This is required for ARM EABI. Section 7.1.1 of the Procedure Call for the
ARM Architecture (AAPCS) defines wchar_t as either an unsigned int or an
unsigned short with the former preferred.
Because of this requirement we need to move the definition of __wchar_t to
a machine dependent header. It also cleans up the macros defining the limits
of wchar_t by defining __WCHAR_MIN and __WCHAR_MAX in the same machine
dependent header then using them to define WCHAR_MIN and WCHAR_MAX
respectively.
Discussed with: bde
thing it was still used for was to set the "global default" password
hash. Since the stock auth.conf contained nothing but comments, the
global default was actually the first algorithm in crypt(3)'s list,
which happens to be DES; I take the fact that nobody noticed as proof
that it was not used outside of crypt(3).
The only other use in our tree was in the Kerberos support code in
in tinyware's passwd(1). I removed that code in an earlier commit;
it would not have compiled anyway, as it only supported Kerberos IV.
The auth_getval() function is now a stub that always returns NULL,
which has the same effect as a functional auth_getval() with an
empty auth.conf.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Introduce dirfd() libc exported symbol replacing macro with same name,
preserve _dirfd() macro for internal use.
Replace dirp->dd_fd with dirfd() call. Avoid using dirfd as variable
name to prevent shadowing global symbol.
Sponsored by: Google Summer Of Code 2011
Since ino_t size is about to change to 64-bits, replace ino_t used in
dump protocol definition with 32-bit dump_ino_t to preserve backward
compatibility. At some point, it may be necessary to use spare fields
in struct in order to fully support 64-bit inode numbers.
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code 2011
The NAND Flash environment consists of several distinct components:
- NAND framework (drivers harness for NAND controllers and NAND chips)
- NAND simulator (NANDsim)
- NAND file system (NAND FS)
- Companion tools and utilities
- Documentation (manual pages)
This work is still experimental. Please use with caution.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Supported by: FreeBSD Foundation, Juniper Networks
a c11 prefix to disambiguate them from the one provided by GCC.
Note: Clang 3.1 also supports the GCC builtins for libstdc++ 4.7 compatibility,
but I don't recommend using them because they are very poorly designed.
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.
would not compile anymore, due to plain 'inline' keywords. Fix this by
using __inline instead.
Reported by: Jia-Shiun Li <jiashiun@gmail.com>
Discussed with: theraven
The lang/gcc* ports patch headers where they think something is
non-standard. These patched headers override the system headers which means
you have to rebuild these ports whenever you do installworld to make sure
they contain the latest changes.
- Address performance regressions encountered by das@ by caching per-thread
data in TLS where available.
- Add a __NO_TLS flag to cdefs.h to indicate where not available.
- Reorganise the xlocale.h definitions into xlocale/*.h so that they can be
included from multiple places.
- Export the POSIX2008 subset of xlocale when POSIX2008 says it should be
exported, independently of whether xlocale.h is included.
- Fix the bug where programs using ctype functions always assumed ASCII unless
recompiled.
- Fix some style(9) violations.
Reviewed by: brooks (mentor)
Approved by: dim (mentor)
builtins, rather than the __asm hack. Somehow I missed the existence of this
builtin originally and only noticed that it was there when I went to implement
it...
Note: Trunk clang now has support for (most of) the C[++]11 atomics stuff.
Please test!
Approved by: brooks (mentor)
Plain 'va_list' in this header seems to cause troubles with non-base GCC
which creates and uses "tortured" versions of some sysem header files
including stdio.h (installed in a private 'include-fixed' directory).
Reviewed by: theraven
X-MFC with: r227753
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@
I was thinking by myself, if the new code doesn't work with GCC 4.2, why
not simply turn it into an efficient version for C11 compilers? By
changing the code to use _Generic() directly in that case, I can build
the tgmath regression test in a matter of milliseconds with Clang,
instead of the 8 seconds it used to take.
So by the time C11 becomes the default, it will pick up the new code
automatically. And now I will refrain from making more changes to
<tgmath.h>.
Instead of using an exponential number of cases with respect to the
number of arguments, this version only uses a linear number.
Unfortunately, it works with Clang, GCC 4.6 and GCC 4.7, but not GCC
4.2. Therefore, leave it commented out.
It turns out our GCC has quite an interesting bug:
typeof(1.0fi) != float _Complex
typeof((float _Complex)1.0fi) != float _Complex
typeof((float _Complex)1.0i) == float _Complex
In other words: if casting to an equal size, GCC seems to take a
shortcut. By casting down from a double to a float, GCC doesn't take
this shortcut, yielding the proper type.
To prevent foot-shooting, add a _Static_assert() to guarantee that
_Complex_I is always a float _Complex. I'm not going to MFC this part of
the diff.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The macro construction used now, is almost identical to the code
provided in C11 proposal N1404. This new version doesn't seem to
introduce any regressions according to the regression test in tools/,
but still seems to malfunction with Clang on certain aspects.
The new code does work successfully with GCC 4.2, 4.6 and 4.7. With 4.7,
it also works when __generic() is implemented on top of _Generic().
Discussed with: stefanf
There is no way one could possibly use this header file in combination
with C++ code. The problem is that in C11 the `noreturn' macro expands
to the `_Noreturn' function specifier, while in C++11 the `noreturn'
keyword is an attribute.
So in C11 you have to write:
noreturn void exit(int status);
While in C++11 you have to write:
[[noreturn]] void exit(int status);
It is impossible to #define noreturn for C++ in such a way that it
allows both conventions.
By intentionally breaking this header this way, we prevent people from
using this header in their C++<11 sources.
The development version of GCC also supports an atomics interface
similar to Clang's. Change the header file to work as follows:
- __CLANG_ATOMICS: Use Clang's new atomics interface,
- __GNUC_ATOMICS: Use GCC's new atomics interface,
- else: fall back to GCC's __sync interface.
Even though _Static_assert() is pretty robust for C code, it cannot work
correctly with C++ code. This is due to the fact that C++ template
parameters may contain commas that are not enclosed in parentheses. For
example:
static_assert(foo<int, int>::bar == baz, "...");
This causes _Static_assert to be called with an excessive number of
parameters. If you want to use static_assert in C++, just use a C++11
compiler.
Reported on: current@, ports@
P_tmpdir [OB XSI] Default directory prefix for tempnam().
This macro is used in a lot of places in legacy applications,
and is why we see a lot of programs written for e.g. Linux
store volatile temporary files in /var/tmp and not /tmp.
MFC after: 2 months
- Make atomic_init() work for GCC, as assigning to structs doesn't work.
- Fix misplaced parenthesis in atomic_is_lock_free() for GCC.
- Make atomic_compare_exchange_strong() for GCC return the proper
boolean value, whether object == expected.
- Fix argument passing in atomic_exchange_explicit() for GCC.