* c.darwin: define MSG for macos
* darwin: add series os name
* Update lib/std/c.zig
Co-authored-by: Alex Rønne Petersen <alex@alexrp.com>
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Co-authored-by: Alex Rønne Petersen <alex@alexrp.com>
* libc: implement common `abs` for various integer sizes
* libc: move imaxabs to inttypes.zig and don't use cInclude
* libc: delete `fabs` c implementations because already implemented in compiler_rt
* libc: export functions depending on the target libc
Previously all the functions that were exported were handled equally,
though some may exist and some not inside the same file. Moving the
checks inside the file allows handling different functions differently
* remove empty ifs in inttypes
Co-authored-by: Alex Rønne Petersen <alex@alexrp.com>
* remove empty ifs in stdlib
Co-authored-by: Alex Rønne Petersen <alex@alexrp.com>
* libc: use `@abs` for the absolute value calculation
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Co-authored-by: Alex Rønne Petersen <alex@alexrp.com>
For C code the macros SIGRTMIN and SIGRTMAX provide these values. In
practice what looks like a constant is actually provided by a libc call.
So the Zig implementations are explicitly function calls.
glibc (and Musl) export a run-time minimum "real-time" signal number,
based on how many signals are reserved for internal implementation details
(generally threading). In practice, on Linux, sigrtmin() is 35 on glibc
with the older LinuxThread and 34 with the newer NPTL-based
implementation. Musl always returns 35. The maximum "real-time" signal
number is NSIG - 1 (64 on most Linux kernels, but 128 on MIPS).
When not linking a C Library, Zig can report the full range of "rt"
signals (none are reserved by Zig).
Fixes#21189
Export the sigset_t ops (sigaddset, etc) from the C library. Don't rely
on the linux.zig defintions (which will be defined to use the kernel ABI).
Move Darwin sigset and NSIG declarations into darwin.zig. Remove
extraneous (?) sigaddset. The C library sigaddset can reject some signals
being added, so need to defer to it.
Functions like isMinGW() and isGnuLibC() have a good reason to exist: They look
at multiple components of the target. But functions like isWasm(), isDarwin(),
isGnu(), etc only exist to save 4-8 characters. I don't think this is a good
enough reason to keep them, especially given that:
* It's not immediately obvious to a reader whether target.isDarwin() means the
same thing as target.os.tag.isDarwin() precisely because isMinGW() and similar
functions *do* look at multiple components.
* It's not clear where we would draw the line. The logical conclusion before
this commit would be to also wrap Arch.isX86(), Os.Tag.isSolarish(),
Abi.isOpenHarmony(), etc... this obviously quickly gets out of hand.
* It's nice to just have a single correct way of doing something.
std.c.NI was never used in the source, so let's finally use it and make
the function more clear!
This is a breaking change, although a minor one: If you previously passed 0 here
(meaning no flags), then now you have to pass an empty struct (.{}) instead.
Otherwise, you probably used @bitCast() shenanigans here (like
@bitCast(c.NI { .NUMERICHOST = true }) and that will still work, but you can
also get rid of the @bitCast() now!
Zig's copy of the `SYMLINK_{NO,}FOLLOW` constants from wasi-musl was
wrong, as were the `IFIFO` and `IFSOCK` file type flags. Fix these up,
and add comments pointing to exactly where they come from (as the
wasi-musl source has lots of unused, different definitions of these
constants).
Add tests for the Zig convention that WASM preopen 3 is the current
working directory. This is true for WASM with or without libc.
Enable several fs and posix tests that are now passing (not necessarily
because of this change) on wasm targets.
Fixes#20890.
* fix merge conflicts
* rename the declarations
* reword documentation
* extract FixedBufferAllocator to separate file
* take advantage of locals
* remove the assertion about max alignment in Allocator API, leaving it
Allocator implementation defined
* fix non-inline function call in start logic
The GeneralPurposeAllocator implementation is totally broken because it
uses global state but I didn't address that in this commit.
heap.zig: define new default page sizes
heap.zig: add min/max_page_size and their options
lib/std/c: add miscellaneous declarations
heap.zig: add pageSize() and its options
switch to new page sizes, especially in GPA/stdlib
mem.zig: remove page_size