| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Previously, getrandom would, each time it's called, traverse the file
system to find /dev/urandom, fetch some random data from it, then throw
away that port. This is quite slow, while calls to getrandom are
genrally expected to be fast.
Additionally, this means that getrandom can not work when /dev/urandom
is unavailable, such as inside a chroot that lacks one. User programs
expect calls to getrandom to work inside a chroot if they first call
getrandom outside of the chroot.
In particular, this is known to break the OpenSSH server, and in that
case the issue is exacerbated by the API of arc4random, which prevents
it from properly reporting errors, forcing glibc to abort on failure.
This causes sshd to just die once it tries to generate a random number.
Caching the random server port, in a manner similar to how socket
server ports are cached, both improves the performance and works around
the chroot issue.
Tested on i686-gnu with the following program:
pthread_barrier_t barrier;
void *worker(void*) {
pthread_barrier_wait(&barrier);
uint32_t sum = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < 10000; i++) {
sum += arc4random();
}
return (void *)(uintptr_t) sum;
}
int main() {
pthread_t threads[THREAD_COUNT];
pthread_barrier_init(&barrier, NULL, THREAD_COUNT);
for (int i = 0; i < THREAD_COUNT; i++) {
pthread_create(&threads[i], NULL, worker, NULL);
}
for (int i = 0; i < THREAD_COUNT; i++) {
void *retval;
pthread_join(threads[i], &retval);
printf("Thread %i: %lu\n", i, (unsigned long)(uintptr_t) retval);
}
In my totally unscientific benchmark, with this patch, this completes
in about 7 seconds, whereas previously it took about 50 seconds. This
program was also used to test that getrandom () doesn't explode if the
random server dies, but instead reopens the /dev/urandom anew. I have
also verified that with this patch, OpenSSH can once again accept
connections properly.
Signed-off-by: Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com>
Message-Id: <20221202135558.23781-1-bugaevc@gmail.com>
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This patch cleans up the power4 strncmp optimization for powerpc64 which
is unlikely to be used anywhere.
Tested on ppc64le with and without --disable-multi-arch flag.
Reviewed-by: Paul E. Murphy <murphyp@linux.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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On x32, the size_t parameter may be passed in the lower 32 bits of a
64-bit register with the non-zero upper 32 bits. The string/memory
functions written in assembly can only use the lower 32 bits of a
64-bit register as length or must clear the upper 32 bits before using
the full 64-bit register for length.
This pach fixes strncpy for x32. Tested on x86-64 and x32. On x86-64,
libc.so is the same with and without the fix.
Reviewed-by: Noah Goldstein <goldstein.w.n@gmail.com>
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On x32, the size_t parameter may be passed in the lower 32 bits of a
64-bit register with the non-zero upper 32 bits. The string/memory
functions written in assembly can only use the lower 32 bits of a
64-bit register as length or must clear the upper 32 bits before using
the full 64-bit register for length.
This pach fixes strncat for x32. Tested on x86-64 and x32. On x86-64,
libc.so is the same with and without the fix.
Reviewed-by: Noah Goldstein <goldstein.w.n@gmail.com>
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While porting ARCv2 to elfutils [1], it was brought up that the
necessary changes to the project's libelf/elf.h must come from
glibc, because they sync it from glibc [2]. Therefore, this patch
is to update ARC entries in elf/elf.h.
The majority of the update is about adding new definitions,
specially for the relocations. However, there is one rename, one
deletion, and one change:
- R_ARC_JUMP_SLOT renamed to R_ARC_JMP_SLOT to match binutils.
- R_ARC_B26 removed because it is unused and deprecated.
- R_ARC_TLS_DTPOFF_S9 changed from 0x4a to the correct value 0x49.
Finally, a specific SHT class for ARC has been added to glibcelf.py.
Else, it would result in a collision:
_register_elf_h(Sht, ranges=True,
File "/src/glibc/scripts/glibcelf.py", line x, in _register_elf_h
raise ValueError('duplicate value {}: {}, {}'.format(
ValueError: duplicate value 1879048193:
SHT_ARC_ATTRIBUTES, SHT_X86_64_UNWIND
[1]
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/elfutils-devel/2022q4/005530.html
[2]
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/elfutils-devel/2022q4/005548.html
No regression has been observed after applying this patch. Below
follows the result:
UNSUPPORTED: crypt/cert
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-audit22
FAIL: elf/tst-audit25a
FAIL: elf/tst-audit25b
FAIL: elf/tst-bz15311
FAIL: elf/tst-bz28937
FAIL: elf/tst-dlmopen4
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-dlopen-self-container
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-dlopen-tlsmodid-container
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-glibc-hwcaps-prepend-cache
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-ldconfig-bad-aux-cache
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-ldconfig-ld_so_conf-update
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-pldd
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-preload-pthread-libc
XPASS: elf/tst-protected1a
XPASS: elf/tst-protected1b
FAIL: elf/tst-tls-allocation-failure-static-patched
FAIL: elf/tst-tls1
FAIL: elf/tst-tls3
FAIL: elf/tst-tlsalign-extern
UNSUPPORTED: elf/tst-valgrind-smoke
UNSUPPORTED: grp/tst-initgroups1
UNSUPPORTED: grp/tst-initgroups2
UNSUPPORTED: io/tst-getcwd-smallbuff
UNSUPPORTED: locale/tst-localedef-path-norm
FAIL: localedata/sort-test
UNSUPPORTED: localedata/tst-localedef-hardlinks
FAIL: malloc/tst-malloc-thread-fail-malloc-check
FAIL: malloc/tst-malloc_info-malloc-check
UNSUPPORTED: math/test-fesetexcept-traps
UNSUPPORTED: math/test-fexcept-traps
UNSUPPORTED: math/test-nearbyint-except
UNSUPPORTED: math/test-nearbyint-except-2
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-adjtimex
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-clock_adjtime
FAIL: misc/tst-misalign-clone
FAIL: misc/tst-misalign-clone-internal
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-ntp_adjtime
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-pkey
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-rseq
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-rseq-disable
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-syslog
UNSUPPORTED: misc/tst-ttyname
FAIL: nptl/test-cond-printers
FAIL: nptl/test-condattr-printers
FAIL: nptl/test-mutex-printers
FAIL: nptl/test-mutexattr-printers
FAIL: nptl/test-rwlock-printers
FAIL: nptl/test-rwlockattr-printers
UNSUPPORTED: nptl/tst-pthread-gdb-attach
UNSUPPORTED: nptl/tst-pthread-gdb-attach-static
UNSUPPORTED: nptl/tst-pthread-getattr
UNSUPPORTED: nptl/tst-rseq-nptl
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-compat1
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-db-endgrent
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-db-endpwent
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-files-hosts-long
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-gai-actions
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-nss-test3
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-reload1
UNSUPPORTED: nss/tst-reload2
UNSUPPORTED: posix/bug-ga2
UNSUPPORTED: posix/bug-ga2-mem
FAIL: posix/globtest
UNSUPPORTED: posix/tst-vfork3
UNSUPPORTED: posix/tst-vfork3-mem
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/mtrace-tst-leaks2
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/tst-leaks2
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/tst-resolv-ai_idn
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/tst-resolv-ai_idn-latin1
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/tst-resolv-res_init
UNSUPPORTED: resolv/tst-resolv-res_init-thread
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-bz28213
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue1
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue10
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue2
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue3
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue4
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue5
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue6
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue8
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue8x
UNSUPPORTED: rt/tst-mqueue9
UNSUPPORTED: stdlib/test-bz22786
UNSUPPORTED: stdlib/tst-system
UNSUPPORTED: string/test-bcopy
UNSUPPORTED: string/test-memmove
UNSUPPORTED: string/tst-memmove-overflow
UNSUPPORTED: string/tst-strerror
UNSUPPORTED: string/tst-strsignal
UNSUPPORTED: time/tst-clock_settime
UNSUPPORTED: time/tst-settimeofday
Summary of test results:
21 FAIL
4184 PASS
69 UNSUPPORTED
16 XFAIL
2 XPASS
Signed-off-by: Shahab Vahedi <shahab@synopsys.com>
Signed-off-by: Vineet Gupta <vineet.gupta@linux.dev>
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From the tests point of view, this is a necessary step for another
patch [1] and allows parsing macros such as "#define A | B". Without
it, a few tests [2] choke when the other patch [1] is applied:
/src/glibc/scripts/../elf/elf.h:4167: error: uninterpretable macro
token sequence: ( EF_ARC_MACH_MSK | EF_ARC_OSABI_MSK )
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/src/glibc/elf/tst-glibcelf.py", line 23, in <module>
import glibcelf
File "/src/glibc/scripts/glibcelf.py", line 226, in <module>
_elf_h = _parse_elf_h()
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
File "/src/glibc/scripts/glibcelf.py", line 223, in _parse_elf_h
raise IOError('parse error in elf.h')
OSError: parse error in elf.h
[1] ARC: update definitions in elf/elf.h
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/libc-alpha/2022-November/143503.html
[2]
tst-glibcelf, tst-relro-ldso, and tst-relro-libc
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Shahab Vahedi <shahab@synopsys.com>
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Similar to d0fa09a770, but for syslog.h when _FORTIFY_SOURCE > 0.
Fixes [BZ #27087] by applying long double-related asm redirections
before using functions in bits/syslog.h.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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Add inline assembler for the ilogb functions. Passes GLIBC regression.
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Add inline assembler for the scalb functions. Passes GLIBC regression.
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Add inline assembler for the scalbn functions. Passes GLIBC regression.
GCC 13, LoongArch support ___builtin_scalbn{,f} with -fno-math-errno,
but only "libm" can use -fno-math-errno in GLIBC, and scalbn is in libc
instead of libm because __printf_fp calls it.
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GCC 13 compiles these built-ins instead of generic
implementation for function logb.
Link: https://gcc.gnu.org/r13-3922
Co-Authored-By: Xi Ruoyao <xry111@xry111.site>
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This patch is using the corresponding GCC builtin for logbf, logb,
logbl and logbf128 if the USE_FUNCTION_BUILTIN macros are defined to one
in math-use-builtins-function.h.
Co-Authored-By: Xi Ruoyao <xry111@xry111.site>
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GCC 13 compiles these built-ins instead of generic
implementation for function llrint.
Link: https://gcc.gnu.org/r13-3920
Co-Authored-By: Xi Ruoyao <xry111@xry111.site>
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This patch is using the corresponding GCC builtin for llrintf, llrint,
llrintl and llrintf128 if the USE_FUNCTION_BUILTIN macros are defined to one
in math-use-builtins-function.h.
Co-Authored-By: Xi Ruoyao <xry111@xry111.site>
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GCC 13 compiles these built-ins instead of generic
implementation for function lrint.
Link: https://gcc.gnu.org/r13-3920
Co-Authored-By: Xi Ruoyao <xry111@xry111.site>
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This patch is using the corresponding GCC builtin for lrintf, lrint,
lrintl and lrintf128 if the USE_FUNCTION_BUILTIN macros are defined to one
in math-use-builtins-function.h.
Co-Authored-By: Xi Ruoyao <xry111@xry111.site>
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GCC 13 compiles these built-ins to frint.{d,s} instruction.
Link: https://gcc.gnu.org/r13-3919
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Code is exactly the same for the two so better to only maintain one
version.
All math and mathvec tests pass on x86.
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1. Remove unnecessary spills.
2. Fix some small nit missed optimizations.
All math and mathvec tests pass on x86.
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Just reformat with the style convention used in other x86 assembler
files. This doesn't change libm.so or libmvec.so.
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```
.section .text.evex512, "ax", @progbits
```
With misspelled as:
```
.section .text.exex512, "ax", @progbits
```
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Many sse4/avx2/avx512 files where just in .text.
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Handle all object suffixes for dependencies of errlist-data and siglist
objects.
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lld does not implement all the linker optimization to avoid the GOT
relocation as done by binutils (bfd/elf32-i386.c:elf_i386_convert_load_reloc).
The current 'movl main@GOT(%ebx), %eax' will then create a GOT
relocation when building with lld, which make static-pie status to
not being able to start the provided main function.
The change uses a __wrap_main local symbol, which in turn calls main
(similar as used by aarch64 and s390x).
Checked on i686-linux-gnu with binutils and lld.
Reviewed-by: Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
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This patch fixes two problems with audit:
1. The DL_OFFSET_RV_VPCS offset was mixed up with DL_OFFSET_RG_VPCS,
resulting in x2 register value nulling in RG structure.
2. We need to preserve the x8 register before function call, but
don't have to save it's new value and restore it before return.
Anyway the final restore was using OFFSET_RV instead of OFFSET_RG value
which is wrong (althoug doesn't affect anything).
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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Currently glibc uses in_time_t_range to detects time_t overflow,
and if it occurs fallbacks to 64 bit syscall version.
The function name is confusing because internally time_t might be
either 32 bits or 64 bits (depending on __TIMESIZE).
This patch refactors the in_time_t_range by replacing it with
in_int32_t_range for the case to check if the 64 bit time_t syscall
should be used.
The in_time_t range is used to detect overflow of the
syscall return value.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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Supports pcrel addressing of TLS GOT entry. Also tweak the non-pcrel
asm constraint to better reflect how the reg is used.
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Use hardware Floating-point instruction f{maxa/mina}.{s/d}, fclass.{s/d}
to implement fmaximum_mag_num{f/ }, fminimum_mag_num{f/ }.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fmaximum_mag_num.c: New file.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fmaximum_mag_numf.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fminimum_mag_num.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fminimum_mag_numf.c: Likewise.
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Use hardware Floating-point instruction f{maxa/mina}.{s/d}, fclass.{s/d}
to implement fmaximum_mag{f/ }, fminimum_mag{f/ }.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fmaximum_mag.c: New file.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fmaximum_magf.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fminimum_mag.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fminimum_magf.c: Likewise.
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Use hardware Floating-point instruction f{maxa/mina}.{s/d},
to implement fmaxmag{f/ }, fminmag{f/ }.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fmaxmag.c: New file.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fmaxmagf.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fminmag.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fminmagf.c: Likewise.
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Use hardware Floating-point instruction f{max/min}.{s/d}, fclass.{s/d}
to implement fmaximum_num{f/ }, fminimum_num{f/ }.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fmaximum_num.c: New file.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fmaximum_numf.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fminimum_num.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fminimum_numf.c: Likewise.
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Use hardware Floating-point instruction f{max/min}.{s/d}, fclass.{s/d}
to implement fmaximum{f/ }, fminimum{f/ }.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fmaximum.c: New file.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fmaximumf.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fminimum.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fminimumf.c: Likewise.
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Use hardware Floating-point instruction fclass.{s/d} to implement
classification functions, i.e finite{f/ }, fpclassify{f/ }, isnan{f/ },
isinf{f/ }, issignaling{f/ }.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_finite.c: New file.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_finitef.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fpclassify.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_fpclassifyf.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_isinf.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_isinff.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_isnan.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_isnanf.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_issignaling.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/s_issignalingf.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu_control.h: Add _FCLASS_* macro.
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Use __builtin_{fma, fmaf} to implement function {fma, fmaf} instead of
the generic implementation.
* sysdeps/loongarch/fpu/math-use-builtins-fma.h: New file.
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Old applications pass __IPC_64 as part of the command argument because
old glibc did not check for unknown commands, and passed through the
arguments directly to the kernel, without adding __IPC_64.
Applications need to continue doing that for old glibc compatibility,
so this commit enables this approach in current glibc.
For msgctl and shmctl, if no translation is required, make
direct system calls, as we did before the time64 changes. If
translation is required, mask __IPC_64 from the command argument.
For semctl, the union-in-vararg argument handling means that
translation is needed on all architectures.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
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RISC-V architecture extends the cache information for level 3 cache
in AUX vector in Linux v.6.1-rc1. This patch supports sysconf to get
the level 3 cache information.
Reviewed-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@rivosinc.com>
Acked-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@rivosinc.com>
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From commit 2e274cd8c1ebd0bd0c43a7f2e5433685740938ca.
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This "Old POSIX/DKUUG borrowed format" handling is original to the file
and doesn't seem to have ever been used, i.e. id/t-t-c doesn't seem to
have ever been called with argv[1] == POSIX.
Upcoming is a POSIX charmap, which would inadvertently trigger this.
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
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lld does not dump a linker script with --verbose (it does not use a
linker script driven design and lots of linker processing is not
serializable as a linker script anyway). With the default
--with-default-link=no build, $@T is empty and makes `test -s $@T` fail.
Just dump the linker script with -fuse-ld=bfd. lld since 15
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D124656) supports custom RELRO sections in the
GNU ld dumped linker script.
Reviewed-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
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Implemented:
wcscat-avx2 (+ 744 bytes
wcscpy-avx2 (+ 539 bytes)
wcpcpy-avx2 (+ 577 bytes)
wcsncpy-avx2 (+1108 bytes)
wcpncpy-avx2 (+1214 bytes)
wcsncat-avx2 (+1085 bytes)
Performance Changes:
Times are from N = 10 runs of the benchmark suite and are reported
as geometric mean of all ratios of New Implementation / Best Old
Implementation. Best Old Implementation was determined with the
highest ISA implementation.
wcscat-avx2 -> 0.975
wcscpy-avx2 -> 0.591
wcpcpy-avx2 -> 0.698
wcsncpy-avx2 -> 0.730
wcpncpy-avx2 -> 0.711
wcsncat-avx2 -> 0.954
Code Size Changes:
This change increase the size of libc.so by ~5.5kb bytes. For
reference the patch optimizing the normal strcpy family functions
decreases libc.so by ~5.2kb.
Full check passes on x86-64 and build succeeds for all ISA levels w/
and w/o multiarch.
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Implemented:
wcscat-evex (+ 905 bytes)
wcscpy-evex (+ 674 bytes)
wcpcpy-evex (+ 709 bytes)
wcsncpy-evex (+1358 bytes)
wcpncpy-evex (+1467 bytes)
wcsncat-evex (+1213 bytes)
Performance Changes:
Times are from N = 10 runs of the benchmark suite and are reported
as geometric mean of all ratios of New Implementation / Best Old
Implementation. Best Old Implementation was determined with the
highest ISA implementation.
wcscat-evex -> 0.991
wcscpy-evex -> 0.587
wcpcpy-evex -> 0.695
wcsncpy-evex -> 0.719
wcpncpy-evex -> 0.694
wcsncat-evex -> 0.979
Code Size Changes:
This change increase the size of libc.so by ~6.3kb bytes. For
reference the patch optimizing the normal strcpy family functions
decreases libc.so by ~5.7kb.
Full check passes on x86-64 and build succeeds for all ISA levels w/
and w/o multiarch.
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Optimizations are:
1. Use more overlapping stores to avoid branches.
2. Reduce how unrolled the aligning copies are (this is more of a
code-size save, its a negative for some sizes in terms of
perf).
3. For st{r|p}n{cat|cpy} re-order the branches to minimize the
number that are taken.
Performance Changes:
Times are from N = 10 runs of the benchmark suite and are
reported as geometric mean of all ratios of
New Implementation / Old Implementation.
strcat-avx2 -> 0.998
strcpy-avx2 -> 0.937
stpcpy-avx2 -> 0.971
strncpy-avx2 -> 0.793
stpncpy-avx2 -> 0.775
strncat-avx2 -> 0.962
Code Size Changes:
function -> Bytes New / Bytes Old -> Ratio
strcat-avx2 -> 685 / 1639 -> 0.418
strcpy-avx2 -> 560 / 903 -> 0.620
stpcpy-avx2 -> 592 / 939 -> 0.630
strncpy-avx2 -> 1176 / 2390 -> 0.492
stpncpy-avx2 -> 1268 / 2438 -> 0.520
strncat-avx2 -> 1042 / 2563 -> 0.407
Notes:
1. Because of the significant difference between the
implementations they are split into three files.
strcpy-avx2.S -> strcpy, stpcpy, strcat
strncpy-avx2.S -> strncpy
strncat-avx2.S > strncat
I couldn't find a way to merge them without making the
ifdefs incredibly difficult to follow.
Full check passes on x86-64 and build succeeds for all ISA levels w/
and w/o multiarch.
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Optimizations are:
1. Use more overlapping stores to avoid branches.
2. Reduce how unrolled the aligning copies are (this is more of a
code-size save, its a negative for some sizes in terms of
perf).
3. Improve the loop a bit (similiar to what we do in strlen with
2x vpminu + kortest instead of 3x vpminu + kmov + test).
4. For st{r|p}n{cat|cpy} re-order the branches to minimize the
number that are taken.
Performance Changes:
Times are from N = 10 runs of the benchmark suite and are
reported as geometric mean of all ratios of
New Implementation / Old Implementation.
stpcpy-evex -> 0.922
strcat-evex -> 0.985
strcpy-evex -> 0.880
strncpy-evex -> 0.831
stpncpy-evex -> 0.780
strncat-evex -> 0.958
Code Size Changes:
function -> Bytes New / Bytes Old -> Ratio
strcat-evex -> 819 / 1874 -> 0.437
strcpy-evex -> 700 / 1074 -> 0.652
stpcpy-evex -> 735 / 1094 -> 0.672
strncpy-evex -> 1397 / 2611 -> 0.535
stpncpy-evex -> 1489 / 2691 -> 0.553
strncat-evex -> 1184 / 2832 -> 0.418
Notes:
1. Because of the significant difference between the
implementations they are split into three files.
strcpy-evex.S -> strcpy, stpcpy, strcat
strncpy-evex.S -> strncpy
strncat-evex.S > strncat
I couldn't find a way to merge them without making the
ifdefs incredibly difficult to follow.
2. All implementations can be made evex512 by including
"x86-evex512-vecs.h" at the top.
3. All implementations have an optional define:
`USE_EVEX_MASKED_STORE`
Setting to one uses evex-masked stores for handling short
strings. This saves code size and branches. It's disabled
for all implementations are the moment as there are some
serious drawbacks to masked stores in certain cases, but
that may be fixed on future architectures.
Full check passes on x86-64 and build succeeds for all ISA levels w/
and w/o multiarch.
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Json output is easier to parse and most other benchmarks already do
the same.
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Changes to generated code are:
1. In a few places use `vpcmpeqb` instead of `vpcmpneq` to save a
byte of code size.
2. Add a branch for length <= (VEC_SIZE * 6) as opposed to doing
the entire block of [VEC_SIZE * 4 + 1, VEC_SIZE * 8] in a
single basic-block (the space to add the extra branch without
changing code size is bought with the above change).
Change (2) has roughly a 20-25% speedup for sizes in [VEC_SIZE * 4 +
1, VEC_SIZE * 6] and negligible to no-cost for [VEC_SIZE * 6 + 1,
VEC_SIZE * 8]
From N=10 runs on Tigerlake:
align1,align2 ,length ,result ,New Time ,Cur Time ,New Time / Old Time
0 ,0 ,129 ,0 ,5.404 ,6.887 ,0.785
0 ,0 ,129 ,1 ,5.308 ,6.826 ,0.778
0 ,0 ,129 ,18446744073709551615 ,5.359 ,6.823 ,0.785
0 ,0 ,161 ,0 ,5.284 ,6.827 ,0.774
0 ,0 ,161 ,1 ,5.317 ,6.745 ,0.788
0 ,0 ,161 ,18446744073709551615 ,5.406 ,6.778 ,0.798
0 ,0 ,193 ,0 ,6.804 ,6.802 ,1.000
0 ,0 ,193 ,1 ,6.950 ,6.754 ,1.029
0 ,0 ,193 ,18446744073709551615 ,6.792 ,6.719 ,1.011
0 ,0 ,225 ,0 ,6.625 ,6.699 ,0.989
0 ,0 ,225 ,1 ,6.776 ,6.735 ,1.003
0 ,0 ,225 ,18446744073709551615 ,6.758 ,6.738 ,0.992
0 ,0 ,256 ,0 ,5.402 ,5.462 ,0.989
0 ,0 ,256 ,1 ,5.364 ,5.483 ,0.978
0 ,0 ,256 ,18446744073709551615 ,5.341 ,5.539 ,0.964
Rewriting with VMM API allows for memcmpeq-evex to be used with
evex512 by including "x86-evex512-vecs.h" at the top.
Complete check passes on x86-64.
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The only change to the existing generated code is `tzcnt` -> `bsf` to
save a byte of code size here and there.
Rewriting with VMM API allows for memcmp-evex-movbe to be used with
evex512 by including "x86-evex512-vecs.h" at the top.
Complete check passes on x86-64.
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len=0 is valid and fairly common so should be tested.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
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Similar to ppoll, the poll.h header needs to redirect the poll call
to a proper fortified ppoll with 64 bit time_t support.
The implementation is straightforward, just need to add a similar
check as __poll_chk and call the 64 bit time_t ppoll version. The
debug fortify tests are also extended to cover 64 bit time_t for
affected ABIs.
Unfortunately it requires an aditional symbol, which makes backport
tricky. One possibility is to add a static inline version if compiler
supports is and call abort instead of __chk_fail, so fortified version
will call __poll64 in the end.
Another possibility is to just remove the fortify support for
_TIME_BITS=64.
Checked on i686-linux-gnu.
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This simply needed to add the timeout parameter to mach_msg, and copy
information from struct hurd_signal_detail.
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For clang the redeclaration after the first use, the visibility attribute
is silently ignored (symbol is STV_DEFAULT) while the asm label attribute
causes an error.
Reviewed-by: Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
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