The OpenBSD doesn't support C99, and the extent to which we support
locales is trivial, so just do it ourselves.
Change-Id: If0a06e627ecc593f7b8ea3e9389365782e49b00e
Requested by Google Breakpad, but seems to be assumed to be defined
in various places in the AOSP tree already; iputils, wpa_supplicant,
et cetera.
Change-Id: I1f7833c98e0af4c77e49744c08b8239061c9a571
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
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>
There are only three users of bionic definition of ALIGN and keeping it
in sys/param.h polutes the namespace.
I inline the definition in the the three places that's used.
Bug: 13400663
Change-Id: I565008e8426c38ffb07422f42cd8e547d53044e9
Avoid this error in -ffreestanding mode:
sys/types.h:45:1: error: unknown type name '__uint32_t'
Change-Id: I826b36873862d1d70b47401f31f4369a77666b8e
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
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
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
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
This change constitutes the minimum amount of
work required to move the code over to C++, address
compiler warnings, and to make it const correct and
idiomatic (within the constraints of being called
from C code).
bug: 13058886
Change-Id: Ic78cf91b7c8e8f07b4ab0781333a9e243763298c
This gives us:
* <dirent.h>
struct dirent64
readdir64, readdir64_r, alphasort64, scandir64
* <fcntl.h>
creat64, openat64, open64.
* <sys/stat.h>
struct stat64
fstat64, fstatat64, lstat64, stat64.
* <sys/statvfs.h>
struct statvfs64
statvfs64, fstatvfs64.
* <sys/vfs.h>
struct statfs64
statfs64, fstatfs64.
This also removes some of the incorrect #define hacks we've had in the
past (for stat64, for example, which we promised to clean up way back
in bug 8472078).
Bug: 11865851
Bug: 8472078
Change-Id: Ia46443521918519f2dfa64d4621027dfd13ac566
We don't need quite so much duplication because we already have a way
to get the signal number from its name, and that already copes with the
fact that the mips/mips64 numbers are different from everyone else's.
Also remove sys_signame from LP64. glibc doesn't have this BSD-ism.
Change-Id: I6dc411a3d73589383c85d3b07d9d648311492a10
Remove the linker's reliance on BSD cruft and use the glibc-style
ElfW macro. (Other code too, but the linker contains the majority
of the code that needs to work for Elf32 and Elf64.)
All platforms need dl_iterate_phdr_static, so it doesn't make sense
to have that part of the per-architecture configuration.
Bug: 12476126
Change-Id: I1d7f918f1303a392794a6cd8b3512ff56bd6e487
libc/libm support for MIPS64 targets
Change-Id: I8271941d418612a286be55495f0e95822f90004f
Signed-off-by: Chris Dearman <chris.dearman@imgtec.com>
Signed-off-by: Raghu Gandham <raghu.gandham@imgtec.com>
Most of <machine/_types.h> was either unused, wrong, or identical across
all 32-/64-bit architectures.
I'm not a huge fan of <sys/_types.h> either, but moving the bits we need
up into there is a step forward.
Bug: 12213562
Change-Id: Id13551c78966e324beee2dd90c5575e37d2a71e6
libunwind has #define inline /* empty */ which breaks our fortified headers.
glibc uses __inline but our BSD-derived headers often override that. __inline__
is the third alternative understood by GCC that -- as far as I know -- neither
the C library itself nor third-party code tries to mess with.
Bug: 12871594
Change-Id: I6677e70ea531bb7d4c46021b43af760d4ad8ecf7
As suggested here: https://android-review.googlesource.com/#/c/71267/
it may be used for x86_64 libunwind enabling.
Change-Id: I21623261a48ea7099e030d33932556e294d226ff
Signed-off-by: Pavel Chupin <pavel.v.chupin@intel.com>
This patch adds trivial implementations of the missing sys headers
needed by strace. All strace needs are the constants and structures,
so this is enough for now. We can come back and add the functions
if/when we ever need them.
Change-Id: Idb87c1a8b6b1c62f6e16ae94f147e1169722b48e
The situation here is a bit confusing. On 64-bit, rlimit and rlimit64 are
the same, and so getrlimit/getrlimit64, setrlimit/setrlimit64,
and prlimit/prlimit64 are all the same. On 32-bit, rlimit and rlimit64 are
different. 32-bit architectures other than MIPS go one step further by having
an even more limited getrlimit system call, so arm and x86 need to use
ugetrlimit instead of getrlimit. Worse, the 32-bit architectures don't have
64-bit getrlimit- and setrlimit-equivalent system calls, and you have to use
prlimit64 instead. There's no 32-bit prlimit system call, so there's no
easy implementation of that --- what should we do if the result of prlimit64
won't fit in a struct rlimit? Since 32-bit survived without prlimit/prlimit64
for this long, I'm not going to bother implementing prlimit for 32-bit.
We need the rlimit64 functions to be able to build strace 4.8 out of the box.
Change-Id: I1903d913b23016a2fc3b9f452885ac730d71e001
glibc has no <sys/dirent.h>. If we do have to bring this back, we
should probably just have one file #include the other.
Change-Id: I5c0bf9c03769daf3b23f69778e9f01f81c3de9ec