It caused an assertion failure when building Zig from source.
This reverts commit 0595feb34128db22fbebea843af929de3ede8190, reversing
changes made to 744771d3303e122474a72c8a94b14fe1e9fb480c.
closes#22566closes#22568
This is necessary since isGnuLibC() is true for hurd, so we need to be able to
represent a glibc version for it.
Also add an Os.TaggedVersionRange.gnuLibCVersion() convenience function.
The old isARM() function was a portability trap. With the name it had, it seemed
like the obviously correct function to use, but it didn't include Thumb. In the
vast majority of cases where someone wants to ask "is the target Arm?", Thumb
*should* be included.
There are exactly 3 cases in the codebase where we do actually need to exclude
Thumb, although one of those is in Aro and mirrors a check in Clang that is
itself likely a bug. These rare cases can just add an extra isThumb() check.
Once we upgrade to LLVM 20, these should be lowered verbatim rather than to
simply musl. Similarly, the special case in llvmMachineAbi() should go away.
Since we exclude Abi.none from the list of ABIs to be tested, it means that
Abi.gnu, which happens to be the first in the list, always gets picked for hosts
where the dynamic linker path does not depend on the ABI component of the
triple. Such hosts include all the BSDs, Haiku, Serenity, Solaris, etc.
To fix this, use DynamicLinker.kind() to determine whether this whole exercise
even makes sense. If it doesn't, as is the case on every OS other than Linux and
Hurd, we'll just fall back to Abi.default() which will try to pick a sensible
default based on the arch and OS components. This detection logic still has
plenty of room for improvement, but is at least a notable step up from
confusingly detecting Abi.gnu ~everywhere.
Closes#9089.
hasDynamicLinker() was just kind of lying in the case of Darwin platforms for
the benefit of std.zig.system.detectAbiAndDynamicLinker(). A better name would
have been hasElfDynamicLinker() or something. It also got the answer wrong for a
bunch of platforms that don't actually use ELF. Anyway, this was clearly the
wrong layer to do this at, so remove this function and instead use
DynamicLinker.kind() + an isDarwin() check in detectAbiAndDynamicLinker().
This works around the fact that LLVM and LLD both have broken support for the
small data area, yet the feature is on by default for all Hexagon CPUs.
I want to eventually replace this hack with a flag in update_cpu_features.zig
for marking features that should always be off by default and not be accessible
to users. That way, the compiler will have full control over them.
* Added error message 'ProcessNotFound' for reading and writing in a Linux
process.
This error occurs if the process to be read from or written to no longer exists.
Fixes#19875
* Added error message "ProcessNotFound" for error forwarding.
* Add error messgae for forwarding.
* Added message for forwarding.
* Error set completed.
* Fixed format error.
* Changed comments to doc comments.
* Adjust buffer length a bit.
* Fix detecting if file is a script. Logic below was unreachable,
because 99% of scripts failed "At least 255 bytes long" check and were detected as ELF files.
It should be "At least 4" instead (minimum value of "ELF magic length" and "smallest possible interpreter path length").
* Fix parsing interpreter path, when text after shebang:
1. does not have newline,
2. has leading spaces and tabs,
3. separates interpreter and arguments by tab or NUL.
* Remove empty error set from `defaultAbiAndDynamicLinker`.
Signed-off-by: Eric Joldasov <bratishkaerik@landless-city.net>
InvalidHandle in OpenError is no longer a possible error on any platform. In the past it was able to be returned in `openOptionsFromFlagsWasi`, but the implementation was changed in 7680c5330cbc9141b9a5444e30c512b6068ab50d to make it no longer possible.
InvalidHandle in RealPathError was a holdover from before d5312d53a066092ba9efd687e25b29a87eb6290c, which made realpath a compile error on WASI. However, InvalidHandle was also a possible error in the FreeBSD fallback implementation added in 537624734c4db9e0cdbdc0ebce57375d17172a70. This commit changes the FreeBSD fallback implementation to return FileNotFound instead of InvalidHandle which matches how EBADF is handled in all the other `realpath` implementations (including the FreeBSD non-fallback implementation).
Closes#19084
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
Encountered in a recent CI run on an aarch64-windows dev kit.
Pretty sure I disabled the virus scanner but it looks like it turned
itself back on with a Windows Update.
Rather than marking the new error code as unreachable in the places
where it is unexpected, this commit makes it return `error.Unexpected`.
`getExternalExecutor` is moved from `std.zig.CrossTarget` to
`std.zig.system.NativeTargetInfo.getExternalExecutor`.
The function also now communicates a bit more information about *why*
the host is unable to execute a binary. The CLI is updated to report
this information in a useful manner.
`getExternalExecutor` is also improved to detect such patterns as:
* x86_64 is able to execute x86 binaries
* aarch64 is able to execute arm binaries
* etc.
Added qemu-hexagon support to `getExternalExecutor`.
`std.Target.canExecBinaries` of is removed; callers should use the more
powerful `getExternalExecutor` instead.
Now that `zig test` tries to run the resulting binary no matter what,
this commit has a follow-up change to the build system and docgen to
utilize the `getExternalExecutor` function and pass `--test-no-exec`
in some cases to avoid getting the error.
Additionally:
* refactor: extract NativePaths and NativeTargetInfo into their own
files named after the structs.
* small improvement to langref to reduce the complexity of the `callconv`
expression in a couple examples.
If a partial read occurs past the halfway point, buf.len - i will be
less than i, which is illegal. The end bound is also entirely unecessary
in this case, so just remove it.
This is mainly because arm64 macOS doesn't support all
versions supported by x86_64 macOS. This is just a temporary
thing until both architectures support the same set of OSes.