One of the aspects of CloudABI is that it aims to help you write code
that is thread-safe out of the box. This is very important if you want
to write libraries that are easy to reuse. For CloudABI we decided to
not provide the thread-unsafe functions. So far this is working out
pretty well, as thread-unsafety issues are detected really early on.
The following patch adds a knob to libc++,
_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_THREAD_UNSAFE_C_FUNCTIONS, that can be set to disable
thread-unsafe functions that can easily be avoided in practice. The
following functions are not thread-safe:
- <clocale>: locale handles should be preferred over setlocale().
- <cstdlib>: mbrlen(), mbrtowc() and wcrtomb() should be preferred over
their non-restartable counterparts.
- <ctime>: asctime(), ctime(), gmtime() and localtime() are not
thread-safe. The first two are also deprecated by POSIX.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8703
Reviewed by: marshall
llvm-svn: 240527
The time_put test doesn't seem to work on Linux and CloudABI. For Linux
we already have an XFAIL. Closer inspection seems to reveal that this
test does not pass for a couple of reasons.
First of all, the tm_yday field is set to an invalid value. The
strftime() function doesn't behave consistently across platforms in case
the values in the tm structure are incoherent. Fix up this field to have
the value 121, which corresponds with tm_mday, tm_mon and tm_year. This
of course affects the output of time_put for some modifiers, so update
the tests accordingly.
Second, some of the tests actually use modifiers that are only present
on BSD derived systems. They are not part of the C standard/POSIX.
Simply remove them.
Finally, some of the tests actually use invalid modifiers, causing a
malformed format string to be passed to strftime(). Remove these tests
as well.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8349
llvm-svn: 233262
Systems like FreeBSD's Capsicum and Nuxi CloudABI apply the concept of
capability-based security on the way processes can interact with the
filesystem API. It is no longer possible to interact with the VFS
through calls like open(), unlink(), rename(), etc. Instead, processes
are only allowed to interact with files and directories to which they
have been granted access. The *at() functions can be used for this
purpose.
This change adds a new config switch called
_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_GLOBAL_FILESYSTEM_NAMESPACE. If set, all functionality
that requires the global filesystem namespace will be disabled. More
concretely:
- fstream's open() function will be removed.
- cstdio will no longer pull in fopen(), rename(), etc.
- The test suite's get_temp_file_name() will be removed. This will cause
all tests that use the global filesystem namespace to break, but will
at least make all the other tests run (as get_temp_file_name will not
build anyway).
It is important to mention that this change will make fstream rather
useless on those systems for now. Still, I'd rather not have fstream
disabled entirely, as it is of course possible to come up with an
extension for fstream that would allow access to local filesystem
namespaces (e.g., by adding an openat() member function).
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8194
Reviewed by: jroelofs (thanks!)
llvm-svn: 232049
This basically reverts the revert in r216508, and fixes a few more cases while
I'm at it. Reading my commit message on that commit again, I think it's bupkis.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8237
llvm-svn: 231940
Summary:
MSAN and ASAN also replace new/delete which leads to a link error in these tests. Currently they are unsupported but I think it would be useful if these tests could run with sanitizers.
This patch creates a support header that consolidates the new/delete replacement functionality and checking.
When we are using sanitizers new and delete are no longer replaced and the checks always return true.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, danalbert, jroelofs, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6562
llvm-svn: 224741