Ensure proper handshake to transfer sigfastblock(2) blocking word
ownership from rtld to libthr.
Unfortunately sigfastblock(2) is not enough to stop intercepting
signals in libthr, because critical sections must ensure more than
just signal blocking.
Tested by: pho
Disscussed with: cem, emaste, jilles
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12773
A new syscall sigfastblock(2) is added which registers a uint32_t
variable as containing the count of blocks for signal delivery. Its
content is read by kernel on each syscall entry and on AST processing,
non-zero count of blocks is interpreted same as the signal mask
blocking all signals.
The biggest downside of the feature that I see is that memory
corruption that affects the registered fast sigblock location, would
cause quite strange application misbehavior. For instance, the process
would be immune to ^C (but killable by SIGKILL).
With consumers (rtld and libthr added), benchmarks do not show a
slow-down of the syscalls in micro-measurements, and macro benchmarks
like buildworld do not demonstrate a difference. Part of the reason is
that buildworld time is dominated by compiler, and clang already links
to libthr. On the other hand, small utilities typically used by shell
scripts have the total number of syscalls cut by half.
The syscall is not exported from the stable libc version namespace on
purpose. It is intended to be used only by our C runtime
implementation internals.
Tested by: pho
Disscussed with: cem, emaste, jilles
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12773
To make the PMC tool pmcstat working properly on Hygon platform, add
support for Hygon Dhyana family 18h by using the PMC initialization
code path of AMD family 17h.
Submitted by: Pu Wen <puwen@hygon.cn>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23562
- Use a constant for the offset instead of a magic number.
- Use an addi instruction that writes to tp directly instead of a mv
that writes the result of a compiler-generated addi.
Reviewed by: mhorne
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23521
This change adds a new libkvm function, kvm_kerndisp(), that can be used to
retrieve the kernel displacement, that is the difference between the kernel's
base virtual address at run time and the kernel base virtual address specified
in the kernel image file.
This will be used by kgdb, to properly relocate kernel symbols, when needed.
Reviewed by: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23285
libssp_nonshared.a defines one symbol, __stack_chk_fail_local. This
is used only on i386 and powerpc; other archs emit calls directly to
__stack_chk_fail. Simplify linking on other archs by omitting it.
PR: 242941 [exp-run]
This appears to have been introduced in r173763. Also fix the confusing
indentation that probably led to the bug in the first place.
PR: 243759
Diagnosed by: martin@lispworks.com
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This allows it to be easily suppressed in, e.g., the "daemon" class where it
will not be properly expanded.
This is a part of D21481.
Submitted by: Andrew Gierth <andrew_tao173.riddles.org.uk>
Among the same justification as the other stdio _unlocked; in addition to an
inline version in <stdio.h>, we must provide a function in libc as well for
the functionality. This fixes the lang/gcc* builds, which want to use the
symbol from libc.
PR: 243810
Reported by: antoine, swills, Michael <michael.adm gmail com>
X-MFC-With: r357284
In r355656, endianness handling of the floating point environment was fixed
in the PowerPC code to work as intended.
However, one bit got missed, causing feholdexcept() to mis-save the fenv.
Submitted by: Renato Riolino <renato.riolino@eldorado.org.br>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23382
O_SEARCH is defined by POSIX [0] to open a directory for searching, skipping
permissions checks on the directory itself after the initial open(). This is
close to the semantics we've historically applied for O_EXEC on a directory,
which is UB according to POSIX. Conveniently, O_SEARCH on a file is also
explicitly undefined behavior according to POSIX, so O_EXEC would be a fine
choice. The spec goes on to state that O_SEARCH and O_EXEC need not be
distinct values, but they're not defined to be the same value.
This was pointed out as an incompatibility with other systems that had made
its way into libarchive, which had assumed that O_EXEC was an alias for
O_SEARCH.
This defines compatibility O_SEARCH/FSEARCH (equivalent to O_EXEC and FEXEC
respectively) and expands our UB for O_EXEC on a directory. O_EXEC on a
directory is checked in vn_open_vnode already, so for completeness we add a
NOEXECCHECK when O_SEARCH has been specified on the top-level fd and do not
re-check that when descending in namei.
[0] https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23247
rand(3)'s standard C API is extremely limiting, but we can do better
than the historical 32-bit state Park-Miller LCG we've shipped since
2001: r73156.
The justification provided at the time for not using random(3) was that
rand_r(3) could not be made to use the same algorithm. That is still
true. However, the irrelevance of rand_r(3) is increasingly obvious.
Since that time, POSIX has marked the interface obsolescent. rand_r(3)
never became part of the standard C library. If not for API
compatibility reasons, I would just remove rand_r(3) entirely.
So, I do not believe it is a problem for rand_r(3) and rand(3) to
diverge.
The 12 ABI is maintained with compatibility definitions, but this
revision does subtly change the API of rand(3). The sequences of
pseudorandom numbers produced in programs built against new versions of
libc will differ from programs built against prior versions of libc.
Reviewed by: kevans, markm
MFC after: no
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23290
fflush_unlocked is currently desired in ports by sysutils/metalog, and
redefined as the locked fflush.
fputc_unlocked, fputs_unlocked, fread_unlocked, and fwrite_unlocked are
currently desired in ports by devel/elfutils, and redefined as the locked
fputs, fread, and fwrite respectively.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23336
Implicit make rules build .S asm files with the compiler, rather than the
assembler. r356889 removed GNU as from the build for powerpc targets,
causing '.s' asm files to fail to build, due to a missing 'as'. Rename the
one dummy asm file we have to a '.S' to force the implicit rules to build
with the compiler rather than the assembler.
Reported by: Francis Little
- Two changes to encoder options:
encoder options may use plus or colon, but only one
encoder names can be specified as "@name"
This results in the syntax:
df --libxo @csv:no-header:leafs=name.available-blocks /
- If xo_set_program is called before xo_parse_args, honor the requested value
- add xo_errorn* function; repair newline-adding-on-xo_error bug
- test programs now use fixed name, since linux libtool prefixs "lt-"
- Fix "horse butt" comment in source code
- update test cases
PR: 242686
I sent out an e-mail on 2020/01/21 with a plan to do this to Kyle, Rob, and
Wes; all parties have responded in the affirmative that it's OK to drop it
from these files.
The existing APIs simply pass the implicit global state to the _r variants.
No functional change.
Note that these routines are not exported from libc and are not intended to be
exported. If someone wished to export them from libc (which I would
discourage), they should first be modified to match the inconsistent parameter
type / order of the glibc public interfaces of the same names.
I know Ravi will ask, so: the eventual goal of this series is to replace
rand(3) with the implementation from random(3) (D23290). However, I'd like to
wait a bit longer on that one to see if more feedback emerges.
Reviewed by: kevans, markm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23289
As part of the FreeBSD powerpc* flag day (1300070), the auxv numbering was
changed to match every other platform.
See D20799 for more details on that change.
While the kernel and rtld were adapted, libc was not, so old dynamic
binaries broke for reasons other than the ABI change on powerpc64.
Since it's possible to support nearly everything regarding old binaries by
adding compatibility code to libc (as besides rtld, it is the main point
where auxv is digested), we might as well provide compatibility code.
The only unhandled case remaining should be "new format libraries that call
elf_aux_info() which are dynamically linked to by old-format binaries",
which should be quite rare.
Reviewed by: jhibbits
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23096
In the case of an error, the RFSPAWN'd thread will write back to psa->error
with the correct exit code. Mark this as volatile as the return value is
being actively dorked up for erroneous exits on !x86.
This fixes the following tests, tested on aarch64 (only under qemu, at the
moment):
- posix_spawn/spawn_test:t_spawn_missing
- posix_spawn/spawn_test:t_spawn_nonexec
- posix_spawn/spawn_test:t_spawn_zero
Reported by: mikael
MFC after: 3 days
to port software written for Linux variant of qsort_r(3).
Reviewed by: kib, arichardson
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23174
More background is available in r356876, but this new interface is more
portable across ZFS implementations and cleaner for what libbe is attempting
to achieve anyways.
MFC after: 3 days
Prior to introduction of this op libc's readdir would call fstatfs(2), in
effect unnecessarily copying kilobytes of data just to check fs name and a
mount flag.
Reviewed by: kib (previous version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23162
For copies shorter than 512 bytes, the data is copied using plain
ld/std instructions.
For 512 bytes or more, the copy is done in 3 phases:
Phase 1: copy from the src buffer until it's aligned at a 16-byte boundary
Phase 2: copy as many aligned 64-byte blocks from the src buffer as possible
Phase 3: copy the remaining data, if any
In phase 2, this code uses VSX instructions when available. Otherwise,
it uses ldx/stdx.
Submitted by: Luis Pires <lffpires_ruabrasil.org> (original version)
Reviewed by: jhibbits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15118