| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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it's essential to decrement the stack pointer before writing to new
stack space, rather than afterwards. otherwise there is a race
condition during which asynchronous code (signals) could clobber the
data being stored.
it may be possible to optimize the code further using stwu, but I
wanted to avoid making any changes to the actual stack layout in this
commit. further improvements can be made separately if desired.
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apparently some other archs have sys/io.h and should not break just
because they don't have the x86 port io functions. provide a blank
bits/io.h everywhere for now.
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based on proposal by Isaac Dunham. nonexistance of bits/io.h will
cause inclusion of sys/io.h to produce an error on archs that are not
supposed to have it. this is probably the desired behavior, but the
error message may be a bit unusual.
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based on code sent to the mailing list by nsz, with minor changes.
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use the 'f' suffix when a float constant is not representable
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raise overflow and underflow when necessary, fix various comments.
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similar to exp.c cleanup: use scalbnf, don't return excess precision,
drop some optimizatoins.
exp.c was changed to be more consistent with expf.c code.
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* old code relied on sign extension on right shift
* exp2l ld64 wrapper was wrong
* use scalbn instead of bithacks
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overflow and underflow was incorrect when the result was not stored.
an optimization for the 0.5*ln2 < |x| < 1.5*ln2 domain was removed.
did various cleanups around static constants and made the comments
consistent with the code.
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put some macros that do not differ between architectures in the
main header and remove from bits.
restructure mips header so it has the same structure as the others.
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fortunately the memory corruption could not hurt anything, but it
prevented clearing the final newline and thus prevented the last path
element from working.
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this is mostly junk, but a few programs with tape-drive support
unconditionally include it, and it might be useful.
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priority inheritance is not yet supported, and priority protection
probably will not be supported ever unless there's serious demand for
it (it's a fairly heavy-weight feature).
per-thread cpu clocks would be nice to have, but to my knowledge linux
is still not capable of supporting them. glibc fakes them by using the
_process_ cpu-time clock and subtracting the thread creation time,
which gives seriously incorrect semantics (worse than not supporting
the feature at all), so until there's a way to do it right, it will
remain as a stub that always fails.
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this allows using the dynamic linker as a command to load programs.
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incomplete but at least partly working. requires all files to be
compiled in the new "secure" plt model, not the old one that put plt
code in the data segment. TLS is untested but may work. invoking the
dynamic linker explicitly to load a program does not yet handle argv
correctly.
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although a number is reserved for it, this option is not implemented
on Linux and does not work. defining it causes some applications to
use it, and subsequently break due to its failure.
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keeping only commonly used data in invtrigl
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this also fixes overflow/underflow raising and excess
precision issues (as those are handled well in scalbn)
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the volatile hack in STRICT_ASSIGN is only needed if
assignment is not respected and excess precision is kept.
gcc -fexcess-precision=standard and -ffloat-store both
respect assignment and musl use these flags by default.
i kept the macro for now so the workaround may be used
for bad compilers in the future.
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old code was correct only if the result was stored (without the
excess precision) or musl was compiled with -ffloat-store.
now we use STRICT_ASSIGN to work around the issue.
(see note 160 in c11 section 6.8.6.4)
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old code was correct only if the result was stored (without the
excess precision) or musl was compiled with -ffloat-store.
(see note 160 in n1570.pdf section 6.8.6.4)
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old code (return x+x;) returns correct value and raises correct
flags only if the result is stored as double (or float)
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previous version did not compare at all; it was just a fancy atomic
write. untested. further atomic fixes may be needed.
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POSIX includes mostly-useless attribute-get functions for each
attribute-set function, presumably out of some object-oriented
dogmatism. the get functions are not useful with the simple idiomatic
usage of attributes. there are of course possible valid uses of them
(like writing wrappers for pthread init functions that perform special
actions on the presence of certain attributes), but considering how
tiny these functions are anyway, little is lost by putting them all in
one file, and some build-time cost and archive-file-size benefits are
achieved.
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also update another newish feature in sysconf, stackaddr
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