Trivial, obvious counterpart to the standard ferror(3) and clearerr(3),
and lets us build bison out of the box.
Bug: http://b/64273806
Test: ran tests
Change-Id: I20affabddb71210051165c41e86adfe5ae04f77f
Implement __freading and __fwriting, and clarify the documentation that was
the cause of these not being implemented for years.
Bug: http://b/17157253
Test: ran tests
Change-Id: I89542c8131b13889e2585417a024050ecf2abcb7
It is reported by tsan that funlockfile() can unlock an unlocked mutex.
It happens when printf() is called before fopen() or other stdio stuff.
As FLOCKFILE(fp) is called before __sinit(), _stdio_handles_locking is false,
and _FLOCK(fp) will not be locked. But then cantwrite(fp) in __vfprintf()
calls__sinit(), which makes _stdio_handles_locking become true, and
FUNLOCKFILE(fp) unlocks _FLOCK(fp).
Change _stdio_handles_locking into _caller_handles_locking,
so __sinit() won't change its value. Add test due to my previous fault.
Bug: 25392375
Change-Id: I483e3c3cdb28da65e62f1fd9615bf58c5403b4dd
The old __isthreaded hack was never very useful on Android because all user
code runs in a VM where there are lots of threads running. But __fsetlocking
lets a caller say "I'll worry about the locking for this FILE*", which is
useful for the normal case where you don't share a FILE* between threads
so you don't need any locking.
Bug: 17154740
Bug: 18593728
Change-Id: I2a8dddc29d3edff39a3d7d793387f2253608a68d