Commit ebd645e on 2001-10-03 made environ.cc:_addenv() add unneeded
space at the end of the environment block to "work around problems
with some buggy applications." This clutters the code and is
presumably no longer needed.
Thanks to Ken Harris <Ken.Harris@mathworks.com> for the diagnosis.
When backing up tail to handle a "..", the code only checked that
it didn't underrun the destination buffer while removing path
components. It did *not* take into account that the first backslash
in the path had to be kept intact. Example path to trigger the
problem: "C:\A..\..\..\B'
Fix this by moving the dst pointer to the first backslash so subsequent
tests cannot underrun this position. Also make sure that we always
*have* a backslash.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Thanks to Ken Harris <Ken.Harris@mathworks.com> for the diagnosis
which led to a buffer underrun in this loop.
Revert before release.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
- when calculating a correction to align next brk to page boundary,
ensure that the correction is less than a page size
- if allocating the correction fails, ensure that the top size is
set to brk + sbrk_size (minus any front alignment made)
Signed-off-by: Jeff Johnston <jjohnstn@redhat.com>
When converting number of days since epoch (32-bits) to seconds,
calculations using 32-bit `long` overflow for years above 2038. Solve
this by casting number of days to `time_t` just before final
multiplication.
Signed-off-by: Freddie Chopin <freddie.chopin@gmail.com>
Previously, hw exception handler stub and interrupt handler stub for microbaze were unable to
be overwritten. Change to weak to fix this.
Signed-off-by: Ben Levinsky <ben.levinsky@xilinx.com>
GCC 7 is able to see straight through this trick, so use a more formal
method to avoid the warning.
Signed-off-by: Yaakov Selkowitz <yselkowi@redhat.com>
- From: Cesar Philippidis <cesar@codesourcery.com>
Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 14:43:42 -0700
Subject: [PATCH] nvptx port
This port adds support for Nvidia GPU's, which are primarily used as
offload accelerators in OpenACC and OpenMP.
There are systems with a MaximumProcessorCount not
reflecting the actually available CPUs. The ActiveProcessorCount
is correct though. So we use ActiveProcessorCount rather than
MaximumProcessorCount per group to set group affinity correctly.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
The gdtoa implementation uses the type long, defined as Long, in lots
of code. For historical reason newlib defines Long as int32_t instead.
This works fine, as long as floating point exceptions are not enabled.
The conversion to 32 bit int can lead to a FE_INVALID situation.
Example:
const char *str = "121645100408832000.0";
char *ptr;
feenableexcept (FE_INVALID);
strtod (str, &ptr);
This leads to the following situation in strtod
double aadj;
Long L;
[...]
L = (Long)aadj;
For instance, on x86_64 the code here is
cvttsd2si %xmm0,%eax
At this point, aadj is 2529648000.0 in our example. The conversion to
32 bit %eax results in a negative int value, thus the conversion is
invalid. With feenableexcept (FE_INVALID), a SIGFPE is raised.
Fix this by always using 64 bit ints here if double is not a 32 bit type
to avoid this type of FP exceptions.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
* Change set_socket_type/get_socket_type to virtual methods
* Move various variables into af_unix_shmem_t
* Change sun_name_t to match new usage pattern
* Move shut_state definition and add a name for the 0 value
* Allow marking packet as administrative packet. This allows
filtering out info packets exchange between peers and tweak
data accordingly.
* Rename send_my_name to send_sock_info and send credentials
if not called from bind (so the socket was already connected)
* Handle SO_PASSCRED in setsockopt/getsockopt
* Add input size checking to setsockopt/getsockopt
* Use NT functions where appropriate
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
We need to share socket info between threads *and* processes.
SRWLOCKs are single-process only, unfortunately. Provide a
sharable low-profile spinlock instead.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Classical function call recursion wastes a lot of stack space.
Each recursion level requires a full stack frame comprising all
local variables and additional space as dictated by the
processor calling convention.
This implementation instead stores the variables that are unique
for each recursion level in a parameter stack array, and uses
iteration to emulate recursion. Function call recursion is not
used until the array is full.
To ensure the stack consumption isn't worsened by this design, the
size of the parameter stack array is chosen to be similar to the
stack frame excluding the array. Each function call recursion level
can handle 8 iterative recursion levels.
Stack consumption will worsen when sorting tiny arrays that do not
need recursion (of 6 elements or less). It will be about equal for
up to 15 elements, and be an improvement for larger arrays. The best
case improvement is a stack size reduction down to about one quarter
of the stack consumption before the change.
A design where the parameter stack array is large enough for the
worst case recursion level was rejected because it would worsen
the stack consumption when sorting arrays smaller than about 1500
elements. The worst case is 31 levels on a 32-bit system.
A design with a dynamic parameter array size was rejected because
of limitations in some compilers.
The qsort algorithm splits the input array in three parts. The
left and right parts may need further sorting. One of them is
sorted by recursion, the other by iteration. This update ensures
that it is the smaller part that is chosen for recursion.
By choosing the smaller part, each recursion level will handle
less than half the array of the previous recursion level. Hence
the recursion depth is bounded to be less than log2(n) i.e. 1
level per significant bit in the array size n.
The update also includes code comments explaining the algorithm.
Newlib has a build configuration where syscalls can be directly
embedded in the newlib library rather than relying on libgloss.
This configuration was broken recently by an update to the libgloss
support for Arm that was not propagated to the syscalls interface in
newlib itself. This patch restores the build. It's essentially a
copy of https://sourceware.org/ml/newlib/2018/msg00128.html but there
are some other minor cleanups and changes that I've made at the same
time. None of those cleanups affect functionality.
The prototypes of the following functions have been updated: _link,
_sbrk, _getpid, _write, _swiwrite, _lseek, _swilseek, _read and
_swiread.
Signed-off-by: Richard Earnshaw <Richard.Earnshaw@arm.com>
E.g. arm ABI requires -fshort-enums for bare-metal toolchains.
Given there are only 29 category enums, the compiler chooses an
8 bit enum type, so a size of 11 bits for the bitfield leads to
a compile time error:
error: width of 'cat' exceeds its type
enum category cat: 11;
^~~
Fix this by aligning the size of the category members to byte
borders.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Scripts do not try to acquire Unicode data by best-effort magic anymore.
Options supported:
-h for help
-i to copy Unicode data from /usr/share/unicode/ucd first
-u to download Unicode data from unicode.org first
If (despite of -i or -u if given) the necessary Unicode files are not
available locally, table generation is skipped, but no error code is
returned, so not to obstruct the build process if called from a Makefile.
E.g. arm ABI requires -fshort-enums for bare-metal toolchains.
Given there are only 29 category enums, the compiler chooses an
8 bit enum type, so a size of 11 bits for the bitfield leads to
a compile time error:
error: width of 'cat' exceeds its type
enum category cat: 11;
^~~
Fix this by aligning the size of the category members to byte
borders.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
touupper and toulower didn't return a value in all cases. Worse,
this only broke Cygwin when building without optimization for debug
purposes.
Why GCC neglects to notice this is a mystery.
While at it, fix formatting.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>