AIX math.h provides C++ overloaded inlined math functions, which should
not be present for G++. The definitions have been guaded by
__COMPATMATH__, but that macro had other uses in IBM xlC++. A new
macro has been introduced with the sole purpose of guarding the functions.
This patch updates libstdc++ os_defines.h to define the additional macro.
The earlier macro definition is retained to guard the functions in the
math.h header of earlier AIX releases.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/os/aix/os_defines.h (__LIBC_NO_CPP_MATH_OVERLOADS__): Define.
for libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog
* acinclude.m4: Add VxWorks-specific case for the
configuration of ctypes.
* configure: Regenerate.
* config/locale/vxworks/ctype_members.cc: Add VxWorks-specific
version.
* config/os/vxworks/ctype_base.h: Adjust for VxWorks7+.
* config/os/vxworks/ctype_configure_char.cc: Likewise.
* config/os/vxworks/ctype_inline.h: Likewise.
* testsuite/28_regex/traits/char/isctype.cc: Defines
NEWLINE_IN_CLASS_BLANK if the target is VxWorks.
* testsuite/28_regex/traits/wchar_t/isctype.cc: Likewise.
The AIX-specific version of atomicity.h that provides compatibility
for the origina POWER architecture without atomic instructions no longer
is referenced. This patch deletes the file.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/os/aix/atomicity.h: Delete.
> Tested on powerpc64{,le}-linux now (-m32/-m64 on be) and while the first
> patch works fine, the second one unfortunately doesn't on either be or le,
> so more work is needed there.
Here are the needed changes to make it work.
For symbols with _LDBL_ substring in version name we already have code to
ignore those if no such symbols appear (but it is slightly incorrect, see
below).
So, this patch does the same thing for symbol versions with _IEEE128_
substring.
The previously incorrectly handled case is that in addition to
FUNC:_ZNKSt17__gnu_cxx_ieee1287num_getIcSt19istreambuf_iteratorIcSt11char_traitsIcEEE14_M_extract_intImEES4_S4_S4_RSt8ios_baseRSt12_Ios_IostateRT_@@GLIBCXX_IEEE128_3.4.29
or
OBJECT:12:_ZTSu9__ieee128@@CXXABI_IEEE128_1.3.13
cases we also have the
OBJECT:0:CXXABI_IEEE128_1.3.13
OBJECT:0:GLIBCXX_IEEE128_3.4.29
cases, which have empty version_name and the name is in that case the
symbol version. Those need to be ignored too.
2021-04-20 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* testsuite/util/testsuite_abi.cc (compare_symbols): If any symbol
versions with _IEEE128_ substring are found, set ieee_version_found
to true. Ignore missing symbols with _IEEE128_ in version name if
!ieee_version_found. Use i->first as version_name instead of
i->second.version_name if the latter is empty.
* config/abi/post/powerpc64-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
And here is an update for 32-bit powerpc-linux.
2021-04-17 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* config/abi/post/powerpc-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/powerpc64-linux-gnu/32/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
As we have only one P1 left right now, I think it is the right time
to update abi list files in libstdc++.
Here is an update for x86_64/i?86/s390x/ppc64 linux (aarch64 seems
to be correct already). For ppc64le it is missing the IEEE128 symver
symbols, but those need further work on the abi checking side.
2021-04-17 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* config/abi/post/x86_64-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/x86_64-linux-gnu/32/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/i386-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/i486-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/s390x-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/powerpc64-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
This removes the new symbols added for the new futex-based
std::call_once implementation. These symbols were new on trunk, so not
in any released version. However, they are already present in some
beta distro releases (Fedora Linux 34) and in Fedora Linux rawhide. This
change can be locally reverted by distros that need to keep the symbols
present until affected packages have been rebuilt.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/99341
* config/abi/post/aarch64-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Remove
std::once_flag symbols.
* config/abi/post/ia64-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Likewise.
* config/abi/post/m68k-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Likewise.
* config/abi/post/riscv64-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt:
Likewise.
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver: Likewise.
* src/c++11/mutex.cc [_GLIBCXX_HAVE_LINUX_FUTEX]
(struct __once_flag_compat): Remove.
(_ZNSt9once_flag11_M_activateEv): Remove.
(_ZNSt9once_flag9_M_finishEb): Remove.
We need to add the symbols for to_chars and from_chars for the
long double cases.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/os/bsd/darwin/ppc-extra.ver: Add matching for
to_chars and from_chars for long double.
The following patch updates the Solaris baselines for GCC 11.1. There's
only one caveat: comparing the Solaris 11.3 and 11.4 baselines, I find
+FUNC:_ZSt10from_charsPKcS0_RdSt12chars_format@@GLIBCXX_3.4.29
+FUNC:_ZSt10from_charsPKcS0_ReSt12chars_format@@GLIBCXX_3.4.29
+FUNC:_ZSt10from_charsPKcS0_RfSt12chars_format@@GLIBCXX_3.4.29
i.e.
std::from_chars(char const*, char const*, double&, std::chars_format)
and similarly for long double, float. Those are from from
src/c++17/floating_from_chars.cc and only defined if
_GLIBCXX_HAVE_USELOCALE, i.e. depend on the XPG7 addition. Given that
only Solaris 11.4 supports XPG7, I've taken the 11.3 baselines to avoid
having separate ones for 11.3 and 11.4.
Tested on i386-pc-solaris2.11 and sparc-sun-solaris2.11 (sparc and x86,
32 and 64-bit, 11.3 and 11.4).
2021-02-10 Rainer Orth <ro@CeBiTec.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
libstdc++-v3:
* config/abi/post/i386-solaris/baseline_symbols.txt: Regenerate.
* config/abi/post/i386-solaris/amd64/baseline_symbols.txt:
Likewise.
* config/abi/post/sparc-solaris/baseline_symbols.txt: Likewise.
* config/abi/post/sparc-solaris/sparcv9/baseline_symbols.txt:
Likewise.
This adds overloads of std::to_chars for powerpc64's __ieee128, so that
std::to_chars can be used for long double when -mabi=ieeelongdouble is
in used.
Eventually we'll want to extend these new overloads to work for
__float128 on all targets that support that type. For now, we're only
doing it for powerpc64 when the new long double type is supported in
parallel to the old long double type.
Additionally the existing std::to_chars overloads for long double
are given the right symbol version, resolving PR libstdc++/98389.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/98389
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver (GLIBCXX_3.4.29): Do not match to_chars
symbols for long double arguments mangled as 'g'.
* config/os/gnu-linux/ldbl-extra.ver: Likewise.
* config/os/gnu-linux/ldbl-ieee128-extra.ver: Likewise.
* src/c++17/Makefile.am [GLIBCXX_LDBL_ALT128_COMPAT_TRUE]:
Use -mabi=ibmlongdouble for floating_to_chars.cc.
* src/c++17/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/c++17/floating_to_chars.cc (floating_type_traits_binary128):
New type defining type traits of IEEE binary128 format.
(floating_type_traits<__float128>): Define specialization.
(floating_type_traits<long double>): Define in terms of
floating_type_traits_binary128 when appropriate.
(floating_to_shortest_scientific): Handle __float128.
(sprintf_ld): New function template for printing a long double
or __ieee128 value using sprintf.
(__floating_to_chars_shortest, __floating_to_chars_precision):
Use sprintf_ld.
(to_chars): Define overloads for __float128.
g++.dg/warn/Wstringop-overflow-6.C tests for a bogus overflow warning in
system headers. This testcase was generating a -Wchar-subscript warning
on AIX because ctype_inline.h was subscripting AIX _OBJ_DATA using a char.
The _M_table case cast the subscript to unsigned char, but the _OBJ_DATA
case did not.
The investigation also exposed that AIX has added a thread-safe variant
of access to __lc_type that had not been applied to the libstdc++
implementation.
This patch casts the subscript to unsigned char and adds the THREAD_SAFE
variant. libstdc++ always is compiled with pthreads, but it is good
to make the situation explicit and to document the appropriate usage.
Bootstrapped on powerpc-ibm-aix7.2.3.0.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/os/aix/ctype_inline.h (bool ctype<char>:: is): Cast
_OBJ_DATA subscript to unsigned char. Add _THREAD_SAFE access to
__lc_type.
(const char* ctype<char>:: is): Same.
This implements the floating-point std::to_chars overloads for float,
double and long double. We use the Ryu library to compute the shortest
round-trippable fixed and scientific forms for float, double and long
double. We also use Ryu for performing explicit-precision fixed and
scientific formatting for float and double. For explicit-precision
formatting for long double we fall back to using printf. Hexadecimal
formatting for float, double and long double is implemented from
scratch.
The supported long double binary formats are binary64, binary80 (x86
80-bit extended precision), binary128 and ibm128.
Much of the complexity of the implementation is in computing the exact
output length before handing it off to Ryu (which doesn't do bounds
checking). In some cases it's hard to compute the output length
beforehand, so in these cases we instead compute an upper bound on the
output length and use a sufficiently-sized intermediate buffer only if
necessary.
Another source of complexity is in the general-with-precision formatting
mode, where we need to do zero-trimming of the string returned by Ryu,
and where we also take care to avoid having to format the number through
Ryu a second time when the general formatting mode resolves to fixed
(which we determine by doing a scientific formatting first and
inspecting the scientific exponent). We avoid going through Ryu twice
by instead transforming the scientific form to the corresponding fixed
form via in-place string manipulation.
This implementation is non-conforming in a couple of ways:
1. For the shortest hexadecimal formatting, we currently follow the
Microsoft implementation's decision to be consistent with the
output of printf's '%a' specifier at the expense of sometimes not
printing the shortest representation. For example, the shortest hex
form for the number 1.08p+0 is 2.1p-1, but we output the former
instead of the latter, as does printf.
2. The Ryu routine generic_binary_to_decimal that we use for performing
shortest formatting for large floating point types is implemented
using the __int128 type, but some targets with a large long double
type lack __int128 (e.g. i686), so we can't perform shortest
formatting of long double on such targets through Ryu. As a
temporary stopgap this patch makes the long double to_chars overloads
just dispatch to the double overloads on these targets, which means
we lose precision in the output. (We could potentially fix this by
writing a specialized version of Ryu's generic_binary_to_decimal
routine that uses uint64_t instead of __int128.) [Though I wonder if
there's a better way to work around the lack of __int128 on i686
specifically?]
3. Our shortest formatting for __ibm128 doesn't guarantee the round-trip
property if the difference between the high- and low-order exponent
is large. This is because we treat __ibm128 as if it has a
contiguous 105-bit mantissa by merging the mantissas of the high-
and low-order parts (using code extracted from glibc), so we
potentially lose precision from the low-order part. This seems to be
consistent with how glibc printf formats __ibm128.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver: Add new exports.
* include/std/charconv (to_chars): Declare the floating-point
overloads for float, double and long double.
* src/c++17/Makefile.am (sources): Add floating_to_chars.cc.
* src/c++17/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/c++17/floating_to_chars.cc: New file.
(to_chars): Define for float, double and long double.
* testsuite/20_util/to_chars/long_double.cc: New test.
This applies the same changes to the djgpp and mingw versions of
error_constants.h as r11-6137 did for the generic version.
All of these constants are defined as macros by <errno.h> on these
targets, so we can just test the macro directly instead of checking for
it at configure time.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/os/djgpp/error_constants.h: Test POSIX errno macros
directly, instead of corresponding _GLIBCXX_HAVE_EXXX macros.
* config/os/mingw32-w64/error_constants.h: Likewise.
* config/os/mingw32/error_constants.h: Likewise.
This adds support for the new __ieee128 long double format on
powerpc64le targets.
Most of the complexity comes from wanting a single libstdc++.so library
that contains the symbols needed by code compiled with both
-mabi=ibmlongdouble and -mabi=ieeelongdouble (and not forgetting
-mlong-double-64 as well!)
In a few places this just requires an extra overload, for example
std::from_chars has to be overloaded for both forms of long double.
That can be done in a single translation unit that defines overloads
for 'long double' and also '__ieee128', so that user code including
<charconv> will be able to link to a definition for either type of long
double. Those are the easy cases.
The difficult parts are (as for the std::string ABI transition) the I/O
and locale facets. In order to be able to write either form of long
double to an ostream such as std::cout we need the locale to contain a
std::num_put facet that can handle both forms. The same approach is
taken as was already done for supporting 64-bit long double and 128-bit
long double: adding extra overloads of do_put to the facet class. On
targets where the new long double code is enabled, the facets that are
registered in the locale at program startup have additional overloads so
that they can work with any long double type. Where this fails to work
is if user code installs its own facet, which will probably not have the
additional overloads and so will only be able to output one or the other
type. In practice the number of users expecting to be able to use their
own locale facets in code using a mix of -mabi=ibmlongdouble and
-mabi=ieeelongdouble is probably close to zero.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* config.h.in: Regenerate.
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver: Make patterns less greedy.
* config/os/gnu-linux/ldbl-ieee128-extra.ver: New file with patterns
for IEEE128 long double symbols.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Enable alternative 128-bit long double format on
powerpc64*-*-linux*.
* doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* fragment.am: Regenerate.
* include/Makefile.am: Set _GLIBCXX_LONG_DOUBLE_ALT128_COMPAT.
* include/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* include/bits/c++config: Define inline namespace for new long
double symbols. Don't define _GLIBCXX_USE_FLOAT128 when it's the
same type as long double.
* include/bits/locale_classes.h [_GLIBCXX_LONG_DOUBLE_ALT128_COMPAT]
(locale::_Impl::_M_init_extra_ldbl128): Declare new member function.
* include/bits/locale_facets.h (_GLIBCXX_NUM_FACETS): Simplify by
only counting narrow character facets.
(_GLIBCXX_NUM_CXX11_FACETS): Likewise.
(_GLIBCXX_NUM_LBDL_ALT128_FACETS): New.
[_GLIBCXX_LONG_DOUBLE_ALT128_COMPAT] (num_get::__do_get): Define
vtable placeholder for __ibm128 long double type.
[_GLIBCXX_LONG_DOUBLE_ALT128_COMPAT && __LONG_DOUBLE_IEEE128__]
(num_get::__do_get): Declare vtable placeholder for __ibm128 long
double type.
[_GLIBCXX_LONG_DOUBLE_ALT128_COMPAT && __LONG_DOUBLE_IEEE128__]
(num_put::__do_put): Likewise.
* include/bits/locale_facets.tcc
[_GLIBCXX_LONG_DOUBLE_ALT128_COMPAT && __LONG_DOUBLE_IEEE128__]
(num_get::__do_get, num_put::__do_put): Define.
* include/bits/locale_facets_nonio.h
[_GLIBCXX_LONG_DOUBLE_ALT128_COMPAT && __LONG_DOUBLE_IEEE128__]
(money_get::__do_get): Declare vtable placeholder for __ibm128 long
double type.
[_GLIBCXX_LONG_DOUBLE_ALT128_COMPAT && __LONG_DOUBLE_IEEE128__]
(money_put::__do_put): Likewise.
* include/bits/locale_facets_nonio.tcc
[_GLIBCXX_LONG_DOUBLE_ALT128_COMPAT && __LONG_DOUBLE_IEEE128__]
(money_get::__do_get, money_put::__do_put): Define.
* include/ext/numeric_traits.h [_GLIBCXX_LONG_DOUBLE_ALT128_COMPAT]
(__numeric_traits<__ibm128>, __numeric_traits<__ieee128>): Define.
* libsupc++/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* po/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* python/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/Makefile.am: Add compatibility-ldbl-alt128.cc and
compatibility-ldbl-alt128-cxx11.cc sources and recipes for objects.
* src/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/c++11/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/c++11/compatibility-ldbl-alt128-cxx11.cc: New file defining
symbols using the old 128-bit long double format, for the cxx11 ABI.
* src/c++11/compatibility-ldbl-alt128.cc: Likewise, for the
gcc4-compatible ABI.
* src/c++11/compatibility-ldbl-facets-aliases.h: New header for long
double compat aliases.
* src/c++11/cow-locale_init.cc: Add comment.
* src/c++11/cxx11-locale-inst.cc: Define C and C_is_char
unconditionally.
* src/c++11/cxx11-wlocale-inst.cc: Add sanity check. Include
locale-inst.cc directly, not via cxx11-locale-inst.cc.
* src/c++11/locale-inst-monetary.h: New header for monetary
category instantiations.
* src/c++11/locale-inst-numeric.h: New header for numeric category
instantiations.
* src/c++11/locale-inst.cc: Include new headers for monetary,
numeric, and long double definitions.
* src/c++11/wlocale-inst.cc: Remove long double compat aliases that
are defined in new header now.
* src/c++17/Makefile.am: Use -mabi=ibmlongdouble for
floating_from_chars.cc.
* src/c++17/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/c++17/floating_from_chars.cc (from_chars_impl): Add
if-constexpr branch for __ieee128.
(from_chars): Overload for __ieee128.
* src/c++20/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/c++98/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/c++98/locale_init.cc (num_facets): Adjust calculation.
(locale::_Impl::_Impl(size_t)): Call _M_init_extra_ldbl128.
* src/c++98/localename.cc (num_facets): Adjust calculation.
(locale::_Impl::_Impl(const char*, size_t)): Call
_M_init_extra_ldbl128.
* src/filesystem/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* testsuite/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* testsuite/util/testsuite_abi.cc: Add new symbol versions.
Allow new symbols to be added to GLIBCXX_IEEE128_3.4.29 and
CXXABI_IEEE128_1.3.13 too.
* testsuite/26_numerics/complex/abi_tag.cc: Add u9__ieee128 to
regex matching expected symbols.
This fixes a bug caused by a mismatch between the macros defined by
<errno.h> when GCC is built and the macros defined by <errno.h> when
users include <system_error>. If the user code is compiled with
_XOPEN_SOURCE defined to 500 or 600, Darwin suppresses the
ENOTRECOVERABLE and EOWNERDEAD macros, which are not defined by SUSv3
(aka POSIX.1-2001).
Since POSIX requires the errno macros to be macros (and not variables or
enumerators) we can just test for them directly using the preprocessor.
That means that <system_error> will match what is actuallydefined when
it's included, not what was defined when GCC was built. With that change
there is no need for the GLIBCXX_CHECK_SYSTEM_ERROR configure checks and
they can be removed.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/93151
* acinclude.m4 (GLIBCXX_CHECK_SYSTEM_ERROR): Remove.
* configure.ac: Regenerate.
* config/os/generic/error_constants.h: Test POSIX errno macros
directly, instead of corresponding _GLIBCXX_HAVE_EXXX macros.
* testsuite/19_diagnostics/headers/system_error/errc_std_c++0x.cc:
Likewise.
* testsuite/19_diagnostics/headers/system_error/93151.cc: New
test.
The current libstdc++ basic_file_stdio.cc code assumes a POSIX API
underneath the stdio implementation provided by the host libc. This
means that the host must provide a fairly broad POSIX file API,
including read, write, open, close, lseek and ioctl.
This patch changes basic_file_stdio.cc to only use basic ANSI-C stdio
functions, allowing it to be used with libc implementations like
picolibc which may not have a POSIX operating system underneath.
This is enabled by a new --enable-cstdio=stdio_pure configure option.
Aided-by: Jonathan Wakely <jwakely@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* acinclude.m4 (GLIBCXX_ENABLE_CSTDIO): Allow "stdio_pure"
option and define _GLIBCXX_USE_PURE_STDIO when it is used. Also
add "stdio_posix" option as an alias for "stdio".
* config/io/basic_file_stdio.cc [_GLIBCXX_USE_PURE_STDIO]: Only
use defined stdio entry points for all I/O operations, without
direct calls to underlying POSIX functions.
* config.h.in: Regenerate.
* configure: Regenerate.
This should have been done before the GCC 10.1 release.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/abi/post/powerpc-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt:
Update.
* config/abi/post/powerpc64-linux-gnu/32/baseline_symbols.txt:
Update.
Since glibc 2.27 the pthread_self symbol has been defined in libc rather
than libpthread. Because we only call pthread_self through a weak alias
it's possible for statically linked executables to end up without a
definition of pthread_self. This crashes when trying to call an
undefined weak symbol.
We can use the __GLIBC_PREREQ version check to detect the version of
glibc where pthread_self is no longer in libpthread, and call it
directly rather than through the weak reference.
It would be better to check for pthread_self in libc during configure
instead of hardcoding the __GLIBC_PREREQ check. That would be
complicated by the fact that prior to glibc 2.27 libc.a didn't have the
pthread_self symbol, but libc.so.6 did. The configure checks would need
to try to link both statically and dynamically, and the result would
depend on whether the static libc.a happens to be installed during
configure (which could vary between different systems using the same
version of glibc). Doing it properly is left for a future date, as that
will be needed anyway after glibc moves all pthread symbols from
libpthread to libc. When that happens we should revisit the whole
approach of using weak symbols for pthread symbols.
For the purposes of std::this_thread::get_id() we call
pthread_self() directly when using glibc 2.27 or later. Otherwise, if
__gthread_active_p() is true then we know the libpthread symbol is
available so we call that. Otherwise, we are single-threaded and just
use ((__gthread_t)1) as the thread ID.
An undesirable consequence of this change is that code compiled prior to
the change might inline the old definition of this_thread::get_id()
which always returns (__gthread_t)1 in a program that isn't linked to
libpthread. Code compiled after the change will use pthread_self() and
so get a real TID. That could result in the main thread having different
thread::id values in different translation units. This seems acceptable,
as there are not expected to be many uses of thread::id in programs
that aren't linked to libpthread.
An earlier version of this patch also changed __gthread_self() to use
__GLIBC_PREREQ(2, 27) and only use the weak symbol for older glibc. Tha
might still make sense to do, but isn't needed by libstdc++ now.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/95989
* config/os/gnu-linux/os_defines.h (_GLIBCXX_NATIVE_THREAD_ID):
Define new macro to get reliable thread ID.
* include/bits/std_thread.h: (this_thread::get_id): Use new
macro if it's defined.
* testsuite/30_threads/jthread/95989.cc: New test.
* testsuite/30_threads/this_thread/95989.cc: New test.
For the --enable-clocale=generic configuration, the current code can
fail with a bad_alloc exception. This patch uses the nothrow version of
operator new and reports allocation failures by setting failbit in the
iostate variable.
* config/locale/generic/c_locale.cc (__set_C_locale()): New function
to set the "C" locale and return the name of the previous locale.
(__convert_to_v<float>, __convert_to_v<double>)
(__convert_to_v<long double>): Use __set_C_locale and set failbit on
error.
The change in r11-4748-50b840ac5e1d6534e345c3fee9a97ae45ced6bc7 causes
a build error on Solaris, due to the new explicit instantiation matching
patterns for two different symbol versions.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver (GLIBCXX_3.4.21): Tighten up patterns
for basic_stringbuf that refer to __xfer_bufptrs.
The current implementation of std::call_once uses pthread_once, which
only meets the C++ requirements when compiled with support for
exceptions. For most glibc targets and all non-glibc targets,
pthread_once does not work correctly if the init_routine exits via an
exception. The pthread_once_t object is left in the "active" state, and
any later attempts to run another init_routine will block forever.
This change makes std::call_once work correctly for Linux targets, by
replacing the use of pthread_once with a futex, based on the code from
__cxa_guard_acquire. For both glibc and musl, the Linux implementation
of pthread_once is already based on futexes, and pthread_once_t is just
a typedef for int, so this change does not alter the layout of
std::once_flag. By choosing the values for the int appropriately, the
new code is even ABI compatible. Code that calls the old implementation
of std::call_once will use pthread_once to manipulate the int, while new
code will use the new std::once_flag members to manipulate it, but they
should interoperate correctly. In both cases, the int is initially zero,
has the lowest bit set when there is an active execution, and equals 2
after a successful returning execution. The difference with the new code
is that exceptional exceptions are correctly detected and the int is
reset to zero.
The __cxa_guard_acquire code (and musl's pthread_once) use an additional
state to say there are other threads waiting. This allows the futex wake
syscall to be skipped if there is no contention. Glibc doesn't use a
waiter bit, so we have to unconditionally issue the wake in order to be
compatible with code calling the old std::call_once that uses Glibc's
pthread_once. If we know that we're using musl (and musl's pthread_once
doesn't change) it would be possible to set a waiting state and check
for it in std::once_flag::_M_finish(bool), but this patch doesn't do
that.
This doesn't fix the bug for non-linux targets. A similar approach could
be used for targets where we know the definition of pthread_once_t is a
mutex and an integer. We could make once_flag._M_activate() use
pthread_mutex_lock on the mutex member within the pthread_once_t, and
then only set the integer if the execution finishes, and then unlock the
mutex. That would require careful study of each target's pthread_once
implementation and that work is left for a later date.
This also fixes PR 55394 because pthread_once is no longer needed, and
PR 84323 because the fast path is now just an atomic load.
As a consequence of the new implementation that doesn't use
pthread_once, we can also make std::call_once work for targets with no
gthreads support. The code for the single-threaded implementation
follows the same methods as on Linux, but with no need for atomics or
futexes.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/55394
PR libstdc++/66146
PR libstdc++/84323
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver (GLIBCXX_3.4.29): Add new symbols.
* include/std/mutex [!_GLIBCXX_HAS_GTHREADS] (once_flag): Define
even when gthreads is not supported.
(once_flag::_M_once) [_GLIBCXX_HAVE_LINUX_FUTEX]: Change type
from __gthread_once_t to int.
(once_flag::_M_passive(), once_flag::_M_activate())
(once_flag::_M_finish(bool), once_flag::_Active_execution):
Define new members for futex and non-threaded implementation.
[_GLIBCXX_HAS_GTHREADS] (once_flag::_Prepare_execution): New
RAII helper type.
(call_once): Use new members of once_flag.
* src/c++11/mutex.cc (std::once_flag::_M_activate): Define.
(std::once_flag::_M_finish): Define.
* testsuite/30_threads/call_once/39909.cc: Do not require
gthreads.
* testsuite/30_threads/call_once/49668.cc: Likewise.
* testsuite/30_threads/call_once/60497.cc: Likewise.
* testsuite/30_threads/call_once/call_once1.cc: Likewise.
* testsuite/30_threads/call_once/dr2442.cc: Likewise.
* testsuite/30_threads/call_once/once_flag.cc: Add test for
constexpr constructor.
* testsuite/30_threads/call_once/66146.cc: New test.
* testsuite/30_threads/call_once/constexpr.cc: Removed.
* testsuite/30_threads/once_flag/cons/constexpr.cc: Removed.
This should fix a bootstrap error on Solaris, due to some of the new
symbols matching old patterns as well as new ones.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver (GLIBCXX_3.4.21): Tighten patterns
for old <sstream> symbols some more.
This replaces uses of BUFSIZ with a new _GLIBCXX_BUFSIZ macro that can
be overridden in target-specific config headers.
That allows the mingw and mingw-w64 targets to override it, because
BUFSIZ is apparently defined to 512, resulting in poor performance. The
MSVCRT stdio apparently uses 4096, so we use that too.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/94268
* config/os/mingw32-w64/os_defines.h (_GLIBCXX_BUFSIZ):
Define.
* config/os/mingw32/os_defines.h (_GLIBCXX_BUFSIZ):
Define.
* include/bits/fstream.tcc: Use _GLIBCXX_BUFSIZ instead
of BUFSIZ.
* include/ext/stdio_filebuf.h: Likewise.
* include/std/fstream (_GLIBCXX_BUFSIZ): Define.
Make libstdc++fs.a a 32/64 bit FAT library.
It is too complicated for the FAT library Makefile fragment to determine if
--enable-libstdcxx-filesystem-ts has been enabled. This patch checks the
existence of libstdc++fs.a at build time and adds the complementary object
file if it was built.
libstdc++-v3/Changelog:
2020-10-11 Clement Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
* config/os/aix/t-aix: Add complementary mode object file to
libstdc++fs.a
This inlines most members of std::exception_ptr so that all operations
on a null exception_ptr can be optimized away. This benefits code like
std::future and coroutines where an exception_ptr object is present to
cope with exceptional cases, but is usually not used and remains null.
Since those functions were previously non-inline we have to continue to
export them from the library, for objects that were compiled against the
old headers and expect to find definitions in the library.
In order to inline the copy constructor and destructor we need to export
the _M_addref() and _M_release() members that increment/decrement the
reference count when copying/destroying a non-null exception_ptr. The
copy ctor and dtor check for null and don't call _M_addref and
_M_release unless they need to. The checks for null pointers in
_M_addref and _M_release are still needed because old code might call
them without checking for null first. But we can use __builtin_expect to
predict that they are usually called for the non-null case.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/90295
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver (CXXABI_1.3.13): New symbol version.
(exception_ptr::_M_addref(), exception_ptr::_M_release()):
Export symbols.
* libsupc++/eh_ptr.cc (exception_ptr::exception_ptr()):
Remove out-of-line definition.
(exception_ptr::exception_ptr(const exception_ptr&)):
Likewise.
(exception_ptr::~exception_ptr()): Likewise.
(exception_ptr::operator=(const exception_ptr&)):
Likewise.
(exception_ptr::swap(exception_ptr&)): Likewise.
(exception_ptr::_M_addref()): Add branch prediction.
* libsupc++/exception_ptr.h (exception_ptr::operator bool):
Add noexcept.
[!_GLIBCXX_EH_PTR_COMPAT] (operator==, operator!=): Define
inline as hidden friends. Remove declarations at namespace
scope.
(exception_ptr::exception_ptr()): Define inline.
(exception_ptr::exception_ptr(const exception_ptr&)):
Likewise.
(exception_ptr::~exception_ptr()): Likewise.
(exception_ptr::operator=(const exception_ptr&)):
Likewise.
(exception_ptr::swap(exception_ptr&)): Likewise.
* testsuite/util/testsuite_abi.cc: Add CXXABI_1.3.13.
* testsuite/18_support/exception_ptr/90295.cc: New test.
std::allocator and std::pmr::polymorphic_allocator should throw
std::bad_array_new_length from their allocate member functions if the
number of bytes required cannot be represented in std::size_t.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver: Add new symbol.
* include/bits/functexcept.h (__throw_bad_array_new_length):
Declare new function.
* include/ext/malloc_allocator.h (malloc_allocator::allocate):
Throw bad_array_new_length for impossible sizes (LWG 3190).
* include/ext/new_allocator.h (new_allocator::allocate):
Likewise.
* include/std/memory_resource (polymorphic_allocator::allocate)
(polymorphic_allocator::allocate_object): Use new function,
__throw_bad_array_new_length.
* src/c++11/functexcept.cc (__throw_bad_array_new_length):
Define.
* testsuite/20_util/allocator/lwg3190.cc: New test.
The default definitions of _GLIBCXX_GUARD_TEST_AND_ACQUIRE and
_GLIBCXX_GUARD_SET_AND_RELEASE in libsupc++/guard.cc only work for the
generic (IA64) ABI, because they test/set the first byte of the guard
variable. For EABI we need to use the least significant bit, which means
using the first byte is wrong for big endian targets.
This has been wrong since r224411, but previously it only caused poor
performance. The _GLIBCXX_GUARD_TEST_AND_ACQUIRE at the very start of
__cxa_guard_acquire would always return false even if the initialization
was actually complete. Before my r11-3484 change the atomic compare
exchange would have loaded the correct value, and then returned 0 as
expected when the initialization is complete. After my change, in the
single-threaded case there is no redundant check for init being
complete, because I foolishly assumed that the check at the start of the
function actually worked.
The default definition of _GLIBCXX_GUARD_SET_AND_RELEASE is also wrong
for big endian EABI, but appears to work because it sets the wrong bit
but then the buggy TEST_AND_ACQUIRE tests that wrong bit as well. Also,
the buggy SET_AND_RELEASE macro is only used for targets with threads
enabled but no futex syscalls.
This should fix the regressions introduced by my patch, by defining
custom versions of the TEST_AND_ACQUIRE and SET_AND_RELEASE macros that
are correct for EABI.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/cpu/arm/cxxabi_tweaks.h (_GLIBCXX_GUARD_TEST_AND_ACQUIRE):
(_GLIBCXX_GUARD_SET_AND_RELEASE): Define for EABI.
AIX FAT libraries should be built with the version of AR chosen by configure.
The GNU Make $(AR) variable includes the AIX -X32_64 option needed
by the default Makefile rules to accept both 32 bit and 64 bit object files.
The -X32_64 option conflicts with ar archiving objects of the same name
used to build FAT libraries.
This patch changes the Makefile fragments for AIX FAT libraries to use $(AR),
but strips the -X32_64 option from the Make variable.
libgcc/ChangeLog:
2020-09-27 Clement Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
* config/rs6000/t-slibgcc-aix: Use $(AR) without -X32_64.
libatomic/ChangeLog:
2020-09-27 Clement Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
* config/t-aix: Use $(AR) without -X32_64.
libgomp/ChangeLog:
2020-09-27 Clement Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
* config/t-aix: Use $(AR) without -X32_64.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
2020-09-27 Clement Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
* config/os/aix/t-aix: Use $(AR) without -X32_64.
libgfortran/ChangeLog:
2020-09-27 Clement Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
* config/t-aix: Use $(AR) without -X32_64.
The user-visible effect of this change is for std::future::wait_until to
use CLOCK_MONOTONIC when passed a timeout of std::chrono::steady_clock
type. This makes it immune to any changes made to the system clock
CLOCK_REALTIME.
Add an overload of __atomic_futex_unsigned::_M_load_and_text_until_impl
that accepts a std::chrono::steady_clock, and correctly passes this
through to __atomic_futex_unsigned_base::_M_futex_wait_until_steady
which uses CLOCK_MONOTONIC for the timeout within the futex system call.
These functions are mostly just copies of the std::chrono::system_clock
versions with small tweaks.
Prior to this commit, a std::chrono::steady timeout would be converted
via std::chrono::system_clock which risks reducing or increasing the
timeout if someone changes CLOCK_REALTIME whilst the wait is happening.
(The commit immediately prior to this one increases the window of
opportunity for that from a short period during the calculation of a
relative timeout, to the entire duration of the wait.)
FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET was added in kernel v2.6.25. If futex reports ENOSYS
to indicate that this operation is not supported then the code falls
back to using clock_gettime(2) to calculate a relative time to wait for.
I believe that I've added this functionality in a way that it doesn't
break ABI compatibility, but that has made it more verbose and less type
safe. I believe that it would be better to maintain the timeout as an
instance of the correct clock type all the way down to a single
_M_futex_wait_until function with an overload for each clock. The
current scheme of separating out the seconds and nanoseconds early risks
accidentally calling the wait function for the wrong clock.
Unfortunately, doing this would break code that compiled against the old
header.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver: Update for addition of
__atomic_futex_unsigned_base::_M_futex_wait_until_steady.
* include/bits/atomic_futex.h (__atomic_futex_unsigned_base):
Add comments to clarify that _M_futex_wait_until and
_M_load_and_test_until use CLOCK_REALTIME.
(__atomic_futex_unsigned_base::_M_futex_wait_until_steady)
(__atomic_futex_unsigned_base::_M_load_and_text_until_steady):
New member functions that use CLOCK_MONOTONIC.
(__atomic_futex_unsigned_base::_M_load_and_test_until_impl)
(__atomic_futex_unsigned_base::_M_load_when_equal_until): Add
overloads that accept a steady_clock time_point and use the
new member functions.
* src/c++11/futex.cc: Include headers required for
clock_gettime.
(futex_clock_monotonic_flag): New constant to tell futex to
use CLOCK_MONOTONIC to match existing futex_clock_realtime_flag.
(futex_clock_monotonic_unavailable): New global to store the
result of trying to use CLOCK_MONOTONIC.
(__atomic_futex_unsigned_base::_M_futex_wait_until_steady): Add
new variant of _M_futex_wait_until that uses CLOCK_MONOTONIC to
support waiting using steady_clock.
When making the patterns less greedy I forgot to use [jmy] for unsigned
integer parameters.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver: Fix wildcards for wstring symbols.
Remove ability for reserve(n) to reduce a string's capacity. Add a new
reserve() overload that makes a shrink-to-fit request, and make
shrink_to_fit() use that.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
2020-07-30 Andrew Luo <andrewluotechnologies@outlook.com>
Jonathan Wakely <jwakely@redhat.com>
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver (GLIBCXX_3.4): Use less greedy
patterns for basic_string members.
(GLIBCXX_3.4.29): Export new basic_string::reserve symbols.
* doc/xml/manual/status_cxx2020.xml: Update P0966 status.
* include/bits/basic_string.h (shrink_to_fit()): Call reserve().
(reserve(size_type)): Remove default argument.
(reserve()): Declare new overload.
[!_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI] (shrink_to_fit, reserve): Likewise.
* include/bits/basic_string.tcc (reserve(size_type)): Remove
support for shrinking capacity.
(reserve()): Perform shrink-to-fit operation.
[!_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI] (reserve): Likewise.
* testsuite/21_strings/basic_string/capacity/1.cc: Adjust to
reflect new behavior.
* testsuite/21_strings/basic_string/capacity/char/1.cc:
Likewise.
* testsuite/21_strings/basic_string/capacity/char/18654.cc:
Likewise.
* testsuite/21_strings/basic_string/capacity/char/2.cc:
Likewise.
* testsuite/21_strings/basic_string/capacity/wchar_t/1.cc:
Likewise.
* testsuite/21_strings/basic_string/capacity/wchar_t/18654.cc:
Likewise.
* testsuite/21_strings/basic_string/capacity/wchar_t/2.cc:
Likewise.
P0487R1 resolved LWG 2499 for C++20 by removing the operator>> overloads
that have high risk of buffer overflows. They were replaced by
equivalents that only accept a reference to an array, and so can
guarantee not to write past the end of the array.
In order to support both the old and new functionality, this patch
introduces a new overloaded __istream_extract function which takes a
maximum length. The new operator>> overloads use the array size as the
maximum length. The old overloads now use __builtin_object_size to
determine the available buffer size if available (which requires -O2) or
use numeric_limits<streamsize>::max()/sizeof(char_type) otherwise. This
is a change in behaviour, as the old overloads previously always used
numeric_limits<streamsize>::max(), without considering sizeof(char_type)
and without attempting to prevent overflows.
Because they now do little more than call __istream_extract, the old
operator>> overloads are very small inline functions. This means there
is no advantage to explicitly instantiating them in the library (in fact
that would prevent the __builtin_object_size checks from ever working).
As a result, the explicit instantiation declarations can be removed from
the header. The explicit instantiation definitions are still needed, for
backwards compatibility with existing code that expects to link to the
definitions in the library.
While working on this change I noticed that src/c++11/istream-inst.cc
has the following explicit instantiation definition:
template istream& operator>>(istream&, char*);
This had no effect (and so should not have been present in that file),
because there was an explicit specialization declared in <istream> and
defined in src/++98/istream.cc. However, this change removes the
explicit specialization, and now the explicit instantiation definition
is necessary to ensure the symbol gets defined in the library.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver (GLIBCXX_3.4.29): Export new symbols.
* include/bits/istream.tcc (__istream_extract): New function
template implementing both of operator>>(istream&, char*) and
operator>>(istream&, char(&)[N]). Add explicit instantiation
declaration for it. Remove explicit instantiation declarations
for old function templates.
* include/std/istream (__istream_extract): Declare.
(operator>>(basic_istream<C,T>&, C*)): Define inline and simply
call __istream_extract.
(operator>>(basic_istream<char,T>&, signed char*)): Likewise.
(operator>>(basic_istream<char,T>&, unsigned char*)): Likewise.
(operator>>(basic_istream<C,T>&, C(7)[N])): Define for LWG 2499.
(operator>>(basic_istream<char,T>&, signed char(&)[N])):
Likewise.
(operator>>(basic_istream<char,T>&, unsigned char(&)[N])):
Likewise.
* include/std/streambuf (basic_streambuf): Declare char overload
of __istream_extract as a friend.
* src/c++11/istream-inst.cc: Add explicit instantiation
definition for wchar_t overload of __istream_extract. Remove
explicit instantiation definitions of old operator>> overloads
for versioned-namespace build.
* src/c++98/istream.cc (operator>>(istream&, char*)): Replace
with __istream_extract(istream&, char*, streamsize).
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/char/3.cc:
Do not use variable-length array.
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/char/4.cc:
Do not run test for C++20.
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/char/9555-ic.cc:
Do not test writing to pointers for C++20.
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/char/9826.cc:
Use array instead of pointer.
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/wchar_t/3.cc:
Do not use variable-length array.
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/wchar_t/4.cc:
Do not run test for C++20.
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/wchar_t/9555-ic.cc:
Do not test writing to pointers for C++20.
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/char/lwg2499.cc:
New test.
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/char/lwg2499_neg.cc:
New test.
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/char/overflow.cc:
New test.
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/wchar_t/lwg2499.cc:
New test.
* testsuite/27_io/basic_istream/extractors_character/wchar_t/lwg2499_neg.cc:
New test.
This adds the missing std::from_chars overloads for floating-point
types, as required for C++17 conformance.
The implementation is a hack and not intended to be used in the long
term. Rather than parsing the string directly, this determines the
initial portion of the string that matches the pattern determined by the
chars_format parameter, then creates a NTBS to be parsed by strtod (or
strtold or strtof).
Because creating a NTBS requires allocating memory, but std::from_chars
is noexcept, we need to be careful to minimise allocation. Even after
being careful, allocation failure is still possible, and so a
non-conforming std::no_more_memory error code might be returned.
Because strtod et al depend on the current locale, but std::from_chars
does not, we change the current thread's locale to "C" using newlocale
and uselocale before calling strtod, and restore it afterwards.
Because strtod doesn't have the equivalent of a std::chars_format
parameter, it has to examine the input to determine the format in use,
even though the std::from_chars code has already parsed it once (or
twice for large input strings!)
By replacing the use of strtod we could avoid allocation, avoid changing
locale, and use optimised code paths specific to each std::chars_format
case. We would also get more portable behaviour, rather than depending
on the presence of uselocale, and on any bugs or quirks of the target
libc's strtod. Replacing strtod is a project for a later date.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* acinclude.m4 (libtool_VERSION): Bump version.
* config.h.in: Regenerate.
* config/abi/pre/gnu.ver: Add GLIBCXX_3.4.29 version and new
exports.
* config/os/gnu-linux/ldbl-extra.ver: Add _GLIBCXX_LDBL_3.4.29
version and new export.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.ac: Check for <xlocale.h> and uselocale.
* crossconfig.m4: Add macro or checks for uselocale.
* include/std/charconv (from_chars): Declare overloads for
float, double, and long double.
* src/c++17/Makefile.am: Add new file.
* src/c++17/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* src/c++17/floating_from_chars.cc: New file.
(from_chars): Define for float, double, and long double.
* testsuite/20_util/from_chars/1_c++20_neg.cc: Prune extra
diagnostics caused by new overloads.
* testsuite/20_util/from_chars/1_neg.cc: Likewise.
* testsuite/20_util/from_chars/2.cc: Check leading '+'.
* testsuite/20_util/from_chars/4.cc: New test.
* testsuite/20_util/from_chars/5.cc: New test.
* testsuite/util/testsuite_abi.cc: Add new symbol versions.
The FAT libraries config fragments need to know which library is native
and which is a multilib to choose the correct multilib from which to
append the additional object file or shared object file. Testing the
top-level archive is fragile because it will fail if rebuilding. This
patch tests the compiler preprocessing macros for the 64 bit AIX specific
__64BIT__ to determine the native mode of the compiler in MULTILIBTOP.
2020-07-14 David Edelsohn <dje.gcc@gmail.com>
libatomic/ChangeLog
* config/t-aix: Set BITS from compiler cpp macro.
libgcc/ChangeLog
* config/rs6000/t-slibgcc-aix: Set BITS from compiler cpp macro.
libgfortran/ChangeLog
* config/t-aix: Set BITS from compiler cpp macro.
libgomp/ChangeLog
* config/t-aix: Set BITS from compiler cpp macro.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog
* config/os/aix/t-aix: Set BITS from compiler cpp macro.
This patch adds the ability to configure GCC on AIX to build as a
64 bit application and to build target libraries "FAT" libraries in both
32 bit and 64 bit mode.
The patch adds makefile fragment hooks to target libraries that allows
them to include target-specific rules. The target specific rules for
AIX place both 32 bit and 64 bit objects and shared objects
in archives at the top-level, not multilib subdirectories. The
multilibs are built in subdirectories, but must be combined during the
last parts of the target library build process. Because of the way
that GCC bootstrap works, the libraries must be combined during the
multiple stages of GCC bootstrap, not solely when installed in the
final destination, so the libraries are correct at the end of
each target library build stage, not solely an install recipe.
gcc/ChangeLog
2020-06-21 David Edelsohn <dje.gcc@gmail.com>
* config.gcc: Use t-aix64, biarch64 and default64 for cpu_is_64bit.
* config/rs6000/aix72.h (ASM_SPEC): Remove aix64 option.
(ASM_SPEC32): New.
(ASM_SPEC64): New.
(ASM_CPU_SPEC): Remove vsx and altivec options.
(CPP_SPEC_COMMON): Rename from CPP_SPEC.
(CPP_SPEC32): New.
(CPP_SPEC64): New.
(CPLUSPLUS_CPP_SPEC): Rename to CPLUSPLUS_CPP_SPEC_COMMON..
(TARGET_DEFAULT): Only define if not BIARCH.
(LIB_SPEC_COMMON): Rename from LIB_SPEC.
(LIB_SPEC32): New.
(LIB_SPEC64): New.
(LINK_SPEC_COMMON): Rename from LINK_SPEC.
(LINK_SPEC32): New.
(LINK_SPEC64): New.
(STARTFILE_SPEC): Add 64 bit version of crtcxa and crtdbase.
(ASM_SPEC): Define 32 and 64 bit alternatives using DEFAULT_ARCH64_P.
(CPP_SPEC): Same.
(CPLUSPLUS_CPP_SPEC): Same.
(LIB_SPEC): Same.
(LINK_SPEC): Same.
(SUBTARGET_EXTRA_SPECS): Add new 32/64 specs.
* config/rs6000/defaultaix64.h: New file.
* config/rs6000/t-aix64: New file.
libgcc/ChangeLog
2020-06-21 David Edelsohn <dje.gcc@gmail.com>
* config.host (extra_parts): Add crtcxa_64 and crtdbase_64.
* config/rs6000/t-aix-cxa: Explicitly compile 32 bit with -maix32
and 64 bit with -maix64.
* config/rs6000/t-slibgcc-aix: Remove extra @multilib_dir@ level.
Build and install AIX-style FAT libraries.
libgomp/ChangeLog
2020-06-21 David Edelsohn <dje.gcc@gmail.com>
* Makefile.am (tmake_file): Build and install AIX-style FAT libraries.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate
* configure.ac (tmake_file): Substitute.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.tgt (powerpc-ibm-aix*): Define tmake_file.
* config/t-aix: New file.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog
2020-06-21 David Edelsohn <dje.gcc@gmail.com>
* Makefile.am (tmake_file): Build and install AIX-style FAT libraries.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure.ac (tmake_file): Substitute.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.host (aix*): Define tmake_file.
* config/os/aix/t-aix: New file.
libatomic/ChangeLog
2020-06-21 David Edelsohn <dje.gcc@gmail.com>
* Makefile.am (tmake_file): Build and install AIX-style FAT libraries.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure.ac (tmake_file): Substitute.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.tgt (powerpc-ibm-aix*): Define tmake_file.
* config/t-aix: New file.
libgfortran/ChangeLog
2020-06-21 David Edelsohn <dje.gcc@gmail.com>
* Makefile.am (tmake_file): Build and install AIX-style FAT libraries.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
* configure.ac (tmake_file): Substitute.
* configure: Regenerate.
* configure.host: Add system configury stanza. Define tmake_file.
* config/t-aix: New file.
I just remembered that the libstdc++ ABI baselines haven't been updated
for the GCC 10 release yet. This patch corrects this for Solaris/SPARC
and x86.
Created on master with make new-abi-baseline on i386-pc-solaris2.11 and
sparc-sun-solaris2.11, bootstrapped on gcc-10 branch without regressions.
* config/abi/post/i386-solaris/baseline_symbols.txt: Regenerate.
* config/abi/post/i386-solaris/amd64/baseline_symbols.txt:
Likewise.
* config/abi/post/sparc-solaris/baseline_symbols.txt: Likewise.
* config/abi/post/sparc-solaris/sparcv9/baseline_symbols.txt:
Likewise.
On Wed, May 06, 2020 at 10:49:13AM +0200, Rainer Orth wrote:
> I just remembered that the libstdc++ ABI baselines haven't been updated
> for the GCC 10 release yet. This patch corrects this for Solaris/SPARC
> and x86.
Oops, here are the updates from Fedora packages built during the weekend.
2020-05-06 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* config/abi/post/x86_64-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/x86_64-linux-gnu/32/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/i386-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/i486-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/aarch64-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/s390x-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.
* config/abi/post/powerpc64-linux-gnu/baseline_symbols.txt: Update.