also has better error
handling. When a device name cannot be resolved, it will just return
NULL instead of a generated device name that makes no sense.
Discussed with: kib
that the annotated function returns a pointer that doesn't alias any
extant pointer. This results in a 50%+ speedup in microbenchmarks such
as the following:
char *cp = malloc(1), *buf = malloc(BUF);
for (i = 0; i < BUF; i++) buf[i] = *cp;
In real programs, your mileage will vary. Note that gcc already
performs this optimization automatically for any function called
`malloc', `calloc', `strdup', or `strndup' unless -fno-builtins is
used.
setenv(3) by tracking the size of the memory allocated instead of using
strlen() on the current value.
Convert all calls to POSIX from historic BSD API:
- unsetenv returns an int.
- putenv takes a char * instead of const char *.
- putenv no longer makes a copy of the input string.
- errno is set appropriately for POSIX. Exceptions involve bad environ
variable and internal initialization code. These both set errno to
EFAULT.
Several patches to base utilities to handle the POSIX changes from
Andrey Chernov's previous commit. A few I re-wrote to use setenv()
instead of putenv().
New regression module for tools/regression/environ to test these
functions. It also can be used to test the performance.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to 700050 due to API change.
PR: kern/99826
Approved by: wes
Approved by: re (kensmith)
Not because I admit they are technically wrong and not because of bug
reports (I receive nothing). But because I surprisingly meets so
strong opposition and resistance so lost any desire to continue that.
Anyone who interested in POSIX can dig out what changes and how
through cvs diffs.
between a 32-bit integer and a radix-64 ASCII string. The l64a_r() function
is a NetBSD addition.
PR: 51209 (based on submission, but very different)
Reviewed by: bde, ru
GNU) for determining whether a string is an affirmative or negative
response to a question according to the current locale. This is done
by matching the response against nl_langinfo(3) items YESEXPR and NOEXPR.