If pthread_detach() is called while the thread is in pthread_exit(),
it takes the risk that no one can free the pthread_internal_t.
So I add PTHREAD_ATTR_FLAG_ZOMBIE to detect this, maybe very rare, but
both glibc and netbsd libpthread have similar function.
Change-Id: Iaa15f651903b8ca07aaa7bd4de46ff14a2f93835
Executing test via test_forked() allows us to
avoid undesired global state changes in tests like
atexit, dlopen(.., RTLD_NODELETE) and similar.
Change-Id: I118cdf009269ab5dd7b117c9b61dafa47de2a011
This catches one trivial difference between us and glibc --- the error
returned by pthread_setname_np for an invalid pthread_t.
Change-Id: If4c21e22107c6488333d11184f8005f8669096c2
Migrate the test about pthread mutex type in file
system/extras/tests/bionic/libc/bionic/test_mutex.c
to the new place
bionic/tests/pthread_test.cpp
in the gtest format.
Change-Id: I6aab10170ccad5b9a4892d52dba2403876c86659
Signed-off-by: Yongqin Liu <yongqin.liu@linaro.org>
The previous pthread_key_create_many test was really
pthread_key_create_all, which has proven very difficult to test
correctly (because it is affected by any other parts of the system using
pthread keys, and that can vary with test ordering). It also tested
expected values of PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX and the associated sysconf() value,
rather than those being in their own test.
Instead, split this test into a few distinct tests:
* pthread.pthread_keys_max
* pthread._SC_THREAD_KEYS_MAX_big_enough_for_POSIX
* pthread.pthread_key_many_distinct
* We actually didn't have a test to ensure that the keys we were
creating were distinct.
* pthread.pthread_key_EAGAIN
* Make sure pthread_key_create() will _eventually_ fail with
EAGAIN, not at a (sometimes incorrectly) predetermined maximum.
Change-Id: Iff1e4fdcc02404094bde0418122c64c227cf1702
Enable the -std=gnu++11 flag for libstdc++ static and
dynamic libs.
ScopeGuard uses DISABLE_ macros instead of '= delete';
Change-Id: I07e21b306f95fffd49345f7fa136cfdac61e0225
There were two problems here:
* This would fail when run with unlimited stack, because it didn't know
that bionic reports unlimited stacks as 8MiB.
* This would leave RLIMIT_STACK small, causing failures to exec (so the
popen and system tests would fail).
Change-Id: I5b92dc64ca089400223b2d9a3743e9b9d57c1bc2
...rather than just what's already mapped in. This seems somewhat
contrary to POSIX's "All pages within the stack described by stackaddr
and stacksize shall be both readable and writable by the thread", but
it's what glibc does.
Bug: 17111575
Change-Id: If9e2dfad9a603c0d0615a8123aacda4946e95b2c
On most architectures the kernel subtracts a random offset to the stack
pointer in create_elf_tables by calling arch_align_stack before writing
the auxval table and so on. On all but x86 this doesn't cause a problem
because the random offset is less than a page, but on x86 it's up to two
pages. This means that our old technique of rounding the stack pointer
doesn't work. (Our old implementation of that technique was wrong too.)
It's also incorrect to assume that the main thread's stack base and size
are constant. Likewise to assume that the main thread has a guard page.
The main thread is not like other threads.
This patch switches to reading /proc/self/maps (and checking RLIMIT_STACK)
whenever we're asked.
Bug: 17111575
Signed-off-by: Fengwei Yin <fengwei.yin@intel.com>
Change-Id: I1d4dbffe7bc7bda1d353c3a295dbf68d29f63158
During pthread_exit, the keys are cleaned. Unfortunately, a call to
free occurs after the cleanup and the memory for some of the keys
is recreated when using jemalloc. The solution is to do the key
cleanup twice.
Also, modify the pthread_detach__leak test to be less flaky
when run on a jemalloc system.
Bug: 16513133
(cherry picked from commit 18d93f2793)
Change-Id: Idb32e7f9b09e2c088d256ed9eb881df80c81ff8e
- used underscore_style_for_vars
- extracted time related functionality into a function
- cleaned up style
- removed unused fields from pthread_rwlock_t on LP64
- changed reservation in pthread_rwlock_t so that the size of the
structure equals glibc version
Bug: 8133149
Change-Id: I84ad3918678dc7f5e6b3db9b7e9b0899d3abe9cd
clone(2) is the public symbol.
Also switch a test from __bionic_clone to clone; testing public API
means the test now works on glibc too.
Change-Id: If59def26a00c3afadb8a6cf9442094c35a59ffde
This is a much simpler implementation that lets the kernel
do as much as possible.
Co-authored-by: Jörgen Strand <jorgen.strand@sonymobile.com>
Co-authored-by: Snild Dolkow <snild.dolkow@sonymobile.com>
Change-Id: Iad19f155de977667aea09410266d54e63e8a26bf
This replaces the non-standard pthread_mutex_lock_timeout_np, which we have
to keep around on LP32 for binary compatibility.
Change-Id: I098dc7cd38369f0c1bec1fac35687fbd27392e00
We only support CLOCK_REALTIME and CLOCK_MONOTONIC for now,
so we us a single bit from pthread_cond_t->value to denote
the clock type. Note that this reduces the width of the counter
to 30 bits, but this should be large enough for all practical
purposes.
bug: 13232338
Change-Id: I857e7da64b3ecbb23eeac7c9f3fbd460f60231bd
In order to be able to generate a list of tests for cts, the same set of
tests must exist across all platforms. This CL adds empty tests where a
test was conditionally compiled out.
This CL creates a single library libBionicTests that includes all of
the tests found in bionic-unit-tests-static.
Also fix a few missing include files in some test files.
Tested by running and compiling the tests for every platform and
verifying the same number of tests are on each platform.
Change-Id: I9989d4bfebb0f9c409a0ce7e87169299eac605a2
__bionic_clone modifies the child stack before cloning so the stack
pointer should be valid. The test is expecting an EINVAL error to be
generated from the incorrect flags: CLONE_THREAD set without
CLONE_SIGHAND.
Change-Id: Ic02192081f6f52df6f03d9810efa82d923247a11
I fixed this bug a while back, but didn't remove it from the list,
could have added a better test, and could have written clearer code
that didn't require a comment.
Change-Id: Iebdf0f9a54537a7d5cbca254a5967b1543061f3d
Let the kernel keep pthread_internal_t::tid updated, including
across forks and for the main thread. This then lets us fix
pthread_join to only return after the thread has really exited.
Also fix the thread attributes of the main thread so we don't
unmap the main thread's stack (which is really owned by the
dynamic linker and contains things like environment variables),
which fixes crashes when joining with an exited main thread
and also fixes problems reported publicly with accessing environment
variables after the main thread exits (for which I've added a new
unit test).
In passing I also fixed a bug where if the clone(2) inside
pthread_create(3) fails, we'd unmap the child's stack and TLS (which
contains the mutex) and then try to unlock the mutex. Boom! It wasn't
until after I'd uploaded the fix for this that I came across a new
public bug reporting this exact failure.
Bug: 8206355
Bug: 11693195
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=57421
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=62392
Change-Id: I2af9cf6e8ae510a67256ad93cad891794ed0580b
<pthread.h> was missing nonnull attributes, noreturn on pthread_exit,
and had incorrect cv qualifiers for several standard functions.
I've also marked the non-standard stuff (where I count glibc rather
than POSIX as "standard") so we can revisit this cruft for LP64 and
try to ensure we're compatible with glibc.
I've also broken out the pthread_cond* functions into a new file.
I've made the remaining pthread files (plus ptrace) part of the bionic code
and fixed all the warnings.
I've added a few more smoke tests for chunks of untested pthread functionality.
We no longer need the libc_static_common_src_files hack for any of the
pthread implementation because we long since stripped out the rest of
the armv5 support, and this hack was just to ensure that __get_tls in libc.a
went via the kernel if necessary.
This patch also finishes the job of breaking up the pthread.c monolith, and
adds a handful of new tests.
Change-Id: Idc0ae7f5d8aa65989598acd4c01a874fe21582c7
Also clean up <signal.h> and revert the hacks that were necessary
for 64-bit in linker/debugger.cpp until now.
Change-Id: I3b0554ca8a49ee1c97cda086ce2c1954ebc11892
Let's have both use rt_sigprocmask, like in glibc. The 64-bit ABIs
can share the same code as the 32-bit ABIs.
Also, let's test the return side of these calls, not just the
setting.
Bug: 11069919
Change-Id: I11da99f85b5b481870943c520d05ec929b15eddb
clock_gettime was returning EINVAL for the values
produced by pthread_getcpuclockid.
Bug: 10346183
Change-Id: Iabe643d7d46110bb311a0367aa0fc737f653208e
pthread_getattr_np was reporting the values supplied to us, not the values we
actually used, which is kinda the whole point of pthread_getattr_np.
pthread_attr_setguardsize and pthread_attr_setstacksize were reporting EINVAL
for any size that wasn't a multiple of the system page size. This is
unnecessary. We can just round like POSIX suggests and glibc already does.
Also improve the error reporting for pthread_create failures.
Change-Id: I7ebc518628a8a1161ec72e111def911d500bba71
Removed 'join_count' from pthread_internal_t and switched to using the flag
PTHREAD_ATTR_FLAG_JOINED to indicate if a thread is being joined. Combined with
a switch to a while loop in pthread_join, this fixes spurious wake-ups but
prevents a thread from being joined multiple times. This is fine for
two reasons:
1) The pthread_join specification allows for undefined behavior when multiple
threads try to join a single thread.
2) There is no thread safe way to allow multiple threads to join a single
thread with the pthread interface. The second thread calling pthread_join
could be pre-empted until the thread is destroyed and its handle reused for
a different thread. Therefore multi-join is always an error.
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=52255
Change-Id: I8b6784d47620ffdcdbfb14524e7402e21d46c5f7
We could special-case raise(3) in non-threaded programs, but the more
conservative course is to make pthread_kill(3) work in signal handlers
at the cost of a race shared by other C libraries.
Change-Id: I59fb23d03bdabf403435e731704b33acdf3e0234
imgtec pointed out that pthread_kill(3) was broken, but most of the
other functions that ought to return ESRCH for invalid/exited threads
were equally broken.
Change-Id: I96347f6195549aee0c72dc39063e6c5d06d2e01f
Fix the pthread_setname_np test to take into account that emulator kernels are
so old that they don't support setting the name of other threads.
The CLONE_DETACHED thread is obsolete since 2.5 kernels.
Rename kernel_id to tid.
Fix the signature of __pthread_clone.
Clean up the clone and pthread_setname_np implementations slightly.
Change-Id: I16c2ff8845b67530544bbda9aa6618058603066d
Now __stack_chk_fail calls abort(3) directly, we terminate with
SIGSEGV rather than SIGABRT. (Because of the workaround for the
debuggerd lossage in the abort(3) implementation, which was the
motivation for switching __stack_chk_fail over to abort(3).)
Also clarify the comment on the weird pthread death test, so it
doesn't get copied and pasted onto real death tests.
Change-Id: Ie832eaded61359c99e7a10db65e28f35e8f63eed