valgrind seems to mess with the stack enough that the kernel will
report "[stack:pid]" rather than "[stack]" in /proc/self/maps, so
switch to the task-specific file instead to force "[stack]". (There
are two conditions in the kernel code that decides which form to
output.)
Bug: 17897476
Change-Id: Iff85ceb6d52e8716251fab4e45d95a27184c5529
...rather than just what's already mapped in. This seems somewhat
contrary to POSIX's "All pages within the stack described by stackaddr
and stacksize shall be both readable and writable by the thread", but
it's what glibc does.
Bug: 17111575
Change-Id: If9e2dfad9a603c0d0615a8123aacda4946e95b2c
On most architectures the kernel subtracts a random offset to the stack
pointer in create_elf_tables by calling arch_align_stack before writing
the auxval table and so on. On all but x86 this doesn't cause a problem
because the random offset is less than a page, but on x86 it's up to two
pages. This means that our old technique of rounding the stack pointer
doesn't work. (Our old implementation of that technique was wrong too.)
It's also incorrect to assume that the main thread's stack base and size
are constant. Likewise to assume that the main thread has a guard page.
The main thread is not like other threads.
This patch switches to reading /proc/self/maps (and checking RLIMIT_STACK)
whenever we're asked.
Bug: 17111575
Signed-off-by: Fengwei Yin <fengwei.yin@intel.com>
Change-Id: I1d4dbffe7bc7bda1d353c3a295dbf68d29f63158
Functions protected with !defined(__LP64__) will be get build as C++
symbols for X64 build. This is not the desired work. So protect the
implementation with !defined(__LP64__) as well.
Change-Id: I4ef50ec36e46289ab308063e24f6c5ac61a6ca8d
<pthread.h> was missing nonnull attributes, noreturn on pthread_exit,
and had incorrect cv qualifiers for several standard functions.
I've also marked the non-standard stuff (where I count glibc rather
than POSIX as "standard") so we can revisit this cruft for LP64 and
try to ensure we're compatible with glibc.
I've also broken out the pthread_cond* functions into a new file.
I've made the remaining pthread files (plus ptrace) part of the bionic code
and fixed all the warnings.
I've added a few more smoke tests for chunks of untested pthread functionality.
We no longer need the libc_static_common_src_files hack for any of the
pthread implementation because we long since stripped out the rest of
the armv5 support, and this hack was just to ensure that __get_tls in libc.a
went via the kernel if necessary.
This patch also finishes the job of breaking up the pthread.c monolith, and
adds a handful of new tests.
Change-Id: Idc0ae7f5d8aa65989598acd4c01a874fe21582c7
This reverts commits eb1b07469f and
d14dc3b87f, and fixes the bug where
we were calling mmap (which might cause errno to be set) before
__set_tls (which is required to implement errno).
Bug: 8557703
Change-Id: I2c36d00240c56e156e1bb430d8c22a73a068b70c
We notify debuggerd of problems by installing signal handlers. That's
fine except for when the signal is caused by us running off the end of
a thread's stack and into the guard page.
Bug: 8557703
Change-Id: I1ef65b4bb3bbca7e9a9743056177094921e60ed3
pthread_getattr_np was reporting the values supplied to us, not the values we
actually used, which is kinda the whole point of pthread_getattr_np.
pthread_attr_setguardsize and pthread_attr_setstacksize were reporting EINVAL
for any size that wasn't a multiple of the system page size. This is
unnecessary. We can just round like POSIX suggests and glibc already does.
Also improve the error reporting for pthread_create failures.
Change-Id: I7ebc518628a8a1161ec72e111def911d500bba71
This reverts commit 6f94de3ca4
(Doesn't try to increase the number of TLS slots; that leads to
an inability to boot. Adds more tests.)
Change-Id: Ia7d25ba3995219ed6e686463dbba80c95cc831ca
POSIX says pthread_create returns EAGAIN, not ENOMEM.
Also pull pthread_attr_t functions into their own file.
Also pull pthread_setname_np into its own file.
Also remove unnecessary #includes from pthread_key.cpp.
Also account for those pthread keys used internally by bionic,
so they don't count against the number of keys available to user
code. (They do with glibc, but glibc's limit is the much more
generous 1024.)
Also factor out the common errno-restoring idiom to reduce gotos.
Bug: 6702535
Change-Id: I555e66efffcf2c1b5a2873569e91489156efca42