Rich Felker [Sat, 19 Oct 2019 19:39:45 +0000 (15:39 -0400)]
fix fpregset_t type on powerpc64
the userspace ucontext API has this as an array rather than a
structure.
commit 3c59a868956636bc8adafb1b168d090897692532 fixed the
corresponding mistake for vrregset_t, namely that the original
powerpc64 port used a mix of types from 32-bit powerpc and powerpc64
rather than matching the 64-bit types.
Rich Felker [Sat, 19 Oct 2019 01:11:44 +0000 (21:11 -0400)]
fix return value of ungetc when argument is outside unsigned char range
aside from the special value EOF, ungetc is specified to accept and
convert values outside the range of unsigned char. conversion takes
place automatically as part of assignment when storing into the
buffer, but the return value is also required to be the resulting
converted value, and this requirement was not satisfied.
Rich Felker [Fri, 18 Oct 2019 23:56:53 +0000 (19:56 -0400)]
fix incorrect use of fabs on long double operand in floatscan.c
based on patch by Dan Gohman, who caught this via compiler warnings.
analysis by Szabolcs Nagy determined that it's a bug, whereby errno
can be set incorrectly for values where the coercion from long double
to double causes rounding. it seems likely that floating point status
flags may be set incorrectly as a result too.
at the same time, clean up use of preprocessor concatenation involving
LDBL_MANT_DIG, which spuriously depends on it being a single unadorned
decimal integer literal, and instead use the equivalent formulation
2/LDBL_EPSILON. an equivalent change on the printf side was made in
commit bff6095d915f3e41206e47ea2a570ecb937ef926.
Rich Felker [Thu, 17 Oct 2019 23:35:17 +0000 (19:35 -0400)]
move pthread types out of per-arch alltypes.h
policy has long been that these definitions are purely a function of
whether long/pointer is 32- or 64-bit, and that they are not allowed
to vary per-arch. move the definition to the shared alltypes.h.in
fragment, using integer constant expressions in terms of sizeof to
vary the array dimensions appropriately. I'm not sure whether this is
more or less ugly than using preprocessor conditionals and two sets of
definitions here, but either way is a lot less ugly than repeating the
same thing for every arch.
Rich Felker [Thu, 17 Oct 2019 23:19:40 +0000 (19:19 -0400)]
define LONG_MAX via arch alltypes.h, strip down bits/limits.h
LLONG_MAX is uniform for all archs we support and plenty of header and
code level logic assumes it is, so it does not make sense for limits.h
bits mechanism to pretend it's variable.
LONG_BIT can be defined in terms of LONG_MAX; there's no reason to put
it in bits.
by moving LONG_MAX definition to __LONG_MAX in alltypes.h and moving
LLONG_MAX out of bits, there are now no plain-C limits that are
defined in the bits header, so the bits header only needs to be
included in the POSIX or extended profiles. this allows the feature
test macro logic to be removed from the bits header, facilitating a
long-term goal of getting such logic out of bits.
having __LONG_MAX in alltypes.h will allow further generalization of
headers.
archs without a constant PAGESIZE no longer need bits/limits.h at all.
Rich Felker [Thu, 17 Oct 2019 20:26:22 +0000 (16:26 -0400)]
make endian.h expose unprefixed macros, functions in standard profile
the resolution of Austin Group issue #162 adds endian.h as a standard
header for future versions of the standard, making it no longer
acceptable for some of the functionality to be hidden behind
_BSD_SOURCE or _GNU_SOURCE. the definitions of the [lb]etoh{16,32,64}
function-like macros are kept conditional since they are alternate
names which the standard did not adopt.
Rich Felker [Thu, 17 Oct 2019 20:06:12 +0000 (16:06 -0400)]
remove use of endian.h from arch reloc.h headers, clean up
building on commit 97d35a552ec5b6ddf7923dd2f9a8eb973526acea,
__BYTE_ORDER is now available wherever alltypes.h is included. since
reloc.h is only used from src/internal/dynlink.h, it can be assumed
that __BYTE_ORDER is exposed. reloc.h is not permitted to be included
in other contexts, and generally, like most arch headers, lacks
inclusion guards that would allow such usage. the mips64 version
mistakenly included such guards; they are removed for consistency.
Rich Felker [Thu, 17 Oct 2019 20:03:42 +0000 (16:03 -0400)]
remove indirect use of endian.h from public headers
building on commit 97d35a552ec5b6ddf7923dd2f9a8eb973526acea,
__BYTE_ORDER is now available wherever alltypes.h is included.
endian.h should not be used since, in the future, it will expose
identifiers that are not in the reserved namespace for the headers
which were previously using it.
Rich Felker [Thu, 17 Oct 2019 19:40:16 +0000 (15:40 -0400)]
move __BYTE_ORDER definition to alltypes.h
this change is motivated by the intersection of several factors.
presently, despite being a nonstandard header, endian.h is exposing
the unprefixed byte order macros and functions only if _BSD_SOURCE or
_GNU_SOURCE is defined. this is to accommodate use of endian.h from
other headers, including bits headers, which need to define structure
layout in terms of endianness. with time64 switch-over, even more
headers will need to do this.
at the same time, the resolution of Austin Group issue 162 makes
endian.h a standard header for POSIX-future, requiring that it expose
the unprefixed macros and the functions even in standards-conforming
profiles. changes to meet this new requirement would break existing
internal usage of endian.h by causing it to violate namespace where
it's used.
instead, have the arch's alltypes.h define __BYTE_ORDER, either as a
fixed constant or depending on the right arch-specific predefined
macros for determining endianness. explicit literals 1234 and 4321 are
used instead of __LITTLE_ENDIAN and __BIG_ENDIAN so that there's no
danger of getting the wrong result if a macro is undefined and
implicitly evaluates to 0 at the preprocessor level.
the powerpc (32-bit) bits/endian.h being removed had logic for varying
endianness, but our powerpc arch has never supported that and has
always been big-endian-only. this logic is not carried over to the new
__BYTE_ORDER definition in alltypes.h.
Rich Felker [Thu, 17 Oct 2019 19:27:00 +0000 (15:27 -0400)]
remove per-arch definitions for va_list
now that commit f7f1079796abc6f97c69521d2334e9c7d3945dd8 removed the
legacy i386 conditional definition, va_list is in no way
arch-specific, and has no reason to be in the future. move it to the
shared part of alltypes.h.in
Rich Felker [Thu, 17 Oct 2019 19:21:12 +0000 (15:21 -0400)]
remove i386 support for legacy struct __va_list
commit ffaaa6d230512f3a7f3d040b943517728f3dc3cf removed the
corresponding stdarg.h support for compilers without va_list builtins,
but failed to remove the alternate type definition, leaving incorrect
va_list definitions in place with compilers that don't define __GNUC__
with a value >= 3.
Szabolcs Nagy [Sun, 13 Oct 2019 14:54:31 +0000 (14:54 +0000)]
math: fix signed int left shift ub in sqrt
Both sqrt and sqrtf shifted the signed exponent as signed int to adjust
the bit representation of the result. There are signed right shifts too
in the code but those are implementation defined and are expected to
compile to arithmetic shift on supported compilers and targets.
Rich Felker [Sun, 13 Oct 2019 21:21:36 +0000 (17:21 -0400)]
fix aliasing-based undefined behavior in mbsrtowcs
mbsrtowcs contains "vectorized" loops to quickly step over bytes
without the high bit set; these have undefined behavior by virtue of
aliasing uint32_t over top of char data for the accesses.
commit 4d0a82170a25464c39522d7190b9fe302045ddb2 fixed the
corresponding usage in string functions by using the may_alias
attribute conditional on __GNUC__ and disabled the vectorized code in
its absence. do the same for mbsrtowcs.
Szabolcs Nagy [Wed, 2 Oct 2019 22:07:49 +0000 (22:07 +0000)]
add Arm to the copyright file
Several math functions are now from the ARM optimized-routines repo
licensed under standard MIT terms and copyrighted by Arm Limited,
so mention this in the COPYRIGHT too.
Rich Felker [Wed, 2 Oct 2019 13:28:03 +0000 (09:28 -0400)]
reintroduce riscv64 struct sigcontext
commit ab3eb89a8b83353cdaab12ed017a67a7730f90e9 removed it as part of
correcting the mcontext_t definition, but there is still code using
struct sigcontext and expecting the member names present in it, most
notably libgcc_eh. almost all such usage is incorrect, but bring back
struct sigcontext at least for now so as not to introduce regressions.
fix riscv64 elf_fpregset_t type and member names mismatch
in order for sys/procfs.h (provided by sys/user.h) to be useful, it
needs to match the API its consumers (gdb, etc.) expect, including the
member names established by glibc.
this partly reverts commit 29e8737f81ccc9fbadcf61a75318aa3d0516aafa,
which partly reverted d493206de7df4db07ad34f24701539ba0a6ed38c,
eliminating struct user_fpregs_struct which seems to have had no
precedent and using union __riscv_mc_fp_state for elf_fpregset_t. this
requires indirect inclusion of signal.h to make union
__riscv_mc_fp_state visible, but being that these are nonstandard
"junk" headers with no official restrictions on what they can pull in,
that's no big deal.
fix riscv64 signal.h namespace violations and ucontext API mismatches
the top-level mcontext_t member names were namespace-violating in
standards profiles before, and nested-level member names (some of them
single-letter) were egregiously bad namespace impositions even in
non-strict profiles. moreover, they mismatched those used in the
public API first defined in glibc, breaking any code making use of
them.
unlike most archs, the public API used in glibc for riscv mcontext_t
members was designed to be namespace-safe, so we can and should expose
the members regardless of feature test macros. only the typedefs for
greg_t, gregset_t, and fpregset_t need to be protected behind FTMs.
the struct tags for mcontext_t and ucontext_t are also changed. for
mcontext_t this is necessary to make the common definition across
profiles namespace-safe. for ucontext_t, it's just a matter of
matching the tag from the glibc-defined API.
these changes are split off and expanded from a patch by Khem Raj.
Szabolcs Nagy [Mon, 16 Sep 2019 20:33:11 +0000 (20:33 +0000)]
math: optimize lrint on 32bit targets
lrint in (LONG_MAX, 1/DBL_EPSILON) and in (-1/DBL_EPSILON, LONG_MIN)
is not trivial: rounding to int may be inexact, but the conversion to
int may overflow and then the inexact flag must not be raised. (the
overflow threshold is rounding mode dependent).
this matters on 32bit targets (without single instruction lrint or
rint), so the common case (when there is no overflow) is optimized by
inlining the lrint logic, otherwise the old code is kept as a fallback.
on my laptop an i486 lrint call is asm:10ns, old c:30ns, new c:21ns
on a smaller arm core: old c:71ns, new c:34ns
on a bigger arm core: old c:27ns, new c:19ns
clean up mips (32-bit, o32) syscall asm constraints
analogous to commit ddc7c4f936c7a90781072f10dbaa122007e939d0 for
mips64 and n32, remove the hack to load the syscall number into $2 via
asm, and use a constraint to let the compiler load it instead.
now, only $4, $5, and $6 are potential input-only registers. $2 is
always input and output, and $7 is both when it's an argument,
otherwise output-only. previously, $7 was treated as an input (with a
"1" constraint matching its output position) even when it was not an
input, which was arguably undefined behavior (asm input from
indeterminate value). this is corrected.
as before, $8, $9, and $10 are conditionally input-output registers
for 5-, 6-, and 7-argument syscalls. their role in input is carrying
in the values that will be stored on the stack for arguments 5-7.
their role in output is carrying back whatever the kernel has
clobbered them with, so that the compiler cannot assume they still
contain the input values.
fix mips setjmp/longjmp fpu state on r6, related issues
mips32 has two fpu register file variants: FR=0 with 32 32-bit
registers, where pairs of neighboring even/odd registers are used to
represent doubles, and FR=1 with 32 64-bit registers, each of which
can store a single or double.
up through r5 (our "mips" arch), the supported ABI uses FR=0, but
modern compilers generate "fpxx" model code that can safely operate
with either model. r6, which is an incompatible but similar ISA, drops
FR=0 and only provides the FR=1 model. as such, setjmp and longjmp,
which depended on being able to save and restore call-saved doubles by
storing and loading their 32-bit halves, were completely broken in the
presence of floating point code on mips r6.
to fix this, use the s.d and l.d mnemonics to store and load fpu
registers. these expand to the existing swc1 and lwc1 instructions for
pairs of 32-bit fpu registers on mips1, but on mips2 and later they
translate directly to the 64-bit sdc1 and ldc1.
with FR=0, sdc1 and ldc1 behave just like the pairs of swc1 and lwc1
instructions they replace, storing or loading the even/odd pair of fpu
registers that can be treated as separate single-precision floats or
as a unit representing a double. but with FR=1, they store/load
individual 64-bit registers. this yields the ABI-correct behavior on
mips r6, and should make linking of pre-r6 (plain "mips") code with
"fp64" model code workable, although this is and will likely remain
unsupported usage.
in addition to the mips r6 problem this change fixes, reportedly
clang's internal assembler refuses to assemble swc1 and lwc1
instructions for odd register indices when building for "fpxx" model
(the default). this caused setjmp and longjmp not to build. by using
the s.d and l.d forms, this problem is avoided too.
as a bonus, code size is reduced everywhere but mips1.
fix mips r6 syscall clobber lists not to include hi/lo registers
mips r6 (an incompatible isa from traditional mips) removes the hi and
lo registers used for mul/div results. older gcc versions accepted
them in the clobber list for asm, but their presence is incorrect and
breaks on later versions.
in the process of fixing this, the clobber list for 32-bit mips
syscalls has been deduplicated via a macro like on mips64 and n32.
Szabolcs Nagy [Wed, 25 Sep 2019 18:34:25 +0000 (19:34 +0100)]
arm: fix setjmp and longjmp asm for armv8-a
armv8 removed the coprocessor instructions other than cp14, so
on an armv8 system the related hwcaps should never be set.
new llvm complains about the use of coprocessor instructions in
armv8-a mode (even though they are never executed at runtime),
so ifdef them out when musl is built for armv8.
fix data race in timer_create with SIGEV_THREAD notification
in the timer thread start function, self->timer_id was accessed
without synchronization; the timer thread could fail to see the store
from the calling thread, resulting in timer_delete failing to delete
the correct kernel-level timer.
this fix is based on a patch by changdiankang, but with the load moved
to after receiving the timer_delete signal rather than just after the
start barrier, so as not to retain the possibility of data race with
timer_delete.
correct the operand specifiers in the riscv64 CAS routines
The operand sepcifiers in a_cas and a_cas_p for riscv64 were incorrect:
there's a backwards branch in the routine, so despite tmp being written
at the end of the assembly fragment it cannot be allocated in one of the
input registers because the input values may be needed for another trip
around the loop.
For code that follows the guaranteed forward progress requirements, the
backwards branch is rarely taken: SiFive's hardware only fails a store
conditional on execptional cases (ie, instruction cache misses inside
the loop), and until recently a bug in QEMU allowed back-to-back
store conditionals to succeed. The bug has been fixed in the latest
QEMU release, but it turns out that the fix caused this latent bug in
musl to manifest.
harden thread start with failed scheduling against broken __clone
commit 8a544ee3a2a75af278145b09531177cab4939b41 introduced a
dependency of the failure path for explicit scheduling at thread
creation on __clone's handling of the start function returning, which
should result in SYS_exit.
since this code path is pretty much entirely untested (previously only
reachable in applications that call the public clone() and return from
the start function) and consists of fragile per-arch asm, don't assume
it works, at least not until it's been thoroughly tested. instead make
the SYS_exit syscall from the start function's failure path.
fix arm __tlsdesc_dynamic when built as thumb code without __ARM_ARCH>=5
we don't actually support building asm source files as thumb1, but
it's possible that the condition __ARM_ARCH>=5 would be false on old
compilers that did not define __ARM_ARCH at all. avoiding that would
require enumerating all of the possible __ARM_ARCH_*__ macros for
testing.
as noted in commit 05870abeaac0588fb9115cfd11f96880a0af2108, mov lr,pc
is not valid for saving a return address when in thumb mode. since
this code is a hot path (dynamic TLS access), don't do the out-of-line
bl->bx chaining to save the return value; instead, use the fact that
this file is preprocessed asm to add the missing thumb bit with an add
in place of the mov.
the change here does not affect builds for ISA levels new enough to
have a thread pointer read instruction, or for armv5 and later as long
as the compiler properly defines __ARM_ARCH, or for any build as arm
(not thumb) code. it's likely that it makes no difference whatsoever
to any present-day practical build environments, but nonetheless now
it's safe.
as an alternative, we could just assume __thumb__ implies availability
of blx since we don't support building asm source files as thumb1. I
didn't do that in order to avoid having a wrong assumption here if
that ever changes.
as noted in commit 05870abeaac0588fb9115cfd11f96880a0af2108, mov lr,pc
is not a valid method for saving the return address in code that might
be built as thumb.
this one is unlikely to matter, since any ISA level that has thumb2
should also have native implementations of atomics that don't involve
kuser_helper, and the affected code is only used on very old kernels
to begin with.
fix code path where child function returns in arm __clone built as thumb
mov lr,pc is not a valid way to save the return address in thumb mode
since it omits the thumb bit. use a chain of bl and bx to emulate blx.
this could be avoided by converting to a .S file with preprocessor
conditions to use blx if available, but the time cost here is
dominated by the syscall anyway.
while making this change, also remove the remnants of support for
pre-bx ISA levels. commit 9f290a49bf9ee247d540d3c83875288a7991699c
removed the hack from the parent code paths, but left the unnecessary
code in the child. keeping it would require rewriting two code paths
rather than one, and is useless for reasons described in that commit.
honor __WCHAR_TYPE__ on archs with legacy long definition of wchar_t
historically, a number of 32-bit archs used long rather than int for
wchar_t, for no good reason. GCC still uses the historical types, but
clang replaced them all with int, and it seems PCC uses int too.
mismatching the compiler's type for wchar_t is not an option due to
wide string literals.
note that the mismatch does not affect C++ ABI since wchar_t is its
own builtin type/keyword in C++, distinct from both int and long, not
a typedef.
i386 already worked around this by honoring __WCHAR_TYPE__ if defined
by the compiler, and only using the official legacy ABI type if not.
add the same to the other affected archs.
it might make sense at some point to switch to using int as the
default if __WCHAR_TYPE__ is not defined, if the expectations is that
new compilers will treat int as the correct choice, but it's unlikely
that the case where __WCHAR_TYPE__ is undefined will ever be used
anyway. I actually wanted to move the definition of wchar_t to the
top-level shared alltypes.h.in, using __WCHAR_TYPE__ and falling back
to int if not defined, but that can't be done without assuming all
compilers define __WCHAR_TYPE__ thanks to some pathological archs
where the ABI has wchar_t as an unsigned type.
synchronously clean up pthread_create failure due to scheduling errors
previously, when pthread_create failed due to inability to set
explicit scheduling according to the requested attributes, the nascent
thread was detached and made responsible for its own cleanup via the
standard pthread_exit code path. this left it consuming resources
potentially well after pthread_create returned, in a way that the
application could not see or mitigate, and unnecessarily exposed its
existence to the rest of the implementation via the global thread
list.
instead, attempt explicit scheduling early and reuse the failure path
for __clone failure if it fails. the nascent thread's exit futex is
not needed for unlocking the thread list, since the thread calling
pthread_create holds the thread list lock the whole time, so it can be
repurposed to ensure the thread has finished exiting. no pthread_exit
is needed, and freeing the stack, if needed, can happen just as it
would if __clone failed.
set explicit scheduling for new thread from calling thread, not self
if setting scheduling properties succeeds, the new thread may end up
with lower priority than the caller, and may be unable to continue
running due to another intermediate-priority thread. this produces a
priority inversion situation for the thread calling pthread_create,
since it cannot return until the new thread reports success.
fix unsynchronized decrement of thread count on pthread_create error
commit 8f11e6127fe93093f81a52b15bb1537edc3fc8af wrongly documented
that all changes to libc.threads_minus_1 were guarded by the thread
list lock, but the decrement for failed SYS_clone took place after the
thread list lock was released.
Rich Felker [Fri, 30 Aug 2019 21:48:47 +0000 (17:48 -0400)]
add public declaration for optreset under appropriate feature profiles
commit 030e52639248ac8417a4934298caa78c21a228d1 added optreset, a BSD
extension to getopt duplicating the functionality (also an extension)
of setting optind to 0, but failed to provide a public declaration for
it. according to the BSD documentation and headers, the application is
not supposed to need to provide its own declaration.
Rich Felker [Fri, 30 Aug 2019 20:21:36 +0000 (16:21 -0400)]
add posix_spawn [f]chdir file actions
these are presently extensions, thus named with _np to match glibc and
other implementations that provide them; however they are likely to be
standardized in the future without the _np suffix as a result of
Austin Group issue 1208. if so, both names will be kept as aliases.
Rich Felker [Mon, 19 Aug 2019 03:41:17 +0000 (23:41 -0400)]
fix clash between sys/user.h and kernel ptrace.h on powerpc[64], sh
due to historical accident/sloppiness in glibc, the powerpc,
powerpc64, and sh versions of struct user, defined by sys/user.h, used
struct pt_regs from the kernel asm/ptrace.h for their regs member.
this made it impossible to define the type in an API-compatible manner
without either including asm/ptrace.h like glibc does (contrary to our
policy of not depending on kernel headers), or clashing with
asm/ptrace.h's definition of struct pt_regs if both headers are
included (which is almost always the case in software using
sys/user.h).
for a long time I viewed this problem as having no reasonable fix. I
even explored the possibility of having the powerpc[64] and sh
versions of user.h just include the kernel header (breaking with
policy), but that looked like it might introduce new clashes with
sys/ptrace.h. and it would also bring in a lot of additional cruft
that makes no sense for sys/user.h to expose. glibc goes out of its
way to suppress some of that with #undef, possibly leading to
different problems. this is a rabbit-hole that should be explored no
further.
as it turns out, however, nothing actually uses struct user
sufficiently to care about the type of the regs member; most software
including sys/user.h does not even use struct user at all. so, the
problem can be fixed just by doing away with the insistence on strict
glibc API compatibility for the struct tag of the regs member.
rather than renaming the tag, which might lead to the new name
entering use as API, simply use an untagged structure inside struct
user with the same members/layout as struct pt_regs.
for sh, struct pt_dspregs is just removed entirely since it was not
used.
Rich Felker [Thu, 15 Aug 2019 00:50:42 +0000 (20:50 -0400)]
remove sporadic server members from struct sched_param
these members are associated with an unsupported option group. with
time_t changing size on 32-bit archs, all interfaces taking struct
sched_param arguments would need redirection and compat shims in order
to be able to continue offering these members, for no benefit. just
convert them to reserved space instead.
Khem Raj [Wed, 14 Aug 2019 01:07:16 +0000 (18:07 -0700)]
re-add ELF gregs and fpregs types to riscv64 user.h
d493206de7df4db07ad34f24701539ba0a6ed38c deleted all the content of
user.h, but sys/procfs.h expects this from sys/user.h
threfore we retain the non conflicting parts
Rich Felker [Wed, 14 Aug 2019 01:53:30 +0000 (21:53 -0400)]
fix regression whereby main thread didn't get TLS relocations
commit ffab43602b5900c86b7040abdda8ccf6cdec95f5 broke this by moving
relocations after not only the allocation of storage for the main
thread's static TLS, but after the copying of the TLS image. thus,
relocation results were not reflected in the main thread's copy. this
could be fixed by calling __reset_tls after relocations, but instead
split the allocation and installation before/after relocations so that
there's not a redundant copy.
due to commit 71af5309874269bcc9e4b84ea716fab33d888c1d, updating of
static_tls_cnt needs to be kept with allocation of static TLS, before
relocations, rather than after installation.
Szabolcs Nagy [Sat, 10 Aug 2019 23:14:40 +0000 (23:14 +0000)]
make relocation time symbol lookup and dlsym consistent
Using common code path for all symbol lookups fixes three dlsym issues:
- st_shndx of STT_TLS symbols were not checked and thus an undefined
tls symbol reference could be incorrectly treated as a definition
(the sysv hash lookup returns undefined symbols, gnu does not, so should
be rare in practice).
- symbol binding was not checked so a hidden symbol may be returned
(in principle STB_LOCAL symbols may appear in the dynamic symbol table
for hidden symbols, but linkers most likely don't produce it).
- mips specific behaviour was not applied (ARCH_SYM_REJECT_UND) so
undefined symbols may be returned on mips.
always_inline is used to avoid relocation performance regression, the
code generation for find_sym should not be affected.
Rich Felker [Mon, 12 Aug 2019 22:19:38 +0000 (18:19 -0400)]
ldso: correct condition for local symbol handling in do_relocs
commit 7a9669e977e5f750cf72ccbd2614f8b72ce02c4c added use of the
symbol reference as the definition, in place of performing a lookup,
for STT_SECTION symbol references that were first found used in FDPIC.
such references may happen in certain other cases, such as
local-dynamic TLS and with relocation types that require a symbol but
that are being used for non-symbolic purposes, like the powerpc
unaligned address relocations.
in all such cases I'm aware of, the symbol referenced is a section
symbol (STT_SECTION); however, the important semantic property is not
its being a section, but rather its binding local (STB_LOCAL). check
the latter instead of the former for greater generality and semantic
correctness.
Samuel Holland [Sun, 30 Jun 2019 12:39:20 +0000 (07:39 -0500)]
add support for powerpc/powerpc64 unaligned relocations
R_PPC_UADDR32 (R_PPC64_UADDR64) has the same meaning as R_PPC_ADDR32
(R_PPC64_ADDR64), except that its address need not be aligned. For
powerpc64, BFD ld(1) will automatically convert between ADDR<->UADDR
relocations when the address is/isn't at its native alignment. This
will happen if, for example, there is a pointer in a packed struct.
gold and lld do not currently generate R_PPC64_UADDR64, but pass
through misaligned R_PPC64_ADDR64 relocations from object files,
possibly relaxing them to misaligned R_PPC64_RELATIVE. In both cases
(relaxed or not) this violates the PSABI, which defines the relevant
field type as "a 64-bit field occupying 8 bytes, the alignment of
which is 8 bytes unless otherwise specified."
All three linkers violate the PSABI on 32-bit powerpc, where the only
difference is that the field is 32 bits wide, aligned to 4 bytes.
Currently musl fails to load executables linked by BFD ld containing
R_PPC64_UADDR64, with the error "unsupported relocation type 43".
This change provides compatibility with BFD ld on powerpc64, and any
static linker on either architecture that starts following the PSABI
more closely.
Rich Felker [Sun, 11 Aug 2019 15:57:38 +0000 (11:57 -0400)]
ldso: remove redundant runtime checks in static TLS logic
as a result of commit ffab43602b5900c86b7040abdda8ccf6cdec95f5,
static_tls_cnt is now valid during relocations at program startup, so
it's no longer necessary to condition the check against static_tls_cnt
on this being a runtime (dlopen) relocation.
Rich Felker [Sun, 11 Aug 2019 15:48:06 +0000 (11:48 -0400)]
ldso: fix calloc misuse allocating initial tls
this is analogous to commit 2f1f51ae7b2d78247568e7fdb8462f3c19e469a4,
and should have been caught at the same time since it was right next
to the code moved in that commit. between final stage 3 reloc_all and
the jump to the main program's entry point, it is not valid to call
any functions which may be interposed by the application; doing so
results in execution of application code before ctors have run, and on
fdpic archs, before the main program's fdpic self-fixups have taken
place, which will produce runaway wrong execution.
Rich Felker [Thu, 8 Aug 2019 01:28:37 +0000 (21:28 -0400)]
fix regression in recvmmsg with no timeout
somewhat analogous to commit d0b547dfb5f7678cab6bc39dd736ed6454357ca4,
but here the omission of the null timeout check was in the time64
syscall code path. this code is not yet used except on x32.
Rich Felker [Thu, 8 Aug 2019 01:15:53 +0000 (21:15 -0400)]
add non-stub implementation of catgets localization functions
these accept the netbsd/openbsd message catalog file format,
consisting of a sorted list of set headers and a sorted list of
message headers for each set, admitting trivial binary search for
lookups.
the gnu format was not chosen because it's unusably bad. it does not
admit efficient (log time or better) lookups; rather, it requires
linear search or hash table lookups, and the hash function is awful:
it's literally set_id*msg_id.
Rich Felker [Wed, 7 Aug 2019 06:57:53 +0000 (02:57 -0400)]
fix regression in select with no timeout
commit 722a1ae3351a03ab25010dbebd492eced664853b inadvertently passed a
copy of {s,us} to the syscall even if the timeout argument tv was
null, thereby causing immediate timeout (polling) in place of
unlimited timeout. only archs using SYS_select were affected.
fix failure of glob to match broken symlinks under some conditions
when the pattern ended with one or more literal path components, or
when the GLOB_MARK flag was passed to request that glob flag directory
results and the type obtained by readdir was unknown or inconclusive
(symlink), the stat function was called to evaluate existence and/or
determine type. however, stat fails with ENOENT for broken symlinks,
and this caused the match to be omitted from the results.
instead, use stat only for the unknown/inconclusive cases with
GLOB_MARK, and otherwise, or if stat fails, use lstat existence still
needs to be determined. this minimizes the number of costly syscalls,
performing both only in the case where GLOB_MARK is in use and there
is a final literal path component which is a broken symlink.
Baruch Siach [Tue, 6 Aug 2019 05:51:13 +0000 (08:51 +0300)]
fix risc64 conflict with kernel headers
Rename user registers struct definitions to avoid conflict with the
asm/ptrace.h kernel header that defines the same structs. Use the
__riscv_mc prefix as glibc does.
in arm cancellation point asm, don't unnecessarily preserve link register
The only reason we needed to preserve the link register was because we
were using a branch-link instruction to branch to __cp_cancel.
Replacing this with a branch means we can avoid the save/restore as
the link register is no longer modified.
Rich Felker [Mon, 5 Aug 2019 23:55:42 +0000 (19:55 -0400)]
use setitimer function rather than syscall to implement alarm
otherwise alarm will break on 32-bit archs when time_t is changed to
64-bit. a second itimerval object is introduced for retrieving the old
value, since the setitimer function has restrict-qualified arguments.
Rich Felker [Mon, 5 Aug 2019 22:41:47 +0000 (18:41 -0400)]
fix x87 stack imbalance in corner cases of i386 math asm
commit 31c5fb80b9eae86f801be4f46025bc6532a554c5 introduced underflow
code paths for the i386 math asm, along with checks on the fpu status
word to skip the underflow-generation instructions if the underflow
flag was already raised. unfortunately, at least one such path, in
log1p, returned with 2 items on the x87 stack rather than just 1 item
for the return value. this is a violation of the ABI's calling
convention, and could cause subsequent floating point code to produce
NANs due to x87 stack overflow. if floating point results are used in
flow control, this can lead to runaway wrong code execution.
rather than reviewing each "underflow already raised" code path for
correctness, remove them all. they're likely slower than just
performing the underflow code unconditionally, and significantly more
complex.
all of this code should be ripped out and replaced by C source files
with inline asm. doing so would preclude this kind of error by having
the compiler perform all x87 stack register allocation and stack
manipulation, and would produce comparable or better code. however
such a change is a much larger project.
Rich Felker [Sat, 3 Aug 2019 22:43:36 +0000 (18:43 -0400)]
update riscv64 syscall numbers to linux v5.1
commit f3f96f2daa4d00f0e38489fb465cd0244b531abe added these for the
rest of the archs, but the patch it corresponded to missed riscv64
since riscv64 was not yet upstream at the time. this caused commit dfc81828f7ab41da08f744c44117a1bb20a05749 to break riscv64 build, due
to a wrong assumption that SYS_statx was unconditionally defined.
Rich Felker [Fri, 2 Aug 2019 18:04:45 +0000 (14:04 -0400)]
clock_gettime: add support for 32-bit vdso with 64-bit time_t
this fixes a major upcoming performance regression introduced by
commit 72f50245d018af0c31b38dec83c557a4e5dd1ea8, whereby 32-bit archs
would lose vdso clock_gettime after switching to 64-bit time_t, unless
the kernel supports time64 and provides a time64 version of the vdso
function. this would incur not just one but two syscalls: first, the
failed time64 syscall, then the fallback time32 one.
overflow of the 32-bit result is detected and triggers a revert to
syscalls. normally, on a system that's not Y2038-ready, this would
still overflow, but if the process has been migrated to a
time64-capable kernel or if the kernel has been hot-patched to add
time64 syscalls, it may conceivably work.
Rich Felker [Thu, 1 Aug 2019 00:35:37 +0000 (20:35 -0400)]
move IPC_STAT definition to a new bits/ipcstat.h file
otherwise, 32-bit archs that could otherwise share the generic
bits/ipc.h would need to duplicate the struct ipc_perm definition,
obscuring the fact that it's the same. sysvipc is not widely used and
these headers are not commonly included, so there is no performance
gain to be had by limiting the number of indirectly included files
here.
files with the existing time32 definition of IPC_STAT are added to all
current 32-bit archs now, so that when it's changed the change will
show up as a change rather than addition of a new file where it's less
obvious that the value is changing vs the generic one that was used
before.
fix missing declarations for pthread_join extensions in source file
per policy, define the feature test macro to get declarations for the
pthread_tryjoin_np and pthread_timedjoin_np functions. in the past
this has been only for checking; with 32-bit archs getting 64-bit
time_t it will also be necessary for symbols to get redirected
correctly.
allow archs to define IPC_STAT, propagate time64 bit to other macros
to make use of {sem,shm,msg}ctl IPC_STAT functionality to provide
64-bit time_t on 32-bit archs, IPC_STAT and related macros must be
defined with bit 8 (0x100) set. allow archs to define IPC_STAT in
bits/ipc.h, and define the other macros in terms of it so that they
all get the same value of the time64 bit.
the time64 syscall has to be used if time_t is 64-bit, since there's
no way of knowing before making a syscall whether the result will fit
in 32 bits, and the 32-bit syscalls do not report overflow as an
error.
on 64-bit archs, there is no change to the code after preprocessing.
on current 32-bit archs, the result is now read from the kernel
through long[2] array, then copied into the timespec, to remove the
assumption that time_t is the same as long.
vdso clock_gettime is still used in place of a syscall if available.
32-bit archs with 64-bit time_t must use the time64 version of the
vdso function; if it's not available, performance will significantly
suffer. support for both vdso functions could be added, but would
break the ability to move a long-lived process from a pre-time64
kernel to one that can outlast Y2038 with checkpoint/resume, at least
without added hacks to identify that the 32-bit function is no longer
usable and stop using it (e.g. by seeing negative tv_sec). this
possibility may be explored in future work on the function.
the 64-bit/time64 version of the syscall is not API-compatible with
the userspace timex structure definition; fields specified as long
have type long long. so when using the time64 syscall, we have to
convert the entire structure. this was always the case for x32 as
well, but went unnoticed, meaning that clock_adjtime just passed junk
to the kernel on x32. it should be fixed now.
for the fallback case, we avoid encoding any assumptions about the new
location of the time member or naming of the legacy slots by accessing
them through a union of the kernel type and the new userspace type.
the only assumption is that the non-time members live at the same
offsets as in the (non-time64, long-based) kernel timex struct. this
property saves us from having to convert the whole thing, and avoids a
lot of additional work in compat shims.
the new code is statically unreachable for now except on x32, where it
fixes major brokenness. it is permanently unreachable on 64-bit.
without this, the SIOCGSTAMP and SIOCGSTAMPNS ioctl commands, for
obtaining timestamps, would stop working on pre-5.1 kernels after
time_t is switched to 64-bit and their values are changed to the new
time64 versions.
new code is written such that it's statically unreachable on 64-bit
archs, and on existing 32-bit archs until the macro values are changed
to activate 64-bit time_t.
get/setsockopt: add fallback for new time64 SO_RCVTIMEO/SO_SNDTIMEO
without this, the SO_RCVTIMEO and SO_SNDTIMEO socket options would
stop working on pre-5.1 kernels after time_t is switched to 64-bit and
their values are changed to the new time64 versions.
new code is written such that it's statically unreachable on 64-bit
archs, and on existing 32-bit archs until the macro values are changed
to activate 64-bit time_t.
make __socketcall analogous to __syscall, error-returning
the __socketcall and __socketcall_cp macros are remnants from a really
old version of the syscall-mechanism infrastructure, and don't follow
the pattern that the "__" version of the macro returns the raw negated
error number rather than setting errno and returning -1.
for time64 purposes, some socket syscalls will need to operate on the
error value rather than returning immediately, so fix this up so they
can use it.
being "ctl" functions that take command numbers, these will be handled
like ioctl/sockopt/etc., using new command numbers for the time64
variants with an "IPC_TIME64" bit added to their values. to obtain
such a reserved bit, we reuse the IPC_64 bit, 0x100, which served only
as part of the libc-to-kernel interface, not as a public interface of
the libc functions.
using new command numbers avoids the need for compat shims (in ABIs
doing time64 through symbol redirection and compat shims) and, by
virtue of having a fixed time64 bit for all commands, we can ensure
that libc can perform the appropriate translations, even if the
application is using new commands from a newer version of the libc
headers than the libc available at runtime.
for the vast majority of 32-bit archs, the kernel {sem,shm,msq}id64_ds
definitions left padding space intended for expanding their time_t
fields to 64 bits in-place, and it would have been really nice to be
able to do time64 support that way. however the padding was almost
always in little-endian order (except on powerpc, and for msqid_ds
only on mips, where it matched the arch's byte order), and more
importantly, the alignment was overlooked. in semid_ds and msqid_ds,
the time_t members were not suitably aligned to be expanded to 64-bit,
due to the ipc_perm header consisting of 9 32-bit words -- except on
powerpc where ipc_perm contains an extra padding word. in shmid_ds,
the time_t members were suitably aligned, except that mips
(accidentally?) omitted the padding for them alltogether.
as a result, we're stuck with adding new time_t fields on the end of
the structures, and assembling the 32-bit lo/hi parts (or 16-bit hi
parts, for mips shmid_ds, which lacked sufficient reserved space for
full 32-bit hi parts) to fill them in.
all of the functional changes here are conditional on the IPC_TIME64
macro having a nonzero definition, which will only happen when
IPC_STAT is redefined for 32-bit archs, and on time_t being larger
than long, so for now the new code is all dead code.
due to the variadic signature, semctl needs to be made aware of any
new commands that take arguments. this was overlooked when commit af55070eae5438476f921d827b7ae49e8141c3fe added SEM_STAT_ANY.
these differ from generic only in using endian-matched padding with a
short __ipc_perm_seq field in place of the int field in generic. this
is not a documented public interface anyway, and the original intent
was to use int here. some ports just inadvertently slipped in the
kernel short+padding form.
remove arch-specific bits/ipc.h that are identical to generic
previously these differed from generic because they needed their own
definitions of IPC_64. now that it's no longer in public header,
they're identical.
move IPC_64 from public bits/ipc.h to syscall_arch.h
the definition of the IPC_64 macro controls the interface between libc
and the kernel through syscalls; it's not a public API. the meaning is
rather obscure. long ago, Linux's sysvipc *id_ds structures used
16-bit uids/gids and wrong types for a few other fields. this was in
the libc5 era, before glibc. the IPC_64 flag (64 is a misnomer; it's
more like 32) tells the kernel to use the modern[-ish] versions of the
structures.
the definition of IPC_64 has nothing to do with whether the arch is
32- or 64-bit. rather, due to either historical accident or
intentional obnoxiousness, the kernel only accepts and masks off the
0x100 IPC_64 flag conditional on CONFIG_ARCH_WANT_IPC_PARSE_VERSION,
i.e. for archs that want to provide, or that accidentally provided,
both. for archs which don't define this option, no masking is
performed and commands with the 0x100 bit set will fail as invalid. so
ultimately, the definition is just a matter of matching an arbitrary
switch defined per-arch in the kernel.
major changes are made alongside adding time64 syscall support to
account for issues found during research. select historically accepts
non-normalized (tv_usec not restricted to less than 1000000) timeouts,
and the kernel normalizes them, but the normalization code is buggy
and subject to integer overflows. since normalization is needed anyway
when using SYS_pselect6 or SYS_pselect6_time64 as the backend, simply
do it up-front to eliminate both code path complexity and the
possibility of kernel bugs.
as a side effect, select no longer updates the caller's timeout
timeval with the remaining time. previously, archs that used
SYS_select updated it and archs that used SYS_pselect6 didn't. this
change may turn out to be controversial and may need revisiting, but
in any case the old behavior was not strictly conforming.
POSIX allows modification of the timeout "upon successful completion",
but the Linux syscall modifies it upon unsuccessful completion (EINTR)
as well (and presumably each time the syscall stops and restarts
before it's known whether completion will be successful). it's
possible that this language does not reflect the actual intent of the
standard, since other historical implementations probably behaved like
Linux, but that should be clarified if there's a desire to bring the
old behavior back. regardless, programs that are depending on this are
not correct and are already broken on some archs we support.
the time64 syscall is used only if the timeout does not fit in 32
bits. after preprocessing, the code is unchanged on 64-bit archs. for
32-bit archs, the timeout now goes through an intermediate copy,
meaning that the caller does not get back the updated timeout. this is
based on my reading of the documentation, which does not document the
updating as a contract you can rely on, and mentions that the whole
recvmmsg timeout mechanism is buggy and unlikely to be useful. if it
turns out that there's interest in making the remaining time
officially available to callers, such functionality could be added
back later.
these functions have no new time64 syscall, so the existence of a
time64 syscall cannot be used as the condition for the new code.
instead, assume the syscall takes timevals as longs, which is true
everywhere but x32, and interface with the kernel through long[4]
objects.
rather than adding new hacks to special-case x32 here, just add
x32-specific source files since a trivial syscall wrapper suffices
there.
the new code paths added in this commit are statically unreachable on
all current archs, but will become reachable when 32-bit archs get
64-bit time_t.
use 64-bit msqid_ds layout in the generic version of bits/msg.h
this layout is more common already than the old generic, and should
become even more common in the future with new archs added and with
64-bit time_t on 32-bit archs.
some of these were not exact duplicates, but had gratuitously
different naming for padding, or omitted the endian checks because the
arch is fixed-endian.
use 64-bit semid_ds layout in the generic version of bits/sem.h
this layout is slightly less common than the old generic one, but only
because x86_64 and x32 wrongly (according to comments in the kernel
headers) copied the i386 padding. for future archs, and with 64-bit
time_t on 32-bit archs, the new layout here will become the most
common, and it makes sense to treat it as the generic.
various padding fields in the generic bits/sem.h were defined in terms
of time_t as a cheap hack standing in for "kernel long", to allow x32
to use the generic version of the file. this was a really bad idea, as
it ended up getting copied into lots of arch-specific versions of the
bits file, and is a blocker to changing time_t to 64-bit on 32-bit
archs.
this commit adds an x32-specific version of the header, and changes
padding type back from time_t to long (currently the same type on all
archs but x32) in the generic header and all the others the hack got
copied into.