* std.os.uefi.tables: ziggify boot and runtime services
* avoid T{} syntax
Co-authored-by: linusg <mail@linusgroh.de>
* misc fixes
* work
* self-review quickfixes
* dont make MemoryMapSlice generic
* more review fixes, work
* more work
* more work
* review fixes
* update boot/runtime services references throughout codebase
* self-review fixes
* couple of fixes i forgot to commit earlier
* fixes from integrating in my own project
* fixes from refAllDeclsRecursive
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: truemedian <truemedian@gmail.com>
* more fixes from review
* fixes from project integration
* make natural alignment of Guid align-8
* EventRegistration is a new opaque type
* fix getNextHighMonotonicCount
* fix locateProtocol
* fix exit
* partly revert 7372d65
* oops exit data_len is num of bytes
* fixes from project integration
* MapInfo consistency, MemoryType update per review
* turn EventRegistration back into a pointer
* forgot to finish updating MemoryType methods
* fix IntFittingRange calls
* set uefi.Page nat alignment
* Back out "set uefi.Page nat alignment"
This backs out commit cdd9bd6f7f5fb763f994b8fbe3e1a1c2996a2393.
* get rid of some error.NotFound-s
* fix .exit call in panic
* review comments, add format method
* fix resetSystem data alignment
* oops, didnt do a final refAllDeclsRecursive i guess
* review comments
* writergate update MemoryType.format
* fix rename
---------
Co-authored-by: linusg <mail@linusgroh.de>
Co-authored-by: truemedian <truemedian@gmail.com>
added adapter to AnyWriter and GenericWriter to help bridge the gap
between old and new API
make std.testing.expectFmt work at compile-time
std.fmt no longer has a dependency on std.unicode. Formatted printing
was never properly unicode-aware. Now it no longer pretends to be.
Breakage/deprecations:
* std.fs.File.reader -> std.fs.File.deprecatedReader
* std.fs.File.writer -> std.fs.File.deprecatedWriter
* std.io.GenericReader -> std.io.Reader
* std.io.GenericWriter -> std.io.Writer
* std.io.AnyReader -> std.io.Reader
* std.io.AnyWriter -> std.io.Writer
* std.fmt.format -> std.fmt.deprecatedFormat
* std.fmt.fmtSliceEscapeLower -> std.ascii.hexEscape
* std.fmt.fmtSliceEscapeUpper -> std.ascii.hexEscape
* std.fmt.fmtSliceHexLower -> {x}
* std.fmt.fmtSliceHexUpper -> {X}
* std.fmt.fmtIntSizeDec -> {B}
* std.fmt.fmtIntSizeBin -> {Bi}
* std.fmt.fmtDuration -> {D}
* std.fmt.fmtDurationSigned -> {D}
* {} -> {f} when there is a format method
* format method signature
- anytype -> *std.io.Writer
- inferred error set -> error{WriteFailed}
- options -> (deleted)
* std.fmt.Formatted
- now takes context type explicitly
- no fmt string
* Use `packed struct` for flags arguments. So, instead of
`linux.FUTEX.WAIT` use `.{ .cmd = .WAIT, .private = true }`
* rename `futex_wait` and `futex_wake` which didn't actually specify
wait/wake, as `futex_3arg` and `futex_4arg` (as its the number
of parameters that is different, the `op` is whatever is specified.
* expose the full six-arg flavor of the syscall (for some of the advanced
ops), and add packed structs for their arguments.
* Use a `packed union` to support the 4th parameter which is sometimes a
`timespec` pointer, and sometimes a `u32`.
* Add tests that make sure the structure layout is correct and that the
basic argument passing is working (no actual futexes are contended).
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.
* 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
The compiler actually doesn't need any functional changes for this: Sema
does reification based on the tag indices of `std.builtin.Type` already!
So, no zig1.wasm update is necessary.
This change is necessary to disallow name clashes between fields and
decls on a type, which is a prerequisite of #9938.
* Elaborate on the sub-variants of Variant I.
* Clarify the use of the TCB term.
* Rename a bunch of stuff to be more accurate/descriptive.
* Follow Zig's style around namespacing more.
* Use a structure for the ABI TCB.
No functional change intended.
This is a misfeature that we inherited from LLVM:
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D61259
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D61939
(`aarch64_32` and `arm64_32` are equivalent.)
I truly have no idea why this triple passed review in LLVM. It is, to date, the
*only* tag in the architecture component that is not, in fact, an architecture.
In reality, it is just an ILP32 ABI for AArch64 (*not* AArch32).
The triples that use `aarch64_32` look like `aarch64_32-apple-watchos`. Yes,
that triple is exactly what you think; it has no ABI component. They really,
seriously did this.
Since only Apple could come up with silliness like this, it should come as no
surprise that no one else uses `aarch64_32`. Later on, a GNU ILP32 ABI for
AArch64 was developed, and support was added to LLVM:
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D94143
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D104931
Here, sanity seems to have prevailed, and a triple using this ABI looks like
`aarch64-linux-gnu_ilp32` as you would expect.
As can be seen from the diffs in this commit, there was plenty of confusion
throughout the Zig codebase about what exactly `aarch64_32` was. So let's just
remove it. In its place, we'll use `aarch64-watchos-ilp32`,
`aarch64-linux-gnuilp32`, and so on. We'll then translate these appropriately
when talking to LLVM. Hence, this commit adds the `ilp32` ABI tag (we already
have `gnuilp32`).
PR [19271](https://github.com/ziglang/zig/pull/19271) added some static function implementations from kernel32, but some parts of the library still used the dynamically loaded versions.
Instead of calling the dynamically loaded kernel32.GetLastError, we can extract it from the TEB.
As shown by [Wine](34b1606019/include/winternl.h (L439)), the last error lives at offset 0x34 of the TEB in 32-bit Windows and at offset 0x68 in 64-bit Windows.
I believe this was accidentally broken when the E enum for errno values
was introduces. These functions are quite the special case in that they
return the error value directly rather than returning -1 and passing the
error value through the errno variable.
In any case, using a u16 as the return type at the ABI boundary where a
c_int is expected is asking for trouble.
netbsd fix:
- `Futex.zig:542:56: error: expected error union type, found 'c_int'`
openbsd fix:
- `emutls.zig:10:21: error: root struct of file 'os' has no member named 'abort'`
- `Thread.zig:627:22: error: expected 6 argument(s), found 5`
This implementation is now a direct replacement for the `kernel32` one.
New bitflags for named pipes and other generic ones were added based on
browsing the ReactOS sources.
`UNICODE_STRING.Buffer` has also been changed to be nullable, as
this is what makes the implementation work.
This required some changes to places accesssing the buffer after a
`SUCCESS`ful return, most notably `QueryObjectName` which even referred
to it being nullable.
Follow up to #19079, which made test names fully qualified.
This fixes tests that now-redundant information in their test names. For example here's a fully qualified test name before the changes in this commit:
"priority_queue.test.std.PriorityQueue: shrinkAndFree"
and the same test's name after the changes in this commit:
"priority_queue.test.shrinkAndFree"
Windows paths now use WTF-16 <-> WTF-8 conversion everywhere, which is lossless. Previously, conversion of ill-formed UTF-16 paths would either fail or invoke illegal behavior.
WASI paths must be valid UTF-8, and the relevant function calls have been updated to handle the possibility of failure due to paths not being encoded/encodable as valid UTF-8.
Closes#18694Closes#1774Closes#2565