The parsefloat routines -- which let us pass NaNs and infinities on to
strto(f|d|ld) -- come from NetBSD.
Also fix LP64's strtold to return a NaN, and fix all the architectures
to return quiet NaNs.
Also fix wcstof/wcstod/wcstold to use parsefloat so they support hex
floats.
Lots of new tests.
Bug: http://b/31101647
Change-Id: Id7d46ac2d8acb8770b5e8c445e87cfabfde6f111
This assumes that it's more likely we're unlinking a file than a directory,
though even if that's not true, as long as a failed unlink(2) is cheaper
than a successful lstat(2) -- which seems likely since there's no data to
copy -- we still win.
Change-Id: I0210e9cd3d31b8cf1813c55c810262ef327382ed
Previously, arc4random would register a fork-detecting pthread_atfork
handler to not have to call getpid() after a fork. pthread_atfork uses
pthread_mutex_lock, which requires the current thread to be initialized,
preventing the use of arc4random for initializing the global stack guard,
which needs to happen before the main thread has been initialized.
Extract the arc4random fork-detection flag and use the existing
arc4random fork handler to set it.
Bug: http://b/29622562
Change-Id: I98c9329fa0e489c3f78cad52747eaaf2f5226b80
This was fixed upstream years ago. While we're here, let's switch to the
OpenBSD copy (because that's our majority upstream BSD, not because they
found and fixed this bug first).
Bug: http://b/28035006
Change-Id: I53dd915a8122bfd7a6d58f01f9902d1586a47e23
Move fdopen/fopen/freopen and change them to initialize _seek64 instead
of the legacy _seek. The in-memory streams can stick with _seek for now,
since you're not going to fit a > 4GiB in-memory stream on a 32-bit device
anyway.
Bug: http://b/24807045
Change-Id: I09dcb426817b571415ce24d4d15f364cdda395b3
BSD doesn't invalidate the fd stored in struct FILE, which can make
it possible (via fileno(3), for example), to perform operations on
an fd you didn't intend to (rather than just failing with EBADF).
Fixing this makes the code slightly simpler anyway, and might help
catch bad code before it ships.
Bug: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10816837/fclose-works-differently-on-android-and-linux
Change-Id: I9db74584038229499197a2695c70b58ed0372a87
Rewrite inet_addr and inet_network in terms of inet_aton, and reimplement
that to include all the missing error checks.
Bug: http://b/24754503
Change-Id: I5dfa971c87201968985a0894df419f0fbf54768a
The visibility control in pthread_atfork.h is incorrect.
It breaks 64bit libc.so by hiding pthread_atfork.
This reverts commit 6df122f852.
Change-Id: I21e4b344d500c6f6de0ccb7420b916c4e233dd34
The overflow's actually in the generic C implementation of memchr.
While I'm here, let's switch our generic memrchr to the OpenBSD version too.
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=147048
Change-Id: I296ae06a1ee196d2c77c95a22f11ee4d658962da
Move various mips-only things into the arch-mips directory. As soon as mips
writes assembler replacements, we can remove these.
Change-Id: Ia7308559bc361f5c8df3e1d456b381865e060b93
Interestingly, this mostly involves cleaning up our implementation of
various <string.h> functions.
Change-Id: Ifaef49b5cb997134f7bc0cc31bdac844bdb9e089
This is correctness rather than performance, but found while investigating
performance.
Bug: 18593728
Change-Id: Idbdfed89d1931fcfae65db29d662108d4bbd9b65
This means all our stdio implementation is now the OpenBSD implementation.
The only thing we lose is the STDIO_THREAD_LOCK calls but they were no-ops
anyway.
We should probably talk to upstream about this. Either fix the locking or,
preferably, encourage them to move away from this pooling (especially since
there's no eviction policy).
Bug: 17154680
Change-Id: Ie2523e444a7d0965b8d141d57e3e11f6432d5b9a