for them, two functions _pthread_cancel_enter and _pthread_cancel_leave
are added to let thread enter and leave a cancellation point, it also
makes it possible that other functions can be cancellation points in
libraries without having to be rewritten in libthr.
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@)
atexit and __cxa_atexit handlers that are either installed by unloaded
dso, or points to the functions provided by the dso.
Use _rtld_addr_phdr to locate segment information from the address of
private variable belonging to the dso, supplied by crtstuff.c. Provide
utility function __elf_phdr_match_addr to do the match of address against
dso executable segment.
Call back into libthr from __cxa_finalize using weak
__pthread_cxa_finalize symbol to remove any atfork handler which
function points into unloaded object.
The rtld needs private __pthread_cxa_finalize symbol to not require
resolution of the weak undefined symbol at initialization time. This
cannot work, since rtld is relocated before sym_zero is set up.
Idea by: kan
Reviewed by: kan (previous version)
MFC after: 3 weeks
number of host CPUs and osreldate.
This eliminates the last sysctl(2) calls from the dynamically linked image
startup.
No objections from: kan
Tested by: marius (sparc64)
MFC after: 1 month
quirks for weak-symbol handling. Text symbols require also marking weak
the special dot-symbol associated with the function, and data symbols
require that you not do that. To fix this, provide a hacked
__weak_reference for powerpc64, and define a new __weak_reference_data
for the single weak data symbol in base.
Revert after: binutils 2.17 import
Obtained from: projects/ppc64
bottom of the manpages and order them consistently.
GNU groff doesn't care about the ordering, and doesn't even mention
CAVEATS and SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS as common sections and where to put
them.
Found by: mdocml lint run
Reviewed by: ru
this type conversion is the high bits which were used to indicate if a
special character was a literal or special were dropped. As a result, all
special character were treated as special, even if they were supposed to
be literals.
Reviewed by: gad@
Approved by: mentor (wes@)
sigvec(2) references have been updated to sigaction(2), sigsetmask(2) and
sigblock(2) to sigprocmask(2), sigpause(2) to sigsuspend(2).
Some legacy man pages still refer to them, that is OK.
Also add xrefs for confstr(3) (as sysconf(3) but for strings) and kvm(3)
(which is a more convenient way to access some of the variables).
PR: 116480
MFC after: 1 week
POSIX permits but does not require checking access on the current and parent
directories.
Because various programs do not like it if getcwd(3) fails, it seems best
to avoid checking access as much as possible. There are various reports in
GNATS about this (search for getcwd).
Our getcwd(3) implementation first queries the kernel for the pathname
directly, which does not check any permissions but sometimes fails, and then
falls back to reading all parent directories for the names.
PR: standards/44425
MFC after: 2 weeks
Although groff_mdoc(7) gives another impression, this is the ordering
most widely used and also required by mdocml/mandoc.
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: philip, ed (mentors)
Be explicit and use the general bracketing form plus symbols which are
to be interpreted mathematically in this case.
Complaint by: mdocml
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: philip, ed (mentors)
The `name' and `newp' arguments can be marked const, because the buffers
they refer to are never changed. While there, perform some other
cleanups:
- Remove K&R from sysctl.c.
- Implement sysctlbyname() using sysctlnametomib() to prevent
duplication of an undocumented kernel interface.
- Fix some whitespace nits.
It seems the prototypes are now in sync with NetBSD as well.
This bug in the man page has gone unnoticed for over 15 years!
PR: docs/143461
Submitted by: Jeremy Huddleston jeremyhu apple.com
Approved by: ed (mentor, implicit)
MFC after: 1 week
- Make sure the mode argument is either a character or a block device.
- Use S_IS*() instead of checking S_IF*-flags by hand.
- Don't use kern.devname when the argument is already NODEV.
- Always call snprintf with the proper amount of arguments corresponding
with the format.
- Perform some whitespace fixes. Tabs instead of 4 spaces, missing space
for return statement.
- Remove unneeded includes.
When we had utmp(5), we had to list all the psuedo-terminals in ttys(5)
to make ttyslot(3) function properly. Now that pututxline(3) deals with
slot allocation internally (not based on TTY names), we don't need to
list all the TTYs on the system in ttys(5) to make user accounting work
properly.
This patch removes all the entries from the /etc/ttys files, but also
the pts(4) entries that were appended implicitly, which was added in
r154838.
I've noticed many applications do a bad job at timekeeping, for several
reasons:
- Applications like screen(1) don't update time records when restoring
the old user login record.
- Many applications only set ut_tv.tv_sec, not ut_tv.tv_usec.
This causes many problems for tools such as ac(8), which require the
timestamps to be properly ordered. This is why I've decided to let the
utmpx code obtain valid timestamps itself.
I've discussed this issue with the Austin Group and it will be fixed in
future revisions of the specification. The issue was that ut_line fields
weren't supposed to be valid for LOGIN_PROCESS entries, while
getutxline() would try to match these records anyway.
They also agreed on our way of implementing pututxline() without
getutxid() (which other operating systems also do), but unfortunately
they disagreed with our way of replacing DEAD_PROCESS entries, which is
a pity. The current specification allows the utmpx database to become
infinitely big over time.
See also: http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=213#c378