For all libthr contexts, use ${MACHINE_CPUARCH}
for all libc contexts, use ${MACHINE_ARCH} if it exists, otherwise use
${MACHINE_CPUARCH}
Move some common code up a layer (the .PATH statement was the same in
all the arch submakefiles).
# Hope she hasn't busted powerpc64 with this...
add a wrapper for it in libc and rework the code in libthr, the
system call still can return EINTR, we keep this feature.
Discussed on: thread
Reviewed by: jilles
objects inside one ELF section, which prevents the creation of a ELF
section with mixed data types. For example, gcc LTO use libelf to
create a .gnu_lto_XXX section that contains integers and a string
table, which doesn't work with our libelf implementation.
The changes made in this commit include:
* Allow Elf_Data type to be different than section type.
* Relax Elf_Data alignment check.
* Align each Elf_Data by their own alignment instead of section alignment.
MFC after: 1 month
This adds a new "arrow" key "delete" corresponding to the kD termcap value.
It only works if that is a sequence such as "\033[3~"; if it is "\177", the
em-delete-prev-char or ed-delete-prev-char from the single-character
mappings remains. It turns out that most terminals (xterm and alikes,
syscons in xterm mode) produce "\033[3~" by default so <Delete> has the
expected effect.
This also means that things need to be considerably misconfigured for
<Backspace> to perform a <Delete> action.
This allows the nfs_getrootfh() function to return the
correct file handle size to pxe.c for pxeboot. It also
results in NFSv2 no longer being used by default anywhere
in FreeBSD. If built with OLD_NFSV2 defined, the old
code that predated this patch will be built and NFSv2
will be used.
Tested by: danny at cs.huji.ac.il
MFC after: 2 weeks
module private type, when private type mutex is locked/unlocked, thread
critical region is entered or leaved. These changes makes fork()
async-signal safe which required by POSIX. Note that user's atfork handler
still needs to be async-signal safe, but it is not problem of libthr, it
is user's responsiblity.
some cases we want to improve:
1) if a thread signal got a signal while in cancellation point,
it is possible the TDP_WAKEUP may be eaten by signal handler
if the handler called some interruptibly system calls.
2) In signal handler, we want to disable cancellation.
3) When thread holding some low level locks, it is better to
disable signal, those code need not to worry reentrancy,
sigprocmask system call is avoided because it is a bit expensive.
The signal handler wrapper works in this way:
1) libthr installs its signal handler if user code invokes sigaction
to install its handler, the user handler is recorded in internal
array.
2) when a signal is delivered, libthr's signal handler is invoke,
libthr checks if thread holds some low level lock or is in critical
region, if it is true, the signal is buffered, and all signals are
masked, once the thread leaves critical region, correct signal
mask is restored and buffered signal is processed.
3) before user signal handler is invoked, cancellation is temporarily
disabled, after user signal handler is returned, cancellation state
is restored, and pending cancellation is rescheduled.
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@)
the separate .o for libc_pic.a. This prevents rtld from making the
symbol global.
Putting the stack_protector_compat.c into the public domain acknowledged
by kan.
Reviewed by: kan
MFC after: 2 weeks