This patch fixes the problem with symbol search order
for dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT/RTLD_NEXT, .) by loading libraries
and ld_preloads in correct order.
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=74255
Change-Id: I4cf84c70dbaabe99310230dfda12385ae5401859
We already had the POSIX strerror_r, but some third-party code defines
_GNU_SOURCE and expects to get the GNU strerror_r instead.
This exposed a bug in the libc internal logging functions where unlike
their standard brethren they wouldn't return the number of bytes they'd
have liked to have written.
Bug: 16243479
Change-Id: I1745752ccbdc569646d34f5071f6df2be066d5f4
We seem to use this stdatomic.h sometimes, and slightly different prebuilts
at other times, making them all difficult to test, and making it unclear
which one we're testing. This generalizes the bionic header so that it
can be used directly as the prebuilt header as well. So long as they
don't diverge again, that should somewhat improve test coverage.
Use the correct builtin for atomic_is_lock_free.
Fix atomic_flag_init.
Turn on atomic tests even with __GLIBC__, since they now appear to pass.
Include uchar.h in stdatomic.h where needed.
Add a basic memory ordering test.
Fix bit-rotted comments in bionic tests makefile.
Change-Id: If6a14c1075b379395ba5d93357d56025c0ffab68
I've also added insque(3) and remque(3) (from NetBSD because the OpenBSD
ones are currently broken for non-circular lists).
I've not added the three hash table functions that should be in this header
because they operate on a single global hash table and thus aren't likely
to be useful.
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=73719
Change-Id: I97397a7b921e2e860fd9c8032cafd9097380498a
These were removed from POSIX 2004. Hides the header declarations for all
targets, and hides the symbols for LP64.
Bug: 13935372
Change-Id: Id592f67e9b7051517a05f536e1373b30162e669c
When we switched to 64 bit host build be default, we no longer build
the glibc unit tests. Fix that, and also set all host targets to build
multilib.
This change also changes the name of bionic-unit-tests-glibc to add
the suffix of 32 or 64 depending on the host type built.
Change-Id: Ife13f9d80f351750ff02825b086d44bb0c2df828
mbrtoc32 and c32rtomb get their implementations from mbrtowc and wcrtomb. The
wc functions now simply call the c32 functions.
Bug: 14646575
Change-Id: I49d4b95fed0f9d790260c996c4d0f8bfd1686324
I accidentally removed the compilcation of the test implementation file
with special flags needed for the test to work. This change creates the
impl as a library with those flags back.
Bug: 14819262
Change-Id: Ib84fd26a7f4d40a0267d3ed686185b0abc5a3706
To use jemalloc, add MALLOC_IMPL = jemalloc in a board config file
and you get the new version automatically.
Update the pthread_create_key tests since jemalloc uses a few keys.
Add a new test to verify memalign works as expected.
Bug: 981363
Change-Id: I16eb152b291a95bd2499e90492fc6b4bd7053836
This patch adds tests for 14 math functions to address coverage
issue of math functions discussed in:
https://android-review.googlesource.com/#/c/49653/
Change-Id: Ia7200b93d4f5c7928a3fb827ca6932226384a116
Signed-off-by: Jingwei Zhang <jingwei.zhang@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Yong Yao <yong.yao@intel.com>
Linker is now able to resolve symlinked libraries correctly.
soinfo is extended to save the graph of dependencies during
load/unload. Dependencies are used only in CallConstructor.
Bug: 9741592
Change-Id: Id9c48a74c46aa89bcdf3d54ec2f8ba3d398130b1
Use the upstream OpenBSD implementations of these functions.
Also ensure we have symbols for htonl, htons, ntohl, and ntohs.
gtest doesn't like us using the macro versions in ASSERT_EQ.
Bug: 14840760
Change-Id: I68720e9aca14838df457d2bb27b999d5818ac2b5
Configure multilib for bionic-unit-tests-glibc-run target (the path to
the host executable was already patched to support multilib build but
the multilib itself wasn't configured).
Change-Id: If533fbdb19bc737e543cf85a0787505458f24579
Spawn 20 child processes, have them all load the library, and compare
the total PSS used in the case where we use dlopen() and the case where
we use android_dlopen_ext() with relro sharing. We assume we will save
at least 10% of the memory; in practise this example saves 40% or more
so this should be a reasonable threshold.
Bug: 14299541
Change-Id: Idccf6b8b0eb137abae2200f1ce68fb76b3cbdd75
* Ability to register atexit handler from atexit handler
* Correct way to handle both forms of atexit handler
Bug: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=66595
Bug: 4998315
Change-Id: I39529afaef97b6e1469c21389d54c0d7d175da28
If the file has no relro segment, the generated relro file will have
length 0, which caused mmap to fail. If the relro file has nonzero size,
but is too short (e.g. because it's for the wrong version of the
library), the linker would segfault while comparing the data. Fix both
these issues: don't try to map a zero length file, and don't try to
compare data that would be beyond the end of the file.
Improve test to explicitly generate two versions of the library: one
with -z relro, and one with -z norelro, so we can test both cases; also
explicitly test the case where the relro file has length 0.
Bug: 14299541
Change-Id: Id8b95585edda90e8bb5de452a35b70ed2d224934
This replaces a partial set of non-functional functions with a complete
set of functions, all of which actually work.
This requires us to implement mbsnrtowcs and wcsnrtombs which completes
the set of what we need for libc++.
The mbsnrtowcs is basically a copy & paste of wcsnrtombs, but I'm going
to go straight to looking at using the OpenBSD UTF-8 implementation rather
than keep polishing our home-grown turd.
(This patch also opportunistically switches us over to upstream btowc,
mbrlen, and wctob, since they're all trivially expressed in terms of
other functions.)
Change-Id: I0f81443840de0f1aa73b96f0b51988976793a323
Since multilib is not set every time, it needs to be per module or
there is a change that another target will use the multilib value set
previously.
Change-Id: I5c30e18d5111705cb3f6e3d4cd9ef8a28c9b746c
The glibc tests are just a regular host binary; they don't require
that you're targeting x86 or x86_64. They do seem to pick up the
suffix of the target though, even though they're always 32-bit.
Change-Id: I689ca2a4f8d7b397afa4df722b95b0d7ec904bf6