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[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 Free
Software Foundation, Inc."]]
[[!meta license="""[[!toggle id="license" text="GFDL 1.2+"]][[!toggleable
id="license" text="Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or
any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant
Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license
is included in the section entitled [[GNU Free Documentation
License|/fdl]]."]]"""]]
[[!tag open_issue_glibc]]
Here's what's to be done for maintaining glibc.
[[!toc levels=2]]
# [[General information|/glibc]]
* [[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/Versioning]]
# [[Sources|source_repositories/glibc]]
# [[Debian Cheat Sheet|debian]]
# Configuration
<!--
git checkout reviewed
git log --reverse --topo-order --pretty=fuller --stat=$COLUMNS,$COLUMNS -b -p -C --cc ..sourceware/master
-i
/^commit |^merge:|^---$|mach[^i]|hurd|linux|gs:|__assume
-->
Last reviewed up to the [[Git mirror's 64a17f1adde4715bb6607f64decd73b2df9e6852
(2013-12-19) sources|source_repositories/glibc]].
* <a id=t_hurdsig-fixes>`t/hurdsig-fixes`</a>
hurdsig.c: In function '_hurd_internal_post_signal':
hurdsig.c:1188:26: warning: 'pending' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
hurdsig.c:1168:12: note: 'pending' was declared here
* <a id=t_host-independency>`t/host-independency`</a>
[[!message-id "87bougerfb.fsf@kepler.schwinge.homeip.net"]], [[!message-id
"20120525202732.GA31088@intel.com"]], commit
918b56067a444572f1c71b02f18255ae4540b043. [[!GCC_PR 53183]], GCC commit
c05436a7e361b8040ee899266e15bea817212c37.
* <a id=t_pie-sbrk>`t/pie-sbrk`</a>
[[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/gcc/Pie]].
* <a id=t_sysvshm>`t/sysvshm`</a>
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/shmat.c: In function '__shmat':
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/shmat.c:57:7: warning: implicit declaration of function '__close' [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/shmget.c: In function 'get_exclusive':
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/shmget.c:85:8: warning: variable 'is_private' set but not used [-Wunused-but-set-variable]
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/shmget.c:102:8: warning: 'dir' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/shmget.c:102:8: warning: 'file' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
* <a id=t_tls>[[`t/tls`|service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/glibc/t/tls]]</a>
* <a id=t_tls-threadvar>[[`t/tls-threadvar`|t/tls-threadvar]]</a>
* <a id=t_verify.h>`t/verify.h`</a>
People didn't like this too much.
Other examples:
* 11988f8f9656042c3dfd9002ac85dff33173b9bd -- `static_assert`
* <a id=toolchain_cross-gnu>[[toolchain/cross-gnu]], without `--disable-multi-arch`</a>
i686-pc-gnu-gcc ../sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/strcmp.S -c [...]
../sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/../strcmp.S: Assembler messages:
../sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/../strcmp.S:31: Error: symbol `strcmp' is already defined
make[2]: *** [/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/src/glibc.obj/string/strcmp.o] Error 1
make[2]: Leaving directory `/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/src/glibc/string'
Might simply be a missing patch(es) from master.
* <a id=disable-multi-arch>`--disable-multi-arch`</a>
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-11-22
<pinotree> tschwinge: is your glibc build w/ or w/o multiarch?
<tschwinge> pinotree: See open_issues/glibc: --disable-multi-arch
<pinotree> ah, because you do cross-compilation?
<tschwinge> No, that's natively.
<tschwinge> There is also a not of what happened in cross-gnu when I
enabled multi-arch.
<tschwinge> No idea whether that's still relevant, though.
<pinotree> EPARSE
<tschwinge> s%not%note
<tschwinge> Better?
<pinotree> yes :)
<tschwinge> As for native builds: I guess I just didn't (want to) play
with it yet.
<pinotree> it is enabled in debian since quite some time, maybe other
i386/i686 patches (done for linux) help us too
<tschwinge> I though we first needed some CPU identification
infrastructe before it can really work?
<tschwinge> I thought [...].
<pinotree> as in use the i686 variant as runtime automatically? i guess
so
<tschwinge> I thought I had some notes about that, but can't currently
find them.
<tschwinge> Ah, I probably have been thinking about open_issues/ifunc
and open_issues/libc_variant_selection.
* <a id=buildX>--build=X</a>
`long double` test: due to `cross_compiling = maybe` wants to execute a
file, which fails. Thus `--build=X` has to be set.
* <a id=check>Check what all these are:</a>
running configure fragment for sysdeps/mach/hurd
checking Hurd header version... ok
running configure fragment for sysdeps/mach
checking for i586-pc-gnu-mig... i586-pc-gnu-mig
checking for mach/mach_types.h... yes
checking for mach/mach_types.defs... yes
checking for task_t in mach/mach_types.h... task_t
checking for thread_t in mach/mach_types.h... thread_t
checking for creation_time in task_basic_info... yes
checking for mach/mach.defs... yes
checking for mach/mach4.defs... yes
checking for mach/clock.defs... no
checking for mach/clock_priv.defs... no
checking for mach/host_priv.defs... no
checking for mach/host_security.defs... no
checking for mach/ledger.defs... no
checking for mach/lock_set.defs... no
checking for mach/processor.defs... no
checking for mach/processor_set.defs... no
checking for mach/task.defs... no
checking for mach/thread_act.defs... no
checking for mach/vm_map.defs... no
checking for mach/memory_object.defs... yes
checking for mach/memory_object_default.defs... yes
checking for mach/default_pager.defs... yes
checking for mach/i386/mach_i386.defs... yes
checking for egrep... grep -E
checking for host_page_size in mach_host.defs... no
checking for mach/machine/ndr_def.h... no
checking for machine/ndr_def.h... no
checking for i386_io_perm_modify in mach_i386.defs... yes
checking for i386_set_gdt in mach_i386.defs... yes
checking whether i586-pc-gnu-mig supports the retcode keyword... yes
* <a id=stackguard>`sysdeps/i386/stackguard-macros.h`</a>
See [[t/tls|service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/glibc/t/tls]].
* <a id=77c84aeb81808c3109665949448dba59965c391e>Verify 77c84aeb81808c3109665949448dba59965c391e against
`~/shared/glibc/make_TAGS.patch`.</a>
* <a id=HP_SMALL_TIMING_AVAIL>`HP_SMALL_TIMING_AVAIL` not defined anywhere.</a>
* <a id=CPUCLOCK_WHICH>Unify `CPUCLOCK_WHICH` stuff in `clock_*` files.</a>
* <a id=tests-clean>Not all tests are re-run in a `make -k tests; make tests-clean; make -k
tests` cycle. For example, after `make tests-clean`:</a>
$ find ./ -name \*.out
./localedata/tst-locale.out
./localedata/sort-test.out
./localedata/de_DE.out
./localedata/en_US.out
./localedata/da_DK.out
./localedata/hr_HR.out
./localedata/sv_SE.out
./localedata/tr_TR.out
./localedata/fr_FR.out
./localedata/si_LK.out
./localedata/tst-mbswcs.out
./iconvdata/iconv-test.out
./iconvdata/tst-tables.out
./stdlib/isomac.out
./posix/wordexp-tst.out
./posix/annexc.out
./posix/tst-getconf.out
./elf/check-textrel.out
./elf/check-execstack.out
./elf/check-localplt.out
./c++-types-check.out
./check-local-headers.out
./begin-end-check.out
* <a id=t_cpuclock>`CPUCLOCK_WHICH`, `t/cpuclock`</a>
/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/src/glibc.obj/rt/librt_pic.a(clock_settime.os): In function `clock_settime':
/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/src/glibc/rt/../sysdeps/unix/clock_settime.c:113: undefined reference to `CPUCLOCK_WHICH'
/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/src/glibc/rt/../sysdeps/unix/clock_settime.c:114: undefined reference to `CPUCLOCK_WHICH'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
make[2]: *** [/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/src/glibc.obj/rt/librt.so] Error 1
make[2]: Leaving directory `/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/src/glibc/rt'
make[1]: *** [rt/others] Error 2
make[1]: Leaving directory `/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/src/glibc'
make: *** [all] Error 2
* <a id=missing>Missing Interfaces</a>
We have posted a [[Google Summer of Code project proposal|community/gsoc]]:
[[!inline pages="community/gsoc/project_ideas/testsuites" show=0 feeds=no
actions=yes]]
Many are missing for GNU Hurd, some of which have been announced in
[`NEWS`](https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=blob;f=NEWS), others
typically haven't (like new flags to existing functions). Typically,
porters will notice missing functionaly. But in case you're looking for
something to work on, here's a bit of a commented list, otherwise go
looking in `/usr/include/i386-gnu/gnu/stubs.h` on a Debian GNU/Hurd system,
or the respective file from a fresh glibc build.
`AT_EMPTY_PATH`, `CLOCK_BOOTTIME`, `CLOCK_BOOTTIME_ALARM`,
`CLOCK_REALTIME_ALARM`, `O_PATH`, `O_TMPFILE`
(ffdd31816a67f48697ea4d6b852e58d2886d42ca),
`PTRACE_*` (for example, cbff0d9689c4d68578b6a4f0a17807232506ea27,
b1b2aaf8eb9eed301ea8f65b96844568ca017f8b,
521c6785e1fc94d1f501743e9a40af9e02797df3),
`RLIMIT_RTTIME`, `SEEK_DATA` (`unistd.h`), `SEEK_HOLE` (`unistd.h`)
`clock_adjtime`, `fallocate`, `fallocate64`, `name_to_handle_at`,
`open_by_handle_at`,
`posix_openpt`, `process_vm_readv`, `process_vm_writev`,
`setns`, `sync_file_range`, [[`mremap`|mremap]] and [[several
`MAP_*`|glibc/mmap]]
Check also the content of `gnu/stubs.h`, which lists all the functions
marked as stub which only return `ENOSYS`.
* <a id=chflags>`chflags`</a>
Patch sent, [[!message-id "20120427012130.GZ19431@type.famille.thibault.fr"]].
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2012-04-27:
<Steap> Does anyone have any idea why int main(void) { return
chflags(); } will compile with gcc but not with g++ ? It says
that "chflags" was not declared in this scope.
<Steap> I get the same error on FreeBSD, but including sys/stat.h
makes it work
<Steap> Can't find a solution on Hurd though :/
<youpi> the Hurd doesn't have chflags
<youpi> apparently linux neither
<youpi> what does it do?
<Steap> change flags :)
<Steap> Are you sure the Hurd does not have chflags ? Because gcc
does not complain
<youpi> there is no chflags function in /usr/include
<youpi> but what flags does it change?
<Steap> According to the FreeBSD manpage, it can set flags such as
UF_NODUMP, UF_IMMUTABLE etc.
<youpi> Hum, there is actually a chflags() definition
<youpi> but no declaration
<youpi> so actually chflags is supported, but the declaration was
forgotten
<youpi> probably because since linux doens't have it, it has never
been a problem up to now
<youpi> so I'd say ignore the error for now, we'll add the
declaration
* <a id=t_tls-threadvar>[[t/tls-threadvar]]</a>
* <a id=futimesat>`futimesat`</a>
If we have all of 'em (check Linux kernel), `#define __ASSUME_ATFCTS`.
* `futimens`
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-02-09:
<youpi> it seems apt 0.9.15.1 has troubles downloading packages
etc., as opposed to apt 0.9.15
<youpi> ah, that version uses futimens unconditionally
<youpi> and we haven't implemented that yet
<azeem> did somebody file a bug for that apt-get issue?
<youpi> I haven't
<youpi> I'll commit the fix in eglibc
<youpi> but perhaps a bug report would be good for the kfreebsd
case
* <a id=bits_stat.h>`bits/stat.h [__USE_ATFILE]`: `UTIME_NOW`, `UTIME_OMIT`</a>
* <a id=__USE_ATFILE>`io/fcntl.h [__USE_ATFILE]`</a>
Do we support `AT_FDCWD` et al.?
(80b4e5f3ef231702b24d44c33e8dceb70abb3a06.)
* <a id=t_opendirat>`t/opendirat`: `opendirat` (`scandirat`, `scandirat64`)</a>
Need changes equivalent to c55fbd1ea768f9fdef34a01377702c0d72cbc213 +
14d96785125abee5e9a49a1c3037f35a581750bd.
* <a id=madvise>`madvise`, `MADV_DONTNEED`, `MADV_DONTDUMP`, `MADV_DODUMP`</a>
[[glibc_madvise_vs_static_linking]].
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-09:
<gg0> does hurd MADV_DONTNEED or MADV_FREE or none?
http://sources.debian.net/src/jemalloc/3.4.0-1/include/jemalloc/jemalloc_defs.h.in#L239
<gg0> seems it builds by defining JEMALLOC_PURGE_MADVISE_DONTNEED
but i don't know what i'm talking about, so it could build with
JEMALLOC_PURGE_MADVISE_FREE as well
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-10:
<youpi> gg0: it implements none, even if it defines DONTNEED (but
not FREE)
See also:
gnash (0.8.11~git20130903-1) unstable; urgency=low
* Git snapshot.
+ Embedded jemalloc copy has been replaced by system one.
[...]
- Disable jemalloc on hurd and kfreebsd-*. No longer disabled upstream.
* <a id=msync>`msync`</a>
Then define `_POSIX_MAPPED_FILES`, `_POSIX_SYNCHRONIZED_IO`.
* <a id=epoll>`epoll`, `sys/epoll.h`</a>
Used by [[wayland]], for example.
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-08-08:
<nalaginrut> is there any possible to have kquque/epoll alike
things in hurd? or there is one?
<braunr> nalaginrut: use select/poll
<nalaginrut> is it possible to implement epoll?
<braunr> it is
<braunr> we don't care enough about it to do it
<braunr> (for now)
<nalaginrut> well, since I wrote a server with Guile, and it could
take advantage of epoll, never mind, if there's no, it'll use
select automatically
<nalaginrut> but if someday someone care about it, I'll be
interested on it
<braunr> epoll is a scalability improvement over poll
<braunr> the hurd being full of scalability issues, this one is
clearly not a priority
<nalaginrut> ok
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-26:
<nalaginrut> if I want to have epoll/kqueue like things, where
should it dwell? kernel or some libs?
<braunr> libs
<pinotree> userland
<braunr> that would be a good project to work on, something i
intended to do (so i can help) but it requires a lot of work
<braunr> you basically need to add a way to explicitely install and
remove polling requests (instead of the currently way that
implicitely remove polling requests when select/poll returns)
<braunr> while keeping the existing way working for some time
<braunr> glibc implements select
<braunr> the hurd io interface shows the select interface
<braunr> servers such as pfinet/pflocal implement it
<braunr> glibc implements the client-side of the call
<nalaginrut> where's poll? since epoll just added edge-trigger in
poll
<braunr> both select and poll are implemented on top of the hurd io
select call (which isn't exactly select)
<braunr>
http://darnassus.sceen.net/gitweb/savannah_mirror/hurd.git/blob/HEAD:/hurd/io.defs
<braunr> this is the io interface
<braunr>
http://darnassus.sceen.net/gitweb/savannah_mirror/glibc.git/blob/refs/heads/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker:/hurd/hurdselect.c
<braunr> this is the client side implementation
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-02-14:
<desrt> also: do you know if hurd has a modern-day poll()
replacement? ala epoll, kqueue, iocp, port_create(), etc?
<pochu_> last thing I remember was that there was no epoll
equivalent, but that was a few years ago :)
<pochu_> braunr: ^
* desrt is about to replace gmaincontext in glib with something
more modern
* desrt really very much wants not to have to write a poll()
backend....
<desrt> it seems that absolutely every system that i care about,
except for hurd, has a new approach here :/
<desrt> even illumos has solaris-style ports
<azeem> desrt: I suggest you bring up the question on bug-hurd
<azeem> the poll() system call there to satisfy POSIX, but there
might be a better Hurd-specific thing you could use
<azeem> is there*
<desrt> that would be ideal
<desrt> i have to assume that a system that passes to many messages
has some other facilities :)
<desrt> *so many
<desrt> the question is if they work with fds....
<desrt> bug-hurd doesn't seem like a good place to ask open-ended
questions....
<azeem> it's the main development lists, it's just old GNU naming
<azeem> list*
<desrt> k. thanks.
<azeem> bug-hurd@gnu.org is the address
* desrt goes to bug... hurd
<desrt> written. thanks.
<braunr> desrt: the hurd has only select/poll
<braunr> it suffers from so many scalability issues there isn't
much point providing one currently
<braunr> we focus more on bug fixing and posix compliance right now
<desrt> fair answer
<braunr> you should want a poll-based backend
<braunr> it's the most portable one, and doesn't suck as much as
select
<braunr> very easy to write
<braunr> although, internally, our select/poll works just like a
bare epoll
<braunr> i.e. select requests are installed, the client waits for
one or more messages, then uninstalls the requests
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-02-23:
<desrt> brings me to another question i asked here recently that
nobody had a great answer for: any plan to do kqueue?
<braunr> not for now
<braunr> i remember answering you about that
<desrt> ah. on IRC or the list?
<braunr> that internally, our select/poll implementation works just
like epoll
<braunr> on irc
<braunr> well "just like" is a bit far from the truth
<desrt> well... poll() doesn't really work like epoll :p
<braunr> internally, it does
<braunr> even on linux
<desrt> since both of us have to do the linear scan on the list
<desrt> which is really the entire difference
<braunr> that's the user interface part
<braunr> i'm talking about the implementation
<desrt> ya -- but it's the interface that makes it unscalable
<braunr> i know
<braunr> what i mean is
<braunr> since the implementation already works like a more modern
poll
<braunr> we could in theory add such an interface
<braunr> but epoll adds some complicated detail
<desrt> you'll have to forgive me a bit -- i wasn't around from a
time that i could imagine what a non-modern poll would look like
inside of a kernel :)
<braunr> what i mean with a modern poll is a scalable poll-like
interface
<braunr> epoll being the reference
* desrt is not super-crazy about the epoll interface....
<braunr> me neither
<desrt> kevent() is amazing -- one syscall for everything you need
<braunr> i don't know kqueue enough to talk about it
<desrt> no need to do 100 epollctls when you have a whole batch of
updates to do
<desrt> there's two main differences
<desrt> first is that instead of having a bunch of separate fds for
things like inotify, timerfd, eventfd, signalfd, etc -- they're
all built in as different 'filter' types
<desrt> second is that instead of a separate epoll_ctl() call to
update the list of monitored things, the kevent() call
(epoll_wait() equivalent) takes two lists: one is the list of
updates to make and the other is the list of events to
return.... so you only do one syscall
<braunr> well, again, that's the interface
<braunr> internally, there still are updates and waits
<braunr> and on a multiserver system like the hurd, this would mean
one system call per update per fd
<braunr> and then one per wait
<desrt> on the implementation side, i think kqueue also has a nice
feature: the kernel somehow has some magic that lets it post
events to a userspace queue.... so if you're not making updates
and you do a kevent() that would not block, you don't even enter
the kernel
<braunr> ok
<desrt> hm. that's an interesting point
<desrt> "unix" as such is just another server for you guys, right?
<braunr> no
<braunr> that's a major difference between the hurd and other
microkernel based systems
<braunr> even multiserver ones like minix
<braunr> we don't have a unix server
<braunr> we don't have a vfs server or even an "fd server"
<desrt> so mach knows about things like fds?
<braunr> no
<braunr> only glibc
<desrt> oh. weird!
<braunr> yes
<braunr> that's the hurd's magic :)
<braunr> being so posix compliant despite how exotic it is
<desrt> this starts to feel like msvcrt :p
<braunr> maybe, i wouldn't know
<braunr> windows is a hybrid after all
<braunr> with multiple servers for its file system
<braunr> so why not
<braunr> anyway
<desrt> so windows doesn't have fds in the kernel either... the C
library runtime emulates them
<braunr> mach has something close to file descriptors
<desrt> which is fun when you get into dll hell -- sometimes you
have multiple copies of the C library runtime in the same program
-- and you have to take care not to use fds from one of them with
th o ther one
<braunr> yes ..
<braunr> that, i knew :)
<braunr> but back to the hurd
<braunr> since fds are a glibc thing here, and because "files" can
be implemented by multiple servers
<braunr> (sockets actually most of the time with select/poll)
<braunr> we have to make per fd requests
<braunr> the implementation uses the "port set" kernel abstraction
<desrt> right -- we could have different "fd" coming from different
places
<braunr> do you know what a mach port is ?
<desrt> not even a little bit
<braunr> hm
<desrt> i think it's what a plane does when it goes really fast,
right?
<braunr> let's say it's a kernel message queue
<braunr> no it's not a sonic boom
<desrt> :)
<braunr> ;p
<braunr> so
<braunr> ports are queues
<desrt> (aside: i did briefly run into mach ports recently on macos
where they modified their kqueue to support them...)
<braunr> queues of RPC requests usually
<desrt> (but i didn't use them or look into them at all)
<braunr> they can be referenced through mach port names, which are
integers much like file descriptors
<braunr> they're also used for replies but, except for weird calls
like select/poll, you don't need to know that :)
<braunr> a port set is one object containing multiple ports
<desrt> sounds like dbus :)
<braunr> the point of a port set is to provide the ability to
perform a single operation (wait for a message) on multiple ports
<desrt> sounds like an epoll fd....
<desrt> is the port set itself a port?
<braunr> so, when a client calls select, it translates the list of
fds into port names, creates reply ports for each of them, puts
them into a port set, send one select request for each, and does
one blocking wait on the port set
<braunr> no, but you can wait for a message on a port set the same
way you do on a port
<braunr> and that's all it does
<desrt> does that mean that you can you put a port set inside of
another port set?
<braunr> hm maybe
<desrt> i guess in some way that doesn't actually make sense
<braunr> i guess
<desrt> because i assume that the message you sent to each port in
your example is "tell me when you have some stuff"
<braunr> yes
<desrt> and you'd have to send an equivalent message to the port
set.... and that just doesn't make sense
<desrt> since it's not really a thing, per se
<braunr> it would
<braunr> insteaf of port -> port set, it would just be port -> port
set -> port set
<braunr> but we don't have any interface where an fd stands for a
port set
<braunr> what i'm trying to tell here is that
<braunr> considering how it's done, you can easily see that there
has to be non trivial communication
<braunr> each with the cost of a system call
<braunr> and not just any system call, a messaging one
<braunr> mach is clearly not as good as l4 when it comes to that
<desrt> hrmph
<braunr> and the fact that most pollable fds are either unix or
inet/inet6 sockets mean that there will be contention in the
socket servers anyway
<desrt> i've seen some of the crazy things you guys can do as a
result of the way mach works and way that hurd uses it, in
particular
<desrt> normal users setting up little tcp/ip universes for
themselves, and so on
<braunr> yes :)
<desrt> but i guess this all has a cost
<braunr> the cost here comes more from the implementation than the
added abstractions
<braunr> mach provides async ipc, which can partially succeed
<desrt> if i spin up a subhurd, it's using the same mach, right?
<braunr> yes
<desrt> that's neat
<braunr> we tend to call them neighbour hurds because of that
<braunr> i'm not sure it is
<desrt> it puts it half way between linux containers and outright
VMs
<desrt> because you have a new kernel.... ish...
<braunr> well, it is for the same reasons hypervisors are neat
<desrt> but the kernel exists within this construct....
<braunr> a new kernel ?
<desrt> a new hurd
<braunr> yes
<desrt> but not a new mach
<braunr> exactly
<desrt> ya -- that's very cool
<braunr> it's halfway between hypervisors and containers/jails
<braunr> what matters is that we didn't need to write much code to
make it work
<braunr> and that the design naturally guarantees strong isolation
<desrt> right. that's what i'm getting at
<braunr> unlike containers
<desrt> it shows that the interaction between mach and these set of
crazy things collectively referred to as the hurd is really
proper
<braunr> usually
<braunr> sometimes i think it's not
<braunr> but that's another story :)
<desrt> don't worry -- you can fix it when you port to L4 ;)
<braunr> eh, no :)
<desrt> btw: is this fundamentally the same mach as darwin?
<braunr> yes
<desrt> so i guess there are multiple separate implementations of a
standard set of interfaces?
<braunr> ?
* desrt has to assume that apple wouldn't be using GNU mach, for
example...
<braunr> no it's the same code base
<braunr> they couldn't
<braunr> but only because the forks have diverged a bit
<desrt> ah
<braunr> and they probably changed a lot of things in their virtual
memory implementation
<desrt> so i guess original mach was under some BSDish type thing
and GNU mach forked from that and started adding GPL code?
<braunr> something like that
<desrt> makes sense
<braunr> we have very few "non-standard" mach interfaces
<braunr> but we now rely on them so we couldn't use another mach
either
<braunr> back to the select/poll stuff
* desrt gets a lesson tonight :)
<braunr> it costs, it's not scalable
<braunr> but
<braunr> we have scalability problems in our servers
<braunr> they're old code, they use global locks
<desrt> right. this is the story i heard last time.
<braunr> probably from me
<braunr> poll works good enough for us right now
<braunr> we're more interested in bug fixes than scalability
currently
<desrt> the reason this negative impacts me is because now i need
to write a bunch more code ;p
<braunr> i hope this changes but we still get weird errors that
many applications don't expect and they react badly to those
<braunr> well, poll really is the posix fallback
<desrt> every other OS that we want to support has some sort of new
scalable epoll-type interface or is Windows (which needs separate
code anyway)
<desrt> a very large number of them have kqueue... linux has
epoll... solaris/illumos is the odd one out with this weird thing
that's sort of like epoll
<braunr> i would think you want a posix fallback for such a
commonly used interface
<braunr> hm
<desrt> braunr: hurd is pretty much the only one that doesn't
already have something better....
<braunr> linux can be built without epoll
<desrt> and the nice thing about all of these things is that every
single one of them gives me an fd that can be polled when any
event is ready
<braunr> i don't see why anyone would do that, but it's a compile
time option ;p
<braunr> yes ...
<braunr> we don't have xxxfd() :)
<desrt> and we want to expose that fd on our API... so people can
chain gmaincontext into other mainloops
<braunr> that's expected
<desrt> so for hurd this means that i will need to spin up a
separate thread doing poll() and communicating back to the main
thread when anything becomes ready
<desrt> i was looking forward to not having to do that :)
<braunr> it matches the unix "everything is a file" idea, and
windows concept of "events"
<braunr> i understand but again, it's a posix fallback
<braunr> you probably want it anyway
<desrt> probably
<braunr> it could help new systems trying to be posix like
<desrt> i honestly thought i'd get away with it, though
<desrt> this is true...
<desrt> CLOCK_MONOTONIC is an easy enough requirement to implement
or fake.... "modern event polling framework" is another story...
[[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/clock_gettime]].
<braunr> yes, but again, we do have the underlying machinery to add
it
<desrt> i appreciate if your priorities are elsewhere ;)
<braunr> it's just not worth the effort right now
<braunr> although we do have performance and latency improvements
in our patch queues currently
<braunr> if our network stack gets replaced, it would become
interesting
<braunr> we need to improve posix compliance first
<braunr> make more applications not choke on unecpected errors
<braunr> and then we can think of improving scalability
<desrt> +1 vote from me for implementing monotonic time :)
<desrt> (and also pthread_condattr_setclock())
<braunr> and we probably won't implement the epoll interface ;p
<braunr> yes
<desrt> it's worth noting that there is also a semi-widely
available non-standard extension called
pthread_cond_timedwait_relative_np that you could implement
instead
<desrt> it takes a (relative) timeout instead of an absolute one --
we can use that if it's available
<braunr> desrt: why would you want relative timeouts ?
<desrt> braunr: if you're willing to take the calculations into
your own hands and you don't have another way to base it on
monotonic time it starts to look like a good alternative
<desrt> and indeed, this is the case on android and macos at least
<braunr> hm
<desrt> not great as a user-facing API of course.... due to the
spurious wakeup possibility and need to retry
<braunr> so it's non standard alternative to a monotonic clock ?
<desrt> no -- these systems have monotonic clocks
<desrt> what they lack is pthread_condattr_setclock()
<braunr> oh right
<desrt> which is documented in POSIX but labelled as 'optional'
<braunr> so relative is implicitely monotonic
<desrt> yes
<desrt> i imagine it would be the same 'relative' you get as the
timeout you pass to poll()
<desrt> since basing anything like this on wallclock time is
absolutely insane
<desrt> (which is exactly why we refuse to use wallclock time on
our timed waits)
<braunr> sure
<braunr> i'm surprised clock_monotonic is even optional in posix
2008
<braunr> but i guess that's to give some transition margin for
small embedded systems
<desrt> when you think about it, CLOCK_REALTIME really ought to
have been the optional feature
<desrt> monotonic time is so utterly basic
<braunr> yes
<braunr> and that's how it's normally implemented
<braunr> kernels provide a monotonic clock, and realtime is merely
shifted from it
* <a id=sys_eventfd.h>`sys/eventfd.h`</a>
* <a id=sys_inotify.h>`sys/inotify.h`</a>
* <a id=sys_signalfd.h>`sys/signalfd.h`</a>
* <a id=sys_timerfd.h>`sys/timerfd.h`</a>
* <a id=timespec_get>`timespec_get` (74033a2507841cf077e31221de2481ff30b43d51,
87f51853ce3671f4ba9a9953de1fff952c5f7e52)</a>
* <a id=waitflags.h>`waitflags.h` (`WEXITED`, `WNOWAIT`, `WSTOPPED`, `WCONTINUED`)</a>
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-04-20:
<pinotree> in glibc, we use the generic waitflags.h which, unlike
linux's version, does not define WEXITED, WNOWAIT, WSTOPPED,
WCONTINUED
<pinotree> should the generic bits/waitflags.h define them anyway,
since they are posix?
<youpi> well, we'd have to implement them anyway
<youpi> but otherwise, I'd say yes
<pinotree> sure, but since glibc headers should expose at least
everything declared by posix, i thought they should be defined
anyway
<youpi> that might bring bugs
<youpi> some applications might be #ifdefing them
<youpi> and break when they are defined but not working
<pinotree> i guess they would define them to 0, andd having them to
non-zero values shouldn't break them (since those values don't do
anything, so they would act as if they were 0.. or not?)
<youpi> no, I mean they would do something else, not define them to
0
<pinotree> like posix/tst-waitid.c, you mean?
<youpi> yes
See `posix/tst-waitid.out` failure below.
* <a id=getconf>`getconf` things (see below the results of `tst-getconf.out`)</a>
* <a id=getsockopt>`getsockopt`, `setsockopt`</a>
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-02-14
<gnu_srs> Hi, {get,set}sockopt is not supported on Hurd. This shows
e.g. in the gnulib's test-{poll,select} code.
<gnu_srs> Reading
http://hea-www.harvard.edu/~fine/Tech/addrinuse.html there might
be reasons _not_ to implement them, comments?
<pinotree> uh? they are supported on hurd
<gnu_srs> not SO_REUSEPORT for setsockopt()
<pinotree> that isn't the same as claiming "get/setsockopt is not
supported on hurd"
<pinotree> most probably that option is not implemented by the
socket family you are using
<gnu_srs> OK, some options like SO_REUSEPORT then, more info in
the link.
<pinotree> note also SO_REUSEPORT is not posix
<pinotree> and i don't see SO_REUSEPORT mentioned in the page you
linked
<gnu_srs> No, but SO_REUSEADDR
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-02-23
<gnu_srs> as an example, the poll test code from gnulib fails due
to that problem (and I've told you before)
<pinotree> gnu_srs: what's the actual failure?
<pinotree> can you provide a minimal test case showing the issue?
<gnu_srs> pinotree: A smaller test program:
http://paste.debian.net/237495/
<pinotree> gnu_srs: setting SO_REUSEADDR before binding the socket
works...
<pinotree> and it seems it was a bug in the gnulib tests, see
http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=gnulib.git;a=commit;h=6ed6dffbe79bcf95e2ed5593eee94ab32fcde3f4
<gnu_srs> pinotree: You are right, still the code I pasted pass on
Linux, not on Hurd.
<pinotree> so?
<pinotree> the code is wrong
<pinotree> you cannot change what bind does after you have called
it
* pinotree → out
<gnu_srs> so linux is buggy?
<braunr> no, linux is more permissive
<braunr> (at least, on this matter)
* <a id=getcontext>`getcontext`/`makecontext`/`setcontext`/`swapcontext`</a>
Support for these functions within the Hurd threadvar environment has
been added, but for multi-threaded applications ([[libpthread]]), it is
a bit clunky: as a practical requirement, a thread's stack size always
has to be equal to `PTHREAD_STACK_DEFAULT`, 2 MiB, and also has to be
naturally aligned. The idea is still to [[get rid of Hurd threadvars
and replace them with TLS|t/tls-threadvar]].
Aside from [[gccgo]], the following packages might make use of these
functions, searching on <http://codesearch.debian.net/> for
`\b(get|set|make|swap)context\s*\(` on 2013-05-18: boost1.49,
chromium-browser, gtk-vnc, guile-1.8, iceape, icedove, iceweasel,
libgc, libsigsegv, luatex, mono, nspr, pth, ruby1.8, texlive-bin, uim,
and more.
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-08:
<pinotree> oh, and even ruby2.0 suffers because of fixed-stack
threads
<youpi> yes, we definitely need to finish fixing it
<youpi> my current work is in our glibc repo, youpi/tls-threadvar
<pinotree> | *** makecontext: a stack at 0xbc000 with size 0x40000
is not usable with threadvars
<pinotree> all 8 failing tests with that
<youpi> maybe we can hand-disable the use of contexts in ruby for
now?
<pinotree> gg0: ↑ :)
<gg0> after the pseudo-patch i RFCed, i don't deserve to say
anything else about that :)
<pinotree> i mean, feel free to investigate and "fix" ruby2.0 as
above :)
<gg0> eh maybe i'd just be able to hand-disable failing
thread-related _tests_ :)
<gg0> i'm still hoping some real developer picks and actually fixes
it, seems it's not enough interesting though
<azeem> 21:37 < youpi> yes, we definitely need to finish fixing it
<gg0> afaiu youpi is working on threadvars-tls migration, which
would mean fixing them all. i just meant fixing ruby, which would
mean having puppet btw
<youpi> gg0: "actually fixing" means fixing threadvars-tls
migration
<youpi> "just fixing" ruby can be done by simply disabling context
use in ruby
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-10:
<gg0> this one fixes make test by disabling context and giving more
time to timing related tests http://paste.debian.net/plain/37977/
<gg0> make test-all is another story
<youpi> gg0: AIUI, the sleep part should get fixed by the next
glibc upload, which will include the getclk patch
<youpi> but the disabling context part could be good to submit to
the debian ruby package, mentioning that this is a workaround for
now
<gg0> unfortunately still not enough, test-all still fails
<youpi> does it make the package not build?
<gg0> test-all is the second part of what we call tests
<gg0> they build and package (they produce all ruby packages),
after that they run debian/run-test-suites.bash which is make
test + make test-all
<gg0> well after or during the build doesn't matter, it's their
testsuite
<gg0> ok just failed:
<gg0> TestBug4409#test_bug4409 = Illegal instruction
<gg0> make: *** [yes-test-all] Error 132
<gg0> what to do with Illegal instruction?
<gg0> just found 2 words that make everybody shut up :p
<pinotree> same as above: debug it
<teythoon> gg0: have you confirmed that this is reproducible? I've
once had a process die with SIGILL and it was not and I figured
it might have been a (qemu?) glitch
<gg0> seems i'm running tests which are disabled on _all_ archs,
better so
<gg0> well, this should be reproducible. i just got it on a qemu, i
could try to reproduce it on real hardware but as just said, i
was testing tests disabled by maintainer so completely useless
<teythoon> gg0: yeah, I'm running all my hurd instances on qemu/kvm
as well, I meant did you get this twice in a row?
<gg0> to be honest i got another illegal instruction months ago but
don't recall doing what
<gg0> nope not twice, i've commented it out. then run the remaining
and then found out i should not have done what i was doing
<gg0> but i could try to reproduce it
<gg0> ok now i recall i got it another one few hours ago on real
hardware, from logs:
<gg0> TestIO#test_copy_stream_socket = Illegal instruction
<gg0> teythoon: on real hardware though
<gg0> and this is the one i should debug once it finishes, still
running
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-11:
<gg0_> ../sysdeps/mach/hurd/jmp-unwind.c:53: _longjmp_unwind:
Assertion `! __spin_lock_locked (&ss->critical_section_lock)'
failed.
<gg0_> and
<gg0_> ../libpthread/sysdeps/mach/pt-thread-halt.c:51:
__pthread_thread_halt: Unexpected error: (ipc/send) invalid
destination port.
<tschwinge> gg0_: Which libpthread source are these? Stock Debian
package?
<gg0_> tschwinge: everything debian, ruby rebuilt with
http://paste.debian.net/plain/38519/ which should disable
*context
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-11:
<gg0_> wrt ruby, i'd propose a patch that disables *context and
comments out failed tests (a dozen). most of them are timing
related, don't always fail
<gg0_> if they failed gracefully, we could leave them enabled and
just ignoring testsuite result, but most of them block testsuite
run when fail
<gg0_> anyone against? any better idea (and intention to implement
it? :p)?
<gg0_> youpi: is disabling some tests acceptable? ^
<youpi> it'd be good to at least know what is failing
<youpi> so as to know what impact hiding these failures will have
<youpi> remember that hiding bugs usually means getting bitten by
them even harder later :)
<gg0_> many of them use pipes
<gg0_> here the final list, see commented out ones
http://paste.debian.net/plain/38426
<gg0_> and as said some don't always fails
<gg0_> test_copy_stream_socket uses a socket
<youpi> note that we can still at least build packages with notest
<youpi> at least to get the binaries uploaded
<youpi> disabling *context should however really be done
<youpi> and the pipe issues are concerning
<youpi> I don't remember other pipe issues
<youpi> so maybe it's a but in the ruby bindings
<gg0_> i just remember they didn't die, then something unknown
fixed it
<youpi> I see something frightening in io.c
<youpi> #if BSD_STDIO
<youpi> preserving_errno(fseeko(f, lseek(fileno(f),
(off_t)0, SEEK_CUR), SEEK_SET));
<youpi> #endif
<youpi> this looks very much like a workaround for an odd thing in
BSD
<youpi> it happens that that gets enabled on hurd too, since
__MACH__ is defined
<youpi> you could try to drop these three lines, just to see
<youpi> this is very probably very worth investigating, at any rate
<youpi> even just test_gets_limit_extra_arg is a very simple test,
that I fail to see why it should ever fail on hurd-i386
<youpi> starting debugging it would be a matter of putting printfs
in io.c, to check what gets called, with what parameters, etc.
<youpi> just a matter of taking the time to do it, it's not very
complex
<gg0_> youpi: are you looking at 1.8? no BSD_STDIO here
<youpi> yes, 1.8
<gg0_> 1.9.3.448
<gg0_> landed to sid few days ago
<youpi> ah, I have 1.87
<youpi> +.
<gg0_> my favourites are TestIO#test_copy_stream_socket and
TestIO#test_cross_thread_close_fd -> Illegal instruction
<gg0_> TestIO#test_io_select_with_many_files sometimes Illegal
instruction, sometimes ruby1.9.1:
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/jmp-unwind.c:53: _longjmp_unwind: Assertion
`! __spin_lock_locked (&ss->critical_section_lock)' failed.
[[thread-cancel_c_55_hurd_thread_cancel_assertion___spin_lock_locked_ss_critical_section_lock]]?
<gg0_> trying to debug illegal instruction
http://paste.debian.net/plain/38585/
<gg0_> (yes, i'm not even good at gdbing)
<gg0_> any hint?
<gg0_> oh found out there's an intree .gdbinit, that might
complicate things
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-13:
<gg0_> where should it be implemented MAP_STACK? plus, is it worth
doing it considering migration to tls, wouldn't it be useless?
<gg0_> sysdeps/mach/hurd/mmap.c i should reduce stupid questions
frequency from daily to weekly basis
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-14:
<gg0_> say i managed to mmap 0x200000-aligned memory
<gg0_> now i get almost the same failed tests i get disabling
*context
<gg0_> that would mean they don't depend on threading
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-16:
<gg0> i get many ../sysdeps/mach/hurd/jmp-unwind.c:53:
_longjmp_unwind: Assertion `! __spin_lock_locked
(&ss->critical_section_lock)' failed.
<gg0> by running ruby testsuite, especially during test_read* tests
http://sources.debian.net/src/ruby1.9.1/1.9.3.448-1/test/ruby/test_io.rb#L972
<gg0> read/write operations with pipes
<braunr> gg0: that's weird
<braunr> gg0: debian glibc ?
<gg0> braunr: yep, debian 2.17-92
<gg0> sometimes assertion above, sometimes tests in question get
stuck reading
<gg0> it would be nice reproducing it w/o ruby
<gg0> probably massive io on pipes could do the job
<gg0> also more nice finding someone who finds it interesting to
fix :p
<gg0> ruby is rebuilt with http://paste.debian.net/plain/40755/, no
*context
<gg0> pipe function in tests above creates one thread for write,
one for read
http://sources.debian.net/src/ruby1.9.1/1.9.3.448-1/test/ruby/test_io.rb#L26
<tschwinge> gg0: About the jmp-unwind assertion failure: is it be
chance this issue:
<http://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/open_issues/thread-cancel_c_55_hurd_thread_cancel_assertion___spin_lock_locked_ss_critical_section_lock.html>?
I didn't look in detail.
<braunr> tschwinge: that's what i thought too about the assertion,
which is why i find it strange
<gg0> asserting it's not locked then locking it doesn't exclude
race conditions
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-17:
<gg0> youpi: i guess no one saw it anymore since
tg-thread-cancel.diff patch
<gg0> it =
http://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/open_issues/thread-cancel_c_55_hurd_thread_cancel_assertion___spin_lock_locked_ss_critical_section_lock.html
<gg0> this one comes from sysdeps/mach/hurd/jmp-unwind.c:53 though
<gg0> another assertion to remove?
<youpi> gg0: it's not exactly the same: in hurd_thread_cancel we
hold no lock at all at the assertion point
<youpi> in jmp-unwind.c, we do hold a lock
<youpi> and the assertion might be actually true because all other
threads are supposed to hold the first lock before taking the
other one
<youpi> you could check for that in other places
<youpi> and maybe it's the other place which wouldhave to be fixed
<youpi> also look for documentation which would say that
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-17:
<braunr_> gg0: is that what we do ??
<gg0> braunr: well, i was looking at
http://sources.debian.net/src/eglibc/2.17-92/debian/patches/hurd-i386/tg-thread-cancel.diff
<gg0> which afaics fixes
http://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/open_issues/thread-cancel_c_55_hurd_thread_cancel_assertion___spin_lock_locked_ss_critical_section_lock.html
<gg0> the one i get now is
http://sources.debian.net/src/eglibc/2.17-92/sysdeps/mach/hurd/jmp-unwind.c#L53
<gg0> 09:12 < youpi> gg0: it's not exactly the same: in
hurd_thread_cancel we hold no lock at all at the assertion point
<gg0> 09:13 < youpi> in jmp-unwind.c, we do hold a lock
<gg0> 09:13 < youpi> and the assertion might be actually true
because all other threads are supposed to hold the first lock
before taking the other one
<braunr> gg0: that assertion is normal
<braunr> it says there is a deadlock
<braunr> ss->critical_section_lock must be taken before ss->lock
<gg0> you mean ss->lock before ss->critical_section_lock
<braunr> no
<gg0> ah ok got it
<braunr> that's a bug
<braunr> longjmp
<braunr> ugh
<braunr> you could make a pass through the various uses of those
locks and check what the intended locking protocol should be
<braunr> i inferred ss->critical_section_lock before ss->lock from
hurd_thread_cancel
<braunr> this might be wrong too but considering this function is
used a lot, i doubt it
<gg0> (no, i hadn't got it, i was looking at jmp-unwind.c where
lock is before critical_section_lock)
<gg0> could we get useful info from gdb'ing the assertion?
<tschwinge> gg0: Only if you first get an understanding why it is
happening, what you expect to happen instead/why it shall not
happen/etc. Then you can perhaps use GDB to verify that.
<gg0> i can offer an irc interface if anyone is interested, it's
ready, just to attach :)
<gg0> this is the test
http://sources.debian.net/src/ruby1.9.1/1.9.3.448-1/test/ruby/test_io.rb#L937
<gg0> pipe function creates two threads
http://sources.debian.net/src/ruby1.9.1/1.9.3.448-1/test/ruby/test_io.rb#L26
<gg0> Attaching to pid 15552
<gg0> [New Thread 15552.1]
<gg0> [New Thread 15552.2]
<gg0> (gdb)
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-21:
<youpi> gg0: it seems the assert (! __spin_lock_locked
(&ss->critical_section_lock)); is bogus
<youpi> but it'd be good to catch a call trace
<youpi> well, it may not be bogus, in case that lock is only ever
taken by the thread itself
<youpi> in that case, inside longjmp_unwind we're not supposed to
have it already
<youpi> ok, that's what we had tried to discuss with Roland
<youpi> it can happen when playing with thread cancelation
<braunr> youpi: the assertion isn't exactly bogus
<braunr> the lock ordering is
<youpi> braunr: which one are you talking about?
<youpi> the one in hurd_thread_cancel looks really wrong
<youpi> and some parts of the code keep the critical section lock
without ss->lock held, so I don't see how lock ordering can help
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-22:
<gg0> how much does this patch suck on a scale from 1 to 10?
http://paste.debian.net/plain/44810/
<youpi> well, the stack allocation issue will go away once I get
the threadvars away
<youpi> I'm working on it right now
<youpi> about the lib paths, it makes sense to add the gnu case,
but i386-gnu shouldn't be put in the path
<gg0> that's great
<gg0> so seems the wrong moment for what i've already done
ie. asking terceiro what he thinks about patch above :/
<gg0> any distro-independent way to get libc.so and libm.so path?
<gg0> ruby as last resource takes them from "ldd ruby"
<pinotree> gg0: should work fine then
<gg0> well it does. but gnu doesn't have a case so it hits default
which is broken
http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/projects/ruby-trunk/repository/revisions/40235/entry/test/dl/test_base.rb
<gg0> btw even linux and kfreebsd with debian multipath have broken
cases but they don't hit default and get fixed by ldd later
<pinotree> why it is broken? are arguments passed to that script?
<gg0> i'm not sure about what propose. a broken case so it doesn't
hit default like linux and kfbsd
<gg0> yes they are :/
<pinotree> and which ones are? who executes that script and which
arguments does it pass to it?
<gg0> other ruby scripts which have nothing to do with libc/libm
<pinotree> well, if they pass arguments which should be the paths
to libc and libm, they must be getting such paths, aren't they?
<gg0> they don't. arguments are other ruby scripts, don't know why,
maybe something else broken before
<gg0> but that would mean that before there's a smarter path
detection way, i doubt
<pinotree> then add the case for hurd, but setting both libc and
libm as nil
<pinotree> so they will be fetched again
<gg0> yep and would really ugly
<gg0> +be
<gg0> "please commit this one which wrongly sets paths."
<gg0> an alternative would be removing default case
<gg0> or pointing it out by proposing ldd in hurd case might make
them review the whole detection
<gg0> by setting correct paths like in patch above it wouldn't
break a possible hurd-amd64, it would work due to ldd
<youpi> gg0: that's why I said the patch is fine, but without the
i386-gnu part of the path
<youpi> just like it happens to be on linux & kfreebsd
<gg0> i might take ldconfig -p output
<gg0> to make it uselessly correct from start
<gg0> http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/8937
<pinotree> note thar ruby 1.8 is EOL
<pinotree> *that
<gg0> -- If you're reporting a bug in both Ruby 1.9/2.0 and Ruby
1.8: ruby-trunk, and write like "this bug can be reproduced in
Ruby 1.8 as well." --
<gg0> i suspect this one won't be the only one i'll file. unless
upcoming youpi's tls and braunr's thread destruction patches fix
all ruby tests
<pinotree> did you check ruby2.0 too, btw?
<gg0> switched to ruby2 few hours ago. i pointed out 2nd part of
testsuite is not enabled, probably terceiro will enable it soon
<gg0> by applying my patch above we'd completely fix current
ruby2.0 build (yes because tests are not completely enabled)
<pinotree> what you run those extra tests?
<gg0>
http://anonscm.debian.org/gitweb/?p=collab-maint/ruby1.9.1.git;a=blob;f=debian/run-test-suites.bash
<gg0> make test + make test-all
<gg0> (test-all is 2nd part)
<gg0> many are problematic. i didn't finish yet to suppress them
one-by-one. one i suppress, another one pops up
<gg0> either get stuck or well known assertion
<pinotree> check those that get stuck :)
<gg0> which kind of check?
<pinotree> "check" as in "debug"
<gg0> btw i tested puppet few days ago (with ruby1.8), it seems to
be working, at least at trasferring files from master
<gg0> don't know about any advanced usage
<pinotree> ruby 1.8 is going to die soon, so testing things against
it is not totally useful
<gg0> so you assume 1.8 is less broken than 1.9/2.0, right?
<pinotree> no
<gg0> i just can see it's been built without tests itself too
<pinotree> erm no
<gg0> well ok, if i can be wrong, i'll be wrong
<gg0> i say that after a quick check time ago, might be wrong
<pinotree> `getbuildlogs ruby1.8 last hurd-i386`, see the last
build log
<gg0> ah from pkg-kde-tools
<gg0> i hate kde :)
<pinotree> no?
<gg0> no what?
<pinotree> devscripts: /usr/bin/getbuildlog
<gg0> pkg-kde-tools: /usr/bin/pkgkde-getbuildlogs
<pinotree> which is not what i said
<gg0> wait that's what apt-file found
<gg0> maybe i should update it
<gg0> is it so recent?
<pinotree> no
<pinotree> i just added an 's' more at the end of the command, but
typing getbu<tab> could have been helpful anyway...
<gg0> yeah just got it
<gg0> my fault not to have tried to run it before looking for it
<pinotree> and btw, i don't see what hating kde has to do with
tools developed by qt/kde debian packagers
<gg0> j/k i simply don't use kde, never used and apt-file search
told me it was from pkg-kde-tools
<gg0> btw build log says "make test" fails, doesn't even start. and
its failure doesn't block the build
<pinotree> exactly
<gg0> s/make test/make test-all/
<gg0> "make test" (aka "1st part" above) doesn't run. i guess it's
missing in packaging
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-22:
<braunr> youpi: i mean the lock order where the assertion occurs is
reserved compared to the one in hurd_thread_cancel
<braunr> (and the one in hurd_thread_cancel is the same used in
hurd condition-related functions)
<youpi> "reserved" ?
<braunr> reversed
<braunr> :)
<youpi> by "the assertion occurs", you mean gg0's spot?
<braunr> yes
<youpi> well , the assertion also happens in hurd_thread_cancel
<braunr> it does oO
<braunr> i didn't see that
<youpi> but otherwise yes, it's completely bogus that we have both
locking in different orders
<youpi> could you submit the fix for jmp-unwind.c to upstream?
<braunr> what fix ?
<youpi> reversing the lock order
<braunr> ah, simply that
<youpi> (well, provided that hurd_thread_cancel is right)
<braunr> that's what i suggested to gg0
<braunr> to check where those locks are held and determine the
right order
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-28:
<gg0_> now we'd just need tls
<gg0_> http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/8937
<gg0_> well, it would pass makecheck at least. makecheckall would
keep hanging on threads/pipes tests i guess, unless tls/thread
destruction patches fix them
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-10-05:
<youpi> so what is missing for ruby2.0, only disabling use of
context for now, no?
<pinotree> i'm not tracking it closely, gg0_ is
<gg0_> maybe terceiro would accept a patch which only disables
*context, "maybe" because he rightly said changes must go
upstream
<gg0_> anyway with or without *context, many many tests in
makecheckall fail by making it hang, first with and without
assertion you removed, now they all simply hang
<gg0_> youpi: what do we want to do? if you're about finishing tls
migration (as i thought a couple of weeks ago), i won't propose
anything upstream. otherwise i could but that will have to be
reverted upstream once you finish
<gg0_> about tests, current ruby2.0 doesn't run makecheckall, only
makecheck which succeeds on hurd (w/o context)
<gg0_> if anyone wants to give it a try:
http://paste.debian.net/plain/51089
<gg0_> first hunk makes makecheck (not makecheckall) succeed and
has been upstreamed, not packaged yet
<pinotree> what about makecheckall for ruby2.0?
<gg0_> 16:58 < gg0_> anyway with or without *context, many many
tests in makecheckall fail by making it hang, first with and
without assertion you removed, now they all simply hang
<pinotree> i for a moment thought it as for 1.9.1, ok
<pinotree> these hangs should be debugged, yes
<gg0_> nope, tests behavior doesn't change between 1.9 and 2.0. i
started suppressing tests onebyone on 2.0 as well and as happened
on 1.9, i gave up cause there were too many
<gg0_> yep a smart mind could start debugging them, starting from
patch above pasted by a lazy one owner
<gg0_> one problem is that one can't reproduce them by isolate
them, they don't fail. start makecheckall then wait for one fail
<gg0_> now after my stupid report, someone like pinotree could take
it over, play with it for half an hour/an hour (which equals to
half a gg0's year/a gg0's year
<gg0_> )
<gg0_> and fix them all
<gg0_> 17:05 < gg0_> youpi: what do we want to do? if you're about
finishing tls migration (as i thought a couple of weeks ago), i
won't propose anything upstream. otherwise i could but that will
have to be reverted upstream once you finish
<youpi> gg0_: I don't really know what to answer
<youpi> that's why I didn't answer :)
<gg0_> youpi: well then we could upstream context disable and keep
it disabled even if you fix tls. ruby won't be as fast as it
would be with context but i don't think anyone will complain
about that. then once packaged, if terceiro doesn't enable
makecheckall, we will have ruby2.0 in main
<youpi> that can be a plan yes
<gg0_> btw reverting it upstream should not be a problem eventually
<youpi> sure, the thing is remembering to do it
<gg0_> filed http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/8990
<gg0_> please don't fix tls too soon :)
<gg0_> s/makecheck/maketest/g
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-10-08:
<gg0_> ok. *context disabled http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/8990
<gg0> bt full of an attached stuck ruby test
http://paste.debian.net/plain/53788/
<gg0> anything useful?
<youpi> uh, is that really all?
<youpi> there's not much interesting unfortunately
<youpi> did you run thread apply all bt full ?
<youpi> (not just bt full)
<gg0> no just bt full
<gg0> http://paste.debian.net/plain/53790/
<gg0> wait, there's a child
<gg0> damn ctrl-c'ing while it was loading symbols made it crash :/
<gg0> restarted testsuite
<gg0> isn't it interesting that failed tests fail only if testsuite
runs from beginning, whereas if run singularly, they succeed?
<gg0> as it got out of whatever resources
<gg0> youpi: http://paste.debian.net/plain/53798/
<youpi> the interesting part is actually right at the top
<youpi> it's indeed stuck in the critical section spinlock
<youpi> question being what is keeping it
<youpi> iirc I had already checked in the whole glibc code that all
paths which lock critical_section_lock actually release it in
all cases, but maybe I have missed some
<youpi> (I did find some missing paths, which I fixed)
<gg0> i guess the same check you and braunr talk about in
discussion just before this anchor
http://darnassus.sceen.net/~hurd-web/open_issues/glibc/#recvmmsg
<youpi> yes, but the issue we were discussing there is not what
happens here
<youpi> we would see another thread stuck in the other way roudn,
otherwise
<gg0> no way to get what is locking?
<youpi> no, that's not recorded
<gg0> and what about writing it somewhere right after getting the
lock?
<youpi> one will have to do that in all spots taking that lock
<youpi> but yes, that's the usual approach
<gg0> i would give it try but eglibc rebuild takes too much time,
that conflicts with my laziness
<gg0> i read even making locks timed would help
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-10-09:
<gg0> so correct order would be:
<gg0> __spin_lock (&ss->lock); // locks sigstate
<gg0> __spin_lock (&ss->critical_section_lock);
<gg0> [do critical stuff]
<gg0> __spin_unlock (&ss->critical_section_lock);
<gg0> __spin_unlock (&ss->lock); // unlocks sigstate
<gg0> ?
<gg0> 21:44 < gg0> terceiro: backported to 2.0 (backport to 1.9 is
waiting) https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/9000
<gg0> 21:46 < gg0> that means that if you take a 2.0 snapshot,
it'll build fine on hurd (unless you introduce maketestall as in
1.9, that would make it get stuck like 1.9)
<gg0> 21:48 < terceiro> gg0: nice
<gg0> 21:48 < terceiro> I will try to upload a snapshot as soon as
I can
<gg0> 21:52 < gg0> no problem. you might break my "conditional
satisfaction" by adding maketestall. better if you do that on
next+1 upload so we'll have at least one 2.0 built :)
<gg0> would it be a problem granting me access to a porter box to
rebuild eglibc+ruby2.0?
<gg0> i'm already doing it on another vm but host often loses power
<pinotree> you cannot install random stuff on a porterbox though
<gg0> i know i'd just need build-deps of eglibc+ruby2.0 i guess
<gg0> (already accessed to porter machines in the past, account
lele, mips iirc)
<gg0> ldap should remember that
<gg0> don't want to disturb anyone else work btw. if it's not a
problem, nice. otherwise no problem
<pinotree> please send a request to admin@exodar.debian.net so it
is not forgotten
<gg0> following this one would be too "official"?
http://dsa.debian.org/doc/guest-account/
<pinotree> hurd is not a release architecture, so hurd machines are
not managed by DSA
<gg0> ok
<pinotree> the general procedure outlines is ok though, just need
to be sent to the address above
<gg0> sent
<gg0> (1st signed mail with mutt, in the worst case i've attached
passphrase :))
<youpi> gg0: could you send me an ssh key?
<pinotree> no alioth account?
<youpi> yes, but EPERM
<gg0> youpi: sent to youpi@
<youpi> youpi@ ?
<gg0> (... which doesn't exist :/)
<gg0> sthibault@
<youpi> please test gg0-guest@exodar.debian.net ?
<youpi> (I'd rather not adduser the ldap name, who knows what might
happen when you get your DD account)
<gg0> i'm in. thanks
<youpi> you're welcome
<gg0> ldap users need to be adduser'ed?
<youpi> I'm not getting your ldap user account from ud-replicate,
at least
<gg0> (btw i never planned to apply nm, i'd be honoured but i
simply think not to deserve it)
<youpi> never say never ;)
<gg0> bah i like failing. that would be a success. i can't :)
<gg0> gg0-guest@exodar:~$ dchroot
<gg0> E: Access not authorised
<gg0> I: You do not have permission to access the schroot service.
<gg0> I: This failure will be reported.
<youpi> ah, right, iirc I need to add you somewhere
<youpi> gg0: please retry?
<gg0> works
<youpi> good
<gg0> are there already eglibc+ruby2.0 build-deps?
<youpi> yes
<gg0> oh that means i should do something myself now :)
<youpi> yep, that had to happen at some point :)
<gg0> my laziness thanks: "at some point" is better than "now" :)
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-10-10:
<gg0> ok just reproduced the
former. ../sysdeps/mach/hurd/jmp-unwind.c:53 waits
<braunr> 20:37 < braunr> gg0: does ruby create and destroy threads
?
<gg0> no idea
<gg0> braunr: days ago you and youpi talked about locking order
(just before this anchor
http://darnassus.sceen.net/~hurd-web/open_issues/glibc/#recvmmsg)
<braunr> oh right
<gg0> <youpi> could you submit the fix for jmp-unwind.c to
upstream?
<braunr> it didn't made it in the todo list
<gg0> so correct order is in hurd_thread_cancel, right?
<braunr> sorry about that
<braunr> we need to make a pass to make sure it is
<gg0> that means locking first ss->critical_section_lock _then_
ss->lock
<gg0> correct?
<braunr> but considering how critical hurd_thread_cancel is, i
expect so
<gg0> i get the same deadlock by swapping locks
<gg0> braunr: youpi: fyi ^
<gg0> 20:51 < braunr> 20:37 < braunr> gg0: does ruby create and
destroy threads ?
<gg0> how could i check it?
<braunr> gg0: ps -eflw
<youpi> gg0: that's not surprising, since in the b acktrace you
posted there isn't another thread locked in the other order
<youpi> so it's really that somehow the thread is already in
critical sesction
<braunr> youpi: you mean there is ?
<braunr> ah, it's not the same bug
<youpi> no, in what he posted, no other thread is stuck
<youpi> so it's not a locking order
<youpi> just that the critical section is actually busy
<gg0> youpi: ack
<gg0> braunr: what's the other bug? ext2fs one?
<braunr> gg0: idk
<gg0> braunr: thanks. doesn't show threads (found -T for that) but
at least doesn't limit columns number if piped (thanks to -w)
<braunr> it does
<braunr> there is a TH column
<gg0> ok thread count. -T gives more info
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-10-24:
<youpi> ruby2.0 builds fine with the to-be-uploaded libc btw
<gg0> youpi: without d-ports patches? surprise me :)
<youpi> gg0: plain main archive source
<gg0> you did it. surprised
<gg0> ah ok you just pushed your tls. great!
<braunr> tls will fix a lot of things
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-11-03:
<youpi> gg0:
<youpi> #252 test_fork.rb:30:in `<top (required)>': core dumped
[ruby-core:28924]
<youpi> FAIL 1/949 tests failed
<youpi> with the to-be-uploaded glibc
<gg0> why does it coredump?
<gg0> that's the test i had workarounded by increasing sleep from 1
to 3 but i don't recall it coredump'ed
<gg0> *recall if
<gg0> "sleep 1" at bootstraptest/test_fork.rb:33
<youpi> how can I run the test alone?
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-11-04:
<youpi> gg0: ^
<gg0> it should not take much
<gg0> run $ make OPTS=-v test
<gg0> found out how to minimize
<gg0> mkdir _youpi && cp bootstraptest/{runner,test_fork}.rb _youpi
<gg0> then run $ ./miniruby -I./lib -I. -I.ext/common
./tool/runruby.rb --extout=.ext -- --disable-gems
"./_youpi/runner.rb" --ruby="ruby2.0 -I./lib" -q -v
<gg0> youpi: that should work
<youpi> #1 test_fork.rb:1:in `<top (required)>': No such file or
directory - /usr/src/ruby1.9.1-1.9.3.448/ruby2.0
-I/usr/src/ruby1.9.1-1.9.3.448/lib -W0 bootstraptest.tmp.rb
[ruby-dev:32404]
<gg0> seems it can't find /usr/src/ruby1.9.1-1.9.3.448/ruby2.0
<youpi> well it's ruby1.9.1 indeed :)
<youpi> ok, got core
<gg0> replace 2.0 with 1.9, check what you have in rootdir
<gg0> k
<youpi> Mmm, no, there's no core file
<gg0> does stupidly increasing sleep time work?
<youpi> nope
<gg0> without *context it runs "make test" fine. real problems come
later with "make test-all"
<gg0> wrt test_fork, is correspondence between signals correct? i
recall i read something about USR1 not implemented
<youpi> USR1 is implemented, it's SIGRT which is not implemented
<gg0> my next wild guess is that that has something to do with
atfork, whatever that means
<gg0> it makes 2 forks: one sleeps for 1 sec then kills -USR1
itself, the second traps USR1 in getting current time. in the
meanwhile parent sleeps for 2 secs
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-11-07:
<gg0> ruby2.0 just built on unstable
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-11-09:
<gg0> youpi: just found out a more "official" way to run one test
only
http://anonscm.debian.org/gitweb/?p=collab-maint/ruby1.9.1.git;a=blob;f=debian/README.porters;h=94aff7dd3ecd9f748498f2e285b4a4313b4b8f36;hb=HEAD
<gg0> btw still getting coredumps?
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-11-13:
<gg0> wrt the other test test_fork i suppose you made it not to
segfault anymore, it simply does fail
<youpi> I haven't taken any particular care
<youpi> didn't have any time to deal with it
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-11-14:
<gg0> btw patches to disable *context have been backported to 1.9
as well so next 1.9 point release should have *context disabled
<gg0> as 2.0 have
<gg0> *has
<gg0> i guess you'd like to get them reverted now
<gg0> youpi: ^
<youpi> after testing that *context work, yes
* `sigaltstack`
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-10-09:
<gnu_srs1> Hi, is sigaltstack() really supported, even if it is
defined as well as SA_ONSTACK?
<braunr> probably not
<braunr> well,
<braunr> i don't know actually, mistaking with something else
<braunr> it may be supported
<pinotree> iirc no
<gnu_srs1> pinotree: are you sure?
<pinotree> this is what i remember
<pinotree> if you want to be sure that $foo works, just do the
usual way: test it yourself
<gnu_srs1> found it: hurd/TODO: *** does sigaltstack/sigstack
really work? -- NO
<pinotree> well TODO is old and there were signal-related patches
by jk in the meanwhile, although i don't think they would have
changed this lack
<pinotree> in any case, test it
<gnu_srs1> anybody fluent in assembly? Looks like this code
destroys the stack: http://paste.debian.net/54331/
<braunr> gnu_srs1: why would it ?
<braunr> it does something special with the stack pointer but it
just looks like it aligns it to 16 bytes, maybe because of sse2
restrictions (recent gcc align the stack already anyway)
<gnu_srs1> Well, in that case it is the called function:
http://paste.debian.net/54341/
<braunr> how do you know there is a problem with the stack in the
first place ?
<gnu_srs1> tracing up to here, everything is OK. then esp and ebp
are destroyed.
<gnu_srs1> and single stepping goes backward until it segfaults
<braunr> "destroyed" ?
<gnu_srs1> zero if I remember correctly now. the x86 version built
for is i586, should that be changed to i486?
<braunr> this shouldn't change anything
<braunr> and they shouldn't get to 0
<braunr> use gdb to determine exactly which instruction resets the
stack pointer
<gnu_srs1> how to step into the assembly part? using 's' steps
through the function since no line information:
<gnu_srs1> Single stepping until exit from function
wine_call_on_stack,
<gnu_srs1> which has no line number information.
<braunr> gnu_srs1: use break on the address
<gnu_srs1> how do i get the address of where the assembly starts?
* <a id=recvmmsg>`recvmmsg`/`sendmmsg` (`t/sendmmsg`)</a>
From [[!message-id "20120625233206.C000A2C06F@topped-with-meat.com"]],
Roland McGrath: *They are generally useful interfaces and there is
nothing intrinsically Linuxoid about them. At least when not given a
timeout, they could be implemented in terms of sendmsg/recvmsg. So
perhaps we ought to have a sysdeps/posix implementation that the Hurd
would use instead of stubs (and folks can consider adding new RPCs).
Then perhaps the Linux fallback case should be that instead of stubs,
too.*
* <a id=SOCK_CLOEXEC>`SOCK_CLOEXEC`</a>
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-02:
<gnu_srs1> Do we support accept4 with the SOCK_CLOEXEC flag?
<gnu_srs1> According to the code in sysdeps/mach/hurd/accept4.c
that case is not covered
<gnu_srs1> (only O_NONBLOCK, not SOCK_NONBLOCK??))
<pinotree> gnu_srs1: we do
<pinotree> but only for accept4, not for socket and socketpair
<gnu_srs1> pinotree: cannot find the case for O_CLOEXEC covered in
__libc_accept4()
<pinotree> gnu_srs1: no, you need SOCK_*
<gnu_srs1> The only code for accept4() is in sysdeps/mach/hurd/ and
it uses O_* for flags ?
<pinotree> flags = sock_to_o_flags (flags);
<pinotree> tried checking it?
<gnu_srs1> Aha, tks:-D
<pinotree> and you don't need an explicit case of O_CLOEXEC, since
it is handled in other ways
[[!message-id "1378154151.21738.15.camel@G3620.my.own.domain"]].
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-03:
<gnu_srs> any ideas about the SOCK_CLOEXEC issue?
<pinotree> didn't i tell already about it?
<gnu_srs> I did not find any hurd related code in tschwinges
branches.
<pinotree> you didn't check deep then...
<gnu_srs> so why does socket/socketpair not return ENOSYS then?
<pinotree> why should it, since they are implemented?
<braunr> ...
<gnu_srs> for socket/socketpair?
<braunr> gnu_srs: enosys means no system call
<gnu_srs> s/ENOSYS/EINVAL/
<gnu_srs> see the mail to the bug-hurd/debian-hurd ML for more info
<gnu_srs> and tschwinges reply
<pinotree> which is what i knew already?
<gnu_srs> pinotree: please reply on the mailing list on the EINVAL
vs EPROTOTYPE issue to clarify things
<pinotree> gnu_srs:
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2013-02/msg00092.html
<pinotree> gnu_srs: things were clear already...
<gnu_srs> pinotree: I've read that patch and still pflocal/pf.c
returns EPROTOTYPE not changed by the __socket wrapper in eglibc
<pinotree> gnu_srs: what about realizing SOCK_CLOEXEC and friends
are NOT posix?
<gnu_srs> since socket/socketpair does not return EINVAL the dbus
code has to be patched then?
<pinotree> pflocal should never ever get such flags mixed to the
protocol, so any invalid value of protocol correctly returns
EPROTOTYPE
<gnu_srs> this is the question I need answered: Which way to go?
<pinotree> all of them
<gnu_srs> ?
<pinotree> - applications should not assume that because you have
accept4 (which is not posix) then SOCK_CLOEXEC and SOCK_NONBLOCK
(flags for it) are usable to socket and socketpair
<pinotree> - glibc should (as the idea of my patch) handle
implementations providing SOCK_* but not supporting them for
socket/socketpair
<pinotree> - finally the hurd part of glibc could implement them
<gnu_srs> to conclude: should I send a bug report for dbus then?
<gnu_srs> pinotree: yes or no?
<pinotree> gnu_srs: *shrug* i wrote it above, so an *upstream*
report (not a debian one)
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-06:
<gnu_srs> I've found another error code issue, now in glib2.0 (and
dbus). Are you really sure the error code
<gnu_srs> for protocol of pflocal/pf.c should be
EPROTONOSUPPORT. The code expects EINVAL for a protocol with
<gnu_srs> SOCK_CLOEXEC, which is a flag. Maybe pf.c should add
this case and return EINVAL instead of
<gnu_srs> submitting bug reports upstream. Yes, I know this is not
POSIX, but it is defined for Hurd too,
<gnu_srs> currently only supported for accept4, not socket or
socketpair.
<pinotree> gnu_srs: no, and i explained already why it is wrong
this way
<pinotree> pflocal shouldn't even get such flags
<pinotree> (pflocal or any other server implementing socket_create)
<gnu_srs> (20:19:35) pinotree: pflocal shouldn't even get such
flags
<gnu_srs> then the glibc wrapper code is missing to catch this
flag:(
<gnu_srs> youpi: ?
<pinotree> gnu_srs: because, as told many times, socket and
socketpair do not support such flags
<pinotree> given they don't do, they filter nothing
<pinotree> and no, you need to file bugs upstream, since having
SOCK_* and accept4 does not imply at all that socket and
socketpair support them
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-07:
<gnu_srs> A correction from yesterdays discussion:
s/EPROTONOSUPPORT/EPROTOTYPE
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-10:
<gnu_srs> for dbus2.0 I found out that the third SOCK_CLOEXEC case
needs a patch too (more working tests),
<gnu_srs> the updated patch is at http://paste.debian.net/37948/ if
you have the time, otherwise I'll do it.
<pinotree> gnu_srs: which is what i wrote in my bug report...
<gnu_srs> Yes you wrote that, but the patch is not updated yet?
<pinotree> it refers to a different socket access, recently added,
which is not used by default
<gnu_srs> I got two more tests running when adding that patch:-/
<pinotree> tests of what?
<gnu_srs> run-test.sh and run-test-systemserver.sh:P
<pinotree> tests of what?
<pinotree> i don't have the universal knowledge of the files in all
the sources
<gnu_srs> dbus-1.6.14/test/name-test/*
[[!message-id "523A3D6C.2030200@gmx.de"]].
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-19:
<pinotree> tschwinge: ehm, regarding the SOCK_* patches for
socket/socketpair, didn't we talk about them when i worked on
eglibc 2.17?
* `mlock`, `munlock`, `mlockall`, `munlockall`
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-01-09:
<gnu_srs> Hi, is mlock, mlockall et al implemented?
<braunr> i doubt it
<braunr> mlock could be, but mlockall only partially
* [[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/Glibc_ioctls]]
* Support for `$ORIGIN` in the dynamic linker, `ld.so`
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-02-23:
<sjamaan>
https://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/user/jkoenig/java/report.html
says $ORIGIN patches have been added to Hurd. Have those hit the
mainline codebase?
[[user/jkoenig/java]], [[user/jkoenig/java/report]].
<sjamaan> It doesn't seem to work here, but perhaps I'm missing
something (I'm using the prebuilt Debian/Hurd 2014-02-11 VM
image)
<sjamaan> objdump -x says the value of RPATH is $ORIGIN
<sjamaan> But it doesn't load a library I placed in the same dir as
the binary
<braunr> sjamaan: i'm not sure
<braunr> sjamaan: what are you trying to do ?
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-02-24:
<sjamaan> braunr: I am working on a release of the CHICKEN Scheme
compiler. Its test suite is currently failing on the stand-alone
deployment tests. Either it should work and use $ORIGIN, or the
test should be disabled, saying Hurd is not supported for
stand-alone deployment-directories
<sjamaan> braunr: The basic idea is to be able to create "appdirs"
like on OS X or PC-BSD, containing all the dependencies a program
needs, which can then simply be untarred
<braunr> sjamaan: ok so you do need $ORIGIN
<sjamaan> yeah
<sjamaan> iiuc, so does Java. Does Java work on Hurd?
<braunr> we had packages at the time jkoenig worked on it
<braunr> integration of patches may have been incomplete, i wasn't
there at the time and i'm not sure
<sjamaan> So it's safest to claim it's unsupported, for now?
<braunr> yes
<sjamaan> Thank you, I'll do that and revisit it later
* `mig_reply_setup`
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-02-24:
<teythoon> braunr: neither hurd, gnu mach or glibc provides
mig_reply_setup
<teythoon> i want to provide this function, where should i put it ?
<teythoon> i found some mach source that put it in libmach afaic
<teythoon>
ftp://ftp.sra.co.jp/.a/pub/os/mach/extracted/mach3/mk/user/libmach/mig_reply_setup.c
<braunr> teythoon: what does it do ?
<teythoon> braunr: not much, it just initializes the reply message
<teythoon> libports does this as well, in the
ports_manage_port_operations* functions
<braunr> teythoon: is it a new function you're adding ?
<teythoon> braunr: yes
<teythoon> braunr: glibc has a declaration for it, but no
implementation
<braunr> teythoon: i think it should be in glibc
<braunr> maybe in mach/
* [[POSIX file record locking|file_locking]]
* <a name="execve_relative_paths">`execve` with relative paths</a>
[[!GNU_Savannah_bug 28934]], [[user/pochu]], [[!message-id
"4BFA500A.7030502@gmail.com"]].
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-03-05:
<teythoon> youpi: what about the exec_filename patch series? [...]
<youpi> Roland was disagreeing with it
* <a name="mount">`mount`/`umount`</a>
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-03-01:
<gnu_srs1> Hi, how to handle packages depending on mount.h, et al?
On Hurd mount/umount is supplied by hurd is not in libc?
<azeem> gnu_srs1: mount or mount.h?
<gnu_srs1> mount.h et al
<gnu_srs1> man 2 mount
<azeem> what is the question then?
<gnu_srs1> some packages expect the mount 2 functionality
available, not by the external command mount/umonut
<gnu_srs1> umount*
<gnu_srs1> azeem: one example is fuse
<teythoon> gnu_srs1: that is correct
<teythoon> gnu_srs1: i put a small hacks entry in the list about
moving the mount/umount functionality from our utilities to the
libc
* <a name="posix_timers">POSIX Timers</a>
`timer_create`, `timer_delete`, [[`clock_gettime`|service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/clock_gettime]], and
so on.
For specific packages:
* <a id=octave>[[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/glibc/octave]]</a>
* <a id=t_cleanup_kernel-features.h>Create `t/cleanup_kernel-features.h`.</a>
* <a id=Secure_file_descriptor_handling>[[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/Secure_file_descriptor_handling]].</a>
* <a id=sendfile>In `sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/Makefile`, there are a bunch of
`-DHAVE_SENDFILE` -- but we do have `sendfile`, too.</a>
Define `__ASSUME_SENDFILE` to 1 in `kernel-features.h`, if `sendfile`
works.
* <a id=pthreadoverwrite>`/usr/include/pthread.h` overwrite issue</a>
`make`, after editing `nss/nss_db/db-initgroups.c`:
[...]
make[2]: Leaving directory `/media/erich/home/thomas/tmp/glibc/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker/resolv'
make subdir=nss -C nss ..=../ others
make[2]: Entering directory `/media/erich/home/thomas/tmp/glibc/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker/nss'
/usr/bin/install -c -m 644 ../include/pthread.h /usr/include/pthread.h
/usr/bin/install: cannot remove `/usr/include/pthread.h': Permission denied
make[2]: *** [/usr/include/pthread.h] Error 1
make[2]: Leaving directory `/media/erich/home/thomas/tmp/glibc/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker/nss'
make[1]: *** [nss/others] Error 2
make[1]: Leaving directory `/media/erich/home/thomas/tmp/glibc/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker'
make: *** [all] Error 2
See [[!message-id "871uv99c59.fsf@kepler.schwinge.homeip.net"]]. Passing
`install_root=/INVALID` to `make`/`make check` is a cheap cure. For `make
install`, prepending an additional slash to `install_root` (that is,
`install_root=//[...]`) is enough to obfuscate the Makefile rules.
* <a id=syslog.c>`sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/syslog.c`</a>
* <a id=fsync>`fsync` on a pipe</a>
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-08-21:
<braunr> pinotree: i think gnu_srs spotted a conformance problem in
glibc
<pinotree> (only one?)
<braunr> pinotree: namely, fsync on a pipe (which is actually a
socketpair) doesn't return EINVAL when the "operation not supported"
error is returned as a "bad request message ID"
<braunr> pinotree: what do you think of this case ?
<pinotree> i'm far from an expert on such stuff, but seems a proper E*
should be returned
<braunr> (there also is a problem in clisp falling in an infinite loop
when trying to handle this, since it uses fsync inside the error
handling code, eww, but we don't care :p)
<braunr> basically, here is what clisp does
<braunr> if fsync fails, and the error isn't EINVAL, let's report the
error
<braunr> and reporting the error in turn writes something on the
output/error stream, which in turn calls fsync again
<pinotree> smart
<braunr> after the stack is exhausted, clisp happily crashes
<braunr> gnu_srs: i'll alter the clisp code a bit so it knows about our
mig specific error
<braunr> if that's the problem (which i strongly suspect), the solution
will be to add an error conversion for fsync so that it returns
EINVAL
<braunr> if pinotree is willing to do that, he'll be the only one
suffering from the dangers of sending stuff to the glibc maintainers
:p
<pinotree> that shouldn't be an issue i think, there are other glibc
hurd implementations that do such checks
<gnu_srs> does fsync return EINVAL for other OSes?
<braunr> EROFS, EINVAL
<braunr> fd is bound to a special file which does not
support synchronization.
<braunr> obviously, pipes and sockets don't
<pinotree>
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/fsync.html
<braunr> so yes, other OSes do just that
<pinotree> now that you speak about it, it could be the failure that
the gnulib fsync+fdatasync testcase have when being run with `make
check` (although not when running as ./test-foo)
<braunr> hm we may not need change glibc
<braunr> clisp has a part where it defines a macro IS_EINVAL which is
system specific
<braunr> (but we should change it in glibc for conformance anyway)
<braunr> #elif defined(UNIX_DARWIN) || defined(UNIX_FREEBSD) ||
defined(UNIX_NETBSD) || defined(UNIX_OPENBSD) #define IS_EINVAL_EXTRA
((errno==EOPNOTSUPP)||(errno==ENOTSUP)||(errno==ENODEV))
<pinotree> i'd rather add nothing to clisp
<braunr> let's see what posix says
<braunr> EINVAL
<braunr> so right, we should simply convert it in glibc
<gnu_srs> man fsync mentions EINVAL
<braunr> man pages aren't posix, even if they are usually close
<gnu_srs> aha
<pinotree> i think checking for MIG_BAD_ID and EOPNOTSUPP (like other
parts do) will b enough
<pinotree> *be
<braunr> gnu_srs: there, it finished correctly even when piped
<gnu_srs> I saw that, congrats!
<braunr> clisp is quite tricky to debug
<braunr> i never had to deal with a program that installs break points
and handles segfaults itself in order to implement growing stacks :p
<braunr> i suppose most interpreters do that
<gnu_srs> So the permanent change will be in glibc, not clisp?
<braunr> yes
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-08-24:
<gnu_srs1> pinotree: The changes needed for fsync.c is at
http://paste.debian.net/185379/ if you want to try it out (confirmed
with rbraun)
<youpi> I agree with the patch, posix indeed documents einval as the
"proper" error value
<pinotree> there's fdatasync too
<pinotree> other places use MIG_BAD_ID instead of EMIG_BAD_ID
<braunr> pinotree: i assume that if you're telling us, it's because
they have different values
<pinotree> braunr: tbh i never seen the E version, and everywhere in
glibc the non-E version is used
<gnu_srs1> in sysdeps/mach/hurd/bits/errno.h only the E version is
defined
<pinotree> look in gnumach/include/mach/mig_errors.h
<pinotree> (as the comment in errno.h say)
<gnu_srs1> mig_errors.h yes. Which comment: from errors.h: /* Errors
from <mach/mig_errors.h>. */ and then the EMIG_ stuff?
<gnu_srs1> Which one is used when building libc?
<gnu_srs1> Answer: At least in fsync.c errno.h is used: #include
<errno.h>
<gnu_srs1> Yes, fdatasync.c should be patched too.
<gnu_srs1> pinotree: You are right: EMIG_ or MIG_ is confusing.
<gnu_srs1> /usr/include/i386-gnu/bits/errno.h: /* Errors from
<mach/mig_errors.h>. */
<gnu_srs1> /usr/include/hurd.h:#include <mach/mig_errors.h>
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-09-02:
<antrik> braunr: regarding fsync(), I agree that EOPNOTSUPP probably
should be translated to EINVAL, if that's what POSIX says. it does
*not* sound right to translate MIG_BAD_ID though. the server should
explicitly return EOPNOTSUPP, and that's what the default trivfs stub
does. if you actually do see MIG_BAD_ID, there must be some other
bug...
<braunr> antrik: right, pflocal doesn't call the trivfs stub for socket
objects
<braunr> trivfs_demuxer is only called by the pflocal node demuxer, for
socket objects it's another call, and i don't think it's the right
thing to call trivfs_demuxer there either
<pinotree> handling MAG_BAD_ID isn't a bad idea anyway, you never know
what the underlying server actually implements
<pinotree> (imho)
<braunr> for me, a bad id is the same as a not supported operation
<pinotree> ditto
<pinotree> from fsync's POV, both the results are the same anyway, ie
that the server does not support a file_sync operation
<antrik> no, a bad ID means the server doesn't implement the protocol
(or not properly at least)
<antrik> it's usually a bug IMHO
<antrik> there is a reason we have EOPNOTSUPP for operations that are
part of a protocol but not implemented by a particular server
<pinotree> antrik: even if it could be the case, there's no reason to
make fsync fail anyway
<antrik> pinotree: I think there is. it indicates a bug, which should
not be hidden
<pinotree> well, patches welcome then...
<antrik> thing is, if sock objects are actually not supposed to
implement the file interface, glibc shouldn't even *try* to call
fsync on them
<pinotree> how?
<pinotree> i mean, can you check whether the file interface is not
implemented, without doing a roundtrip^
<pinotree> ?
<antrik> well, the sock objects are not files, i.e. they were *not*
obtained by file_name_lookup(), but rather a specific call. so glibc
actually *knows* that they are not files.
<braunr> antrik: this way of thinking means we need an "fd" protocol
<braunr> so that objects accessed through a file descriptor implement
all fd calls
<antrik> now I wonder though whether there are conceivable use cases
where it would make sense for objects obtained through the socket
call to optionally implement the file interface...
<antrik> which could actually make sense, if libc lets through other
file calls as well (which I guess it does, if the sock ports are
wrapped in normal fd structures?)
<braunr> antrik: they are
<braunr> and i'd personally be in favor of such an fd protocol, even if
it means implementing stubs for many useless calls
<braunr> but the way things are now suggest a bad id really means an
operation is simply not supported
<antrik> the question in this case is whether we should make the file
protocol mandatory for anything that can end up in an FD; or whether
we should keep it optional, and add the MIG_BAD_ID calls to *all* FD
operations
<antrik> (there is no reason for fsync to be special in this regard)
<braunr> yes
<antrik> braunr: BTW, I'm rather undecided whether the right approach
is a) requiring an FD interface collection, b) always checking
MIG_BAD_ID, or perhaps c) think about introducing a mechanism to
explicitly query supported interfaces...
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-09-03:
<braunr> antrik: querying interfaces sounds like an additional penalty
on performance
<antrik> braunr: the query usually has to be done only once. in fact it
could be integrated into the name lookup...
<braunr> antrik: once for every object
<braunr> antrik: yes, along with the lookup would be a nice thing
[[!message-id "1351231423.8019.19.camel@hp.my.own.domain"]].
* <a id=t_no-hp-timing>`t/no-hp-timing`</a>
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-11-16
<pinotree> tschwinge: wrt the glibc topgit branch t/no-hp-timing,
couldn't that file be just replaced by #include
<sysdeps/generic/hp-timing.h>?
* <a id=flockfile>`flockfile`/`ftrylockfile`/`funlockfile`</a>
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-11-16
<pinotree> youpi: uhm, in glibc we use
stdio-common/f{,try,un}lockfile.c, which do nothing (as opposed to eg
the nptl versions, which do lock/trylock/unlock); do you know more
about them?
<youpi> pinotree: ouch
<youpi> no, I don't know
<youpi> well, I do know what they're supposed to do
<pinotree> i'm trying fillig them, let's see
<youpi> but not why we don't have them
<youpi> (except that libpthread is "recent")
<youpi> yet another reason to build libpthread in glibc, btw
<youpi> oh, but we do provide lockfile in libpthread, don't we ?
<youpi> pinotree: yes, and libc has weak variants, so the libpthread
will take over
<pinotree> youpi: sure, but that in stuff linking to pthreads
<pinotree> if you do a simple application doing eg main() { fopen +
fwrite + fclose }, you get no locking
<youpi> so?
<youpi> if you don't have threads, you don't need locks :)
<pinotree> ... unless there is some indirect recursion
<youpi> ?
<pinotree> basically, i was debugging why glibc tests with mtrace() and
ending with muntrace() would die (while tests without muntrace call
wouldn't)
<youpi> well, I still don't see what a lock will bring
<pinotree> if you look at the muntrace implementation (in
malloc/mtrace.c), basically fclose can trigger a malloc hook (because
of the free for the FILE*)
<youpi> either you have threads, and it's need, or you don't, and it's
a nop
<youpi> yes, and ?
<braunr> does the signal thread count ?
<youpi> again, in linux, when you don't have threads, the lock is a nop
<youpi> does the signal thread use IO ?
<braunr> that's the question :)
<braunr> i hope not
<youpi> IIRC the signal thread just manages signals, and doesn't
execute the handler itself
<braunr> sure
<braunr> i was more thinking about debug stuff
<youpi> can't hurt to add them anyway, but let me still doubt that it'd
fix muntrace, I don't see why it would, unless you have threads
<pinotree> that's what i'm going next
<pinotree> pardon, it seems i got confused a bit
<pinotree> it'd look like a genuine muntrace bug (muntrace → fclose →
free hook → lock lock → fprint (since the FILE is still set) → malloc
→ malloc hook → lock lock → spin)
<pinotree> at least i got some light over the flockfile stuff, thanks
;)
<pinotree> youpi: otoh, __libc_lock_lock (etc) are noop in the base
implementation, while doing real locks on hurd in any case, and on
linux only if nptl is loaded, it seems
<pinotree> that would explain why on linux you get no deadlock
<youpi> unless using nptl, that is?
<pinotree> hm no, even with pthread it works
<pinotree> but hey, at least the affected glibc test now passes
<pinotree> will maybe try to do investigation on why it works on linux
tomorrow
[[!message-id "201211172058.21035.toscano.pino@tiscali.it"]].
In context of [[libpthread]].
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-01-21
<braunr> ah, found something interesting
<braunr> tschwinge: there seems to be a race on our file descriptors
<braunr> the content written by one thread seems to be retained
somewhere and another thread writing data to the file descriptor will
resend what the first already did
<braunr> it could be a FILE race instead of fd one though
<braunr> yes, it's not at the fd level, it's above
<braunr> so good news, seems like the low level message/signalling code
isn't faulty here
<braunr> all right, simple explanation: our IO_lockfile functions are
no-ops
<pinotree> braunr: i found that out days ago, and samuel said they were
okay
<braunr> well, they're not no-ops in libpthreads
<braunr> so i suppose they replace the default libc stubs, yes
<pinotree> so the issue happens in cthreads-using apps?
<braunr> no
<braunr> we don't have cthreads apps any more
<braunr> and aiui, libpthreads provides cthreads compatibility calls to
libc, so everything is actually using pthreads
<braunr> more buffer management debugging needed :/
<pinotree> hm, so how can it be that there's a multithread app with no
libpthread-provided file locking?
<braunr> ?
<braunr> file locking looks fine
<braunr> hm, the recursive locking might be wrong though
<braunr> ./sysdeps/mach/hurd/bits/libc-lock.h:#define
__libc_lock_owner_self() ((void *) __hurd_threadvar_location (0))
<braunr> nop, looks fine too
<braunr> indeed, without stream buffering, the problem seems to go away
<braunr> pinotree: it really looks like the stub IO_flockfile is used
<braunr> i'll try to make sure it's the root of the problem
<pinotree> braunr: you earlier said that there's some race with
different threads, no?
<braunr> yes
<braunr> either a race or an error in the iostream management code
<braunr> but i highly doubt the latter
<pinotree> if the stub locks are used, then libpthread is not
loaded... so which different threads are running?
<braunr> that's the thing
<braunr> the libpthread versions should be used
<pinotree> so the application is linked to pthread?
<braunr> yes
<pinotree> i see, that was the detail i was missing earlier
<braunr> the common code looks fine, but i can see wrong values even
there
<braunr> e.g. when vfprintf calls write, the buffer is already wrong
<braunr> i've made similar tests on linux sid, and it behaves as it
should
<pinotree> hm
<braunr> i even used load to "slow down" my test program so that
preemption is much more likely to happen
<pinotree> note we have slightly different behaviour in glibc's libio,
ie different memory allocation ways (mmap on linux, malloc for us)
<braunr> the problem gets systematic on the hurd while it never occurs
on linux
<braunr> that shouldn't matter either
<pinotree> ok
<braunr> but i'll make sure it doesn't anyway
<braunr> this mach_print system call is proving very handy :)
<braunr> and also, with load, unbuffered output is always correct too
<pinotree> braunr: you could try the following hack
http://paste.debian.net/227106/
<braunr> what does it do ?
<pinotree> (yes, ugly as f**k)
<braunr> does it force libio to use mmap ?
<braunr> or rather, enable ?
<pinotree> provides a EXEC_PAGESIZE define in libio, so it makes it use
mmap (like on linux) instead of malloc
* <a id=t_pagesize>`t/pagesize`.</a>
<braunr> yes, the stub is used instead of the libpthreads code
<braunr> tschwinge: ^
<braunr> i'll override those to check that it fixes the problem
<braunr> hm, not that easy actually
<pinotree> copy their files from libpthreads to sysdeps/mach/hurd
<pinotree> hm right, in libpthread they are not that split as in glibc
<braunr> let's check symbol declaration to understand why the stubs
aren't overriden by ld
<braunr> _IO_vfprintf correctly calls @plt versions
<braunr> i don't know enough about dynamic linking to see what causes
the problem :/
<braunr> youpi: it seems our stdio functions use the stub IO_flockfile
functions
<youpi> really? I thought we were going through cthreads-compat.c
<braunr> yes really
<braunr> i don't know why, but that's the origin of the "duplicated"
messages issue
<braunr> messages aren't duplicated, there is a race that makes on
thread reuse the content of the stream buffer
<braunr> one*
<youpi> k, quite bad
<braunr> at least we know where the problem comes from now
<braunr> youpi: what would be the most likely reason why weak symbols
in libc wouldn't be overriden by global ones from libpthread ?
<youpi> being loaded after libc
<braunr> i tried preloading it
<braunr> i'll compare with what is done on wheezy
<youpi> you have the local-dl-dynamic-weak.diff patch, right?
<braunr> (on squeeze, the _IO_flockfile function in libc seems to do
real work unlike our noop stub)
<braunr> it's the debian package, i have all patches provided there
<braunr> indeed, on linux, libc provides valid IO_flock functions
<braunr> ./sysdeps/pthread/flockfile.c:strong_alias (__flockfile,
_IO_flockfile)
<braunr> that's how ntpl exports it
<braunr> nptl*
<pinotree> imho we should restructure libpthread to be more close to
nptl
<braunr> i wish i knew what it involves
<pinotree> file structing for sources and tests, for example
<braunr> well yes obviously :)
<braunr> i've just found a patch that does exactly that for linuxthreads
<pinotree> that = fix the file locking?
<braunr> in addition to linuxthreads/lockfile.c (which we also
equivalently provide), there is
linuxthreads/sysdeps/pthread/flockfile.c
<braunr> no, restructiring
<braunr> restructuring*
<braunr> i still have only a very limited idea of how the glibc sources
are organized
<pinotree> the latter is used as source file when compiling flockfile.c
in stdio-common
<braunr> shouldn't we provide one too ?
<pinotree> that would mean it would be compiled as part of libc proper,
not libpthread
<braunr> yes
<braunr> that's what both linuxthreads and nptl seem to do
<braunr> and the code is strictly the same, i.e. a call to the internal
_IO_lock_xxx functions
<youpi> I guess that's for the hot-dlopen case
<youpi> you need to have locks properly taken at dlopen time
<braunr> youpi: do you mean adding an flockfile.c file to our sysdeps
will only solve the problem by side effect ?
<braunr> and that the real problem is that the libpthread versions
aren't used ?
<youpi> yes
<braunr> ok
<braunr> youpi: could it simply be a versioning issue ?
<youpi> could be
<braunr> it seems so
<braunr> i've rebuilt with the flockfile functions versioned to 2.2.6
(same as in libc) and the cthreads_compat functions are now used
<braunr> and the problem doesn't occur any more with my test code
<braunr> :)
<youpi> could you post a patch?
<braunr> i need a few info before
<youpi> it'd be good to check which such functions are hooked
<braunr> i suppose the version for functions declared in libpthreads
shouldn't change, right ?
<youpi> yes
<braunr> ok
<youpi> they didn't have a vresion before
<braunr> shall i commit directly ?
<youpi> so it should be fine
<braunr> well, they did
<braunr> 2.12
<youpi> yes, but please tell me when it's done
<braunr> sure
<youpi> so I can commit that to debian's eglibc
<youpi> I mean, before we integrated libpthread build into glibc
<youpi> so they never had any version before 2.12
<braunr> ok
<youpi> basically we need to check the symbols which are both in
libpthread and referenced in libc
<youpi> to make sure they have the same version in the reference
<braunr> ok
<youpi> only weak references need to be checked, others would have
produced a runtime error
<braunr> youpi: done
<braunr> arg, the version i mention in the comment is wrong
<braunr> i suppose people understand nonetheless
<youpi> probably, yes
<braunr> ah, i can now appreciate the headache this bug hunting gave me
these last days :)
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-01-22
<youpi> braunr: commited to debian glibc
<youpi> btw, it's normal that the program doesn't terminate, right?
<youpi> (i.e. it's the original bug you were chasing)
<braunr> youpi: about your earlier question (yesterday) about my test
code, it's expected to block, which is the problem i was initially
working on
<youpi> ok, so all god
<youpi> +o
* <a id=t_pagesize2>`t/pagesize`</a>
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-11-16
<pinotree> tschwinge: somehow related to your t/pagesize branch: due to
the fact that EXEC_PAGESIZE is not defined on hurd, libio/libioP.h
switches the allocation modes from mmap to malloc
[[!message-id "87mxd9hl2n.fsf@kepler.schwinge.homeip.net"]].
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-01-21
<braunr> why is it a hack ?
<pinotree> because most probably glibc shouldn't rely on EXEC_PAGESIZE
like that
<braunr> ah
<pinotree> there's a mail from roland, replying to thomas about this
issue, that this use of EXEC_PAGESIZE to enable mmap or not is just
wrong
<braunr> ok
<pinotree> (the above is
http://thread.gmane.org/87mxd9hl2n.fsf@kepler.schwinge.homeip.net )
<braunr> thanks
<pinotree> (just added the reference to that in the wiki)
<braunr> pinotree: btw, what's wrong with using malloc instead of mmap
in libio ?
<pinotree> braunr: i'm still not totally sure, most probably it should
be slightly slower currently
<braunr> locking contention ?
<braunr> pinotree:
http://www.sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2006-11/msg00061.html
<braunr> pinotree: it looks to me there is now no valid reason not to
use malloc
<braunr> the best argument for mmap is that libio requires zeroed
memory, but as the OP says, zeroing a page is usually more expensive
than a small calloc (even on kernel that keep a list of zeroed pages
for quick allocations, frequent mmaps() often make this list empty)
<pinotree> braunr: mmap allocations in libio are rounded to the page
size
<braunr> well they have to
* <a id=LD_DEBUG>`LD_DEBUG`</a>
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-11-22
<pinotree> woot, `LD_DEBUG=libs /bin/ls >/dev/null` prints stuff and
then sigsegv
<tschwinge> Yeah, that's known for years... :-D
<tschwinge> Probably not too difficult to resolve, though.
* IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-08-16:
<pinotree> http://paste.debian.net/25934/ ← _hurd_thread_sigstate calls
malloc, boom
* <a id=conformtest>`conformtest`</a>
IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-09-22:
<youpi> btw, I noticed that glibc has a head conformance test which we
happily fail quite a bit :)
<youpi> it's not so awful, we don't have twice as many failures as
linux, but not so far
<pinotree> youpi: do you mean "header" for "head", right?
<youpi> err, where ? :)
<pinotree> <youpi> btw, I noticed that glibc has a head conformance
test which we happily fail quite a bit :)
<youpi> ah, yes
<pinotree> noticed that too
<youpi> I had a quick look at the POSIX part, some things are probably
not too hard to change (e.g. exposing pthread_kill in signal.h)
<youpi> others will by quite hard to fix (short type instead of int
type for some flock structure field)
<youpi> s/by/be/
* `truncate`/`ftruncate`
Hurd fixed with 2013-10-03 commit 6c3825f2b750bf9b913c6ea986739e648c470603,
glibc still to be done?
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-10-01:
<pinotree> libdiskfs/node-drop.c: assert (np->dn_stat.st_size == 0); ←
this one?
<pinotree> iirc you constantly get that when building ustr
<braunr> is ustr a package ?
<pinotree> yes
<pinotree> iirc the ustr tests are mostly disk-intensive
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-10-02:
<braunr> i've traced the problem up to truncate
<braunr> which gets a negative size
<braunr> shouldn't take long to find out where it comes from now
<pinotree> it seems our truncate doesn't handle negative values well though
<braunr> EINVAL The argument length is negative or larger than the
maximum file size.
<braunr> i still have to see whether it comes from the user (unlikely) or
if it's an internal inconsistency
<braunr> i suspect some code wrongly handles vm_map failures
<braunr> leading to that inconsistency
<braunr> pinotree: looks like glibc doesn't check for length >= 0
<pinotree> yeah
<braunr> servers should do it nonetheless
<pinotree> should we fix glibc, libdiskfs/libnetfs/libtrivfs/etc, or both?
<braunr> it appears a client does the truncate
<braunr> i'd say both
<braunr> can you take the glibc part ? :)
<pinotree> i was going to do the hurd part... :p
<pinotree> ok, i'll pick libc
<braunr> well i'm doing it already
<braunr> i want to write a test case first
<braunr> to make sure that's the problem
<pinotree> already on the hurd part, you mean?
<braunr> yes
<pinotree> ok
<braunr> ok looks like it
<braunr> i can't reproduce the assertion but it does make ext2fs freeze
<braunr> pinotree: http://darnassus.sceen.net/~rbraun/test_ftruncate.c
<pinotree> merci
<braunr> pinotree: ustr builds
<pinotree> wow
<braunr> the client code (ustr) seems to perform a ftruncate with size
((size_t)-1) whereas lengths are signed ..
<braunr> i'll check other libraries and send a patch soon
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-10-03:
<braunr> youpi: i've committed a fix to hurd that checks for negative sizes
when truncating files
<braunr> this allows building the ustr package without making ext2fs choke
on an assertion
<braunr> pinotree is preparing a patch for glibc
<braunr> see truncate/ftruncate
<braunr> with an off_t size parameter, which can be negative
<braunr> EINVAL The argument length is negative or larger than the
maximum file size.
<braunr> hurd servers were not conforming to that before my change
* `t/ptrmangle`: `PTR_MANGLE`/`PTR_DEMANGLE`
* <https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/PointerEncryption>
* See also [[t/tls|service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/glibc/t/tls]].
* b7f2d27dbd85f6a0966dc389ad4f8205085b7ae8 `ARM: Add pointer encryption
support.` may help to find all the places that need to be touched when
adding support.
* <a id=baselinechanges>Verify baseline changes, if we need any follow-up changes:</a>
* a11ec63713ea3903c482dc907a108be404191a02
* 7e2b0c8562b35155820f87b5ff02a8b6850344cc
* 8c0677fe5d91b7269364ca08fa08ed09e4c2d8c9
* 5a2a1d75043138e696222ced4560de2fb90b8024
* 5ae958d74180e2572d198bd7872c86f391de6da7
* 5b08ac571ff8e94fe96511a532f0d20997de5f52
* 3d04ff3a5d3ce3616837e1d15e03b6e1b360cf26
* b2ef2c014b9c66995a3eb4f310ae7c5c510279bf
* 63c4ed22b5048c8701d8806026c23cc95f0df756
* ac2b484c02b01307ab6bbe5d45ddbf16d64edf8c
* e35fcef8b739ed24e083ff8a3078ac14e101cf67
* 6fb8cbcb58a29fff73eb2101b34caa19a7f88eba
* 8a492a675e566dc1e666df0a86cbf541442cb179
* 5dbc3b6cc0b759bf4b22d851ccb9cbf3e3cbc6ef
* c86434ccb576a3ce35b5a74f72b9f03bd45b522a
* d22e4cc9397ed41534c9422d0b0ffef8c77bfa53
* 15bac72bac03faeb3b725b1d208c62160f0c3ad7
* c08fb0d7bba4015078406b28d3906ccc5fda9d5a
* 10b3bedcb03386cc280113f552479793e4bac35f
* 754f7da38b0904b4b989d3500cc8dd5be625cf6a
* 3cdaa6adb113a088fdfb87aa6d7747557eccc58d
* 962dba7828cf251a9025ccb43bc6effa30379b72
* 3162f12e58c3a848db883916843b332b9f8c9d39
* 1c06ba3100847da6bd1f2e011dc24fa8debd9615
* 84b9230c404aed4fd3a7bb3d045ca367043dde8c
* 090555538d4347a52807ba9f08cf20ed13206afe
* 817328eea788c746131cf151b64fd250200da333
* c3758feebf7c8786231465da664743c6f0ec79cc
* 1ac7a2c7b448c851eb8976fcc290a906a4075203
* c21cc9bcb38a87ff638d1099ca871d94a2192b31
* 6484ba5ef092b62b7d2112c0d976dbd6d1a40fde
* b8b4863d78bf26b39918fc753b03ed98ef262903
* b76b818e6fe2061e778b3a9bbe63c554c3f9b3c1
* 8e9f92e9d5d7737afdacf79b76d98c4c42980508 -- `_dl_map_object` in
`sysdeps/mach/hurd/dl-sysdep.c`
* 0e516e0e14f2f9783a21cd1727bc53776341f857
* a1fb5e3ebe9d38b5ae6c5bfbfaa04882d52355bc
* cf7c9078a5acdbb435498ace92cd81009637a971
* db753e2cfb2051ebf20dc089f87c5b1297cc2cff
* 4a531bb0b3b582cb693de9f76d2d97d970f9a5d5 -- looks good.
* 5bd6dc5c2c68fe98691db9b40f87d9b68ea9565b
* 451f001b50870604e1f2daef12f04f9f460d3997 +
a85b5cb4d4a5fc56e2b38638d270bf2daa67eb6c -- BZ10484. `nptl/Versions
[libc] (GLIBC_PRIVATE): Export __libc_alloca_cutoff`. We don't even
define it yet. Also see
[[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/glibc___libc_alloca_cutoff_should_be_lowered]].
* 1086d70d916fd0eb969b3d89ff88abd35f6a5c34
* cfa28e560ef69372b9e15e9a2d924a0fbcfc7bca
* 8cf8ce1702c354a8266e3cfa6ab54c2467d1873f
* 68dc949774cb651d53541df4abdc60327f7e096b
* 70181fddf1467996bea393d13294ffe76b8a0853
* a77e8cbc394ab098aa1fc3f0a6645a38348d21ca
* 32465c3ea007065acd8ca8199f130cdf4068130d
* 18ba70a559c52719fd94a713cc380514d9d19125
* 620a05296fe3380b7441ba7720e8b25c48a8c28c
* [low] e6c61494125126d2ba77e5d99f83887a2ed49783 -- `Fix memory leak in
TLS of loaded objects.` Do we need to replicate `nptl/allocatestack.c`
hunk?
* 6e04cbbe79f5965809fdbf1f28d7ae8b4af74d31 +
1bfbe0d335d3fc44a492648b974a0db19975f6d8 -- `Fix
pathconf(_PC_BUF_SIZE).`
* 28377d1bf58625172a1734b92e835591d4d23a18 -- `Optimize fdopendir a bit.`
* 7fb90fb89bbdf273ab7ab96517fe1b156cd7aee1 +
6fb2dde3f1aa3a1419cb6c2dfa53dd1d506722a4 -- `Fix Linux getcwd for long
paths`
* f574184a0e4b6ed69a5d9a3234543fba6d2a7367 -- `Fix sched_setscheduler
call in spawn implementation`
* 3b85df27870a47ed1db84e948e37a5a50a178a92 +
f50ef8f1efdd1f2b040acbb8324604f168e8832a -- sysconf
* 68a3f91fcad464c4737c1eaed4ae0bf539801fb2 -- `Fix reporting of invalid
timeouts in emulated pselect`
* ea389b12b3b65c4a7fa91fa76f8c99867eb37865 -- `strndup -> __strndup`;
strndupa?
* 7e4afad5bcf49e03c3b987399c6a8f66a9018660 -- `Nicer output for negative
error numbers in strerror_r`. Change needed for
`sysdeps/mach/_strerror.c`?
* 7ea72f99966a65a56aedba817ee2413ff9b1f23c +
adcd5c15d2a37794d021104160b425ff61f88219 -- `Always fill output buffer
in XPG strerror function`. Change needed for
`sysdeps/mach/xpg-strerror.c`?
* a91710475294c66d0005bdaae0919d36ef8ce3d2 -- sotruss ([[debugging]],
[[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/profiling]]). Does it work?
* b1ebd700c5295a449f8d114740f0d1fb6e6b2eb5 +
80e2212d8e59933a1641f029ebd360526ff0e074 +
4997db742946d08be4378cf91221f558f928bc73 -- `Don't document si_code
used for raise()`. Also for `bits/siginfo.h`?
* 11988f8f9656042c3dfd9002ac85dff33173b9bd -- pldd, Does it work?
Probably not: needs `/proc/[PID]/auxv`, `/proc/[PID]/exe`,
`/proc/[PID]/mem` ([[!tag open_issue_hurd]],
[[hurd/translator/procfs]]).
* 9113ea1f3f29b3aee710efc829e85a9772bcb836 -- `--experimental-malloc`.
Watch what happens.
* 4e34ac6a1e256f40ab0d8eeed37aa1ea83440e76 -- `-defsym=_begin=0`. Watch
what happens. Native build: apparently OK.
* f781ef4015504e8a1da649c266584976238aa079 (`--with-default-link`) +
1b74661a6b93a892ecb1c717dedeedba5c2a976c +
fd5e21c75d8e9221d766f4bc922a237265514ec2. Watch what happens. Native
build: `use-default-link = no`.
* de283087c74f720cf8a7171972e72b5fa2b45e79 (`Handle Lustre filesystem`),
4e5f31c847982997c856f03bbc35134e9fd0f61f (`Handle ext4 in
{,f}pathconf`). What about stuff like that for us?
* d30cf5bb00bfb286ff14d931fb69f5b53724bcdc (`Find readelf with
AC_CHECK_TOOL`). Aren't there more in other configure.in and Makefile
files?
* 7a03a9c8c4b37b88ac5e82b557d974f3161ddaf9 (`Add read barriers in
cancellation initialization`). Is this needed in other places, too?
* [low] 5744c68d78f6ca6c6500e2c8d3d85b3a31f4ed2a (`Align x86 TCB to 64
bytes`). Probably we have hidden somewhere such a constant, too (in
libpthread).
* d96de9634a334af16c0ac711074c15ac1762b23c +
ecb1482ffd85fd3279642b1dc045aa867ad4d415 (`Try shell in posix_spawn*
only in compat mode`). Change looks good, but what about
`SPAWN_XFLAGS_TRY_SHELL` for us?
* 3ce1f2959437e952b9db4eaeed2407424f11a4d1 (`Make several tool features
mandatory and simplify the code.`). Generally looks good.
* `locale/global-locale.c`: Apparently, no one is using
`_HURD_THREADVAR_LOCALE`. But it is exported via
`hurd/threadvar.h`.
* `mach/devstream.c`: reversed. Fixed in
`t/repair-mach_devstream.c`.
* `malloc/arena.c`: should be OK.
* `Remove support for !USE___THREAD`.
d063d164335938d557460bebaa7cfe388157b627 (generally looks good;
`csu/errno-loc.c` (should be OK); `include/errno.h` (fixed)) +
(de82006d43e198fd162807c9adc720c7ebd728a3 +
037e9fe21c92216ef7032ea2796781ec27ca182a) +
995a80dfbcb443ead5aa22682c884ec5c827a2ea (discussing) +
bc7e1c3667b577ad418f7520df2a7dbccea04ee9 (should be ok).
* [OK] 22a89187139a9083ca73989bfd11597e0f85cb61 (`malloc: Remove all
kinds of unused configuration options and dead code.`). `NO_STARTER`
changes (should be OK).
* [high] `pagesize`, 02d46fc4b969e25e4ba0c54aa95fa98d7279bd05 (`Simplify
malloc initialization`); aebae0537dcb408100b88c6b7647a7e858c43237,
[[!sourceware_PR 11929]]. Is this all kosher for us? See
[[!message-id "87mxd9hl2n.fsf@kepler.schwinge.homeip.net"]].
* [OK] 83cd14204559abbb52635006832eaf4d2f42514a (`Remove --wth-tls
option, TLS support is required`).
* a7c8e6a1478de9f990b11e5e853318ccbe4330f2 (`Fix invalid conversion in
__cmsg_nxthdr`). Probably just a C++ thing and not relevant for us;
see [[!message-id "87r52nk1kx.fsf@kepler.schwinge.homeip.net"]].
* [low] `mmap`, 110946e473b38fc3896212e416d9d7064fecd5b7. Kosher with
respect to our [[glibc/mmap]] peculiarities?
* [OK] `__attribute__ ((__leaf__))`, `BZ #13344`,
aa78043a4aafe5db1a1a76d544a833b63b4c5f5c +
49a43d80ec5c97cf6136b1ee2687414773b2d5aa +
3871f58f065dac3917eb18220a479e9591769c8c +
9beb2334930db81ceada5aa6051fe5ac0554db32 +
0ffc4f3ebaace42cd545db55a2ac50b6e0cc7d89 +
edc5984d4d18296d7aa3d8f4ed8f7336a743170e +
57769839788e2c62b68d9dfbf4b35052321278ba.
<http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Function-Attributes.html>.
* [low] `conformtest`, 3134156779108fe8b46e0f4cd60d837572faaa93 +
4efeffc1d583597e4f52985b9747269e47b754e2 +
d94a4670800de6e8f088b8630ad5142866127980 -- should probably mirror
`bits/siginfo.h` changes.
* [low] stack guard, 6c6a98c983c44b440ae66d2aa8f32529a9dd7bfe,
[[!message-id "4F3BE241.9090409@mentor.com"]] -- anything needed for
us?
* [low] `libc-lockP.h` 9463518d0d314d7bd0160315e0ef30e15be08985 --
probably should do similar changes, also to the generic file.
* [low] `bits/socket.h`/`bits/socket_type.h` [[!message-id
"Pine.LNX.4.64.1203090206420.18868@digraph.polyomino.org.uk"]]
02a6f887cb3e2c048937111eb4cf150d397609de -- probably should do the same
for the generic version as used by GNU Hurd.
* [low] CFI for `_start`, 6a1bd2a100c958d30bbfe8c9b8f9071d24b7c3f4,
[[!message-id "20120316180551.GA6291@host2.jankratochvil.net"]] -- what
about other architectures?
* `linkobj/libc.so`, 510bbf14b4f25fec8ee3a2d24de3f24bdbf84333 -- need to
adapt for (conditional?) Sun RPC reversion (if that was the original
cause for the patch)?
* [low] `Add __fsword_t and use it in bits/statfs.h`,
3e5aef87d76cfa7354f2b0d82b96e59280720796, [[!message-id
"20120517134700.GA19046@intel.com"]] -- only updates one copy of
`bits/statfs.h`; update the others, too, for consistency.
* [low] 789bd351b45f024b7f51e4886bf46b8e887ab6da: remove
`libc_hidden_def` in `sysdeps/mach/hurd/accept4.c`?
* 0948c3af9dfb3bc1312d6bed2f3a6bfd4e96eef4,
b80af2f40631871cf53a5e39d08d5d5516473b96,
04570aaa8ad88caad303f8afe469beb4cf851e17 `_dl_initial_dtv`: OK?
* [very low] ea4d37b3169908615b7c17c9c506c6a6c16b3a26 `Implement
POSIX-generic sleep via nanosleep rather than SIGARLM.`: any benefit
using that one (with `sysdeps/mach/nanosleep.c`) instead of
`sysdeps/mach/sleep.c`?
* ea4d37b3169908615b7c17c9c506c6a6c16b3a26 -- IRC, freenode, #hurd,
2012-11-20, pinotree: »tschwinge: i agree on your comments on
ea4d37b3169908615b7c17c9c506c6a6c16b3a26, especially since mach's
sleep.c is buggy (not considers interruption, extra time() (= RPC)
call)«.
* ba384f6ed9275f3966505f2375b56d169e3dc588,
0409959c86f6840510851a851a1588677a2e537b,
e57b0c6100e63bfd816ae59339452eafc81f1d3a `C++11 thread_local
destructors support`. Anything needed to be done in our [[libpthread]]
and configured for us in [[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/Gcc]]? Probably need to replicate the
`nptl/pthread_create.c` change, and fix
`stdlib/Makefile`:`$(objpfx)tst-tls-atexit`.
+++ include/link.h
@@ -302,6 +302,9 @@ struct link_map
+ /* Number of thread_local objects constructed by this DSO. */
+ size_t l_tls_dtor_count;
+++ include/stdlib.h
@@ -100,6 +100,11 @@ extern int __cxa_atexit (void (*func) (void *), void *arg, void *d);
+extern int __cxa_thread_atexit_impl (void (*func) (void *), void *arg,
+ void *d);
+extern void __call_tls_dtors (void);
+libc_hidden_proto (__call_tls_dtors);
+++ nptl/pthread_create.c
@@ -311,6 +311,9 @@ start_thread (void *arg)
[after the thread function returns]
+ /* Call destructors for the thread_local TLS variables. */
+ __call_tls_dtors ();
+++ stdlib/Makefile
+$(objpfx)tst-tls-atexit = $(common-objpfx)nptl/libpthread.so \
+ $(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so
+++ stdlib/cxa_thread_atexit_impl.c
+++ stdlib/exit.c
__run_exit_handlers (int status, struct exit_function_list **listp,
bool run_list_atexit)
{
+ /* First, call the TLS destructors. */
+ __call_tls_dtors ();
+gcc-4.7 tst-tls-atexit.c -c -std=gnu99 -fgnu89-inline -O2 -Wall -Winline -Wwrite-strings -fmerge-all-constants -frounding-math -g -Wno-parenth
+gcc-4.7 -nostdlib -nostartfiles -o [...]/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker.build/stdlib/tst-tls-atexit [...]/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker.build/nptl/lib
+gcc-4.7: error: [...]/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker.build/nptl/libpthread.so: No such file or directory
+make[2]: *** [[...]/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker.build/stdlib/tst-tls-atexit] Error 1
+gcc-4.7 tst-tls-atexit-lib.c -c -std=gnu99 -fgnu89-inline -O2 -Wall -Winline -Wwrite-strings -fmerge-all-constants -frounding-math -g -Wno-par
+tst-tls-atexit-lib.c: In function 'do_foo':
+tst-tls-atexit-lib.c:35:3: warning: implicit declaration of function '__cxa_thread_atexit_impl' [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
* a600e5cef53e10147932d910cdb2fdfc62afae4e `Consolidate Linux and POSIX
libc_fatal code.` -- is `backtrace_and_maps` specific to Linux?
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-02-06:
<braunr> why wouldn't glibc double free detection code also print
the backtrace on hurd ?
<youpi> I don't see any reason why
<youpi> except missing telling glibc that it's essentially like on
linux
* 288f7d79fe2dcc8e62c539f57b25d7662a2cd5ff `Use __ehdr_start, if
available, as fallback for AT_PHDR.` -- once we require Binutils 2.23,
can we simplify [[glibc's process startup|glibc/process]]
(initialization of `_dl_phdr` and `_dl_phnum`)? As these are only used
for `[!SHARED]`, can we completely remove them (that is, the `phdr` and
`phdrsz` members) from `hurd_startup_data`, and simplify
[[hurd/interface/exec_startup_get_info]], or do we still require these
for the `[SHARED]` case?
* fab7ce3f5b4060bf62659e8b58529de4156b5a2f `Link extra-libs consistently
with libc and ld.so.` Alright for us? Probably have to adjust
[libpthread]/Makefile.
* b8c61b4b1d6afb69190169764c1b141f4659e48b `Remove trailing whitespace
from mach/*.sub.` Update `mach/Makefile`: generated
`mach/errsystems.c` is no longer checked in as of
66e3dda448406399136e6f144a1b46679d5b2613. Rule had been disabled in
421f82e5cc8f81ab003247d771bcecbad799be85, then re-enabled in
8e3cc80f6d4f69ce003c82d3561ac324692792ad, but comment not removed.
* [low] 61dd6208fb1e59a423b6dfa712a3c896c34b2590 `New API to set default
thread attributes`. Implement in libpthread ([[!taglink
open_issue_libpthread]])?
* [high] e4608715e6e1dd2adc91982fd151d5ba4f761d69 `CVE-2013-2207, BZ
#15755: Disable pt_chown. -- [[!message-id
"51E8D4C1.9000705@redhat.com"]]; do we need it (`--enable-pt_chown`)?
cdfc721b8d2d5079325ea9f0beb5673d72b4cdd0.
* 91ce40854d0b7f865cf5024ef95a8026b76096f3 `CVE-2013-4237, BZ #14699:
Buffer overflow in readdir_r` -- [[!message-id
"519220C7.6050705@redhat.com"]]; do we need corresponding changes to
Hurd sysdep files?
* 8cc3269f95fa7faa8f448d741f68cbc40efbf4ee `Flesh out 4.4 bits/socket.h
with SOCK_CLOEXEC, SOCK_NONBLOCK.`,
e041fb8b6557882b6710a655a97bbf3541b56b54 `Replace generic bits/socket.h
with 4.4 file.` -- `sysdeps/mach/hurd/bits/socket.h` differs from the
generic `bits/socket.h` now only in the values of
[[`SOCK_CLOEXEC`|service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/secure_file_descriptor_handling]] and
`SOCK_NONBLOCK`. If possible (no conflicts), would it make sense to
transition to the latter file, continuing to accept the former values
as deprecated for some time?
* [high] 6a97b62a5b4f18aea849d6f4d8de58d1469d2521 `Fix unsafe compiler
optimization` -- have to revert, see [[!sourceware_PR 15605]]. For
analysis/fix also look at 384ca551743318bd9c9e24a496d6397f2e3f2a49.
* 6c82a2f8d7c8e21e39237225c819f182ae438db3 `Coordinate IPv6 definitions
for Linux and glibc` -- alright for us?
* c61b4d41c9647a54a329aa021341c0eb032b793e `POINTER_CHK_GUARD` -- see
[[t/tls|service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/glibc/t/tls]].
* 5f855e3598a576c35e54623a13b256f3e87fcd4d `Fix erroneous (and circular)
implied pattern rule for linkobj/libc.so.` -- alright for us?
* [high] 7b7bab1391a3b16fff7e325e2c8a36b68eacba90 [Hurd] `Add fork hooks
for pthread_atfork` -- is that from a topic branch that can then be
annihilated? Verify emails. Verify no further changes in topic
branch.
* [high] 43d5c02c72bdaf59a8e0d4b06f2ae87e42269cbd `Fix build on hurd` --
is that from a topic branch that can then be annihilated? Verify
emails. Verify no further changes in topic branch.
* 69a17d9d245dc3551792e95e1823cc2d877592f3 `Patch [1/4] async-signal safe
TLS.` -- do we also need an implementation of this? (Not yet called
from anywhere?)
* *baseline*
## Update
`baseline`, `t/regenerate_configure` (could now be removed),
`t/master_backports`, `t/eglibc_backports`, `t/host-independency`,
`tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker`
# Build
Here's a log of a glibc build run; this is from our [[Git repository's
f57644d0bdfc1ebe2201a677a33af27e09a5bab6 (2013-12-20;
64a17f1adde4715bb6607f64decd73b2df9e6852 (2013-12-19))
plus 6a97b62a5b4f18aea849d6f4d8de58d1469d2521 reverted,
`id:"87zjnvn688.fsf@kepler.schwinge.homeip.net"`,
`id:"87ioujn0eq.fsf@kepler.schwinge.homeip.net"`,
1226676cd6f6f4451e6e6b75b8fbd9a35c949e8e reverted,
56798c444bc584c118b69a3506c4050b34edc35f reverted,
`id:"878uvfmwvs.fsf@kepler.schwinge.homeip.net"`
sources|source_repositories/glibc]], run on coulomb.SCHWINGE.
$ export LC_ALL=C
$ ../Roger_Whittaker/configure --prefix=/usr --disable-profile --disable-multi-arch --build=i486-gnu --host=i486-gnu CC=gcc-4.7 CXX=g++-4.7 2>&1 | tee log_build
[...]
$ make install_root=/INVALID 2>&1 | tee log_build_
[...]
This takes up around 600 MiB, and needs roughly X min on kepler.SCHWINGE and
105 min on coulomb.SCHWINGE.
<!--
$ (make install_root=/INVALID && touch .go-install) 2>&1 | tee log_build_ && test -f .go-install && (make install_root="$PWD".install install && touch .go-test) 2>&1 | tee log_install && test -f .go-test && ln -s /usr/lib/i386-*gnu/libstdc++.so.6 /lib/i386-*gnu/libgcc_s.so.1 mach/libmachuser.so.1 hurd/libhurduser.so.0.3 ./ && make -k install_root=/INVALID check fast-check=yes 2>&1 | tee log_test
-->
## Analysis
$ toolchain/logs/process glibc build fetch coulomb.SCHWINGE
TODO.
* baseline
fd5bdc0924e0cfd1688b632068c1b26f3b0c88da..2ba92745c36eb3c3f3af0ce1b0aebd255c63a13b
(or probably Samuel's mmap backport) introduces:
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/mmap.c: In function '__mmap':
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/mmap.c:54:15: warning: comparison between pointer and integer [enabled by default]
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/mmap.c:66:21: warning: comparison between pointer and integer [enabled by default]
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/mmap.c:143:13: warning: comparison between pointer and integer [enabled by default]
../sysdeps/mach/hurd/mmap.c:165:24: warning: comparison between pointer and integer [enabled by default]
* baseline
fd5bdc0924e0cfd1688b632068c1b26f3b0c88da..2ba92745c36eb3c3f3af0ce1b0aebd255c63a13b
introduces:
nscd_gethst_r.c: In function '__nscd_get_nl_timestamp':
nscd_gethst_r.c:112:4: warning: implicit declaration of function 'time' [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
This was already present before:
nscd_gethst_r.c: In function 'nscd_gethst_r':
nscd_gethst_r.c:426:5: warning: implicit declaration of function '__close' [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
* baseline
2ba92745c36eb3c3f3af0ce1b0aebd255c63a13b..7a270350a9bc3110cd5ba12bbd8c5c8c365e0032
introduces:
tst-relsort1.c:6:1: warning: function declaration isn't a prototype [-Wstrict-prototypes]
* baseline
fc56c5bbc1a0d56b9b49171dd377c73c268ebcfd..cbc818d0ee66065f3942beffdca82986615aa19a
introduces
+gcc-4.6 tst-printf-round.c -c -std=gnu99 -fgnu89-inline -O2 -Wall -Winline -Wwrite-strings -fmerge-all-constants -frounding-math -g -Wno-parentheses -Wstrict-prototypes -I../include -I[...]/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker.build-gcc-4.
+tst-printf-round.c: In function 'do_test':
+tst-printf-round.c:203:11: warning: passing argument 3 of 'test_hex_in_one_mode' discards 'const' qualifier from pointer target type [enabled by default]
+tst-printf-round.c:139:1: note: expected 'const char **' but argument is of type 'const char * const*'
+tst-printf-round.c:208:8: warning: passing argument 3 of 'test_hex_in_one_mode' discards 'const' qualifier from pointer target type [enabled by default]
+tst-printf-round.c:139:1: note: expected 'const char **' but argument is of type 'const char * const*'
+tst-printf-round.c:216:8: warning: passing argument 3 of 'test_hex_in_one_mode' discards 'const' qualifier from pointer target type [enabled by default]
+tst-printf-round.c:139:1: note: expected 'const char **' but argument is of type 'const char * const*'
+tst-printf-round.c:224:8: warning: passing argument 3 of 'test_hex_in_one_mode' discards 'const' qualifier from pointer target type [enabled by default]
+tst-printf-round.c:139:1: note: expected 'const char **' but argument is of type 'const char * const*'
gcc-4.6 test-wcschr.c -c -std=gnu99 -fgnu89-inline -O2 -Wall -Winline -Wwrite-strings -fmerge-all-constants -frounding-math -g -Wno-parentheses -Wstrict-prototypes -I../include -I[...]/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker.build-gcc-4.6-486
+In file included from test-wcschr.c:2:0:
+../string/test-strchr.c: In function 'check1':
+../string/test-strchr.c:249:3: warning: passing argument 1 of 'stupid_STRCHR' from incompatible pointer type [enabled by default]
+../string/test-strchr.c:77:1: note: expected 'const wchar_t *' but argument is of type 'char *'
+../string/test-strchr.c:249:22: warning: initialization from incompatible pointer type [enabled by default]
+../string/test-strchr.c:252:5: warning: passing argument 2 of 'check_result' from incompatible pointer type [enabled by default]
+../string/test-strchr.c:92:1: note: expected 'const wchar_t *' but argument is of type 'char *'
+../string/test-strchr.c:252:5: warning: passing argument 4 of 'check_result' from incompatible pointer type [enabled by default]
+../string/test-strchr.c:92:1: note: expected 'const wchar_t *' but argument is of type 'char *'
# Install
TODO.
$ make install_root="$PWD".install install 2>&1 | tee log_install
[...]
This takes up around 100 MiB, and needs roughly X min on kepler.SCHWINGE and 16
min on coulomb.SCHWINGE.
## Analysis
$ toolchain/logs/process glibc install fetch coulomb.SCHWINGE
TODO.
# Testsuite
$ make -k install_root=/INVALID check fast-check=yes 2>&1 | tee log_test
[...]
This needs roughly X min on kepler.SCHWINGE and 130 min on coulomb.SCHWINGE.
Specifying `fast-check=yes` disables the `conformtest` which takes 1.75 h (out
of 2.75 h total) on coulomb.SCHWINGE, doesn't pass anyway, and clearly isn't
our most critical issue to solve.
`elf/tst-xmmymm.out` is another candidate to disable: needs 90 min to run.
## Analysis
$ toolchain/logs/process glibc test fetch coulomb.SCHWINGE
Failures, mostly in order of appearance:
* `check-abi`, `check-abi-libmachuser`, `check-abi-libhurduser`,
`check-abi-libBrokenLocale`, `check-abi-libm`, `check-abi-libdl`,
`check-abi-libcrypt`, `check-abi-libresolv`, `check-abi-librt`,
`check-abi-libnsl`, `check-abi-libutil`, `check-abi-libc`, `check-abi-ld`,
`c++-types.data`
Reference files are missing.
* `math/test-float.out`, `math/test-double.out`
A handful of ULP failures.
* `math/test-ldouble`, `math/test-ildoubl`, `math/test-ifloat`,
`math/test-idouble`
SIGSEGV. Or SIGILL.
* `stdlib/tst-secure-getenv.out`
open (/proc/self/exe): No such file or directory
Needs [[`/proc/self/exe`|hurd/translator/procfs/jkoenig/discussion]].
* `stdlib/tst-strtod-round.out`
strtold (-0x0.7p-16445) returned -0x0.0000000000008p-16385 not -0x0.000000000000001p-16385 (FE_DOWNWARD)
strtold (-0x0.7p-16494) returned -0x0.0000000000008p-16385 not -0x0.000000000000001p-16385 (FE_DOWNWARD)
* `stdio-common/bug22.out`
Timed out: killed the child process
Known problem.
* `libio/tst-atime.out`, `dirent/tst-fdopendir.out`
[[!message-id "201305102256.56636.toscano.pino@tiscali.it"]].
`libio/tst-atime.out`:
atime has not changed
Due to `ext2fs --no-atime`.
* IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2013-05-08
<youpi> bah, tst-atime failure :)
<pinotree> do you have its output?
<youpi> well it's very simple
<youpi> I have the noatime option on / :)
<pinotree> oh
<youpi> fortunately fsysopts works :)
<pinotree> the test checks whether ST_NOATIME is in the mount
options, maybe it would be a good idea to provide it
<youpi> yes
<pinotree> unfortunately it isn't in posix, so i'm not sure whether
adding it to the general bits/statvfs.h would be welcome
<pinotree> or whether we should fork it, like it is done for linux
<pinotree> oh no, we fork it already
<pinotree> \o/
`dirent/tst-fdopendir.out`:
directory atime changed
Due to `ext2fs --atime` (default).
* `libio/tst-fopenloc.check`, `posix/bug-regex31-mem`,
`posix/tst-fnmatch-mem`, `misc/tst-error1-mem`
Memory not freed:
-----------------
Address Size Caller
0x0807e268 0x8000 at 0x10c71c4
Caused by different memory allocation way in libio, see
[[!message-id "87mxd9hl2n.fsf@kepler.schwinge.homeip.net"]]
* `dlfcn/bug-atexit3.out`
Originally:
dlopen failed: libstdc++.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
See [[!message-id "20090420002344.11798.qmail@s461.sureserver.com"]].
Hacked around with `ln -s /usr/lib/i386-*gnu/libstdc++.so.6
/lib/i386-*gnu/libpthread-stubs.so.0 /lib/i386-*gnu/libgcc_s.so.1 ./`.
This is a bug in the glibc test harness. Should probably use some
`configure` magic akin to the `fixincludes` stuff (`gcc-4.4
-print-file-name=libstdc++.so.6`, etc.).
Even if that that is being worked around, the tests nowadays
([[service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/packaging_libpthread]]) fail with:
dlopen failed: [...]/libc.so.0.3: version `GLIBC_2.13_DEBIAN_31' not found (required by [...]/libstdc++.so.6)
* `dlfcn/tststatic.out`, `dlfcn/tststatic2.out`, `dlfcn/tststatic3.out`,
`dlfcn/tststatic4.out`, `dlfcn/tststatic5.out`
SIGSEGV.
`LD_LIBRARY_PATH` doesn't contain the `mach` and `hurd` directories; yet
the test shouldn't just SIGSEGV.
* `dirent/opendir-tst1.out`, `dirent/tst-fdopendir2.out`
`dirent/opendir-tst1.out`:
`opendir' succeeded on a FIFO???
`dirent/tst-fdopendir2.out`:
fdopendir with normal file descriptor did not fail
`opendir` and `fdopendir` do not return `ENOTDIR` if `fd` is not a
directory.
* `posix/tst-waitid.out`
Intermittent.
SIGCHLD for stopped status 0
SIGCHLD for stopped pid -1
SIGCHLD for killed code 1
SIGCHLD for killed status 0
SIGCHLD for killed pid -1
* `posix/bug-glob2.out`
Intermittent.
Timed out: killed the child process
* `posix/annexc.out`
Failure ignored by the glibc testsuite.
* `posix/tst-getconf.out`
Ends with:
getconf POSIX_ALLOC_SIZE_MIN /: [...]/posix/getconf: pathconf: /: Invalid argument
It fails because of unimplemented pathconf cases: `_PC_ALLOC_SIZE_MIN`,
`_PC_REC_INCR_XFER_SIZE`, `_PC_REC_MAX_XFER_SIZE`, `_PC_REC_MIN_XFER_SIZE`,
`_PC_REC_XFER_ALIGN`, `_PC_SYMLINK_MAX`, `_PC_2_SYMLINKS`.
`_CS_GNU_LIBPTHREAD_VERSION` is provided by libpthread when compiled as
add-on.
* `posix/tst-vfork3-mem`
+ 0x0804cee0 Alloc 10 duplicate: 0x1095389 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:[0x1095389]
+ 0x0804cf90 Alloc 11 duplicate: 0x1156963 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(tsearch+0xe3)[0x1156963]
+ 0x0804cfa8 Alloc 12 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x00000008 Alloc 17 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x0804cee0 Alloc 18 duplicate: 0x1095389 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:[0x1095389]
+ 0x0804cf90 Alloc 19 duplicate: 0x1156963 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(tsearch+0xe3)[0x1156963]
+ 0x0804cfa8 Alloc 20 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x00000008 Alloc 25 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x0804cee0 Alloc 26 duplicate: 0x1095389 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:[0x1095389]
+ 0x0804cf90 Alloc 27 duplicate: 0x1156963 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(tsearch+0xe3)[0x1156963]
+ 0x0804cfa8 Alloc 28 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x00000008 Alloc 33 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x0804cee0 Alloc 34 duplicate: 0x1095389 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:[0x1095389]
+ 0x0804cf90 Alloc 35 duplicate: 0x1156963 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(tsearch+0xe3)[0x1156963]
+ 0x0804cfa8 Alloc 36 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x00000008 Alloc 41 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x0804cee0 Alloc 42 duplicate: 0x1095389 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:[0x1095389]
+ 0x0804cf90 Alloc 43 duplicate: 0x1156963 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(tsearch+0xe3)[0x1156963]
+ 0x0804cfa8 Alloc 44 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x00000008 Alloc 49 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x0804cee0 Alloc 50 duplicate: 0x1095389 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:[0x1095389]
+ 0x0804cf90 Alloc 51 duplicate: 0x1156963 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(tsearch+0xe3)[0x1156963]
+ 0x0804cfa8 Alloc 52 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x00000008 Alloc 57 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x0804cee0 Alloc 58 duplicate: 0x1095389 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:[0x1095389]
+ 0x0804cf90 Alloc 59 duplicate: 0x1156963 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(tsearch+0xe3)[0x1156963]
+ 0x0804cfa8 Alloc 60 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x00000008 Alloc 65 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x0804cee0 Alloc 66 duplicate: 0x1095389 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:[0x1095389]
+ 0x0804cf90 Alloc 67 duplicate: 0x1156963 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(tsearch+0xe3)[0x1156963]
+ 0x0804cfa8 Alloc 68 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x00000008 Alloc 73 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x0804cee0 Alloc 74 duplicate: 0x1095389 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:[0x1095389]
+ 0x0804cf90 Alloc 75 duplicate: 0x1156963 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(tsearch+0xe3)[0x1156963]
+ 0x0804cfa8 Alloc 76 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x00000008 Alloc 81 duplicate: 0x10df0c8 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(argz_create+0x68)[0x10df0c8]
+ 0x0804cee0 Alloc 82 duplicate: 0x1095389 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:[0x1095389]
+ 0x0804cf90 Alloc 83 duplicate: 0x1156963 $BUILDDIR/libc.so.0.3:(tsearch+0xe3)[0x1156963]
- 0x0804c8d8 Free 84 was never alloc'd 0x10955fc
- 0x0804c960 Free 87 was never alloc'd 0x115672f
- 0x0804c9b8 Free 88 was never alloc'd 0x1156737
Memory not freed:
-----------------
Address Size Caller
0x0804cfa8 0x73 at 0x10df0c8
0x00000008 0 at 0x10df0c8
Perhps because we implement `vfork` in terms of `fork` (`posix/vfork.c`)?
* `posix/tst-pathconf.out`
pathconf on directory failed: (os/kern) successful
* `io/test-lfs.out`
/home/thomas/tmp/glibc/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker.build/io/test-lfs: cannot write test string to large file: Invalid argument
* `io/tst-futimesat.out`
file created
futimesat failed
`futimesat` is a stub.
* `misc/tst-pselect.o`
tst-pselect.c: In function 'do_test':
tst-pselect.c:33:17: error: 'SA_NOCLDWAIT' undeclared (first use in this function)
* `gmon/tst-sprofil.out`
Floating point exception
* `nss//libnss_test1.so`
[...]/nss/nss_test1.os: In function `_nss_test1_getpwent_r':
[...]/nss/nss_test1.c:60: undefined reference to `pthread_mutex_lock'
[...]/nss/nss_test1.c:85: undefined reference to `pthread_mutex_unlock'
* `rt/tst-shm.out`
read file outside of SHMDIR directory: (os/kern) successful
* `rt/tst-timer.out`
No message.
* `rt/tst-timer2.o`
tst-timer2.c: In function 'do_test':
tst-timer2.c:33:23: error: 'SIGRTMIN' undeclared (first use in this function)
* `rt/tst-aio2`, `rt/tst-aio3`, `rt/tst-aio9`, `rt/tst-aio10`,
`rt/tst-mqueue3`, `rt/tst-mqueue5.o`, `rt/tst-mqueue6`, `rt/tst-mqueue8`,
`rt/tst-timer3`, `rt/tst-timer4.o`, `rt/tst-timer5.o`,
`rt/tst-cputimer1.o`, `rt/tst-cputimer2.o`, `rt/tst-cputimer3.o`,
`elf/tst-thrlock`
[...]/rt/tst-aio2.o: In function `do_test':
[...]/rt/tst-aio2.c:62: undefined reference to `pthread_barrier_init'
[...]/rt/tst-aio2.c:94: undefined reference to `pthread_barrier_wait'
[...]/rt/tst-aio2.o: In function `thrfct':
[...]/rt/tst-aio2.c:35: undefined reference to `pthread_barrier_wait'
tst-mqueue5.c: In function 'rtmin_handler':
tst-mqueue5.c:50:14: error: 'SIGRTMIN' undeclared (first use in this function)
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.o: In function `do_test':
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.c:127: undefined reference to `pthread_attr_init'
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.c:149: undefined reference to `pthread_attr_setguardsize'
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.c:211: undefined reference to `pthread_attr_setguardsize'
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.c:262: undefined reference to `pthread_attr_destroy'
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.c:128: undefined reference to `pthread_attr_setguardsize'
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.o: In function `fct':
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.c:79: undefined reference to `pthread_self'
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.c:79: undefined reference to `pthread_getattr_np'
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.c:88: undefined reference to `pthread_attr_getguardsize'
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.c:95: undefined reference to `pthread_attr_destroy'
[...]/rt/tst-mqueue6.c:95: undefined reference to `pthread_attr_destroy'
[...]/elf/tst-thrlock.o: In function `do_test':
[...]/elf/tst-thrlock.c:38: undefined reference to `pthread_create'
[...]/elf/tst-thrlock.c:48: undefined reference to `pthread_join'
* `rt/tst-aio8.out`
r = -1, e = 1073741902 (Function not implemented)
Should work with [[!message-id
"201209302353.51055.toscano.pino@tiscali.it"]] in libpthread.
* `debug/tst-chk1.out`
Intermittent. Timeout. Unknown.
* `debug/tst-chk2.out`, `debug/tst-chk3.out`, `debug/tst-lfschk2.out`,
`debug/tst-lfschk3.out`
Unknown.
* `debug/tst-chk4.out`, `debug/tst-chk5.out`, `debug/tst-chk6.out`,
`debug/tst-lfschk4.out`, `debug/tst-lfschk5.out`, `debug/tst-lfschk6.out`
[...]/debug/tst-chk4: [...]/libc.so.0.3: version `GLIBC_2.13_DEBIAN_31' not found (required by [...]/libstdc++.so.6)
[...]/debug/tst-chk4: [...]/libc.so.0.3: version `GLIBC_2.13_DEBIAN_31' not found (required by [...]/libgcc_s.so.1)
* `debug/tst-longjmp_chk2.out`
SIGSEGV.
not on alternate stack
in signal handler
on alternate stack
out of signal handler
on alternate stack
It says *alternate stack*.
* `inet/tst-ether_line.o`
tst-ether_line.c: In function 'do_test':
tst-ether_line.c:19:19: error: 'ETH_ALEN' undeclared (first use in this function)
Will either need a `hurd/netinet/if_ether.h` that includes
`<net/if_ether.h>`, or can do that in the generic `netinet/if_ether.h`?
See also [[!sourceware_PR 11142]].
* `login/tst-grantpt.out`
posix_openpt(O_RDWR) failed
errno 1073741902 (Function not implemented)
`posix_openpt` is a stub.
grantpt(): expected: return = -1, errno = 1073741846
got: return = -1, errno = -303
`grantpt` (actually `ptsname_r`), does not fail with `ENOTTY` when the `fd`
does not refer to a PTY master.
* `elf/tst-auxv.out`
SIGSEGV.
* `elf/tst-stackguard1-static.out`, `elf/tst-stackguard1.out`
differences 0 defaults 0
stack guard canaries are not randomized enough
nor equal to the default canary value
Sometimes times out.
* `elf/tst-ptrguard1-static.o`, `elf/tst-ptrguard1.o`
In file included from tst-ptrguard1-static.c:1:0:
tst-ptrguard1.c: In function 'con':
tst-ptrguard1.c:42:24: error: 'tcbhead_t' has no member named 'pointer_guard'
tst-ptrguard1.c: In function 'do_test':
tst-ptrguard1.c:65:29: error: 'tcbhead_t' has no member named 'pointer_guard'
tst-ptrguard1.c:104:30: error: 'tcbhead_t' has no member named 'pointer_guard'
See [[t/tls|service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663/glibc/t/tls]].
* `elf/tst-tls9-static.out`
SIGSEGV.
* `elf/tst-dlmopen1.out`
SIGSEGV.
* `elf/tst-audit1.out`, `elf/tst-audit2.out`, `elf/tst-audit8.out`
SIGKILL.
* `elf/tst-null-argv.out`
Inconsistency detected by ld.so: ../sysdeps/mach/hurd/dl-sysdep.c: 338: open_file: Assertion `!(flags & ~(0x0001 | 0x00400000))' failed!
* `elf/check-textrel.out`
$BUILDDIR/libc.so.dyn: *** text relocations used
* `elf/check-execstack.out`
$BUILDDIR/libc.so.phdr: *** executable stack signaled
* `elf/check-localplt.out`
Around 500 or so `Extra PLT reference`.
* `check-local-headers.out`
A lot. Including `/usr/include/device/*.h`, `/usr/include/mach/*.h`,
`/usr/include/hurd/*.h`.
* `debug/tst-longjmp_chk2.out`, `debug/tst-longjmp_chk3.out`,
`debug/tst-longjmp_chk4.out`, `debug/tst-longjmp_chk5.out`,
`debug/tst-backtrace2.out`, `debug/tst-backtrace3.out`,
`debug/tst-backtrace4.out`, `debug/tst-backtrace5.out`
`debug/tst-backtrace6.out`
All say: `Obtained backtrace with 0 functions`.
Earlier failures; no longer seen:
* `test-assert-perr.out`
Fails intermittently. Unknown.
* `test-multiarch.out`
Needs [[`/proc/cpuinfo`|hurd/translator/procfs/jkoenig/discussion]]
providing the `flags` line.
* `elf/tst-array*`
No longer fail with GCC 4.7.
[[!message-id "50950082.1070906@df1tl.local.here"]].
* `io/ftwtest`, `posix/globtest`, `iconvdata/iconv-test`, `intl/tst-gettext`,
`malloc/tst-mtrace`, `elf/tst-pathopt`, `iconvdata/tst-tables`,
`grp/tst_fgetgrent`,
`posix/wordexp-tst`, `localedata/bug-setlocale1.out`, `posix/tst-getconf`
/home/thomas/tmp/glibc/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker.build-gcc-4.4-486.O/io/ftwtest: error while loading shared libraries: libmachuser.so.1: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
Looking into `localedata/bug-setlocale1.c`, it is clear what it going on:
only the root of the build directory is added for `--library-path`, but
none of the other directories that are additionally used. This is a bug in
the glibc test harness. Hacked around by `ln -s mach/libmachuser.so.1
hurd/libhurduser.so.0.3 ./`. Hopefully the other instances are similar.
* `assert/test-assert.out`
Fails sometimes...
* `math/test-fenv.out`
Used to fail (is listed in Debian eglibc-2.13-21's
`expected-results-i486-gnu-libc`), but something between
22bcba37dd3b782b1a1ec7bf51da468e48f4d2eb and
005b7594ffe209639dd1ef2b9ed9a4c22307dec1 causes it to passe -- very likely
Jérémie's signaling work.
* `elf/tst-unused-dep.out` (1f393a11f65dcaa1952bdcaf0317a65a5f8aff9d,
[[!sourceware_PR 13706]], [[!message-id "4F4210C1.1090704@redhat.com"]])
Unused direct dependencies:
/home/thomas/tmp/glibc/tschwinge/Roger_Whittaker.build-gcc-4.6-486/dlfcn/libdl.so.2
As of 8958805c11c741d9211e20612c86271d906c9a0b, this test now passes --
correct?
* `stdlib/bug-getcontext.out`
getcontext failed, errno: 1073741902.
Fixed, implemented in `t/context_functions`.
* `resource/bug-ulimit1.out`
Result of ulimit (UL_SETFSIZE, 10000): 0
Result of ulimit(UL_GETFSIZE): 10000
Buggy `sysdeps/unix/bsd/ulimit.c` return values.
Fixed, [[!message-id "201211182342.51619.toscano.pino@tiscali.it"]].
Compared to Debian:
$ bash ~/tmp/glibc/debian/eglibc-2.13/debian/testsuite-checking/convertlog.sh log_test > log_test.filtered
$ bash ~/tmp/glibc/debian/eglibc-2.13/debian/testsuite-checking/compare.sh ~/tmp/glibc/debian/eglibc-2.13/debian/testsuite-checking/expected-results-i486-gnu-libc log_test.filtered
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