Commit Graph

95 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ed Schouten
dc428c2ffe Remove unneeded stdlib directories.
It's not necessary to add stdlib directories for each architecture, even
if the architecture doesn't implement any files of its own.

Submitted by:	Christoph Mallon
2009-06-23 14:11:41 +00:00
Ed Schouten
a1b5a8955e Mark uname(), getdomainname() and setdomainname() with COMPAT_FREEBSD4.
Looking at our source code history, it seems the uname(),
getdomainname() and setdomainname() system calls got deprecated
somewhere after FreeBSD 1.1, but they have never been phased out
properly. Because we don't have a COMPAT_FREEBSD1, just use
COMPAT_FREEBSD4.

Also fix the Linuxolator to build without the setdomainname() routine by
just making it call userland_sysctl on kern.domainname. Also replace the
setdomainname()'s implementation to use this approach, because we're
duplicating code with sysctl_domainname().

I wasn't able to keep these three routines working in our
COMPAT_FREEBSD32, because that would require yet another keyword for
syscalls.master (COMPAT4+NOPROTO). Because this routine is probably
unused already, this won't be a problem in practice. If it turns out to
be a problem, we'll just restore this functionality.

Reviewed by:	rdivacky, kib
2008-11-09 10:45:13 +00:00
Bruce Evans
d2012f3333 Add an alternative view of the bits in an 80-bit long double (64+16
instead of 32+32+15+1) on all arches that have such long doubles (amd64,
ia64 and i386).  Large objects should be be accessed in large units,
and the 32+32+15+1[+padding] decomposition asks for almost the opposite
of that, sometimes resulting in very slow accesses depending on how
well the compiler ignores what we ask for and converts to the best
units for the given machine.  E.g., on Athlons, there is a 10-20 cycle
penalty for accessing the middle 32-bit word immediately after an
80-bit store.

Whether actually using the alternative view is better is very machine-
dependent.  A 32+32+16 view is probably best with old 32-bit systems
and gcc through 4.2.1.  The compiler should mostly avoid the view and
generate best accesses, but gcc-4.2.1 is far from doing that.  I think
64+16 is best for now.  Similarly for doubles -- they should be using
64+0 especially on 64-bit machines, but fdlibm uses 32+32 extensively
for them.  Fortunately, in 64-bit mode for doubles, gcc already ignores
the 32+32-bit view and generates best accesses in many cases.
2008-01-17 16:39:07 +00:00
David Schultz
7cd4a83267 Since nan() is supposed to work the same as strtod("nan(...)", NULL),
my original implementation made both use the same code. Unfortunately,
this meant libm depended on a vendor header at compile time and previously-
unexposed vendor bits in libc at runtime.

Hence, I just wrote my own version of the relevant vendor routine. As it
turns out, mine has a factor of 8 fewer of lines of code, and is a bit more
readable anyway. The strtod() and *scanf() routines still use vendor code.

Reviewed by:	bde
2007-12-18 23:46:32 +00:00
David Schultz
39e7abef0e Export gdtoa's __ULto{x,Q}_D2A routine in a private namespace so
libm can use it.
2007-12-16 21:15:57 +00:00
David Schultz
199cdab56f Arrange so that the NaN returned by strtod("nan", NULL) is the same as
the NaN returned by strtod("nan()", NULL).
2007-12-16 21:15:09 +00:00
David Schultz
9c90f85a6b In scanf, round according to the current rounding mode. 2007-12-03 07:17:33 +00:00
Yaroslav Tykhiy
b82b77daf3 The fork symbols aren't MD, they already live in sys/.
Found by:	version_gen.awk
Tested by:	md5(1) (libc.so hasn't changed at all)
2007-10-18 11:28:38 +00:00
Peter Wemm
65a6d893ba Classify mmap, lseek, pread, pwrite, truncate, ftruncate as pseudo
syscalls, unless WITHOUT_SYSCALL_COMPAT is defined.  The default case
will have the .c wrappers still.  If you define WITHOUT_SYSCALL_COMPAT,
the .c wrappers will go away and libc will make direct syscalls.

After 7-stable starts, the direct syscall method will be default.

Approved by:  re (kensmith)
2007-07-04 23:23:01 +00:00
Peter Wemm
eabc04d472 Adjust the syscall stub macros to be consistent in their meaning. In
particular:
SYSCALL() makes a syscall, with errno handling, and continues execution
directly after the macro in the non-error case.
RSYSCALL() is just like SYSCALL(), but returns after success.
Both SYSCALL(name) and RSYSCALL(name) export  "__sys_name" as a strong
symbol, with "_name" and "name" as weak aliases.
PSEUDO() is just like RSYSCALL(), but skipping the "name" weak alias.  It
still does "__sys_name" and "_name".

Change i386 to add errno handling to PSEUDO.  The same for amd64 and
sparc64, with appear to have copied the behavior.
ia64 was correct (as was alpha).  Just remove some apparently unused
variants of the macros. (untested!)
I believe powerpc is correct.
Fix arm to not export "name" from the PSEUDO case.  Remove apparently
extra unused variants.  (untested!)

The errno problem manifested on i386/amd64/sparc64 by having "PSEUDO"
classified syscalls return without setting errno.  eg: "addr = mmap()"
could return with "addr" = 22 instead of setting errno to 22 and
returning -1.

Approved by: re (kensmith)
2007-07-04 23:18:38 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
2665faf497 Some libc symbol map cleanups.
net: endhostdnsent is named _endhostdnsent and is
  private to netdb family of functions.

  posix1e: acl_size.c has been never compiled in,
  so there's no "acl_size".

  rpc: "getnetid" is a static function.

  stdtime: "gtime" is #ifdef'ed out in the source.

  some symbols are specific only to some architectures,
  e.g., ___tls_get_addr is only defined on i386.

  __htonl, __htons, __ntohl and __ntohs are no longer
  functions, they are now (internal) defines in
  <machine/endian.h>.

Submitted by:	ru
2007-05-31 13:01:34 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
5f864214bb Use C comments since we now preprocess these files with CPP. 2007-04-29 14:05:22 +00:00
David Schultz
266cb5ad57 The distinction between quiet and signaling NaN formats is
machine-dependent; these files tell the latest version of gdtoa
what to do.
2007-01-03 05:00:03 +00:00
Olivier Houchard
05b432d2d1 Instead of re-implementing hton[ls] and friends for each arch, add a new MI
file, net/ntoh.c, which just implement them using the inline functions from
<sys/endian.h>.

Suggested by:	bde
2006-11-06 22:07:47 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
7d3f85133a Prevent dead code elimination for the TP assignmient by using inline
assembly.
2006-08-30 00:39:07 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
d7ce16692e Fix comment. 2006-03-16 14:27:17 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
3029eff743 Desupport the undocumented NO_QUAD option, just don't compile
the quad support on 64-bit platforms.
2006-03-16 14:22:19 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
6fad3aaf15 Add each directory's symbol map file to SYM_MAPS. 2006-03-13 01:15:01 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
cce72e8860 Add symbol maps and initial symbol version definitions to libc.
Reviewed by:	davidxu
2006-03-13 00:53:21 +00:00
David Schultz
21f9dd806f - Define LDBL_NBIT to be a mask indicating the position of the integer
bit in a long double.  For architectures that don't have such a bit,
  LDBL_NBIT is 0.  This makes it possible to say `mantissa & ~LDBL_NBIT'
  in places that previously used an #ifdef to select the right expression.
  The optimizer should dispense with the extra arithmetic when LDBL_NBIT
  is 0 anyway.
- Add an XXX comment for the big endian case.
2005-03-07 04:55:40 +00:00
David Schultz
f154b03b25 Update my email address. 2005-02-06 03:23:31 +00:00
David Schultz
00646ca204 Replace the ldexp() implementation in libc with a renamed copy of the
scalbn() implementation from libm.  (The two functions are defined to
be identical, but ldexp() lives in libc for backwards compatibility.)
The old ldexp() implementation...
  - was more complicated than this one
  - set errno instead of raising FP exceptions
  - got some corner cases wrong
    (e.g. ldexp(1.0, 2000) in round-to-zero mode)

The new implementation lives in libc/gen instead of
libc/$MACHINE_ARCH/gen, since we don't need N copies of a
machine-independent file.  The amd64 and i386 platforms
retain their fast and correct MD implementations and
override this one.
2005-01-22 06:03:40 +00:00
David Schultz
bd15659f64 Eliminate gdtoa.mk and move its contents to ${MACHINE_ARCH}/Makefile.inc.
The purpose of having a separate file involved an abandoned scheme that
would have kept contrib/gdtoa out of the include path for the rest of libc.
2005-01-15 05:23:58 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
a35d88931c For variables that are only checked with defined(), don't provide
any fake value.
2004-10-24 15:33:08 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
ef0cd312df Unbreak memmove(). Return the dst argument. While here, fix the END
macro to actually reference memmove, not memcpy.
2004-09-04 00:23:15 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
4c36bcaa87 Unbreak memcpy(). memcpy() is defined to return the dst argument.
By using r8 instead of r14 to do the swap, we put the dst argument
in the return register. Since bcopy() doesn't clobber r8, we don't
have to do anything else. This fixes ports/textproc/aspell.
2004-09-04 00:04:58 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
f0556e70bb Make profiling actually work. The gcc compiler emits a call to the
_mcount() stub when profiling is enabled. Emit this code sequence
for assembly routines as welli (MCOUNT definition in <machine/asm.h>.
We do not pass the GOT entry however as the 4th argument, because it's
not used. The _mcount() stub calls __mcount(), which does the actual
work. Define _MCOUNT_DECL to define __mcount. We do not have an
implementation of mcount(), so we define MCOUNT as empty, but have a
weak alias to _mcount() in _mcount.S.
Note that the _mcount() stub in the kernel is slightly different from
the stub in userland. This is because we do not have to worry about
nested routines in the kernel.
2004-08-25 07:42:34 +00:00
Doug Rabson
ccd13c49b5 Add support for TLS in statically linked programs. 2004-08-15 16:18:52 +00:00
David Schultz
479f8d2214 Make FLT_ROUNDS correctly reflect the dynamic rounding mode. 2004-07-19 08:17:25 +00:00
David Schultz
39bcea8689 Replace seven nominally MD implementations of frexp() that are broken
for subnormals with one implementation that works.
2004-07-18 21:23:39 +00:00
David Schultz
240dbabfa8 Implement the classification macros isfinite(), isinf(), isnan(), and
isnormal() the hard way, rather than relying on fpclassify().  This is
a lose in the sense that we need a total of 12 functions, but it is
necessary for binary compatibility because we have never bumped libm's
major version number.  In particular, isinf(), isnan(), and isnanf()
were BSD libc functions before they were C99 macros, so we can't
reimplement them in terms of fpclassify() without adding a dependency
on libc.so.5.  I have tried to arrange things so that programs that
could be compiled in FreeBSD 4.X will generate the same external
references when compiled in 5.X.  At the same time, the new macros
should remain C99-compliant.

The isinf() and isnan() functions remain in libc for historical
reasons; however, I have moved the functions that implement the macros
isfinite() and isnormal() to libm where they belong.  Moreover,
half a dozen MD versions of isinf() and isnan() have been replaced
with MI versions that work equally well.

Prodded by:	kris
2004-07-09 03:32:40 +00:00
David Schultz
36e22bed27 Fix some aliasing problems. 2004-02-16 10:02:40 +00:00
Colin Percival
1c81bd2c60 style cleanup: Remove duplicate $FreeBSD$ tags.
These files had tags after teh copyright notice,
inside the comment block (incorrect, removed),
and outside the comment block (correct).

Approved by:	rwatson (mentor)
2004-02-10 20:45:28 +00:00
David Schultz
a8cb7cca02 Define LDBL_MANH_SIZE and LDBL_MANL_SIZE to be the sizes of the
high and low words of the mantissa in bits, respectively.
2004-01-18 07:57:02 +00:00
Jacques Vidrine
346866aa97 Add required headers. 2004-01-06 19:40:28 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
0eae3d809e Virtual addresses in headers of ELF files for dynamic objects need
to be relocated before they can be used as pointers.
2003-11-08 05:29:49 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
b32428bbc5 The FP status register allows for 6 traps to be masked. One of them,
the denormal/unnormal trap, is not a standard IEEE trap. We did
not exclude it from being returned by fpgetmask(), nor did we make
sure that fpsetmask() didn't clobber it. Since the non-IEEE trap
is not part of fp_except_t, users of ifpgetmask()/fpsetmask() would
be confronted with unexpected behaviour, one of which is a SIGFPE
for denormal/unnormal FP results.

This commit makes sure that we don't leak the denormal/unnormal mask
bit in fp_except_t and also that we don't clobber it.
2003-10-22 09:00:07 +00:00
Bruce M Simpson
abd498aa71 Add the mlockall() and munlockall() system calls.
- All those diffs to syscalls.master for each architecture *are*
   necessary. This needed clarification; the stub code generation for
   mlockall() was disabled, which would prevent applications from
   linking to this API (suggested by mux)
 - Giant has been quoshed. It is no longer held by the code, as
   the required locking has been pushed down within vm_map.c.
 - Callers must specify VM_MAP_WIRE_HOLESOK or VM_MAP_WIRE_NOHOLES
   to express their intention explicitly.
 - Inspected at the vmstat, top and vm pager sysctl stats level.
   Paging-in activity is occurring correctly, using a test harness.
 - The RES size for a process may appear to be greater than its SIZE.
   This is believed to be due to mappings of the same shared library
   page being wired twice. Further exploration is needed.
 - Believed to back out of allocations and locks correctly
   (tested with WITNESS, MUTEX_PROFILING, INVARIANTS and DIAGNOSTIC).

PR:             kern/43426, standards/54223
Reviewed by:    jake, alc
Approved by:    jake (mentor)
MFC after:	2 weeks
2003-08-11 07:14:08 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
03bab8d60f o There are 6 trap disable bits in ar.fpsr, not five. Even though we
didn't provide a constant for one of them (non-IEEE denormal trap),
  in an attempt to not support it probably, it's not we are left with
  the lower 5 bits.
o Properly mask the passed or returned fp_except_t. Not doing so
  causes instant core dumps by trying to write an invalid value to
  ar.fpsr. Now that we're masking, stop using exclusive-or to invert
  bits.

This fixes the illegal instruction fault encountered when building
mozilla.
2003-08-09 17:07:24 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
8955f59879 Override the default stubs for getcontext(2) and swapcontext(2) so
that we can flush the register stack prior to entering the kernel.
This avoids having dirty registers and saves us from having to
manually write them to the backing store from within the kernel.
In that respect, flushing the RSE is both functionally required as
well as performance optimal.

On average we had 18 dirty registers when getcontext(2) was called
from libthr. Since libthr does not switch back to a context created
by getcontext(2), not having dealt with the dirty registers was
harmless.
2003-08-02 00:49:36 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
6e9a9b9f52 The END() must expand to the .endp directive with the same name as
on the corresponding .proc directive, or the .endp must not have a
name at all.
While here, remove an artificial dependency in Ovfork.S by performing
manual register renaming.
2003-08-01 22:17:12 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
938b878e45 Revert previous commit. We don't use setjmp()/longjmp() for context
switching anymore, so there's no need to save and restore GP. This
change breaks threaded applications linked against libc_r. Pull the
tier 2 card again: relink. This will link against libthr instead.
2003-07-25 22:36:48 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
ec5f6d191d Implement signalcontext(). Needed by libpthread (aka libkse). 2003-06-24 05:06:42 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
75fa7db991 o Fix a cut-n-paste bug. We were clobbering rp with gp...
o  Make sure the arguments to ctx_wrapper() are loaded from the
   backing store by forcing an underflow. Do this by making all
   registers in the register frame local.
2003-06-02 00:16:39 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
fae3c3b7eb Rough implement of makecontext() needed to support libthr.
o  Up to 8 arguments are allowed. This is the number of arguments
   passed in registers. Subsequent registers are passed on the stack.
   Trying to deal with this is not easy in C and likely forces us to
   use assembly code. Let's avoid that for now. There's no indication
   that more than 8 arguments is a strong requirement (Linux also has
   an 8 argument limit).
o  We expect that the stack base is 16-byte aligned and the stack
   size is a multiple of 16-byte. We bomb out if this is not the case.
   We probably want to be less strict by enforcing it ourselves. For
   now it's better to not hide gross alignment bogons by silently
   correcting it.
2003-05-31 19:42:51 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
f2c49dd248 Revamp of the syscall path, exception and context handling. The
prime objectives are:
o  Implement a syscall path based on the epc inststruction (see
   sys/ia64/ia64/syscall.s).
o  Revisit the places were we need to save and restore registers
   and define those contexts in terms of the register sets (see
   sys/ia64/include/_regset.h).

Secundairy objectives:
o  Remove the requirement to use contigmalloc for kernel stacks.
o  Better handling of the high FP registers for SMP systems.
o  Switch to the new cpu_switch() and cpu_throw() semantics.
o  Add a good unwinder to reconstruct contexts for the rare
   cases we need to (see sys/contrib/ia64/libuwx)

Many files are affected by this change. Functionally it boils
down to:
o  The EPC syscall doesn't preserve registers it does not need
   to preserve and places the arguments differently on the stack.
   This affects libc and truss.
o  The address of the kernel page directory (kptdir) had to
   be unstaticized for use by the nested TLB fault handler.
   The name has been changed to ia64_kptdir to avoid conflicts.
   The renaming affects libkvm.
o  The trapframe only contains the special registers and the
   scratch registers. For syscalls using the EPC syscall path
   no scratch registers are saved. This affects all places where
   the trapframe is accessed. Most notably the unaligned access
   handler, the signal delivery code and the debugger.
o  Context switching only partly saves the special registers
   and the preserved registers. This affects cpu_switch() and
   triggered the move to the new semantics, which additionally
   affects cpu_throw().
o  The high FP registers are either in the PCB or on some
   CPU. context switching for them is done lazily. This affects
   trap().
o  The mcontext has room for all registers, but not all of them
   have to be defined in all cases. This mostly affects signal
   delivery code now. The *context syscalls are as of yet still
   unimplemented.

Many details went into the removal of the requirement to use
contigmalloc for kernel stacks. The details are mostly CPU
specific and limited to exception_save() and exception_restore().
The few places where we create, destroy or switch stacks were
mostly simplified by not having to construct physical addresses
and additionally saving the virtual addresses for later use.

Besides more efficient context saving and restoring, which of
course yields a noticable speedup, this also fixes the dreaded
SMP bootup problem as a side-effect. The details of which are
still not fully understood.

This change includes all the necessary backward compatibility
code to have it handle older userland binaries that use the
break instruction for syscalls. Support for break-based syscalls
has been pessimized in favor of a clean implementation. Due to
the overall better performance of the kernel, this will still
be notived as an improvement if it's noticed at all.

Approved by: re@ (jhb)
2003-05-16 21:26:42 +00:00
David Schultz
b7412bf571 Add a comment describing why it's important for the values in this
file to be correct, and how to generate them automatically.

Caused much pain and suffering for:	peter
2003-05-08 13:50:44 +00:00
David Schultz
92b93b37c0 Add __ldtoa(), a wrapper around gdtoa() to make it look like dtoa().
In support of this, add some MD macros to assist in converting long
doubles to the format expected by gdtoa().

Reviewed by:	silence on standards@
2003-04-05 22:10:13 +00:00
David Schultz
6a66acb565 Replace our ancient dtoa/strtod implementation with the gdtoa
package, a more recent, generalized set of routines.  Among the
changes:
- Declare strtof() and strtold() in stdlib.h.
- Add glue to libc to support these routines for all kinds
  of ``long double''.
- Update printf() to reflect the fact that dtoa works slightly
  differently now.

As soon as I see that nothing has blown up, I will kill
src/lib/libc/stdlib/strtod.c.  Soon printf() will be able
to use the new routines to output long doubles without loss
of precision, but numerous bugs in the existing code must
be addressed first.

Reviewed by:	bde (briefly), mike (mentor), obrien
2003-03-12 20:30:00 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
cafd6dbd76 Fix threaded applications on ia64 that are linked dynamicly. We did
not save (restore) the global pointer (GP) in the jmpbuf in setjmp
(longjmp) because it's not needed in general. GP is considered a
scratch register at callsites and hence is always restored after a
call (when it's possible that the call resolves to a symbol in a
different loadmodule; otherwise GP does not have to be saved and
restored at all), including calls to setjmp/longjmp. There's just
one problem with this now that we use setjmp/longjmp for context
switching: A new context must have GP defined properly for the
thread's entry point. This means that we need to put GP in the
jmpbuf and consequently that we have to restore is in longjmp.
This automaticly requires us to save it as well.

When setjmp/longjmp isn't used for context switching, this can be
reverted again.
2003-03-05 04:39:24 +00:00