This constant was missing in unistd.h and some applications
use it to check for pthread barriers support.
Signed-off-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@pulkomandy.tk>
ticket : #13601
Thus, BeOS compatibility is preserved (and there is no risk of
breaking GCC5<->GCC2 interoperation on hybrid builds.)
This commit only makes the actual change, the build fixes are
in the next commit.
These were added in C99 to avoid interferring with C++, but then C++11
caught up with inttypes/h/stdint.h and removed the need for the macros.
They have disappeared from C11 as a result, and also from current glibc
implementation (https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=15366)
So it seems reasonably safe to do the same, and it will save people
having to enable access to these macros explicitly when writing C++.
This reverts commit 17286dc70a.
As discussed on the mailing list. As it turns out, this was less
than half of an actual implementation of this macro, and there's
technically no way to implement it without introducing (theoretical)
race conditions, in the current design anyway.
limits.h is part of the C standard, but POSIX and XSI extend it with
various defines. We should not add these unless the application requests
support for them.
In this case, PAGE_SIZE should only be defined if XSI support is
requested by defining _XOPEN_SOURCE. Note that PAGESIZE (plain POSIX for
the same thing) and B_PAGE_SIZE are alternatives that remain available.
This is an implementation of pthread barriers pursuant to the relevant specification.
Barriers are essentially a special case of conditional variables,
such that all threads waiting on one are woken up when the number of
waiters reaches a number provided at the initialization of the barrier.
In view of that, this implementation mimics the implementation of pthread_cond,
except it is more specialized and self-contained.
Signed-off-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
The warnings made those headers and those including them not detectable
by libiberty's configure because of the way it checked for them.
This fixes the gcc build.
- Termios: cf{get,set}{i,o}speed can handle arbitrary speed values.
- The value is stored in the appropriate fields of the termios structure
in this case. The old constants (stored in the flags) are preserved
for BeOS binary compatibility.
- Adjust the FTDI FT232* driver to accept custom rates, by replacing the
hardcoded regster values with a function that will compute it
according to FTDI documentation (confirmed giving the same values for
the existing baudrates).
Haiku does not yet support certain features related to POSIX threads.
Constants used to test for the presence of these features should
therefore be left undefined, according to the POSIX spec, but are
currently set to -1. This can cause software built on Haiku to
incorrectly detect the presence of these features.
* unistd.h: Undefine _POSIX_THREAD_ATTR_STACKADDR,
_POSIX_THREAD_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING feature constants.
* conf.cpp: __sysconf: Return -1 for unsupported features.
Signed-off-by: Augustin Cavalier <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
This commit replaces the placeholder implementation of sbrk(), which
operated on a process' heap, with real implementations of brk() and
sbrk() that adjust a process' program break.
* unistd.h: Add standard definitions of brk() and sbrk(); include
stdint.h for intptr_t.
* thread.cpp: Recognize RLIMIT_AS and RLIMIT_DATA resource limits
(both currently unlimited); order limit identifiers alphabetically.
* arch-specific.cpp: Remove sbrk_hook().
* malloc_debug_api.cpp: Remove sbrk_hook().
* unistd/Jamfile: Build brk.c instead of sbrk.c.
* unistd/brk.c: Add.
* unistd/sbrk.c: Delete (placeholder implementation).
* libroot_stubs.c: Remove sbrk_hook().
* libroot_stubs_legacy.c: Remove sbrk_hook().
* src/tests/.../posix/Jamfile: Build brk_test.c.
* brk_test.c: Add (simple unit test that demonstrates behaviour of
sbrk()).
Signed-off-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
The POSIX standard requires us to allow assert.h to be included multiple
times with differnt values of NDEBUG. So we can't have a global header
guard on the files. However, we must also make sure that we don't
declare functions multiple times in that case. Re-introduce an header
guard on the part of the file where we declare functions, only.
Fixes lots of warnings when building Netsurf.
* This closes#12114 again; while not POSIX, it's just a line away.
* Removed exect() from the header -- not sure where this came from.
but I can't find anything about it on the net.
* Consolidated use of asterisk style in exec.cpp.
libbind development was transferred to the NetBSD project at
http://wiki.netbsd.org/individual-software-releases/netresolv/
There isn't an official release yet, but they provide a set of patches
against the latest libbind release.
* Remove all files we don't use
* Merge the changes to the remaining files
* Add some new files we need
* Move getifaddrs implementation to libnetwork (instead of libbnetapi)
so it can be used by netresolv.
Fixes#8293 : netresolv uses getifaddrs to determine if there is a local
IPv6 address. If there is not, it will not return AAAA records.
* Fixes sharing semantics, so non-shared semaphores in non-shared
memory do not become shared after a fork.
* Adds two new system calls: _user_mutex_sem_acquire/release(),
which reuse the user_mutex address-hashed wait mechanism.
* Named semaphores continue to use traditional sem_id semaphores.
When enabled (using heap_debug_dump_allocations_on_exit(true) or
MALLOC_DEBUG=e) this causes a dump of all remaining allocations when
libroot_debug is unloaded. It uses terminate_after to be called as
late as possible.
When combined with alloc stack traces this makes for a nice if a bit
crude leak checker. Note that a lot of allocations usually remain
even at that stage due to statically, lazyly and globally allocated
stuff from the various system libraries where it isn't necessarily
worth the overhead to free them when the program terminates anyway.
When configured to do so (using heap_debug_set_stack_trace_depth(depth)
or MALLOC_DEBUG=s<depth>) the guarded heap now captures stack traces on
alloc and free.
A crash due to hitting a guard page or an already freed page now dumps
these stack traces. In the case of use-after-free one can therefore see
both where the allocation was done and where it was freed.
Note that there is a hardcoded maximum stack trace depth of 50 and that
the alloc stack trace takes away space from the free stack trace which
uses up the rest of that maximum.
This allows for something similar as was implemented in 217f090 but
makes it optional and configurable.
The MALLOC_DEBUG environment variable now can take "a<size>" to set
the default alignment to the specified size. Note that not all
alignments may be supported depending on the heap implementation.
int64_t is signed. Although it does not make a difference by itself, because
INT64_MAX is still a valid number for uint64_t (UL), the later INT64_MIN
declaration depends on INT64_MAX, and therefore got implicitly casted to
unsigned type.
This fixes the following program on a x86_64 system:
#include <stdint.h>
int main() {
int64_t test = 5;
if (test < INT64_MIN)
return 1;
return 0;
}
This is a regression since commit 1d13a609 ("stdint.h: define [U]INT64[MAX|MIN]
with [U]L on x86_64").
Signed-off-by: Jerome Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
* Partly reverting hrev47655, as the moved declarations are expected
by many ports to be accessable via string.h.
Following standards is a good thing in general, but not if it causes
more problems than it helps ...