internally when and where required. Macros in <stdio.h> are updated
to automatically call the underlying functions when the process is
threaded to obtain the necessary locking. A private mutex is added
to protect __sglue, the internal list of FILE handles, and another
to protect the one-time initialization. Some routines in libc that
use getc() change to use getc_unlocked() as they're either protected
by their own lock or aren't thread-safe routines anyway.
committing on behalf of and okay guenther@ now that we have install
media space available.
internally when and where required. Macros in <stdio.h> are updated
to automatically call the underlying functions when the process is
threaded to obtain the necessary locking. A private mutex is added
to protect __sglue, the internal list of FILE handles, and another
to protect the one-time initialization. Some routines in libc that
use getc() change to use getc_unlocked() as they're either protected
by their own lock or aren't thread-safe routines anyway.
ok kurt@, earlier version tested by sthen@ and jj@
This is required as gcc grows ever more pedantic with old age
and cavorts with standards bodies that like to create paradoxes.
ok kettenis@ miod@ millert@ espie@
just stop updating fts_level so we don't overflow it. This allows
rm, find, etc to operate on very deep hierarchies. Consumers of
fts(3) do need to be aware that the actual level may be larger
than fts_level. During the next libc major bump we will make
fts_level an int instead of a short. OK deraadt@
formats. which even for 80-bit & 128-bit long doubles is only 15
bits. therefore, scalbln, scalblnf, scalblnl are essentially the
same as scalbn, scalbnf, scalbnl with bounds checking so that
LONG_MIN..INT_MIN, and INT_MAX..LONG_MAX ranges properly raise
exceptions & yield correct values. looks good to millert@
cannot cooperate with other programs. The aim of this change is
to allow any program to send midi data to other programs as they
were midi hardware. For instance, this change should solve the
longstanding problem of using a midi sequencer with software
synthesizers. More precisely:
- new midicat(1) utility (actually hardlink to aucat(1)).
it creates software midi thru boxes, allowing programs
to send midi messages to other programs as they were
midi(4) hardware.
- new midi api in libsndio (see mio_open(3)), to access
midi(4) devices and midicat(1) sockets in a uniform way.
- new device naming scheme <service>:<unit>[.<option>],
common to audio and midi.
- new sndio(7) manual describing concepts and naming
The current audio device naming still works, but people having
scripts or configuration files containing device names could read
the sndio(7) man page and slowly start updating device names.
discussed with jakemsr@ and deraadt@, help form jmc@
PF_UNSPEC queries are made. While there change the default from inet6
first then inet4 to inet4 first then inet6, this prevents the many
people with IPv4 only connectivity from constantly trying to contact
IPv6 addresses, and also unbreaks many ports who don't use getaddrinfo
right.
ok deraadt@, plenty of cheering in the room wrt the idea, not loud
enough complaining from the v6 crowd.
standard explicitly disallows passing setenv a name with a '=' in
it but historic BSD behavior is to allow this but to ignore the '='
and anything after it.
- provide proper dtoa locks
- use the real strtof implementation
- add strtold, __hdtoa, __hldtoa
- add %a/%A support
- don't lose precision in printf, don't round to double anymore
- implement extended-precision versions of libc functions: fpclassify,
isnan, isinf, signbit, isnormal, isfinite, now that the ieee.h is
fixed
- separate vax versions of strtof, and __hdtoa
- add complex math support. added functions: cacos, casin, catan,
ccos, csin, ctan, cacosh, casinh, catanh, ccosh, csinh, ctanh, cexp,
clog, cabs, cpow, csqrt, carg, cimag, conj, cproj, creal, cacosf,
casinf, catanf, ccosf, csinf, ctanf, cacoshf, casinhf, catanhf,
ccoshf, csinhf, ctanhf, cexpf, clogf, cabsf, cpowf, csqrtf, cargf,
cimagf, conjf, cprojf, crealf
- add fdim, fmax, fmin
- add log2. (adapted implementation e_log.c. could be more acruate
& faster, but it's good enough for now)
- remove wrappers & cruft in libm, supposed to work-around mistakes
in SVID, etc.; use ieee versions. fixes issues in python 2.6 for
djm@
- make _digittoint static
- proper definitions for i386, and amd64 in ieee.h
- sh, powerpc don't really have extended-precision
- add missing definitions for mips64 (quad), m{6,8}k (96-bit) float.h
for LDBL_*
- merge lead to frac for m{6,8}k, for gdtoa to work properly
- add FRAC*BITS & EXT_TO_ARRAY32 definitions in ieee.h, for hdtoa&ldtoa
to use
- add EXT_IMPLICIT_NBIT definition, which indicates implicit
normalization bit
- add regression tests for libc: fpclassify and printf
- arith.h & gd_qnan.h definitions
- update ieee.h: hppa doesn't have quad-precision, hppa64 does
- add missing prototypes to gdtoaimp
- on 64-bit platforms make sure gdtoa doesn't use a long when it
really wants an int
- etc., what i may have forgotten...
- bump libm major, due to removed&changed symbols
- no libc bump, since this is riding on djm's libc major crank from
a day ago
discussed with / requested by / testing theo, sthen@, djm@, jsg@,
merdely@, jsing@, tedu@, brad@, jakemsr@, and others.
looks good to millert@
parts of the diff ok kettenis@
this commit does not include:
- man page changes
forthcoming OpenSSL update.
Function names lose their underscore (SHA256_Init => SHA256Init) and
the various SHA256_CTX, SHA512_CTX are merged into a single SHA2_CTX
that is used for all these hashes.
ok millert@ manpage bits jmc@ "please commit" deraadt@
They really are just a way to share common code between gdb and binutils
(which in the GNU world are seperate packages). The developers (and I'm
one of them) make absolutely no effert to maintain a stable API/ABI.
If ports people really need libbfd or libopcodes, they should just
package a suitable version.
ok weingart@, deraadt@
FP_NORMAL, FP_SUBNORMAL, FP_ZERO, FP_ILOGB0, FP_ILOGBNAN definitions,
per C99
- classify functions into sections, add missing definitions, add
and some '#if 0' functions, and long double definitions, so we see
what's needed to be done
- other stuff is XXX'd, and will be uncommented soon
ok millert@
Not sure what's more surprising: how long it took for NetBSD to
catch up to the rest of the BSDs (including UCB), or the amount of
code that NetBSD has claimed for itself without attributing to the
actual authors.
OK deraadt@