raise the timeout to 100ms to be sure that if it fails (timeout is returned) it is due to a real problem.
the test shouldn't be longer: it will wait more time only on failure.
As documented in the comment right above the finalization function,
Gimli can be used as a XOF, i.e. the output doesn't have a fixed
length.
So, allow it to be used that way, just like BLAKE3.
With the simple rule that whenever we have or will have 2 similar
functions, they should be in their own namespace.
Some of these new namespaces currently contain a single function.
This is to prepare for reduced-round versions that are likely to
be added later.
It is now possible to force linking with system linker `ld` instead
of the LLVM `lld` linker when building natively on the target. This
can be done at each stage by specifying `--system-linker-hack` flag,
and can be useful on platforms where `lld` fails to operate properly
such as macOS 11 Big Sur on ARM64 where every binary/dylib is expected
to be codesigned.
Some example invocations for each stage of compilation of Zig
toolchain:
```
cmake .. -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/path/to/llvm -DSYSTEM_LINKER_HACK=1
```
```
build/zig build test --system-linker-hack
```
```
build/zig build --prefix $(pwd)/stage2 -Denable-llvm
--system-linker-hack
```
```
build/zig build-exe hello.zig --system-linker-hack
```
Comparisons with absolute epsilons are usually useful when comparing
numbers to zero, for non-zero numbers it's advised to switch to relative
epsilons instead to obtain meaningful results (check [1] for more
details).
The new API introduces approxEqAbs and approxEqRel, where the former
aliases and deprecated the old `approxEq`, allowing the user to pick the
right tool for the job.
The documentation is meant to guide the user in the choice of the
correct alternative.
[1] https://randomascii.wordpress.com/2012/02/25/comparing-floating-point-numbers-2012-edition/
There's no guarantee for the kernel definition to be ABI compatible with
the libc one (and vice versa).
There's also no guarantee of ABI compatibility between musl/glibc.
Fun, isn't it?
With this commit, the function tries to use more efficient syscalls, and
then falls back to non-positional reads.
The motivating use case for this change is to support something like the
following:
try io.getStdOut().writeFileAll(dest_file, .{});
We are checking that two identical, constant values, are stored at
different addresses.
But sharing a unique location doesn't look like something the compiler
wouldn't do.
It may make more sense to check that a const variable and a mutable
variable set to the same value have different addresses.