Adding the perfunctory <ctype.h> tests showed that we'd accidentally
dropped several symbols. This puts everything back in its proper place
and switches us to upstream head at the same time.
Change-Id: Ib527ad280c9baded81e667fa598698526d93e66f
The OpenBSD doesn't support C99, and the extent to which we support
locales is trivial, so just do it ourselves.
Change-Id: If0a06e627ecc593f7b8ea3e9389365782e49b00e
Add tests for the above.
Add the fortify implementations of __stpcpy_chk and __stpncpy_chk.
Modify the strncpy test to cover more cases and use this template for
stpncpy.
Add all of the fortify test cases.
Bug: 13746695
Change-Id: I8c0f0d4991a878b8e8734fff12c8b73b07fdd344
lconv is taken from ndk/sources/android/support/include/locale.h and
matches
bsd/glibc upstream.
Keep old declaration for 32-bits for compatibility.
localeconv.c and deps are taken from openbsd upstream.
Changed strtod.c accordingly.
Change-Id: I9fcc4d15f5674d192950d80edf26f36006cd31b4
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
Also neuter __isthreaded.
We should come back to try to hide struct FILE's internals for LP64.
Bug: 3453512
Bug: 3453550
Change-Id: I7e115329fb4579246a72fea367b9fc8cb6055d18
The new implementation is a better approximation to the processor time used
by the process because it's actually based on resource usage rather than just
elapsed wall clock time.
Change-Id: I9e13b69c1d3048cadf0eb9dec1e3ebc78225596a
The only way the setitimer call can fail is if the unsigned number of seconds is
too large to fit in the kernel's signed number of seconds. If you schedule a
68-year alarm, glibc will fail by returning 0 and BSD will fail by returning -1.
Change-Id: Ic3721b01428f5402d99f31fd7f2ba2cc58805607
Also undo some of the mess where we have OpenBSD <stdio.h> but a mix of
different BSD's implementations.
In this first pass, I've only moved easy OpenBSD stuff.
Change-Id: Iae67b02cde6dba9d8d06fedeb53efbfdac0a8cf6