* std.c: consolidate some definitions, making them share code. For
example, freebsd, dragonfly, and openbsd can all share the same
`pthread_mutex_t` definition.
* add type safety to std.c.O
- this caught a bug where mode flags were incorrectly passed as the
open flags.
* 3 fewer uses of usingnamespace keyword
* as per convention, remove purposeless field prefixes from struct field
names even if they have those prefixes in the corresponding C code.
* fix incorrect wasi libc Stat definition
* remove C definitions from incorrectly being in std.os.wasi
* make std.os.wasi definitions type safe
* go through wasi native APIs even when linking libc because the libc
APIs are problematic and wasteful
* don't expose WASI definitions in std.posix
* remove std.os.wasi.rights_t.ALL: this is a footgun. should it be all
future rights too? or only all current rights known? both are
the wrong answer.
Most of this migration was performed automatically with `zig fmt`. There
were a few exceptions which I had to manually fix:
* `@alignCast` and `@addrSpaceCast` cannot be automatically rewritten
* `@truncate`'s fixup is incorrect for vectors
* Test cases are not formatted, and their error locations change
* pthread_key_t should also be available for non-android platforms
* Also change the type to c_uint because Linux pthreadtypes.h typedefs it as "unsigned int"
Partially addresses #13950
There are still a few occurrences of "stage1" in the standard library
and self-hosted compiler source, however, these instances need a bit
more careful inspection to ensure no breakage.
Rename all references of sparcv9 to sparc64, to make Zig align more with
other projects. Also, added new function to convert glibc arch name to Zig
arch name, since it refers to the architecture as sparcv9.
This is based on the suggestion by @kubkon in PR 11847.
(https://github.com/ziglang/zig/pull/11487#pullrequestreview-963761757)
The libc interface uses `stat` instead of `stat64` struct.
This fixes, among other things, `zig fmt` accidentally setting the
formatted file's permission to 000.
Extract existing constants to do with TCP socket options into a 'TCP'
namespace.
Export 'MSG' and 'TCP' from std.os.{linux, windows} into std.c.
Fix compile errors to do with std.x.os.Socket methods related to setting
TCP socket options.
Handle errors in the case that an interface could not be resolved in an
IPv6 address on Windows. Tested using Wine with the loopback interface
disabled.
Have all instantiations of std.x.os.Socket on Windows instantiate an
overlapped socket descriptor. Fixes the '1ms read timeout' test in
std.x.net.tcp.Client. The test would previously deadlock, as read
timeouts only apply to overlapped sockets.
Windows documentation by default recommends that most instantiations of
sockets on Windows be overlapped sockets (s.t. they may operate in both
blocking or nonblocking mode when operated with WSA* syscalls). Refer to
the documentation for WSASocketA for more info.
* std lib tests are passing on x86_64-linux with and without -lc
* stage2 is building from source on x86_64-linux
* down to 38 remaining uses of `usingnamespace`
We already have a LICENSE file that covers the Zig Standard Library. We
no longer need to remind everyone that the license is MIT in every single
file.
Previously this was introduced to clarify the situation for a fork of
Zig that made Zig's LICENSE file harder to find, and replaced it with
their own license that required annual payments to their company.
However that fork now appears to be dead. So there is no need to
reinforce the copyright notice in every single file.
The primary purpose of this change is to eliminate one usage of
`usingnamespace` in the standard library - specifically the usage for
errno values in `std.os.linux`.
This is accomplished by truncating the `E` prefix from error values, and
making errno a proper enum.
A similar strategy can be used to eliminate some other `usingnamespace`
sites in the std lib.
Conflicts:
* lib/std/os/linux.zig
* lib/std/os/windows/bits.zig
* src/Module.zig
* src/Sema.zig
* test/stage2/test.zig
Mainly I wanted Jakub's new macOS code for respecting stack size, since
we now depend on it for debug builds able to pass one of the test cases
for recursive comptime function calls with `@setEvalBranchQuota`.
The conflicts were all trivial.
While musl decided to hard-wire off_t to a 64bit quantity, glibc is much
older and defaults to 32bit offsets and offers some -64 suffixed
versions of I/O functions.
There's a weird mix-up of types: sometimes off_t is used, sometimes not,
sometimes it's defined as a signed quantity and sometimes as an unsigned
one, but we'll sort this problem later.