Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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st_[amc]time_nsec to each kernel_stat, and define STAT_HAVE_NSEC to convert them
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Hi. I have found a bug in realpath that did not allow me to use it with
symlinks. Although I am using 0.9.28.1, the bug is present in 0.9.28 and
also in the trunk.
I attach a suggested patch. Please let me know if the solution is correct.
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errno to EINVAL if filename is NULL
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mark both arguments as being non-NULL
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I'm seeing a hang in applications that open and close files with a
non-threaded uClibc. There is code in fclose() to remove a file handle from
_stdio_openlist however it's commented out, allegedly because it is dead.
_stdio_openlist is used in several places, including _stdio_term when a
program exits. fclose() frees the struct, so I don't see how the code can
possibly be redundant.
In the __UCLIBC_HAS_THREADS__ && __STDIO_BUFFERS case the file is removed from
_stdio_openlist by __STDIO_OPENLIST_DEC_USE.
The attached patch fixes this bug be re-enabling the code.
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from Carmelo Amoroso <carmelo73@gmail.com>.
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Math support to be done.
From Steve Papacharalambous, stevep@freescale.com
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disable strict-aliasing until someone gets the balls to clean this stuff up
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__USE_FILE_OFFSET64 is defined. This was the case for all
architectures except those that use packed structures by default
(i.e., CRIS).
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this is a bug rather than by design
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I have successfully made gethostbyname_r(), res_init(), and gethostid() fully
reentrant. In addition, I have added a NULL check to inet_aton(). This is
where SEG FAULTs were coming from when gethostbyname_r() was called.
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Hi Erik,
Thanks for all your great work. I found a set of bugs in
resolv.c . Basically, there is code that looks like:
BIGLOCK;
__nameserversXX=__nameservers;
__nameserverXX=__nameserver;
BIGUNLOCK;
i = __dns_lookup(dname, type, __nameserversXX, __nameserverXX, &packet, &a);
which is a problem because the declarations are
int __nameservers;
char * __nameserver[MAX_SERVERS];
int __searchdomains;
char * __searchdomain[MAX_SEARCH];
so you can see that __nameserver is a pointer. Copying the
pointer to __nameserverXX doesn't protect the global variable
space. I have attached a patch and the new file. I hope you
will incorporate these bug fixes. I spent quite a bit of time
tracking them down.
Many thanks,
Ron
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gethostbyname2_r tries to resolve an ipv6 address from /etc/hosts using
get_hosts_byname_r, but with AF_INET instead of the supplied address family.
This returns ipv4 addresses marked as ipv6 ones. Fix from nbd.
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identical cc1 input for LFS enabled (compared to before r17652) but makes sure that we pickup the non-LFS if LFS is turned off (like r17652 did in this case).
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Sounds like a typo, really
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However, retesting on m68k showed up a problem that had appeared in
uClibc since the last time I tried. Specifically, revision 15785 did:
-#define HEAP_GRANULARITY (sizeof (HEAP_GRANULARITY_TYPE))
+#define HEAP_GRANULARITY (__alignof__ (HEAP_GRANULARITY_TYPE))
-#define MALLOC_ALIGNMENT (sizeof (double))
+#define MALLOC_ALIGNMENT (__alignof__ (double))
The problem is that
(a) MALLOC_HEADER_SIZE == MALLOC_ALIGNMENT
(b) the header contains a size value of type size_t
(c) sizeof (size_t) is 4 on m68k, but...
(d) __alignof__ (double) is only 2 (the largest alignment used on m68k)
So we only allocate 2 bytes for the 4-byte header, and the least
significant 2 bytes of the size are in the user's area rather than
the header. The patch below fixes that problem by redefining
MALLOC_HEADER_SIZE to:
MAX (MALLOC_ALIGNMENT, sizeof (size_t))
(but without the help of the MAX macro ;)). However, we really would
like to have word alignment on Coldfire. It makes a big performance
difference, and because we have to allocate a 4-byte header anyway,
what wastage there is will be confined to the end of the allocated block.
Any wastage will also be limited to 2 bytes per allocation compared to
the current alignment.
I've therefore used the __aligned__ type attribute to create a double
type that has at least sizeof (size_t) bytes of alignment. I've
introduced a new __attribute_aligned__ macro for this. It might seem
silly protecting against old or non-GNU compilers here, but the extra
alignment is only an optimisation, and having the macro is more in the
spirit of the other attribute code.
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be 0 in this case. Avoids some warnings).
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Only affects gcc <2.7 or non-gcc compilers that bailed earlier due to missing int64_t
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