Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines | |
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* | Update copyright dates with scripts/update-copyrights. | Joseph Myers | 2017-01-01 | 1 | -1/+1 |
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* | quick_exit tests: Do not use C++ headers | Florian Weimer | 2016-06-09 | 1 | -10/+26 |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | If C++ headers such as <cstdlib> or <thread> are used, GCC 6 will include /usr/include/stdlib.h (instead of stdlib/stdlib.h in the glibc source directory), and this turns up as a make dependency. An implicit rule will kick in and make will try to install stdlib/stdlib.h as /usr/include/stdlib.h because the target is out of date. This commit switches to <stdlib.h> and <pthread.h> instead of <cstdlib> and <thread>. | ||||
* | Bug 20198: quick_exit should not call destructors. | Carlos O'Donell | 2016-06-06 | 1 | -0/+50 |
In C++11 18.5.12 says "Objects shall not be destroyed as a result of calling quick_exit." In C11 quick_exit is silent about thread object destruction. Therefore to make glibc C++ compliant we do not call any thread local destructors. A new regression test verifies the fix. I will note that C++11 18.5.3 makes it clear that C++ defines additional requirements for _Exit() to prevent it from executing destructors. Given that the point of _Exit() is to terminate the process immediately it makes sense the C and C++ should line up and avoid calling destructors. No failures. New regtest passes. |