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2022-10-19remove LFS64 programming interfaces (macro-only) from _GNU_SOURCERich Felker1-1/+1
these badly pollute the namespace with macros whenever _GNU_SOURCE is defined, which is always the case with g++, and especially tends to interfere with C++ constructs. as our implementation of these was macro-only, their removal cannot affect any existing binaries. at the source level, portable software should be prepared for them not to exist. for now, they are left in place with explicit _LARGEFILE64_SOURCE. this provides an easy temporary path for integrators/distributions to get packages building again right away if they break while working on a proper, upstreamable fix. the intent is that this be a very short-term measure and that the macros be removed entirely in the next release cycle.
2021-11-29define NULL as nullptr when used in C++11 or laterIsmael Luceno1-1/+3
This should be safer for casting and more compatible with existing code bases that wrongly assume it must be defined as a pointer.
2019-03-12make FILE a complete type for pre-C11 standard profilesRich Felker1-0/+4
C11 removed the requirement that FILE be a complete type, which was deemed erroneous, as part of the changes introduced by N1439 regarding completeness of types (see footnote 6 for specific mention of FILE). however the current version of POSIX is still based on C99 and incorporates the old requirement that FILE be a complete type. expose an arbitrary, useless complete type definition because the actual object used to represent FILE streams cannot be public/ABI. thanks to commit 13d1afa46f8098df290008c681816c9eb89ffbdb, we now have a framework for suppressing the public complete-type definition of FILE when stdio.h is included internally, so that a different internal definition can be provided. this is perfectly well-defined, since the same struct tag can refer to different types in different translation units. it would be a problem if the implementation were accessing the application's FILE objects or vice versa, but either would be undefined behavior.
2018-02-24fix aliasing violations in fgetpos/fsetposRich Felker1-0/+1
add a member of appropriate type to the fpos_t union so that accesses are well-defined. use long long instead of off_t since off_t is not always exposed in stdio.h and there's no namespace-clean alias for it. access is still performed using pointer casts rather than by naming the union member as a matter of style; to the extent possible, the naming of fields in opaque types defined in the public headers is not treated as an API contract with the implementation. access via the pointer cast is valid as long as the union has a member of matching type.
2017-12-06adjust fopencookie structure tag for ABI-compatRich Felker1-1/+1
stdio types use the struct tag names from glibc libio to match C++ ABI.
2017-12-06implement the fopencookie extension to stdioWilliam Pitcock1-0/+14
notes added by maintainer: this function is a GNU extension. it was chosen over the similar BSD function funopen because the latter depends on fpos_t being an arithmetic type as part of its public API, conflicting with our definition of fpos_t and with the intent that it be an opaque type. it was accepted for inclusion because, despite not being widely used, it is usually very difficult to extricate software using it from the dependency on it. calling pattern for the read and write callbacks is not likely to match glibc or other implementations, but should work with any reasonable callbacks. in particular the read function is never called without at least one byte being needed to satisfy its caller, so that spurious blocking is not introduced. contracts for what callbacks called from inside libc/stdio can do are always complicated, and at some point still need to be specified explicitly. at the very least, the callbacks must return or block indefinitely (they cannot perform nonlocal exits) and they should not make calls to stdio using their own FILE as an argument.
2013-11-24restore type of NULL to void * except when used in C++ programsRich Felker1-0/+4
unfortunately this eliminates the ability of the compiler to diagnose some dangerous/incorrect usage, but POSIX requires (as an extension to the C language, i.e. CX shaded) that NULL have type void *. plain C allows it to be defined as any null pointer constant. the definition 0L is preserved for C++ rather than reverting to plain 0 to avoid dangerous behavior in non-conforming programs which use NULL as a variadic sentinel. (it's impossible to use (void *)0 for C++ since C++ lacks the proper implicit pointer conversions, and other popular alternatives like the GCC __null extension seem non-conforming to the standard's requirements.)
2013-07-22refactor headers, especially alltypes.h, and improve C++ ABI compatRich Felker1-1/+1
the arch-specific bits/alltypes.h.sh has been replaced with a generic alltypes.h.in and minimal arch-specific bits/alltypes.h.in. this commit is intended to have no functional changes except: - exposing additional symbols that POSIX allows but does not require - changing the C++ name mangling for some types - fixing the signedness of blksize_t on powerpc (POSIX requires signed) - fixing the limit macros for sig_atomic_t on x86_64 - making dev_t an unsigned type (ABI matching goal, and more logical) in addition, some types that were wrongly defined with long on 32-bit archs were changed to int, and vice versa; this change is non-functional except for the possibility of making pointer types mismatch, and only affects programs that were using them incorrectly, and only at build-time, not runtime. the following changes were made in the interest of moving non-arch-specific types out of the alltypes system and into the headers they're associated with, and also will tend to improve application compatibility: - netdb.h now includes netinet/in.h (for socklen_t and uint32_t) - netinet/in.h now includes sys/socket.h and inttypes.h - sys/resource.h now includes sys/time.h (for struct timeval) - sys/wait.h now includes signal.h (for siginfo_t) - langinfo.h now includes nl_types.h (for nl_item) for the types in stdint.h: - types which are of no interest to other headers were moved out of the alltypes system. - fast types for 8- and 64-bit are hard-coded (at least for now); only the 16- and 32-bit ones have reason to vary by arch. and the following types have been changed for C++ ABI purposes; - mbstate_t now has a struct tag, __mbstate_t - FILE's struct tag has been changed to _IO_FILE - DIR's struct tag has been changed to __dirstream - locale_t's struct tag has been changed to __locale_struct - pthread_t is defined as unsigned long in C++ mode only - fpos_t now has a struct tag, _G_fpos64_t - fsid_t's struct tag has been changed to __fsid_t - idtype_t has been made an enum type (also required by POSIX) - nl_catd has been changed from long to void * - siginfo_t's struct tag has been removed - sigset_t's has been given a struct tag, __sigset_t - stack_t has been given a struct tag, sigaltstack - suseconds_t has been changed to long on 32-bit archs - [u]intptr_t have been changed from long to int rank on 32-bit archs - dev_t has been made unsigned summary of tests that have been performed against these changes: - nsz's libc-test (diff -u before and after) - C++ ABI check symbol dump (diff -u before, after, glibc) - grepped for __NEED, made sure types needed are still in alltypes - built gcc 3.4.6
2013-07-18fix FILENAME_MAX to match PATH_MAXRich Felker1-1/+1
POSIX is not clear on whether it includes the termination, but ISO C requires that it does. the whole concept of this macro is rather useless, but it's better to be correct anyway.
2013-06-25respect iso c namespace in stdio.h and wchar.h regarding va_listRich Felker1-10/+11
despite declaring functions that take arguments of type va_list, these headers are not permitted by the c standard to expose the definition of va_list, so an alias for the type must be used. the name __isoc_va_list was chosen to convey that the purpose of this alternate name is for iso c conformance, and to avoid the multitude of names which gcc mangles with its hideous "fixincludes" monstrosity, leading to serious header breakage if these "fixes" are run.
2013-01-18use a common definition of NULL as 0L for C and C++Rich Felker1-6/+1
the historical mess of having different definitions for C and C++ comes from the historical C definition as (void *)0 and the fact that (void *)0 can't be used in C++ because it does not convert to other pointer types implicitly. however, using plain 0 in C++ exposed bugs in C++ programs that call variadic functions with NULL as an argument and (wrongly; this is UB) expect it to arrive as a null pointer. on 64-bit machines, the high bits end up containing junk. glibc dodges the issue by using a GCC extension __null to define NULL; this is observably non-conforming because a conforming application could observe the definition of NULL via stringizing and see that it is neither an integer constant expression with value zero nor such an expression cast to void. switching to 0L eliminates the issue and provides compatibility with broken applications, since on all musl targets, long and pointers have the same size, representation, and argument-passing convention. we could maintain separate C and C++ definitions of NULL (i.e. just use 0L on C++ and use (void *)0 on C) but after careful analysis, it seems extremely difficult for a C program to even determine whether NULL has integer or pointer type, much less depend in subtle, unintentional ways, on whether it does. C89 seems to have no way to make the distinction. on C99, the fact that (int)(void *)0 is not an integer constant expression, along with subtle VLA/sizeof semantics, can be used to make the distinction, but many compilers are non-conforming and give the wrong result to this test anyway. on C11, _Generic can trivially make the distinction, but it seems unlikely that code targetting C11 would be so backwards in caring which definition of NULL an implementation uses. as such, the simplest path of using the same definition for NULL in both C and C++ was chosen. the #undef directive was also removed so that the compiler can catch and give a warning or error on redefinition if buggy programs have defined their own versions of NULL prior to inclusion of standard headers.
2012-12-28expose [v]asprintf under _BSD_SOURCERich Felker1-2/+2
reported/requested by Strake; simplified from the provided patch
2012-12-03feature test macros: make _GNU_SOURCE enable everythingRich Felker1-3/+0
previously, a few BSD features were enabled only by _BSD_SOURCE, not by _GNU_SOURCE. since _BSD_SOURCE is default in the absence of other feature test macros, this made adding _GNU_SOURCE to a project not a purely additive feature test macro; it actually caused some features to be suppressed. most of the changes made by this patch actually bring musl in closer alignment with the glibc behavior for _GNU_SOURCE. the only exceptions are the added visibility of functions like strlcpy which were BSD-only due to being disliked/rejected by glibc maintainers. here, I feel the consistency of having _GNU_SOURCE mean "everything", and especially the property of it being purely additive, are more valuable than hiding functions which glibc does not have.
2012-09-07default features: make musl usable without feature test macrosRich Felker1-5/+1
the old behavior of exposing nothing except plain ISO C can be obtained by defining __STRICT_ANSI__ or using a compiler option (such as -std=c99) that predefines it. the new default featureset is POSIX with XSI plus _BSD_SOURCE. any explicit feature test macros will inhibit the default. installation docs have also been updated to reflect this change.
2012-09-06use restrict everywhere it's required by c99 and/or posix 2008Rich Felker1-28/+34
to deal with the fact that the public headers may be used with pre-c99 compilers, __restrict is used in place of restrict, and defined appropriately for any supported compiler. we also avoid the form [restrict] since older versions of gcc rejected it due to a bug in the original c99 standard, and instead use the form *restrict.
2012-08-25implement "low hanging fruit" from C11Rich Felker1-0/+2
based on Gregor's patch sent to the list. includes: - stdalign.h - removing gets in C11 mode - adding aligned_alloc and adjusting other functions to use it - adding 'x' flag to fopen for exclusive mode
2012-08-11add bsd fgetln functionRich Felker1-0/+4
optimized to avoid allocation and return lines directly out of the stream buffer whenever possible.
2012-07-04add prototypes for getw/putwRich Felker1-0/+2
2012-06-04_GNU_SOURCE is supposed to imply _LARGEFILE64_SOURCERich Felker1-1/+1
this is ugly and stupid, but now that the *64 symbol names exist, a lot of broken GNU software detects them in configure, then either breaks during build due to missing off64_t definition, or attempts to compile without function declarations/prototypes. "fixing" it here is easier than telling everyone to add yet another feature test macro to their builds.
2012-05-28there is no such GNU function fpurge, only __fpurge.Rich Felker1-1/+0
no idea where I got the idea fpurge should exist...
2012-05-28add prototype for BSD/GNU stdio *_unlocked extension functionsRich Felker1-2/+12
also fix up distinction of what is GNU-only and what's GNU+BSD
2012-05-28remove duplicate lfs64 cruft in stdio.hRich Felker1-2/+0
2012-05-22support _BSD_SOURCE feature test macroRich Felker1-4/+7
patch by Isaac Dunham. matched closely (maybe not exact) to glibc's idea of what _BSD_SOURCE should make visible.
2012-05-04add support for ugly *64 functions with _LARGEFILE64_SOURCERich Felker1-0/+12
musl does not support legacy 32-bit-off_t whatsoever. off_t is always 64 bit, and correct programs that use off_t and the standard functions will just work out of the box. (on glibc, they would require -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 to work.) however, some programs instead define _LARGEFILE64_SOURCE and use alternate versions of all the standard types and functions with "64" appended to their names. we do not want code to actually get linked against these functions (it's ugly and inconsistent), so macros are used instead of prototypes with weak aliases in the library itself. eventually the weak aliases may be added at the library level for the sake of using code that was originally built against glibc, but the macros will still be the desired solution in the headers.
2011-09-11add prototypes for GNU *_unlocked stdio functionsRich Felker1-0/+4
actually these are just weak aliases for the normal locking versions right now, and they will probably stay that way since making them lock-free without slowing down the normal versions would require significant code duplication for no benefit.
2011-09-03implement fmemopenRich Felker1-0/+1
testing so far has been minimal. may need further work.
2011-09-03implement open_memstreamRich Felker1-0/+1
this is the first attempt, and may have bugs. only minimal testing has been performed.
2011-06-30implement the nonstandard GNU function fpurgeRich Felker1-0/+1
this is a really ugly and backwards function, but its presence will prevent lots of broken gnulib software from trying to define its own version of fpurge and thereby failing to build or worse.
2011-04-05add more legacy functions: setlinebuf and setbufferRich Felker1-0/+2
2011-02-20prototypes for GNU asprintf/vasprintfRich Felker1-0/+2
2011-02-15move stdio stuff that's not arch-specific out of bitsRich Felker1-1/+9
2011-02-14begin namespace-cleanup of standard C headersRich Felker1-20/+31
2011-02-12initial check-in, version 0.5.0v0.5.0Rich Felker1-0/+144