- May 23, 2019
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Sébastien Marie authored
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- May 22, 2019
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gnzlbg authored
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gnzlbg authored
The second argument of `gettimeofday` was a `*mut c_void` on all targets, but that type is incorrect in the following targets, where it should be a `*mut timezone` instead: On these other targets it appears that the signature of gettimeofday was incorrect (it takes a time-zone pointer instead of a void pointer): linux+gnu: http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/gettimeofday.2.html freebsd: https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=gettimeofday&apropos=0&sektion=2&manpath=FreeBSD+11.2-stable&arch=default&format=html openbsd: https://man.openbsd.org/gettimeofday.2 android: https://github.com/ricardoquesada/android-ndk/blob/master/usr/include/sys/time.h dragonfly: https://www.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=gettimeofday§ion=2 This commit corrects the type on these targets, which is a breaking change. Due to how this API is commonly used (e.g. passing `ptr::null_mut` to the second argument), breakage should be minimal. Users wanting to support both versions can just write `ptr as *mut _` instead. Closes #1338.
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- May 16, 2019
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gnzlbg authored
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/60775 .
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- Apr 05, 2019
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Kevin Kuehler authored
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- Mar 03, 2019
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Sébastien Marie authored
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- Mar 02, 2019
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Sébastien Marie authored
while here, generate the right file in test_openbsd()
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- Feb 24, 2019
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Sébastien Marie authored
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- Feb 23, 2019
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Bryant Mairs authored
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- Feb 22, 2019
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gnzlbg authored
This cleans up the build.rs of `libc-test` for apple targets. I wanted to update the docker containers of some targets so that we can start testing newer currently-skipped APIs properly, but it is impossible to figure out which headers and APIs are skipped for each target. This PR separates the testing of apple targets into its own self-contained function. This allows seeing exactly which headers are included, and which items are skipped. A lot of work will be required to separate the testing of all major platforms and make the script reasonable. During the clean up, I discovered that, at least for apple targets, deprecated but not removed APIs are not tested. I re-enabled testing for those, and fixed `daemon`, which was not properly linking its symbol. I also added the `#[deprecated]` attribute to the `#[deprecated]` APIs of the apple targets. The attribute is available since Rust 1.9.0 and the min. Rust version we support is Rust 1.13.0. Many other APIs are also currently not tested "because they are weird" which I interpret as "the test failed for an unknown reason", as a consequence: * the signatures of execv, execve, and execvp are incorrect (see https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/issues/1272) * the `sig_t` type is called `sighandler_t` in libc for some reason: https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/issues/1273 This probably explains why some other things, like the `sa_handler`/`sa_sigaction` fields of `sigaction` were skipped. The field is actually a union, which can be either a `sig_t` for the `sa_handler` field, or some other type for the `sa_sigaction` field, but because the distinction was not made, the field was not checked. The latest ctest version can check volatile pointers, so a couple of skipped tests are now tested using this feature.
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- Feb 20, 2019
- Feb 13, 2019
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gnzlbg authored
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- Feb 09, 2019
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Sébastien Marie authored
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- Feb 08, 2019
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David Holroyd authored
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David Holroyd authored
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David Holroyd authored
I guess the previous lint failure was about avoiding #[cfg], and doing this instead.
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David Holroyd authored
Will likely alter this after seeing CI results across platforms.
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- Feb 07, 2019
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gnzlbg authored
This PR fixes the build on all platforms and all Rust version down to the minimum Rust version supported by libc: Rust 1.13.0. The `build.rs` is extended with logic to detect the newer Rust features used by `libc` since Rust 1.13.0: * Rust 1.19.0: `untagged_unions`. APIs using untagged unions are gated on `cfg(libc_unions)` and not available on older Rust versions. * Rust 1.25.0: `repr(align)`. Because `repr(align)` cannot be parsed by older Rust versions, all uses of `repr(align)` are split into `align.rs` and `no_align.rs` modules, which are gated on the `cfg(libc_align)` at the top level. These modules sometimes contain macros that are expanded at the top level to avoid privacy issues (`pub(crate)` is not available in older Rust versions). Closes #1242 . * Rust : `const` `mem::size_of`. These uses are worked around with hardcoded constants on older Rust versions. Also, `repr(packed)` structs cannot automatically `derive()` some traits like `Debug`. These have been moved into `s_no_extra_traits!` and the lint of missing `Debug` implementations on public items is silenced for these. We can manually implement the `extra_traits` for these in a follow up PR. This is tracked in #1243. Also, `extra_traits` does not enable `align` manually anymore. Since `f64::to_bits` is not available in older Rust versions, its usage has been replaced with a `transmute` to an `u64` which is what that method does under the hood. Closes #1232 .
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- Feb 03, 2019
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Bryant Mairs authored
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Bryant Mairs authored
This was not compile-tested on all platforms, but instead all `pub enum` types had a `Debug` impl derived for them.
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- Jan 16, 2019
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Alan Somers authored
PR #1098 added the CMSG_DATA(3) family of functions into libc. Because they're defined as macros in C, they had to be rewritten as Rust functions for libc. Also, they can't be tested in CI for the same reason. But that PR erroneously used the same definitions in BSD as in Linux. This commit corrects the definitions for OSX, FreeBSD, DragonflyBSD, OpenBSD, and NetBSD. I renamed a few variables and collapsed a few macros in order to combine the definitions where possible. Fixes #1210
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- Jan 15, 2019
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Alan Somers authored
The aio functions require librt on NetBSD.
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- Jan 13, 2019
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alecmocatta authored
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- Jan 12, 2019
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- Jan 09, 2019
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Andrei-Marius Radu authored
OpenBSD doesn't implement fexecve. The only reference of it that I can find in the OpenBSD source is in the man pages of signal(3) and sigaction(2) (where it's mentioned that it is not implemented). OpenBSD official source code link: https://cvsweb.openbsd.org/src/lib/libc/sys/sigaction.2?rev=1.75&content-type=text/x-cvsweb-markup OpenBSD Github mirror: https://github.com/openbsd/src/blob/master/lib/libc/sys/sigaction.2#L619 On NetBSD's unistd.h I see that it is under an ifdef. Calling it returns 78 / ENOSYS / Function not implemented. NetBSD office source code link: http://cvsweb.netbsd.org/bsdweb.cgi/src/include/unistd.h?rev=1.151&content-type=text/x-cvsweb-markup&only_with_tag=MAIN NetBSD Github mirror: https://github.com/NetBSD/src/blob/trunk/include/unistd.h#L319
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- Jan 08, 2019
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alecmocatta authored
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- Jan 03, 2019
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Alan Somers authored
On FreeBSD, uname is an inline function. The uname that is present in libc.so is for FreeBSD 1.0 compatibility. It expects a buffer of a different size. Fixes #1190 Reported-by: Alex Zepeda
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- Dec 28, 2018
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Tom Pusateri authored
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Tom Pusateri authored
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- Dec 27, 2018
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Tom Pusateri authored
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- Dec 15, 2018
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Benjamin Saunders authored
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- Dec 06, 2018
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M Farkas-Dyck authored
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- Dec 05, 2018
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Jonathan A. Kollasch authored
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- Nov 27, 2018
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Sébastien Marie authored
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Sébastien Marie authored
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Sébastien Marie authored
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Fensteer authored
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