as well as when it was removed from POSIX specification.
Reviewed by: theraven, wblock, bapt, rodrigc
Approved by: bapt, rodrigc (mentor)
Differential Revision: D3374
Fix some phrases to make it more clear.
Differential Revision: D3378
Reported by: bde@
Reviewed by: wblock
Approved by: bapt, rodrigc (mentor)
Sponsored by: gandi.net
POSIX.1-2001 and removed from the specification in POSIX.1-2008.
New softwares shall use memcpy(3) or memmove(3).
Differential Revision: D3358
Reviewed by: wblock
Approved by: rodrigc
Sponsored by: gandi.net
This function originated in glibc, and this matches their behaviour
(and NetBSD, OpenBSD, and musl).
An empty big string (arg "l") is handled by the existing
l_len < s_len test.
Reviewed by: bapt, ngie
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2657
POSIX.1-2008 specifies that those two functions should be declared by
including <strings.h>, not <string.h> (the latter only has strcoll_l()
and strxfrm_l()):
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/strcasecmp.html
Obtained from: DragonFlyBSD
Reviewed by: theraven
MFC after: 2 weeks
if not already defined. This allows building libc from outside of
lib/libc using a reach-over makefile.
A typical use-case is to build a standard ILP32 version and a COMPAT32
version in a single iteration by building the COMPAT32 version using a
reach-over makefile.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
This explanation is supposed to be simpler and better. In particular
"comparing it to the snprintf API provides lots of value, since it raises the
bar on understanding, so that programmers/auditors will a better job calling
all 3 of these functions."
Requested by: deraadt@cvs.openbsd.org
Obtained From: OpenBSD
Reviewed by: cperciva
This ensures strerror() and friends continue to work correctly even if a
(non-PIE) executable linked against an older libc imports sys_errlist (which
causes sys_errlist to refer to the executable's copy with a size fixed when
that executable was linked).
The executable's use of sys_errlist remains broken because it uses the
current value of sys_nerr and may access past the bounds of the array.
Different from the message "Using sys_errlist from executables is not
ABI-stable" on freebsd-arch, this change does not affect the static library.
There seems no reason to prevent overriding the error messages in the static
library.
This allows people to still write statically linked applications that
call strchr() or strrchr() and have a local variable or function called
index.
Discussed with: bde@
As I looked through the C library, I noticed the FreeBSD MIPS port has a
hand-written version of index(). This is nice, if it weren't for the
fact that most applications call strchr() instead.
Also, on the other architectures index() and strchr() are identical,
meaning we have two identical pieces of code in the C library and
statically linked applications.
Solve this by naming the actual file strchr.[cS] and let it use
__strong_reference()/STRONG_ALIAS() to provide the index() routine. Do
the same for rindex()/strrchr().
This seems to make the C libraries and static binaries slightly smaller,
but this reduction in size seems negligible.
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)
Of course, strerror_r() may still fail with ERANGE.
Although the POSIX specification said this could fail with EINVAL and
doing this likely indicates invalid use of errno, most other
implementations permitted it, various POSIX testsuites require it to
work (matching the older sys_errlist array) and apparently some
applications depend on it.
PR: standards/151316
MFC after: 1 week
their implementations aren't in the same files. Introduce LIBC_ARCH
and use that in preference to MACHINE_CPUARCH. Tested by amd64 and
powerpc64 builds (thanks nathanw@)