After failing to find RUNPATH in the ELF of /usr/bin/env, not finding
the answer in a symlink of the dynamic interpreter, and not finding
libc.so.6 in the same directory as the dynamic interpreter, Zig will
check `/lib/$triple`.
This fixes incorrect native glibc version detected on Debian bookworm.
This is a partial revert of the previous commit, fixing a regression on
Debian. However, the commit additionally improves the
detectAbiAndDynamicLinker function to read more than 1 byte at a time
when detecting a shebang line.
This commit removes the check that takes advantage of when the dynamic
linker is a symlink. Instead, it falls back on the same directory as the
dynamic linker as a de facto runpath. Empirically, this gives correct
results on Gentoo and NixOS.
Unfortunately it is still falling short for Debian, which has libc.so.6
in a different directory as the dynamic linker.
Before, native glibc and dynamic linker detection attempted to use the
executable's own binary if it was dynamically linked to answer both the
C ABI question and the dynamic linker question. However, this could be
problematic on a system that uses a RUNPATH for the compiler binary,
locking it to an older glibc version, while system binaries such as
/usr/bin/env use a newer glibc version. The problem is that libc.so.6
glibc version will match that of the system while the dynamic linker
will match that of the compiler binary. Executables with these versions
mismatching will fail to run.
Therefore, this commit changes the logic to be the same regardless of
whether the compiler binary is dynamically or statically linked. It
inspects `/usr/bin/env` as an ELF file to find the answer to these
questions, or if there is a shebang line, then it chases the referenced
file recursively. If that does not provide the answer, then the function
falls back to defaults.
This commit also solves a TODO to remove an Allocator parameter to the
detect() function.
Previously, this code would fail to detect glibc version because it
relied on libc.so.6 being a symlink which revealed the answer. On modern
distros, this is no longer the case.
This new strategy finds the path to libc.so.6 from /usr/bin/env, then
inspects the .dynstr section of libc.so.6, looking for symbols that
start with "GLIBC_2.". It then parses those as semantic versions and
takes the maximum value as the system-native glibc version.
closes#6469
see #11137closes#12567
This is a temporary workaround to an unclear platform-dependence
behavior we have in libstd for `std.fs.File` abstraction. See
https://github.com/ziglang/zig/issues/12783 for more information.
Previously, this function used incorrect registers for the munmap syscall, leading to detached threads not cleaning up.
closes#12690
Co-authored-by: bxlr <biexelar@diroot.org>
This is not technically correct, but given that we are not yet able
to link against the CRT, it's a good default until then.
Add basic logging of generated symbol table in the linker.
Adds error for taking a non comptime parameter in a function returning a
comptime-only type but not when that type is dependent on a parameter.
Co-authored-by: Veikka Tuominen <git@vexu.eu>
`sc_fpstate` member of `struct sigcontext` is a `struct fxsave64 *`.
use *anyopaque to represent it.
avoid to defining `fxsave64` as it is a packed struct with some arrays.
From `copy_file_range(2)` errors:
ETXTBSY
Either fd_in or fd_out refers to an active swap file.
Same error will be used in the upcoming `ioctl_ficlonerange(2)`:
ETXTBSY
One of the files is a swap file. Swap files cannot share storage.
Previously, Zig had inconsistent semantics for an enum like this:
`enum(u8){zero = 0}`
Although in theory this can only hold one possible value, the tag
`zero`, Zig no longer will treat the type this way. It will do loads and
stores, as if the type has runtime bits.
Closes#12619
Tests passed locally:
* test-behavior
* test-cases