This brings us on par with glibc.
To avoid breaking clients, temporary keep cmsg_nxthdr until the next NDK
refresh.
Bug: 15822452
Change-Id: I24c24e68c31f4f2b8f3d2df7acd575cb75174173
Put the accept4 test in the sorted order, and put the accept4 define in
sorted order.
Also add the missing SYS_RECVMMSG and SYS_SENDMMSG defines.
Change-Id: Iba55354975e0d5027dbee53f6de752c2df719493
Also add the corresponding constant, struct, and function declarations
to <sys/socket.h>, and perfunctory tests so we know that the symbols
actually exist.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Ranquet <guillaumex.ranquet@intel.com>
Change-Id: Ib0d854239d3716be90ad70973c579aff4895a4f7
SOCK_CLOEXEC is used to atomically set close-on-exec flag for the new
descriptor(s), and SOCK_NONBLOCK is used to mark descriptor(s) as
non-blocking.
Change-Id: I8ba6a70543d23759e3ddcc7ff9c21b567184d681
Fortify calls to recv() and recvfrom().
We use __bos0 to match glibc's behavior, and because I haven't
tested using __bos.
Change-Id: Iad6ae96551a89af17a9c347b80cdefcf2020c505
Note that the Linux kernel handed over responsibility for most of the
socket constants to glibc some time ago. Someone had updated our
external/kernel-headers file but not regenerated the bionic headers,
so this change copies the missing stuff from the old bionic <linux/socket.h>
into <sys/socket.h>. This is what glibc does.
I've hacked a few of the other files to #include <sys/socket.h> for
backward compatibility, but even so this requires numerous other
changes to switch people over from direct inclusion of <linux/...> headers.
Change-Id: I0e4af64e631d3cef911a31d90f2f806e058278a0